Épisodes

  • For the Love of Emceeing with Human Voice, Khalil Ekulona
    Jun 26 2026

    Former host of NPR’s This is Nashville, rapper and musician, emcee, and philosopher Khalil Ekulona joins us to talk about… you guessed it… the voice.


    For his whole life, he used his voice not only in the arts and entertainment, but in guiding his life decisions. And he has thoughts on what’s going to happen with the future of AI voices.


    Find Khalil https://www.instagram.com/khalilekulona (https://www.instagram.com/khalilekulona)


    Email us if you want someone on the show

    or find a cool article about the voice! Foreverhumanvoices@gmail.com

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    48 min
  • Actor, Funny Man, Smart Guy Steven Weber ‘s Hot Take on the Root of AI
    Jun 19 2026

    You may know him as Brian Hackett from “Wings,” heard his narration of Stephen King’s “It,” or maybe you’re watching him on Chicago Med right now. Steven Weber, audio book narrator, singer, and award winning actor joins Forever Human Voices to discuss his hot take on the root of AI and how it’s reshaping creative work.


    From “GET ME A HUMAN ON THE PHONE” to guessing Mel Brooks’ reaction to AI and lauding favorite narrators, we promise it’s not all bleak today. But one thing is clear from this conversation: as creative professionals, we have to have this discussion.


    00:00 Episode Two Intro

    01:23 Late Night Check In

    01:50 Gratitude and Family

    02:23 Sons in Music Today

    03:03 Career and AI Fears

    04:10 Why AI Exists Money

    07:03 Audiobooks and AI Narration

    09:35 Human Emotion in Voice

    11:30 Losing Humans in Service

    12:41 Hope and Detaching

    14:38 Mediocrity and Addiction

    16:07 Always On Culture Shift

    21:57 Organic Voices Idea

    25:07 AI Everywhere Now

    26:23 Humans Only Service

    26:57 Capitalism Eats Organics

    28:06 Places With Restraint

    30:33 Audiobook Work Favorites

    31:39 Narrating Stephen King’s It

    32:57 Great Narrators List

    35:46 Celebrity Memoirs Talk

    36:18 Matthew Perry Memories

    39:09 AI In Schools Standards

    40:52 Town Square Connection

    41:48 Fake Memoir Pitch

    43:59 Mel Brooks On AI


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    47 min
  • Neuroscientist Sophie Scott on Why Human Voices (and Conversations) Still Matter in an AI World
    Jun 10 2026

    Sophie Scott on Why Human Voices (and Conversations) Still Matter in an AI World

    Neuroscientist Sophie Scott (UCL), whose research focuses on speech perception and vocal communication, discusses how the brain changes through life by rewiring neural connections rather than growing new neurons, and why human voices carry powerful social and emotional meaning from before birth. She explains that babies learn their mother’s voice and the rhythm of language in utero, and that singing uniquely soothes infants and engages specialized brain responses even in adults. Scott describes conversation as a precisely timed, affiliative “joint action” where people align pitch, rhythm, words, and even breathing, producing bonding effects linked to endorphins, akin to primate grooming. The hosts contrast this with text and synthetic/AI voices, arguing AI lacks natural alignment and emotional reactivity, raising concerns about reduced human connection, voice cloning, and growing exposure to automated customer service and AI narration.

    00:00 Meet Sophie Scott

    00:33 Standup Scientist

    01:22 You Only Get One Brain

    03:37 Why Voices Matter

    03:57 Voices Before Birth

    05:46 Singing Bonds Us

    08:50 Conversation Alignment

    10:17 What Voices Reveal

    11:41 Accents And Identity

    12:37 Audiobooks Versus AI

    15:05 Synthetic Voice Risks

    16:24 Voice Cloning Research

    19:31 Texting Versus Talking

    20:56 Dunbar And Endorphins

    25:12 AI Newsreader Backlash

    28:37 Wrapping Up And Next Time

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    30 min
  • Intro to Forever Human Voices: The Value of the Human Voice & What to Expect in This Show
    Jun 10 2026

    Forever Human Voices: Why the Human Voice Still Matters in an AI World

    Cohosts Molly Secours (filmmaker, writer, audiobook narrator) and Téa Chura (art consultant and musician) introduce “Forever Human Voices,” a series of 30-minute conversations exploring the value of the human voice amid AI voices and the growing difficulty of reaching real people by phone. They emphasize the show is not about bashing or fearing AI—both use technology—but about examining emotional, spiritual, relational, and psychological impacts and what, if anything, might be lost. They preview early guests: London neuroscientist and comedian Sophie Scott, who studies the voice and its lifelong influence; actor Steven Weber (Wings, Chicago Med); Nashville’s Khalil Ekulona; and voice actor Roy Samuelson, whose company creates audio description for films for sight-challenged audiences. The series raises open-ended questions about integrating technology without losing humanity or livelihoods.

    00:00 Why Human Voice Matters

    01:03 Not Anti AI

    01:26 Guest Sophie Scott

    02:05 Guest Steven Weber

    02:36 Guests Khalil and Roy

    03:34 Art AI and Balance

    04:39 How Episodes Work

    05:22 Big Questions Ahead

    05:45 Start Episode One

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    6 min
  • Sneak Preview of the First Four Episodes Discussing The Value of the Human Voice in an AI World
    Jun 10 2026

    We, Molly Secours (filmmaker, writer, audiobook narrator) and Téa Chura (art/ist consultant and musician), introduce “Forever Human Voices,” a 30-minute interview series asking what the human voice means as AI voices and synthetic media grow and human contact on phones and in daily life declines. We preview four guests: London neuroscientist and comedian Prof. Sophie Scott on how the voice affects us from the womb; actor Steven Weber (Wings, Chicago Med); broadcast journalist/musician Khalil Ekulona; and voice actor Roy Samuelson who runs an audio-description company for blind audiences. The sneak preview raises questions about synthetic storytelling, “organic” human-voice tiers, and how digital interaction affects real-life connection.

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    4 min