Anchoring is not a speech; it has a distinct kind of formal tone. It should flow like honey; people cannot see the punctuations, they should sense it with our tone, so give a tone that shows punctuation, say something with a lot of pride.
- Anchoring is not a speech; it carries a distinct formal tone that must feel natural and graceful.
- Your words should flow like honey—smooth, connected, and pleasant, without sounding mechanical.
- The audience cannot see punctuation, so they must sense pauses and commas through your voice modulation.
- Always match the speed and rhythm of your co-anchor to maintain harmony on stage.
- Show appreciation and awareness—acknowledge good delivery and pronunciation when your co-anchor speaks well.
-
At important moments, make eye contact and use graceful hand gestures toward the stage to guide the audience’s attention.
- While introducing dignitaries, go beyond basic phrases—express deep respect and pride, because simply saying “we are privileged” often understates the honour.
Anchoring is not a speech, it has a distinct kind of a formal tone it should flow like honey people cannot see the punctuations, they should sense it with our tone so give a tone that shows punctuation say something with a lot of pride match the speed of the co anchor Well done very good the way you said certain words at this moment look at the person and show your hands towards stage we have to show a lot of respect and pride when we talk about someone. This is an understatement when we just say we are privilege
Comments
Post a Comment