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RFN Special: Jonny's E3 2001 Audio Diaries

by Jonathan Metts - April 27, 2011, 12:51 pm EDT
Total comments: 32

Long before podcasts were invented, Jonny recorded these audio logs for his trip to E3, including first impressions of GameCube, GBA, and the Planet GameCube staff.

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This special episode of Radio Free Nintendo is actually compiled from four separate audio files that I recently found on my hard drive. In May 2001, I returned to Los Angeles for my second trip to the Electronic Entertainment Expo. That year's E3 would be my first time attending with a group, as a staff member of Planet GameCube (now Nintendo World Report). It was also the first time anyone had played GameCube, the American debut of Game Boy Advance, and my first experience at a Nintendo press conference. 

You'll hear about all of these experiences and much more in this four-part "audio diary" that I recorded long before podcasts existed as a concept. You also get to hear my innate Southern accent, before years of being around non-Southerners gradually suppressed it. I hope this blast from the past will be an exciting prelude to E3 2011, which has many overt parallels to that heady time of one decade ago. Please excuse the poor audio quality -- my equipment and recording technology has come a long way in the past ten years!

This episode was edited by Jonathan Metts.

Talkback

SupaKirbApril 27, 2011

Oh gosh... this is going to be a treat to listen to while I'm out. NINTENDO WORLD REPORT! You spoil us.... lol.

happyastoriaApril 27, 2011

Wow, that accent....My father has a hardcore Brooklyn accent and never lost it even when he lived in Miami for 10 years. I think you lost it on purpose, lol.

Anyway, this is interesting stuff!

This audio was recorded after I'd been in college for about nine months, so my accent was probably already less pronounced than it had been in high school. I don't know if others will hear this, but I noticed the accent is noticeably softer even by the fourth audio diary, which was recorded about a week after the first one. So, just spending that much time in California with PGC friends had an effect, even after I returned to Alabama.


In any case, definitely not on purpose. Accent absorption and loss is fairly common. I have a friend from Tennessee who spent a year in London and came back with a distinct (though partial) British accent that lasted at least six months after she was back in the U.S. It would be at least that severe if I moved to another English-speaking country, or a region in America with its own strong accent.

CericApril 27, 2011

My wife was raised in Tennessee but she has her parents northern accent.  Accents are funny things.

Edit, my non-descriminatory policy gooo:

It's an RFN Prequel.

So it's the same as now :D

What was your position then?

Oh, Previews Editor.

Is he related to Hulk Hogan?

Wait, who was doing Planet Trivia?

Ok, so far you call yourself Southern.

Do you still bring Eye Drops? (They also help with petrification.)

lol, Captian PlanetGamecube.

I still never finish Super Metroid.

You don't Sign out anymore.

Internet names.  More fun.

Think one day you will rule them.

Fun business cards.  Do you still have business cards?

Joneson for an Internet Fix.

I hear typing in the background.

Ah, Staff meeting misser, late sleeper.

lol Tie. Now seriously was it Purple?

OOOh Juice and Cookies.  Did you get the Nintendo Cookie recipe?

If only they "ripped everyone to shreds."

Lot of people back in the day knew the site.  Did that ever change?

Did they try to trap you in one of those Boxes from the early commercials in the day?

IGN had a correct mock-up back in the day.  Maybe they'll be right this time?

You could touch the Cube.

Oh the tased you if you did.

And Stuff.

You ditching the sales data :(

Woohooo Super Smash Brother Melee.  It does look good.

I would agree about Luigi.

If you had Smash Bros wouldn't you show a lot of footage?

Miyamoto-san Mr. Miyamoto which is it?

Luigi Mansion doesn't look bad.  I really should actually play it all (and get my own copy.)

That was surprising.

The boot up of the Cube is cool.  Did you ever have it hang out as the clock?

I like the alternative sound as well.

Even today the load time is impressive.

You can hear the Ah and wondering in your voice.  But not this deep southern accent I was promised.

Pikmin was called Cabbage...

The environment was impressive.

Learn Mr. Miyamoto's backyard.  It should be on the box.

You thought Starfox Adventure looked cool but, you didn't know the horrors it would launch.

Knew the DK animals by memory.

Sad it pretty much stayed that way.

I'm surprised how many of the gems of GCN where being shown in some form.

All those Bad updates editor.

Staff Chat in the Third Dimension.  It will blow your mind.

Did it change your perception for the good?

Hunger Beat up Diary.

You no longer sound like your Transmitting from Space.  In fact it sounds like

the regular podcast in the Future.

Gamecube has no Bottlenecks, yay.

New job really.

7 o'Clock Dedication.

It feels justify later when your in the front and can't see the end.

WooHoo.  We're Number 1.

Noooo, the Exhibitors we're taking space.

Good choice.

lol, Sardine can.

Kameo: Elements of Power what happened to that...

Evil Jonny is starting to raise his head.

Thanks Rise.

That Preview Editor.  Slacking off.

Booth Tour Priority, Yay.

Go Go, Mario Tennis.

Interactive Imagination?

Interview appointments sound cool.  We should get more of those this year.

How many Small Companies are their anymore?

So the Lesson is Go to the ones that sound dumb on paper.

Food for 20 is a fiasco.

This is making the coverage for this year already sound pathetic.

They could Die on a Plane...

Sounds like a blast and I be sad afterwards.

Hours on Fighting games... Ok I could see doing that.

Where Everybody Knows your name...

Yeah, I can understand that.

All Hardcore, oh yeah

Yep, how do you.

Do you still think that their is E3 and everything between E3?

You will Survive.  As long as You...

I was promised Bromance.

lol Long and its half a Podcast all together in todays time.

I'm really really glad I listened to this.  Thanks for sharing.  I was stoked for the Cube and wish I had found the site sooner.

This should be really cool, I love looking back at peoples impressions of things like this. Sometimes I read old magazines from this time aswell.

CericApril 27, 2011

I kept all my Nintendo Power magazines from childhood for that reason.

nintendo1945April 27, 2011

"Makin sure I get some ah-drowps so my eyes don't burn out lookin' at them plasma TV screens awl day"





Kytim89April 27, 2011

Quote from: Jonnyboy117

This audio was recorded after I'd been in college for about nine months, so my accent was probably already less pronounced than it had been in high school. I don't know if others will hear this, but I noticed the accent is noticeably softer even by the fourth audio diary, which was recorded about a week after the first one. So, just spending that much time in California with PGC friends had an effect, even after I returned to Alabama.


In any case, definitely not on purpose. Accent absorption and loss is fairly common. I have a friend from Tennessee who spent a year in London and came back with a distinct (though partial) British accent that lasted at least six months after she was back in the U.S. It would be at least that severe if I moved to another English-speaking country, or a region in America with its own strong accent.


Jonny, I am a Kentuckian and I have a very prominent southern accent. In fact, my high school was in a rural suburb and the kids there lived in the country and they said my accent stood out the most. Also, some kid in that school said that I sound like Snake, or David Hayter, from the MGS series with a southern accent because my voice is deep.

KwolfApril 27, 2011

Accents are defiantly a funny thing.  The way they can be picked up and lost.  The way they change over time, etc.    Thanks for sharing the audio "diary" .  Was fun to take a trip back into the past.  If you anything like me, you also find it funny to hear yourself in the past, or see yourself.  Thinking about how much you have changed, on the note of accents and such.    Either way it was a cool time back then, anticipating Gamecube and what it might bring. :)

Chad SexingtonApril 28, 2011

Is that some southern twang I sense in your voice?  What happened to it?  Did you go Hollywood on me?

:)

Scatt-ManApril 28, 2011

Standard, redundant appreciation comment. Cheers, Johnzo-boi!

TrueNerdApril 28, 2011

I can't help but feel you've lost some of your wide eyed wonder over the last decade.

The_Darkest_RedApril 28, 2011

My favorite part so far:


"I'm going to be playing the Gamecube in two days. That hasn't really sunk in yet."


This is amazing stuff. Thanks for posting it.  ;D

King of TwitchApril 28, 2011

"internet cafe" now that brings me back.

Quote:

it's this weird simulation/real-time strategy game that Miyamoto's making it's the game called Cabbage that he's been workin on forever and this is finally it.. it's almost complete it looks like and you're this little dude and you have these little plant guys that follow you around and you toss them at these different objects and it's context sensitive whenever they land next to a certain object they have something they do to it like if you throw it at a plant they'll start to chop down a plant if you throw it at a bridge they'll start to cross the bridge if you throw it at a rock they'll pick it up, they'll pick up the rock if you throw em at a wall they'll start to break down the wall

This is a gem of a find, best E3 ever.

AVApril 28, 2011

i really enjoyed it and the accent was fun to hear since I'm used to the 'modern' Jonny on RFN. I think timing wise releasing this near e3 this year would have been cooler ,but whatever i'm still happy i got to hear them all

Scatt-ManApril 29, 2011

The gaming community is in shock this morning as thousands of games journalolygists' bodies were found in a mass heap after committing what police are suspecting was a mass suicide. The cause? Not false promises of fake, magical afterlife lands full of chocolate, oh no... Close friends and family of many of the dead have mentioned that their loved ones were suffering from a servere form of depression after attending the E3 gaming expo of '91.

Resident famous-yet-useless psychiatrist Bobby Bobbob predicts that once after having experienced the magical wonders of the Nintendo Gamecube, then being forced to return to Mischief Makers for hours on end, with its constant 'Shake-Shaking', no matter how entertaining, just could not compete to the awesomeness that had been experienced mere days beforehand. Cindy Spreadum, a useless-yet-somehow-still-in-business prostitute discovered numerous voiced recordings of a one Jonny Metts of Planet 'Kewbs which backs up the claims of Bobby. Cindy was adamant in clarifying that she had no professional business relationship with Johnny, and that she simply saw an opened window and wandered inside, like flies to a fresh, steaming pile of bulldog vomit.

...That's not to say that Johnny's room smells like vomit.
End.
*I was tempted to add a link to a Youtube clip of a dog having sex, followed by it vomiting, but felt it might've been inappropriate. Just search for 'dog', 'sex' and 'vomit' for lulz in the 'Tewbs.*

SupaKirbApril 29, 2011

*Probably gonna email you this, in hopes you might discuss it on a future Podcast or something.

Just got a chance to listen to this thing in its entirety, and gosh I envy you John. This was about 10 years ago.. so I'm guessing you were in your late teens or early 20's? I just wish that I could be doing something like this in my life right now. I'm passionate about gaming, but my knowledge isn't as great as yours was here. I think the reason for that is because I've had no real reason to be knowledgeable about gaming in the first place. It's like the ending of your diary explains, no one is interested in gaming to the degree I am. And it sucks! I've gotten to know a few people online who I am close to, but even they don't seem like they are interested in the way that I am. I listen to you guys on the podcast, having these great conversations, and to be honest, at times I am overwhelmed by how technical you all get with gaming terms and such. But anyways, I want to end this ramble and ask a question which I hope you see and don't mind answering. And that is….

What advice do you have to someone like me who wants to be able to do what you were doing, during the time of this audio diary? I really am interested in gaming, and I want to learn about Nintendo, report on Nintendo, and write my thoughts on Nintendo. (If I'm playing a game, it’s usually by Nintendo.) But the problem is, I don't feel like I have the writing ability and gaming knowledge to do so. Did you ever feel this way before you got into video game journalism John?

KeyBillyApril 29, 2011

I'm also from Alabama and listened to this on my phone, since the electricity is out.  Somehow, that made it more nostalgic.  Maybe it's the candles.  Anyway, thanks for sharing something so personal.  It really did bring me back to that time, and I hope you get to enjoy E3 this year too.

Chocobo_RiderApril 29, 2011

This is awesome, Jonny.  Thanks so much for sharing it.

Like everyone else, I'm getting a kick out of your accent haha.  It's nothing crazy, but it is a noticeable difference from what you sound like now.

It's also really fun to hear the awe in your voice as a wide-eyed gamer experiencing the "visual orgy" of Smash Bros. Melee  ;D

I'll be listening to the rest throughout the day....  thanks again for sharing it!!

Quote from: KeyBilly

I'm also from Alabama and listened to this on my phone, since the electricity is out.  Somehow, that made it more nostalgic.  Maybe it's the candles.  Anyway, thanks for sharing something so personal.  It really did bring me back to that time, and I hope you get to enjoy E3 this year too.

Glad NWR can give you some levity during this time.

KeyBillyApril 29, 2011

I actually dodged some light posts and ran through a tree day before yesterday, after which I was stranded for hours in a pitch black area.  What did I do?  Praised the Lord and played some Pokemon.  I also had the last NWR on my 3DS and tried to listen, though the poor battery life cut things short.  That was the least of my worries and actually made me laugh.

Chocobo_RiderApril 29, 2011

Just finished listening.  Poor Jonny and his post-E3 depression!!  It's interesting to hear how much Jonny yearned for the social connection with fellow gamers.  Some people might find it pathetic, but I found it very endearing.  Again, thanks for sharing, Jonny! This was very insightful and enjoyable.

I wish the rest of the RFN crew had recordings like this to share ^_^

SundoulosApril 29, 2011

Quote from: KeyBilly

I'm also from Alabama and listened to this on my phone, since the electricity is out.  Somehow, that made it more nostalgic.  Maybe it's the candles.  Anyway, thanks for sharing something so personal.  It really did bring me back to that time, and I hope you get to enjoy E3 this year too.

Ditto for me.  I've enjoyed the pick-me-up listening to my stored copies of NWR podcasts...I was finally able to get the family out of North Alabama late last night.

Thanks for the comments everyone, I'm really glad you enjoyed it. It was a real kick for me to hear, as well.


For the guys in Alabama, I hope you and your loved ones are safe. It has been a terrible week down there. My aunt lost her home, but it seems that all of my relatives and friends are safe. Tornadoes were always a common problem in the summer, but these were especially bad, and it's strange to hear talk of it around the nation for once.

MiyamotoApril 30, 2011

Really enjoyed this. Took me right back although my news was all from magazines in those days. Totally reminded me of how excited I was queuing up for my Cube at midnight.



KeyBillyApril 30, 2011

So sorry to hear about your aunt, but I'm glad everyone is safe!

adadadApril 30, 2011

Quote from: SupaKirb

*Probably gonna email you this, in hopes you might discuss it on a future Podcast or something.

Just got a chance to listen to this thing in its entirety, and gosh I envy you John. This was about 10 years ago.. so I'm guessing you were in your late teens or early 20's? I just wish that I could be doing something like this in my life right now. I'm passionate about gaming, but my knowledge isn't as great as yours was here. I think the reason for that is because I've had no real reason to be knowledgeable about gaming in the first place. It's like the ending of your diary explains, no one is interested in gaming to the degree I am. And it sucks! I've gotten to know a few people online who I am close to, but even they don't seem like they are interested in the way that I am. I listen to you guys on the podcast, having these great conversations, and to be honest, at times I am overwhelmed by how technical you all get with gaming terms and such. But anyways, I want to end this ramble and ask a question which I hope you see and don't mind answering. And that is….

What advice do you have to someone like me who wants to be able to do what you were doing, during the time of this audio diary? I really am interested in gaming, and I want to learn about Nintendo, report on Nintendo, and write my thoughts on Nintendo. (If I'm playing a game, it’s usually by Nintendo.) But the problem is, I don't feel like I have the writing ability and gaming knowledge to do so. Did you ever feel this way before you got into video game journalism John?

In many ways, isn't a gaming journalist (at least the sort who writes online) just an articulate forum poster? My advice, completely unconnected to the whole getting-into-the-industry part which I know nothing about, would be to write. Doesn't matter what it's about but if you want to write about something the first thing to do is to learn how to write, and of course you'll probably want to do that in a journalistic context, so if you're at school or university you should get involved with their paper if there is one, or if not look into your local weeklies or whatever. As well as doing that, to practise writing and learning to write about games specifically you should be on forums discussing games - decent forums, not shitty ones. I recommend NeoGAF, although it can take a long time to be approved and get an account there. I'm sure there are others besides. Obviously in that statement I'm including this forum too!

What adadad said.

Just write, dude. Read stuff. It doesn't happen overnight.

For example, when I came here, I didn't know crap. I just really liked video games. It was only after throwing myself into the fire that I actually "learned" about the industry in a deeper context.

Jet PilotMay 01, 2011

Thanks for posting these recordings Jonny.

KisakiProjectMay 02, 2011

I loved this.  2001  is when I started really getting into gaming (ie owning multiple consoles and reading stuff online).  The excitement for GBA & GCN were huge parts of my teenage youth.  So I really enjoyed relieving that.  Thank you for this.

Fatty The HuttMay 02, 2011

These are great, Jonny. What a cute kid you were! These recordings are a nice time capsule of both the industry and of younger-you and I think it took considerable humility to share them. Thanks for letting us have a listen.    My favourite comment of yours was that you didn't feel you were eloquent speaking about games but were OK writing about them. LOL! I guess you've fixed that, haven't you. Nowadays, you are very eloquent speaking about games. One might even say loquacious!  ;D

roykoopa64May 03, 2011

Jonny, the last segment of your diary really struck a chord with me (and I'm sure with many other gamers as well). That must have been quite the experience being around gamers that share your passion, something uncommon in our everyday lives.

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