The MTA will need to drastically cut service and possibly eliminate subway lines unless the government steps in with a significant aid package, says an advocacy group. Photo Credit: mta.info
Edited by: TJVNews.com
If things weren’t bizarre enough in the city that never sleeps, New York City subway riders might be shocked to learn the latest development.
The New York Post reported that on Wednesday, it was revealed that the person whose voice reverberates on the city’s subway stations each day is a transgender woman
Bernie Wagenblast, is a New Jersey native, who in addition to announcing train arrivals in the New York City subway system and other public safety messages also voices the AirTrain at Newark Liberty International Airport and South Philadelphia’s Port Authority Transit Corporation, the Post reported.
He publicly came out as a transgendered woman on WNYC’s “Death, Sex & Money” podcast after transitioning in December 2022, the Post reported. This was decades after she recorded some of the city’s most iconic transportation lines.
Speaking to podcast host Anna Sale, Wagenblast said she feels “disembodied” from the sound of her pre-transition voice, the Post reported. “I’ve only been using this voice full-time since January 1,” Wagenblast told the Post. She added that she had used her new voice in the privacy of her home after working with a voice coach for a year and a half.
“Before that, I had been working on it, but most of my conversation was what I call my guy voice, and professionally I still use that voice, but I’m trying to use this voice more and more so that it becomes more natural, I become more comfortable with it, and hopefully I can improve upon it,” Wagenblast added.
The Post also reported that Wagenblast continued to use her “guy voice” professionally last year, particularly when she was called to record updated announcements last year ahead of the opening of Newark Airport’s new Terminal A. But that was for the last time, she said.
Wagenblast — who has kept her birth name — said she noticed she was different when she felt “natural” playing with her grandmother’s jewelry and makeup at 4 years old, according to the Post report.
Two years later, she suggested that she and her female best friend switch clothes during an afternoon of playtime, a move that earned her a talk from her parents about how unacceptable it was to have feminine characteristics.
“I don’t think there was one waking hour of my life from 6 years on that I didn’t think about being a girl at least once during that hour. That’s how pervasive it was. It was something that was always there,” Wagenblast told the Post.
With no acceptable outlet for her true feelings, Wagenblast threw herself into her work, the Post reported. She practiced speaking in a traditional, deep, male sounding, broadcasting voice.
The Post also said that Wagenblast landed several radio jobs throughout the New York metro area, including at WINS and WABC, mainly doing traffic reporting.
She joined the New York City Department of Transportation to help establish the city’s first transportation communications center and lent her voice to the nearly 500 subway stations across the city, which still use her original audio today, the Post reported.
Wagenblast is the founder and editor of the Transportation Communications Newsletter and now hosts two podcasts, both of which she utilizes her new voice for, the paper said.
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