Hey, if you want the gang members in your video game to talk like gang members, why not go to the source?
Thatās just what Rockstar games did for their upcoming open-world crime opus Grand Theft Auto V. Spotted by Videogamer, the seriesā longtime radio host Lazlow went on Chicagoās WGN talk radio to talk about the game and revealed one of the secrets to Rockstarās audio authenticity.
You wouldnāt think that radio would be the best medium for a video-game previewāand youād be right! Thereās nothing quite as frustrating as listening to amicable WGN host Nick Diglio go on and on about how gorgeous and cool GTA V looks⦠while you canāt see them playing it.
All the same, Lazlow shared some interesting bits about the process of recording the gameās audio and writing the material for the talk radio stations. (GTA V will feature not one but two talk radio stations, all part of a massive, outstanding-sounding musical suite that I cannot wait to dive into.)
To make the game more authentic, āWe went to peopleās environments and recorded them in their homes, and we got a lot more material and a lot more authentic [material],ā Lazlow told Diglio, describing a moonshine-enhanced recording session with āoutlaw countryā radio-host Jesco White.
That approach went the other way, as wellāRockstar hired a contractor to help bring actual gang members into the studio to add authenticity to the ambient dialogue.
āIn the game, part of the element of the story is that thereās these gangs, these rival gangs,ā Lazlow said. āAnd thereās black gangs, thereās Latino gangs, and we recruited a guy who gets gang members, like actual gang members⦠I mean, El Salvadorian gang dudes with amazing tattoos, one of which literally had gotten out of prison the day before.
āAnd we brought these guys in to record the game characters, because, you know, you donāt want a goofy L.A. actor who went to a fancy school trying to be a hard gang member, thereās nothing worse than that. Just go find the real, terrifying people, and say [to them], āCan you come in here please?ā And they look at the lines and say, āI wouldnāt say that. If I was upset at another gang I wouldnāt say that.ā [And so you say] āThen say what you would say!'ā
āAuthenticity, you know?ā Lazlow said. ā[There were a lot of times] where we would just throw the script on the floor and be like, āThis thing we have is irrelevant, letās actually work out something real.'ā
Of course, this isnāt the first time a crime-fiction director or producer put those closest to their subject matter in front of a camera or behind a microphone. The Wireās David Simon famously cast a number of reformed Baltimore slingers, crooks and cops on his show, capturing a fascinating performance from Felicia āSnoopā Pearson, who sadly wound up going back to jail on drug charges after the show wrapped.
While imitators may try to mimic Rockstarās uncanny knack for ambient dialogue, no one comes close to the variety and often uncanny authenticity of the GTA gamesā chatter. Canāt say Rockstar doesnāt go the extra mile.
Grand Theft Auto V [WGN Chicago Talk Radio]