
Articles tagged with: barack obama
Barack Obama Voice Artist Ben Campbell Appears on ABC's Jimmy Kimmel Live
KNIX radio host of Ben & Matt in the Morning Ben Campbell, an accomplished voice impressionist with dozens of characters, lent his Barack Obama impression to ABC's Jimmy Kimmel Live on behalf of Politicos Comedy Brigade on Friday. The comedy sketch on Jimmy Kimmel's popular late night show poked fun at a scene from George W. Bush's Presidential Library dedication, during which Barbara Bush and Barack Obama whispered back and forth while laughing during Condolleezza Rice's speech.
Click here to book Barack Obama voice artist Ben Campbell for a voice over project or production. for a voice over project or production.
Barack Obama Impersonator Louis Ortiz Featured In January 2012 Edition Of WASHINGTONIAN Magazine In Exposé On Presidential Encounters
WASHINGTONIAN - People & Politics
Presidential Encounters: Driving Reagan, Caddying for Clinton, Playing Obama, and More
What it’s like to ferry the President around town, move into the White House, make a living impersonating the chief executive—and more tales of encounters with the commander in chief.
January 2012 Edition - By Shane Harris, Carol Ross Joynt, Libby Copeland, Mary Yarrison, and Luke Mullins
Driving Ronald Reagan
Joe LaSorsa, a retired Secret Service agent, drove the presidential limousine for Reagan in 1984.
When you’re driving a 13,000-pound armored vehicle, there’s a slew of idiosyncrasies. The bulletproof windows are made of thick glass, and you have to get used to the depth distortion when you’re looking through it. You can get bleary-eyed, but you get used to it. Then there’s the weight factor. You have to learn what speed you can take a corner to make it comfortable for the President so he isn’t sliding around in the back.
There’s no chatting in the limo. If the President wants something, he talks to the detail leader, who sits in the right front seat. As the driver, you’re part of the evacuation team should something happen. So you need to be ready to get the President to safety should someone start shooting.
When I drove for Reagan, there was a lot of routine travel in Washington. You have routes that you run consistently—to a hotel, the Capitol. But when the President visits another city, we go four, five, even six days in advance. We drive the routes he’ll use and look for construction, obstructions, potential security issues. His motorcade affects a city’s traffic, so the local police always have input. The day before the President arrives, we drive the routes two or three times. The Secret Service prides itself on keeping the President on time.
—As told to Shane Harris
Living in the Johnson White House
Lynda Bird Johnson Robb is a daughter of former President Lyndon Baines Johnson.
I moved into the White House in January 1964, when I was 19. I had a wonderful room, the one Caroline Kennedy had lived in, overlooking Pennsylvania Avenue. I wanted to find out all the famous people who had stayed in my room, so I started asking everyone, even President Eisenhower, who was visiting Daddy one day. He said, “I think Queen Elizabeth’s lady-in-waiting stayed in that room.”
I was looking for somebody more important, so I kept researching. I found out that little Willie Lincoln died in that room and then the Lincolns locked it up, never to go in it again. The White House curator also told me that after President Lincoln died, my room was where they performed the autopsy. After that, I didn’t want to learn anything more.
I was friends with the Secret Service. They are around you on eight-hour shifts, three people to a shift. I would call down and say, “I want to go to a bookstore,” and they would go with me. They liked me because I also liked to go to football games. I never appreciated enough that I didn’t have to drive or find a place to park. That was one of the nicest things.
That and the White House operators. They could find anybody. Literally. We would say, “Could you please get so-and-so on the phone for me?” and they would track her down, wherever she was.
I didn’t leave anything behind when I moved out. No carved initials, no secret messages. But when my firstborn, Lucinda, was a baby, I pushed her buggy through all the rooms and took pictures so she would have a memory of her time there.
—As told to Carol Ross Joynt
Getting a Pardon From George W. Bush
Leslie Collier is a farmer just outside Charleston, Missouri.
It was November 2008.
I work at a cattle sale in Patton, Missouri, every Monday, and we were sorting a big herd of cattle when my cell phone rang. It was the White House. A lady informed me that I had been pardoned by President Bush. It was quite a shock.
A buddy of mine was helping me sort the cattle. He looked at me and said, “What was all that about?” I said, “I just got a presidential pardon.” He said, “You got a presidential what?”
The pardon was for an eagle-poisoning incident in 1993. We had lots of coyotes, and I came up with the bright idea to get rid of some of them. I put out poison, and it did kill a bunch of coyotes. I didn’t realize that if another animal eats one that’s been poisoned, it’ll die too. Never really thought about bald eagles. Hadn’t seen any over there. But some eagles ate the dead coyotes. The first one was found by a guy fishing on the Mississippi River. A few days went by, they found another one.
A local conservation agent called and told me they’d found a dead eagle. I was very concerned. I always liked bald eagles. When I was a little ol’ kid, we’d go over on the Mississippi River and it was really unusual to see a bald eagle. When you did, man, you thought it was something.
For a while, it looked like they were going to put me in jail. In the end, I paid a big fine and was on two years’ probation. If you’re a convicted felon, you’re banned from owning a firearm for life. I probably had nine or ten guns at the time. My dad had to come get them.
Lanie Black was my state representative. I’ve known Lanie for several years. He knew what kind of person I was and that I regretted what I’d done. He worked with Jo Ann Emerson, who’s our congresslady. Catherine Hanaway—she kind of ran George Bush’s campaign in the state of Missouri—she was involved toward the end. She called Lanie and said, “I just want to know what kind of fellow this guy is. Tell me all about him.” And so Lanie did. And she told him, “Well, it looks like this thing’s gonna happen for y’all.”
To me, what was really unusual is President Bush had absolutely nothing to gain by pardoning me. Right after it happened, a reporter called and wanted to know what my political connection was. I said, “I started with my state representative.”
She said, “That’s not very close to the President.”
I said,“Well, no, ma’am.”
—As told to Libby Copeland
Caddying for Bill Clinton
James D. Spaid was a caddy at Robert Trent Jones golf club in Gainesville, Virginia, from 1992 to 2003.
I took a job as a caddy as a stopgap after ending my military career. I was relatively new to the club when President Clinton first came.
I didn’t know how it would go because, honestly, I didn’t vote for the guy. But I can’t say I was nervous. In the ’80s, I had been assigned to the Presidential Escort—for Ronald Reagan and then George Bush—so I was used to being near the President.
Still, nothing that’s required of you in the Presidential Escort is conducive to a good round of golf. The formality and the tension don’t work—golf is supposed to be a time to relax. In the Presidential Escort I couldn’t stand at ease, joke around, or say anything but “Yes sir, Mr. President, sir.”
Our first round together was uneventful. It’s the second time that sticks in my head. It had been several weeks since the first, but he walked up like we were old friends. He’s putting his arm around me, pulling me in close, and I’m trying not to let on that I’m uncomfortable. And then he says, “James, how is your son Zach doing? He must be what—just over eight months now?” He was right, down to the week, and I was so surprised that he remembered my name, much less my son’s. I always say that if you want to get to know somebody, you take him out on the golf course. What I learned about President Clinton was that he was very generous and kind.
—As told to Mary Yarrison
Impersonating Barack Obama
Louis Ortiz, 41, performs with a troop of political impersonators called the Politicos Comedy Brigade.
Nobody needed hope and change more than I did in 2008. After I lost my job as a phone technician, I was sleeping on my parents’ couch. But then a funny thing happened: People started telling me I looked like presidential candidate Barack Obama. I didn’t notice the resemblance at first—I thought people were just making fun of my big ears. But once I shaved my facial hair, I could see America’s future 44th President in the mirror.
I learned that presidential look-alikes can make decent money. So I bought my first suit, had headshots taken, and found a talent agent. After Obama was elected, my phone started ringing. I played Obama in a South Korean commercial and a Japanese film. I even performed for the Dalai Lama in Australia.
Looking like Obama is easy, but it takes practice to impersonate him. I studied his speeches and worked with veteran Bill Clinton impersonator Tim Watters. Now I can make as much as $10,000 for a single event, which allows me to support my fiancée and two children in Florida the way I never could before the 2008 election.
The funny thing is how many people treat me like I really am the President. After Osama bin Laden was killed, people were high-fiving me on the street. But I also get criticized for Obamacare.
I don’t care what John Boehner says, President Obama is definitely a job creator. I’m living proof.
—As told to Luke Mullins
Barack Obama Impersonator Louis Ortiz Appears On ESPN As Guest Star For Inauguration Day Premier of New Deportes Show Redes
Barack Obama impersonator Louis Ortiz made a prime time appearance on ESPN for the premiere of their new Deportes show Redes. Redes, hosted by sports journalist Barak Fever, makes history in that it is one of the very first social media driven television shows. The show, which made its premier on Inauguration day, featured Louis Ortiz as Barack Obama passing on the torch to another Barack, or "Barak" as the case may be. The video of the appearance is forthcoming, but in the meantime check out this photo of Obama impersonator Louis Ortiz on the ESPN set of Redes with Barak Fever.
BBC News Features Barack Obama Impersonator Louis Ortiz On Front Page - Interview Is #3 Most Watched Video On BBC News For Inauguration Day
Louis Ortiz, the world's best impersonator of President Barack Obama, continues to surge on the day of Mr. Obama's Second Inauguration.
An interview with Louis Ortiz by BBC was featured on the front page of BBC News throughout the evening, vaulting it to the #3 most watched video on the BBC News site, higher even than President Obama's oath of office, though it trails Beyonce's rendition of the National Anthem by one spot.
Ortiz was also featured by BBC News on their Inauguration Timeline.
From BBC: President Obama lookalike Louis Ortiz has told the BBC that he is happy that the president has been re-elected because it secures him "at least four more years of work".
Hundreds of thousands of supporters gathered to see the real Mr Obama be sworn in by Chief Justice John Roberts in Washington DC.
Khalil Senghori, an Obama supporter, told the BBC's Laura Trevelyan that the atmosphere on the Mall was "wonderful".
Barack Obama Impersonator Louis Ortiz Invited Into Inauguration Day Press Box In Washington DC
Louis Ortiz, the world's best Barack Obama impersonator, spent Inauguration Day on the National Mall in Washington, DC where he was a guest of the media in the Inauguration Press Box. Ortiz did live interviews with ABC, C-SPAN, BBC, Al-Jazeera, FOX Washington, WTTG, and many others.
After greeting the media, Louis Ortiz stood by as Barack Obama was sworn in as President of the United States before hundreds of thousands of onlookers.
All of us at Politicos Comedy Brigade congratulate Louis Ortiz and wish him the best during the next four years of his Presidency.
Barack Obama Impersonator Louis Ortiz Interviewed by WTTG FOX 5 Washington DC From Inauguration
Wisdom Martin of FOX 5 DC took a few minutes to interview the top attraction of the Inauguration Day Press Box on the National Mall in Washington, DC. Barack Obama impersonator fielded questions from Martin among throngs of supporters just before the Inauguration of the real President Barack Obama.
NBC Washington DC Covers Barack Obama Impersonator Louis Ortiz On Inauguration Day At National Mall
NBC Washington: Obama Impersonator Draws Attention at Inauguration, a man who makes a lot of money as a President Barack Obama impersonator was in D.C. Monday for the real Commander in Chief's inauguration.
Barack Obama Impersonator Louis Ortiz Interview Covered By Media Bistro On Inauguration Day
By Merrill Knox, Media Bistro
While reporting on President Obama’s second inauguration from the National Mall, WTTG reporter Wisdom Martin came across a professional Presidential look-alike.
“I’m from Channel 5 here in DC, and you look just like Barack Obama,” Martin told the man, who was swamped with people attempting to take a picture with him. “What do you mean? I’m Barack Obama,” the look-alike, Louis Ortiz, responded.
Ortiz called his life since Obama was elected “a roller-coaster ride,” telling Martin, “Not too many downs. Many ups. South Korea, Japan, Australia, corporate events, IBM, the Dalai Lama, Steve Forbes. It’s just nonstop.”
While reporting on President Obama’s second inauguration from the National Mall, WTTG reporter Wisdom Martin came across a professional Presidential look-alike.
“I’m from Channel 5 here in DC, and you look just like Barack Obama,” Martin told the man, who was swamped with people attempting to take a picture with him. “What do you mean? I’m Barack Obama,” the look-alike, Louis Ortiz, responded.
Ortiz called his life since Obama was elected “a roller-coaster ride,” telling Martin, “Not too many downs. Many ups. South Korea, Japan, Australia, corporate events, IBM, the Dalai Lama, Steve Forbes. It’s just nonstop.”
Barack Obama Impersonator Louis Ortiz Covered By My FOX 5 New York From National Mall On Inauguration Day
President Obama impersonator Louis Ortiz in D.C. for Inauguration Day
WASHINGTON - Professional impersonator Louis Ortiz has put his physical resemblance to President Obama to good use. Over the last several years, Ortiz has carved a living out of his uncanny resemblance to the Commander in Chief. On Inauguration Day 2013, Ortiz was spotted in Washington, D.C. on the National Mall during the President's swearing in ceremony.
WASHINGTON - Professional impersonator Louis Ortiz has put his physical resemblance to President Obama to good use. Over the last several years, Ortiz has carved a living out of his uncanny resemblance to the Commander in Chief. On Inauguration Day 2013, Ortiz was spotted in Washington, D.C. on the National Mall during the President's swearing in ceremony.
Barack Obama Impersonator Louis Ortiz Featured On MSNBC and NBCNews.com
Obama’s not from Kenya. He’s from the Bronx
NBCNews.com and MSNBC Correspondent Trymaine Lee
As the election returns began to trickle in last November, Louis Ortiz, a laid-off telephone man from the Bronx, bit his nails, squeezed his eyes shut and prayed like he’d never prayed before. But when he opened his eyes, all he saw on TV was a wave of Republican red sweeping up from Texas and into the Midwest. “It was too stressful,” said Ortiz. “I couldn’t deal. So I just went to bed.”
Later that night Ortiz was shaken to his feet by a chorus of whoops, hollers and the blare of Spanish music rolling in from his parents’ living room. Ortiz’s mother bounded breathlessly into the room.
“Cito, Cito,” she screamed. “We got Ohio, we got Ohio! Obama won Ohio! It’s over! We won!” Ortiz double-checked his mother’s Electoral College math and let out a scream of his own.
“It was like I was living in a parallel universe with Obama. We had to win,” Ortiz told MSNBC.com on Thursday, standing on a cold, busy corner in the Bronx. “And it was like him getting reelected was the same as me getting reelected. He was fighting for a second chance and so was I.”
If Barack Obama’s presidency has directly benefited an individual American in any real, tangible way, it’s Ortiz, whose resemblance to the president has delivered him from unemployment and near pennilessness to a relatively lucrative career as an Obama impersonator— “Bronx Obama.”
For Ortiz, a second Obama term means a second lease on life, giving him another four years in which to parlay Obama’s political success into his own economic survival, booking paid gigs across the country and as far away as South Korea and even an audience with the Dali Lama. “It’s like I’m in the Twilight Zone,” Ortiz said. “And I love it!”
A filmmaker is currently shooting a documentary called The Audacity of Louis Ortiz; it’s scheduled for release later this year. “Bronx Obama” recently signed on with a talent management agency, William Gold Entertainment, that has bolstered his status and put money, resources and know-how behind the “look-alike thing” Ortiz says he was doing for much of Obama’s first term. He spends hours a day honing his craft and has taken the occasional acting class. He’s worked as part of a group of other impersonators, including a surreal-sounding appearance with a Bill Clinton impersonator and a Donald Trump lookalike moderating a debate with fake Sarah Palin and fake Mitt Romney. His weeks are filled with corporate events and fundraisers, public appearances and media interviews. His fees can be in the hundreds or the thousands, and he’s finally making a decent income. “I live on a plane,” Ortiz said.
Just four years ago life wasn’t all planes, trains, and corporate cash. Back then Ortiz was living small: no income, no prospects. He’d been fired from his job at the phone company about a year earlier and was fighting to get it back. He lost his health insurance and the lack of medical attention exacerbated his multiple sclerosis. He was locked in a nasty custody battle for his then-12-year-old daughter. And the legal costs for the court case involving his daughter and arbitration for his job were mounting.
“I just didn’t know how I was going to make it. And didn’t think I would. I was just sitting down with my little bit of hope,” Ortiz said. “I was really going nuts.” Ortiz was used to providing for himself and helping to support his family, including his daughter, who didn’t live with him at the time. He said he’d always held a job but found himself, for the first time, unable to make ends meet.
“And then here comes this shining star from Hawaii.”
It was the summer of 2008: Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton were battling for the Democratic presidential nomination, and a couple of his drinking buddies at a local bar pointed out Ortiz’s resemblance to Obama, who was on the cover of one of New York City’s tabloid newspapers. Ortiz had the ears if nothing else, and there was something about the way his eyebrows hung closely over his eyes, the way they squint when he laughed hard or smiled wide.
He didn’t have much to lose, so he shaved his goatee, slipped on a suit and tie and picked up as much of Obama’s cadence as he could.
Where Louis Ortiz, always affable and social, had his light dimmed by hard times, Bronx Obama shined, he said. Bronx Obama stopped traffic. Strangers were asking to take pictures with him. And people were actually paying for him to appear at local events.
Obama’s election in 2008 solidified his role. Ortiz remembers the moment well. He said he’d suited up and grabbed a couple of his buddies to ride with him into Manhattan. (An entourage of men in suits and dark shades helps him get in character.) But as the group stopped at a Bronx gas station for orange juice, gunshots rang out. Then screaming.
Was it a shootout? An attempted assassination? Nope, word had gotten out that Obama had defeated John McCain to become the 44th President of the United States.
“People were cheering and shooting all over the Bronx,” Ortiz said. Later, the group drove into Manhattan where Ortiz was greeted with cheers and backslaps.
Careerwise, things picked up even more after the election. But Ortiz still had one foot in an imaginary Oval Office and the other in his real life in the Bronx. He heard from his lawyer that he wouldn’t get back his old job or the $400,000 back pay he was asking for. He cried for about three weeks, he says: “Niagara Falls.” Then he was asked to do an episode of This American Life. His appearance on the show led to more press and more paying gigs. “When I think back, the lowest point—that I wasn’t getting my job back—turned out to be the highest point,” Ortiz said. “I got my answer and I decided to go full force with the Obama thing.” He began studying his competition, the Jay Lamonts and Reggie Browns who had built up big followings and big bank accounts doing their Obama impersonations.
Earlier this week, about an hour before his train to Connecticut for a shoot with ESPN was scheduled to leave, Ortiz walked into the station and checked the departure board. It’d be a long day, a long couple of weeks really. He’d be at ESPN most of the day. Then it would be back to the Bronx before a gig in New Jersey the next day, then off to Washington, D.C., to schmooze-up the inauguration crowd. Then it would be back to Jersey for a fundraiser at a church on Martin Luther King, Jr. Day.
“Every once in a while I sit back and say, am I sitting in first class right now on the way to D.C. or some other city to do a show for a bunch of CPA’s?” Ortiz said, breaking slowly into a huge Obama-ish grin. “Yes, yes I am.”
NBCNews.com and MSNBC Correspondent Trymaine Lee
As the election returns began to trickle in last November, Louis Ortiz, a laid-off telephone man from the Bronx, bit his nails, squeezed his eyes shut and prayed like he’d never prayed before. But when he opened his eyes, all he saw on TV was a wave of Republican red sweeping up from Texas and into the Midwest. “It was too stressful,” said Ortiz. “I couldn’t deal. So I just went to bed.”
Later that night Ortiz was shaken to his feet by a chorus of whoops, hollers and the blare of Spanish music rolling in from his parents’ living room. Ortiz’s mother bounded breathlessly into the room.
“Cito, Cito,” she screamed. “We got Ohio, we got Ohio! Obama won Ohio! It’s over! We won!” Ortiz double-checked his mother’s Electoral College math and let out a scream of his own.
“It was like I was living in a parallel universe with Obama. We had to win,” Ortiz told MSNBC.com on Thursday, standing on a cold, busy corner in the Bronx. “And it was like him getting reelected was the same as me getting reelected. He was fighting for a second chance and so was I.”
If Barack Obama’s presidency has directly benefited an individual American in any real, tangible way, it’s Ortiz, whose resemblance to the president has delivered him from unemployment and near pennilessness to a relatively lucrative career as an Obama impersonator— “Bronx Obama.”
For Ortiz, a second Obama term means a second lease on life, giving him another four years in which to parlay Obama’s political success into his own economic survival, booking paid gigs across the country and as far away as South Korea and even an audience with the Dali Lama. “It’s like I’m in the Twilight Zone,” Ortiz said. “And I love it!”
A filmmaker is currently shooting a documentary called The Audacity of Louis Ortiz; it’s scheduled for release later this year. “Bronx Obama” recently signed on with a talent management agency, William Gold Entertainment, that has bolstered his status and put money, resources and know-how behind the “look-alike thing” Ortiz says he was doing for much of Obama’s first term. He spends hours a day honing his craft and has taken the occasional acting class. He’s worked as part of a group of other impersonators, including a surreal-sounding appearance with a Bill Clinton impersonator and a Donald Trump lookalike moderating a debate with fake Sarah Palin and fake Mitt Romney. His weeks are filled with corporate events and fundraisers, public appearances and media interviews. His fees can be in the hundreds or the thousands, and he’s finally making a decent income. “I live on a plane,” Ortiz said.
Just four years ago life wasn’t all planes, trains, and corporate cash. Back then Ortiz was living small: no income, no prospects. He’d been fired from his job at the phone company about a year earlier and was fighting to get it back. He lost his health insurance and the lack of medical attention exacerbated his multiple sclerosis. He was locked in a nasty custody battle for his then-12-year-old daughter. And the legal costs for the court case involving his daughter and arbitration for his job were mounting.
“I just didn’t know how I was going to make it. And didn’t think I would. I was just sitting down with my little bit of hope,” Ortiz said. “I was really going nuts.” Ortiz was used to providing for himself and helping to support his family, including his daughter, who didn’t live with him at the time. He said he’d always held a job but found himself, for the first time, unable to make ends meet.
“And then here comes this shining star from Hawaii.”
It was the summer of 2008: Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton were battling for the Democratic presidential nomination, and a couple of his drinking buddies at a local bar pointed out Ortiz’s resemblance to Obama, who was on the cover of one of New York City’s tabloid newspapers. Ortiz had the ears if nothing else, and there was something about the way his eyebrows hung closely over his eyes, the way they squint when he laughed hard or smiled wide.
He didn’t have much to lose, so he shaved his goatee, slipped on a suit and tie and picked up as much of Obama’s cadence as he could.
Where Louis Ortiz, always affable and social, had his light dimmed by hard times, Bronx Obama shined, he said. Bronx Obama stopped traffic. Strangers were asking to take pictures with him. And people were actually paying for him to appear at local events.
Obama’s election in 2008 solidified his role. Ortiz remembers the moment well. He said he’d suited up and grabbed a couple of his buddies to ride with him into Manhattan. (An entourage of men in suits and dark shades helps him get in character.) But as the group stopped at a Bronx gas station for orange juice, gunshots rang out. Then screaming.
Was it a shootout? An attempted assassination? Nope, word had gotten out that Obama had defeated John McCain to become the 44th President of the United States.
“People were cheering and shooting all over the Bronx,” Ortiz said. Later, the group drove into Manhattan where Ortiz was greeted with cheers and backslaps.
Careerwise, things picked up even more after the election. But Ortiz still had one foot in an imaginary Oval Office and the other in his real life in the Bronx. He heard from his lawyer that he wouldn’t get back his old job or the $400,000 back pay he was asking for. He cried for about three weeks, he says: “Niagara Falls.” Then he was asked to do an episode of This American Life. His appearance on the show led to more press and more paying gigs. “When I think back, the lowest point—that I wasn’t getting my job back—turned out to be the highest point,” Ortiz said. “I got my answer and I decided to go full force with the Obama thing.” He began studying his competition, the Jay Lamonts and Reggie Browns who had built up big followings and big bank accounts doing their Obama impersonations.
Earlier this week, about an hour before his train to Connecticut for a shoot with ESPN was scheduled to leave, Ortiz walked into the station and checked the departure board. It’d be a long day, a long couple of weeks really. He’d be at ESPN most of the day. Then it would be back to the Bronx before a gig in New Jersey the next day, then off to Washington, D.C., to schmooze-up the inauguration crowd. Then it would be back to Jersey for a fundraiser at a church on Martin Luther King, Jr. Day.
“Every once in a while I sit back and say, am I sitting in first class right now on the way to D.C. or some other city to do a show for a bunch of CPA’s?” Ortiz said, breaking slowly into a huge Obama-ish grin. “Yes, yes I am.”




































































































