Pokemon Dubbing - Indonesia
A young woman named Risa Sarasvati, a theater student who worked part-time at a radio station, auditioned. She was a die-hard fan of the old VHS dubs. She remembered Pak Bambang’s gruff Satoshi. For her audition, she read a scene where May (Haruka) first sees her Torchic.
Ash Ketchum—renamed simply "Satoshi" after the Japanese creator, a bizarre hybrid of dubs—sounded like a 35-year-old chain-smoking uncle from Surabaya trying to imitate a teenager. His battle cry, "Pikachu, serangan kilat!" (Pikachu, lightning attack!), was delivered with such gruff, gravelly intensity that you half-expected him to ask for a kretek cigarette afterwards. Pokemon Dubbing Indonesia
It wasn't the pristine, high-definition version the Japanese or Americans saw. It was something rawer. A third-generation copy of the English dub, with the English text clumsily covered by a white box and replaced with clunky, all-caps Indonesian words. The opening theme song, "Gotta Catch 'Em All!" was left in English, a strange, foreign chant that every kid mangled with pride. A young woman named Risa Sarasvati, a theater