logo
Child star who sang 'washing machines live longer with Calgon' has new job

Child star who sang 'washing machines live longer with Calgon' has new job

Daily Mirror08-05-2025

Seb Sargent, 21, went viral mimicking train voices on TikTok - but he started young, singing the Calgon jingle at just two-years-old that foreshadowed his future career
Seb Sargent's voice is probably more familiar to you than his face. At just 21, the Salford-based broadcaster and voice artist has lent his vocal cords to everything from rapper Central Cee's stage shows to shop announcements and official railway messages.
But it all began with a famous jingle - delivered during nap time at daycare when Seb, aged two-and-a-half, sat bolt upright and sang: "Washing machines live longer with Calgon!"

Now, with over 57,000 TikTok followers, Seb blends behind-the-scenes voiceover work with viral impressions of famous UK transport voices. "People call me the 'voice of the UK' or the 'voice of the trains,'" he laughs. "It's surreal."

Diagnosed with ADHD as a child, Seb credits his neurodivergence with fuelling his fast-paced life, which juggles voice gigs, songwriting, a Master's degree, journalism training, and restaurant shifts.
READ MORE: Elite star's new Netflix thriller is being called 'the worst movie ever' as viewers left furious
His early fascination with TV adverts and slogans turned into a career at just 13, when he recorded his first professional voiceover - a voicemail greeting for a wedding car hire company.
Seb's big break came at 18, when he recorded voiceovers for Central Cee's London Underground-themed sets at Parklife and Wireless festivals. "I was a uni fresher listening to his tracks at student nights," Seb recalls. "Next thing, my voice was echoing through stadium speakers."
Since then, his portfolio has expanded to include official work for the Department for Transport, including safety announcements for the rail network, and in-store messages for retailers like B&M.
But it was during the 2020 lockdown, out of boredom, that Seb found an online audience. A TikTok video mixing his real railway announcements with uncanny impressions of other voice artists quickly went viral.

"I made a spoof suggesting I was the single voice behind every train announcement. I'm not, of course - but people loved the idea," he says.
"I still don't confirm which bits are real and which are impressions. That's part of the fun."
One of his most popular videos shows Seb being recognised by a train manager on an Avanti West Coast service. Invited to take the mic, he delivered a live announcement at Manchester Piccadilly - first mimicking a fellow voice artist, then switching to his own voice.

"People were staring," he says. "They knew the voice but couldn't quite believe it was coming from me."
Despite his growing fame, Seb remains grounded. He recently graduated from Cardiff University with a journalism degree and is now pursuing a Master's in Salford while working shifts for the BBC.
"There's a running joke at work that I never shut up," he jokes.
Seb hopes to one day voice the Metrolink Bee Network in his home city. "That would be the dream," he says. "I'm already trying to convince them."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Adolescence actor Stephen Graham underwent 'scary' emergency op on plane
Adolescence actor Stephen Graham underwent 'scary' emergency op on plane

Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mirror

Adolescence actor Stephen Graham underwent 'scary' emergency op on plane

The actor and father of two experienced an unsettling health dilemma mid-flight to America, which resulted in an emergency operation on the plane Stephen Graham has opened up about the "scary" emergency operation he underwent while on a plane. Appearing on Late Night with Seth Meyers, the Adolescence actor spoke of a medical emergency that took place the last time he touched down in the States. After the host asked about his previous traumatic flight, Stephen responded by saying it was "a hell of an experience". ‌ He elaborated: "Look, I'm of a certain age, you know what I mean? You're a gentleman, like myself. I don't know; once you get over like 45, you tend to go to the toilet quite a lot of times." His storytelling made the crowd laugh and had viewers wondering where this story was going exactly. ‌ Graham went on to explain how many people opt to have a catheter fitted, which is something he himself had opted for. Ultimately , it was supposed to aid him in his bathroom habits, and he explained that after "three to four months", you should be experiencing "fewer trips to the toilet". Although the Netflix star found himself in a bit of an unusual situation on a flight 10,000 feet in the air when everything had been fine, right up until that point. He tells the late-night host about drinking water on the flight as usual, going to the toilet and suddenly not being able to pee. "I'm like, Oh, this doesn't feel right," he told Myers. "I knew I had to, and then silly Stephen thought, 'Oh, well, if I go back to my seat and I just keep drinking water, at some point it will happen.'" After going back to his seat and some time passing, he went back to the toilet and was shocked by what happened next. Graham said: "long story short, all of a sudden I went, but it was just pure blood," adding that it was "very scary". He further explained that he couldn't stop the sheer amount of blood and began to have a "slight panic attack". He admitted that the entire situation had made him quite emotional, but luck was on his side, as he remembers taking a selfie with a fan before the flight, who just happened to be a doctor. ‌ "He had another friend with him, who was a surgeon," the actor explained. "So I'm there, and I explain. He's like, 'Ok,' and the surgeon, Dr Haji, says, 'We can work this out.'" The entire area he was in was sterilised, and a catheter was pulled out of an emergency box. To put it bluntly, Graham said: "I drop my kecks, I get on the couch, and he performs a catheter operation there and then." And, once it was over and done with, the adolescence star took a selfie with the doctors and crew on board to remember the moment.

Addison Rae: Addison review – 2025's most refreshing star revels in pop's shallow pleasures
Addison Rae: Addison review – 2025's most refreshing star revels in pop's shallow pleasures

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Addison Rae: Addison review – 2025's most refreshing star revels in pop's shallow pleasures

When Madonna came to the height of her powers in the late 90s and early 00s, it felt as though she had perfected a new mode of pop stardom, making icy, complex and uncannily incisive records such as Ray of Light and Confessions on a Dance Floor. Those albums are powered by a gripping interplay between detachment and intensity; they sound, to me, like attempts to make pop albums without any sense of ego. As if she's saying: this isn't a Madonna record, it's a pop record. Addison Rae's exceptional debut album reminds me of that unimpeachable run of Madonna records, understanding that supreme confidence and exceptional taste can sell even the most unusual album. It's both familiar – Rae is an artist who unapologetically lives and dies by her references – and totally bold: I get the sense that she is less trying to say 'this is who I am' as much as 'this is what pop should be'. Rae's vision of pop is formally traditionalist – she loves big choruses, euphoric key changes, huge builds – but undeniably influenced by her past life as an inhabitant of content-creation HQ Hype House, after her dance videos made her one of the most-followed people on TikTok. The 24-year-old sees no cognitive dissonance in putting together seemingly mismatched aesthetic or emotional sensibilities, a quality that, to me, suggests supreme comfort with the practically dadaist experience of scrolling TikTok's For You page. Winsome opener New York explores frenetic Jersey club; on Headphones On, a warm-and-fuzzy 90s-style R&B track, she casually tosses off the lyric 'wish my mom and dad could've been in love' as if it was an intrusive thought she just had to let out. Although Addison covers a lot of ground musically, every song also sounds uncannily like it came out of the indie-electronica boom of the early 2010s; High Fashion, arguably the best song here, is a pitch-perfect throwback to early James Blake and second-album Mount Kimbie; Diet Pepsi is Lana Del Rey by way of Neon Indian. The record's remarkable coherence can be chalked up to the fact that Rae worked with the same writer-producer duo, Elvira Anderfjärd and Luka Kloser, on every song – a rare feat for a major-label pop debut, made rarer by the fact that big-budget pop records made exclusively by women are practically nonexistent. But a quick scan of Anderfjärd and Kloser's credits suggests that Rae is in the driver's seat here; neither of them has ever made a song as laconically pretty as the EDM-scented Summer Forever, or as girlishly menacing as FameIs a Gun. If Addison has a mission statement, it's on the latter: 'Tell me who I am – do I provoke you with my tone of innocence?' she asks at its outset. 'Don't ask too many questions, that is my one suggestion.' It's an invitation to take Rae's music at face value – there's no self-conscious dip into wilful silliness or laborious camp. Most of the time, Rae is stringing together vague abstractions in a way that shuns overinterpretation, like when she sings: 'No matter what I try to do / In times like these, it's how it has to be', or returns to the phrase 'Life's no fun through clear waters'. Addison arrives at a fortuitous time: Rae resists the 2020s impulse to intellectualise every pop album and is unencumbered by ham-fisted concepts, Easter eggs or ultra-prescriptive 'lore' that tells listeners what to think. Its casually incisive tone suggests Rae might be a great pop flâneuse in the vein of Madonna or Janet Jackson, drifting through the scene with alluring ease and a gimlet eye. But she'd probably tell me I'm overthinking it.

Major US star slammed as he plays to unimpressed UK arena and fans demand their money back
Major US star slammed as he plays to unimpressed UK arena and fans demand their money back

Scottish Sun

timean hour ago

  • Scottish Sun

Major US star slammed as he plays to unimpressed UK arena and fans demand their money back

Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) A MAJOR US star has been slammed by fans who have likened his concert to a 'child's talent show'. The rapper played to an unimpressed UK arena leaving fans demanding their money back. Sign up for the Entertainment newsletter Sign up 3 A major US star has been slammed by fans who likened his concert to a 'child's talent show' Credit: Tiktok/@laureng2044 Global superstar Nelly kicked off the European leg of his Where The Party At tour last month. He is making his way to through the UK shows this week. The 50-year-old was joined by other big names such as US singer Eve and rapper Fabolous. He just performed at Birmingham's Utilita Arena and at The O2 in London. Some members of the crowd took to social media to share videos of the concert, branding it 'awful' and the 'worst' they had ever been to. 'Remind me never to see a concert that's 2-4-1 on tickets- it was watching a child's talent show,' one user said. 'Was awful wasn't it,' replied another. A third penned: 'Is it possible to get a refund ? worst concert I've been to' 'I'm a Nelly fan but he was yelling and his hype men drowned him out entirely,' chimed a fourth. Nelly is still set to play in Manchester and Glasgow before finishing his euro stint in Dublin. Ashanti gives birth to first child with husband Nelly just two weeks after rapper was arrested for drug possession He is a Grammy Award winner and actor best known for Billboard No. 1 hits such as Hot in Herre and Dilemma. His real name is Cornell Iral Haynes Jr. The Texas born star spent much of his childhood and adulthood estranged from his father after his parents divorced when he was seven. He rose to fame in the early 2000s after his debut album Country Grammar sold over 8.4 million copies in the US. He dominated the hip-hop industry for years and was ranked as the number three Top Artist of the Decade (2000s) Billboard in December 2009. 3 The rapper rose to fame in the early 2000s Credit: Getty

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store