Partially. He did show remorse by telling my associate he felt bad. He just didn't feel bad enough to say it to me. Chris is so lazy other people have to apologize on his behalf.
Also probably him trying to avoid feeling actually remorseful by telling you directly to your face about it. He is still a self-important prick under the autism after all.
But how recently was this ?
In any case I think sonichu projects would be easier to convince Chris about because you can make pretty much everything up (fake company, fake email etc etc) but an established IP like MLP has more available sources for Chris to check how real the offer is.
Again your coming to him with an offer to make money not an offer to work.
When he was, arguably, less insane, people still managed to trick Chris into thinking the guy from
Nintendo was communicating directly with him.
Of course, I have to wonder how he'd react if somebody came to him saying they were from the Filly Funtasia show - a Chinese knock-off version of MLP that apparently never got off the ground beyond some blindbag toys and a barely functional website.
I'm still amazed though at how Chris does not understand
Chris doesn't understand
anything really. I doubt these days he could even put together a half-decent deck of Yu-Gi-Oh! or Pokemon cards like he could in the past.
Professional VAs both male and female also must have a wide vocal range. Chris thinks you just arrive at some studio in a limo and there's fanatic women outside waiting for an autograph; you go inside, record a few lines in funny voices, and you get to go outside and trib with fans afterward.
Not only that, but Chris thinks he can get a VA job doing a
female voice despite being a man. Even doing his falsetto voice is going to destroy his vocal cords and that's just in casual use.
He's just fucked no matter what here, since he can't do high pitched voices reliably - there's a reason young boys in cartoons are voiced by
women if not actual young boys. I remember being shocked as a kid when I learned Tommy Pickles from
Rugrats was voiced by a woman - coincidentally, also Tara Strong.