This was the era of the "VHS-dub." Unofficial, unlicensed, and unforgettable. A man named Pak Bambang, a former radio announcer turned electronics seller in Glodok, Jakarta, was one of its accidental architects. With a cheap microphone, a borrowed VCR, and a team of his friends—a noodle vendor, a high school teacher, and his own wife, Ibu Dewi—he would record new audio over the silenced English tracks.
Risa fought back. She invited the Japanese producer to a school in a Jakarta kampung . They sat on a plastic tarp, eating kerupuk , and watched a room full of 50 children scream with joy every time Risa’s Pikachu shouted, "Satoshi, jangan bodoh, belok kiri!" (Satoshi, don't be stupid, turn left!).
The call went out. They needed voice actors. And they needed them fast.
She got the job. But she wasn't Satoshi. She was the voice of Pikachu.
(Don't touch my friend.)
"Torchic isn't just cute," she said. "It's new . It's scared. But it's also brave." She then delivered the line not as a coddling owner, but as a big sister: "Kamu takut? Ayo, kita lakukan ini bersama-sama. Berdiri di belakangku." (Are you scared? Come on, let's do this together. Stand behind me.)
That line became legendary. By 2002, the Pokémon Company International had caught on. Lawyers descended. The illegal VHS dubs vanished overnight. Pak Bambang’s stall was raided, his tapes crushed. A generation mourned. Kids were left with either the untouchable English-dubbed version on cable (a luxury few had) or silence.