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Catrina Huskey and Amanda Fitzwater both work at the Butler County Health Department in Poplar Bluff. Catrina is an HIV case manager and Amanda is a prevention specialist.
Catrina Huskey and Amanda Fitzwater both work at the Butler County Health Department in Poplar Bluff. Catrina is an HIV case manager and Amanda is a prevention specialist.
Listen(33:52, 32.7 MB mp3, released 2013.02.04)It all comes down to this: Nash and his co-workers, having received warnings of something big and spooky about to happen, are unable to enjoy the Museum's big Halloween party. Their worried minds are soon made worrieder by the appearance of several ghosts, a medium and a strange mix of highly sinister characters. It soon becomes apparent that there is a turf war in progress - and the Battle For The Museum has already begun...Is it this boring in YOUR office?Written by Charles RussellPerry Whittle as Keith Nash Amanda Fitzwater as Helene Mancuso Captain John Tadrzak as Professor Stein Alasdair Stuart as Casey M. Sieiro Garcia as Mala Monroe April Sadowski as Angie/Adrienne Rebecca Thrasher as Jane Marleigh Norton as Alexis Jon Specht as Damien H. Keith Lyons as Larry Audio Élan as Miranda/Volka Chip Joel as various goons and David Ault as Argus Original music composed by Joey Stuckey and Kevin MacLeodThis series is produced by Elie HirschmanPost-production work by Greg Wilkinson"Every man is a warrior inside. But the choice to fight is his own." - John Eldredge
ListenIt's business as usual in the Johnson City Regional Museum: the new head of marketing is driving folks to distraction with her over-commercialism, Mala Monroe and Professor Stein bond over common interests, Casey is assigned to do manual labor for "the greater good", and the levels of supernatural energy are slowly rising to critical levels in the Vanmount Theater Annex.Is it this boring in YOUR office?Written by Charles RussellFeatured in our cast were:Perry Whittle as Keith NashAmanda Fitzwater as Helene MancusoCaptain John Tadrzak as Professor SteinAlasdair Stuart as CaseyM. Sieiro Garcia as Mala MonroeApril Sadowski as Angie/AdrienneRebecca Thrasher as JaneSally Wiget as the voice of the Tour GuideMarleigh Norton as AlexisJon Specht as Damienand David Ault as ArgusOriginal music composed by Joey Stuckey and Kevin MacLeodThis series is produced by Elie HirschmanPost-production work by Greg WilkinsonThe executive producer for Darker Projects is Eric BusbyPlease note: all veil-piercing in this episode was performed by qualified supernatural beings. Do NOT attempt this at home.
Her Last Breath Before Wakingby A.C. WiseShe is a city haunted by a ghost.When the architect dreams, her sinews are suspension bridges, her ribs vaulting arches, her bones steel I-beams, and her blood concrete. In her dreams, the city is pristine and perfect. She is perfect.The architect has a lover who is afraid to sleep. At night, the lover lays her head against the architect’s chest. Instead of breath and pulse, she hears the rumble of high-speed trains.Full transcript after the cut.----more----Hello! Welcome to GlitterShip episode 21 for February 2, 2016. I am your host, Keffy, and I'm super excited to be sharing this story with you.Today's story is "Her Last Breath Before Waking" by A.C. Wise.Before I get to the story, I just wanted to mention that GlitterShip is currently eligible for the Best Fancast category of the Hugo Awards. I wasn't really sure if GlitterShip was a "fancast" or a "semiprozine" but I thought I should check just in case anyone asked me.That said, if you like GlitterShip, the best thing you can do is tell your friends to start listening. If they're interested in LGBTQIA short fiction but are unable to access audio (or just don't like it!), they can read all of the GlitterShip stories on our website at glittership.comA.C. Wise's short stories have appeared in Clarkesworld, Apex, Shimmer, and, The Year's Best Dark Fantasy and Horror 2015, among other places. Her debut collection, The Ultra Fabulous Glitter Squadron Saves the World Again, was published by Lethe Press in October 2015. In addition to her fiction, she co-edits Unlikely Story, and contributes a monthly Women to Read: Where to Start column to SF Signal. Find her online at www.acwise.net.Our guest reader this week is Amanda Fitzwater.Amanda Fitzwater is a dragon wearing a human meat suit from Christchurch, New Zealand. A graduate of Clarion 2014, she’s had stories published in Lethe Press’ “Heiresses of Russ 2014”, “Daughters of Frankenstein: Lesbian Mad Scientists”, and recently an essay in Twelfth Planet Press’ “Letters to Tiptree”. Look out for stories coming soon from Shimmer Magazine and The Future Fire. As a narrator, her voice has been heard across the Escape Artists Network, on Redstone SF, and Interzone. She tweets under her penname as @AJFitzwater Her Last Breath Before Wakingby A.C. WiseShe is a city haunted by a ghost.When the architect dreams, her sinews are suspension bridges, her ribs vaulting arches, her bones steel I-beams, and her blood concrete. In her dreams, the city is pristine and perfect. She is perfect.The architect has a lover who is afraid to sleep. At night, the lover lays her head against the architect’s chest. Instead of breath and pulse, she hears the rumble of high-speed trains.The architect stands on the balcony of her close apartment looking over the city-that-is and seeing the city-that-might-be. She smokes thin cigarettes and mentally replaces the burnt-out factory and its blind-eye smashed windows with a row of gleaming, silver towers. Once she builds them, her towers will scrape the stars.“The city is rotten,” she says; she doesn’t turn around.“I like the city,” says the architect’s lover, so softly she might not be heard. “It’s where we met.”But the architect isn’t listening. Her hands sketch forms on the air, rewriting the view with shimmering art deco buildings, glistening fountains, and wide, chilly plazas.The architect’s lover creeps outside to stand beside the architect. She hates visiting the architect here; it’s too high. The wind plucks at her. She doesn’t like seeing the city spread out this way, reduced to brick and wood, stone and smudges of light. Her own apartment is close to the ground, where she can step out the door and feel worn cobblestones beneath her feet.Sometimes, even though she knows the architect would disapprove, the architect’s lover goes outside barefoot. She stands in her doorway and breathes in the stench of factories, blanketing the city in smoke. She breathes in the crackling, golden scent of fresh bread from the bakery on the corner. She breathes in the rotting geraniums in her neighbor’s window box. But most of all, she breathes in the stink of the river, because once upon a time it smelled like the promise of a new world.On those days, the architect’s lover curls her toes around the worn-smooth cobbles and drinks in the life of all the people who came before her — every horse’s hoof, every shoeless urchin, every factory-man and whore, every rainfall wearing the cobbles as round as they are now. It makes the city feel alive. It comforts her.More than once, she has tried to show the architect her city, the one she sees with her feet curled around the cobblestones, but the architect only frowns. The architect has plans. The architect’s lover would re-write the city with new-forged memories; the architect would re-write it with glass and chrome.The architect slides her arm around her lover’s waist, drawing her closer to the view, but she’s still looking at the city.“One day this will be beautiful,” the architect says.The architect’s lover looks at the architect instead of the city — the plane of her cheekbones, the sweeping lines of her neck and throat, the dark spiral of her hair.“It’s beautiful now,” she says.In the morning, the architect’s lover finds plans scattered throughout the apartment. She lay beside the architect all night, listening to the high-speed rumble of dreams moving under the architect’s skin. The architect couldn’t have drawn the plans. She must have shed them from her body in her sleep like unwanted skin.In two weeks, a tower rises where the architect’s hands traced the air, even though there have been no work crews, no scaffolds, no sound of hammers and nails. Like the plans, the architect must have dreamed it, brought it into being by force of will.The architect’s lover cannot remember what stood there before the tower, if anything at all. This makes her weep, sitting alone in a café near the river, where the architect will not see. The architect’s lover wants to remember everything about the city, imprint it on her bones: here is where she held the architect’s hand, there is where they watched long barges pole down the canal. If she can keep the city from changing, maybe she can keep the architect from changing as well.People pass the café where the architect’s lover sits, but no one seems to notice the tower. It has always been there. They take it for granted; this is the way the city is meant to be. When she tries to ask about it, people merely shrug. They walk faster; they look at the architect’s lover with strange, indulgent smiles. They shake their heads before going about their days.The next time the architect’s lover visits, the architect calls her out onto the balcony. She points to the tower that has always been there.“You see?” the architect says, indicating the top of the tower, a pyramid of glass all lit up with giant spotlights and faceted like a jewel. “One day I’ll buy you a diamond bigger and brighter than that one. I’ll string stars around your waist and wrap moonlight around your throat. I’ll drape you in fur and put pearls and feathers in your hair. You’ll never want for anything.”The architect’s lover shudders; she imagines drowning under all that weight.The architect’s lover still longs to become the architect’s wife some day, even though she fears she will die of neglect if she does, so long as she doesn’t die of a broken heart first. She has tried not to love the architect every way she knows how, but her heart keeps circling back to the day they met. It is a fixed point in time, and for the architect’s lover, it will never change.They were both strangers in the city, recognizing in each other someone else who had not yet learned to call it home. They discovered it together, exploring every street, every alley, every rooftop and doorway. As they did, the architect’s lover wrote each location on her heart, remembering the way the architect looked when she touched that lintel, this railing. The architect’s lover never saw the city until she saw it through the architect’s eyes, and now they are inextricably intertwined. After so long adrift, these twin points, architect and city, anchored her. In the secret places inside her skin and her bones, her name for both architect and city is home.What secret name the architect has for her, the architect’s lover does not know. This, she does know: The architect never learned to name the city home and she will rewrite all the places they’ve ever been together — the smoky café where they first met, drinking absinthe and watching bloated corpses float down the river; the crumbling bridge where they shared their first kiss, the architect tasting of heady wine and the architect’s lover tasting of nothing at all; the factory where they first fucked, the rough brick against the architect’s lover’s back, and broken glass crunching under their boots. Even the rotten pier where the boats that brought them both from different places long before they knew each other first landed.Even so, the architect’s lover cannot fall out of love.All the places she has written on her heart will vanish. Her heart will remain. But when those places are gone, who will they be — the architect and the architect’s lover? Who will they be, separate and together? With no history, what hope can there be for their future?The architect’s lover is afraid the architect will rewrite her if she falls asleep. So she stays awake, eating cold, tart plums the color of new bruises. She smokes cigarettes she can’t stand the taste of, and drinks coffee so thick the spoon stands on its own when she forgets it halfway through stirring.She does all these things and tries not to think of the architect’s hands on her body when they fuck, placing causeways in the curve of her hip, a spiral staircase winding around her spine, a domed cathedral to replace her skull.She can’t tell the architect of her fear. She can’t tell her she’s afraid, or she’ll lose the architect even sooner. She is losing her. Has lost her. Will lose her again and again. She wants to lose her, and yet the architect’s lover is afraid of coming unmoored again, losing the only place she can call home.So instead she tries to imagine making herself vast enough to hold a city entire, her arms long enough to encompass bridges and canals, wrapped so tight nothing will ever crumble. Even in her dreams, in the rare moments she lets herself sleep, she fails.These are the architect’s dreams.One: She replaces her bones with scaffolding. Her eyes become window glass, shattering sunlight. Her jaw sings a bridge’s span, made musical by the tramping of a thousand feet. All through her are tunnels, connecting everything. Her veins are marble. Her foundation stone. Her heart a cavernous station thundering with countless trains. She is vast and contains multitudes. And she is beautiful.Two: She is very young and playing on the river bank with her brother and her cousin. It is summer and they are barefoot, squishing mud between their toes, feeling the wet, green life of fish and frogs and stilt-legged birds. They break off reeds from the shore and whip-thin branches from the overhanging trees, weaving them into impossible, organic structures. She is not the architect yet, in these dreams, but hers are always the strongest buildings. Her brother and cousin are too impatient, their fingers too quick. They splinter the reeds, snap the wood, and throw the wrecks into the sun-glinting water. They don’t want it badly enough. Her constructions can withstand anything, bound by her force of will.Three: She is very old, but ageless. Her skin, stretched taut over bone-that-is-not-bone, is so thin the light shines through it. There is metal everywhere she can fit it. She has carved away as many pieces of herself as she can and still walk, still breathe. She has cut windows in her flesh, replaced skin with glass so the delicate structures within, the winding catwalks and promenades, are visible. She is light, so light, but she abhors the body that remains, holding her down.At night, she calls her children to her. They come creeping from the shadows, their fingers bloody from tearing her city apart by day and building it anew as dusk falls. Metal spines protrude through their skin. Electricity sparks in their bones, makes their eyes glow. They never speak, but they crackle. She has given them whips to hold, downed power lines with frayed copper ends. At her bidding, they flay her, drawing blood from her remaining skin. She closes her eyes, cries ecstasy from a throat clogged with emotion. They are so perfect, her beautiful children, but it is never enough.She is never enough.Four: In her house near the river, she lies snugged tight between her brother and cousin, breathing in their dreams. Elsewhere in the house, her mother, father, and uncle snore. The door bursts open, shatters, raining splinters. Her family, all of them, is dragged from their beds, pushed barefoot into the snow.She can see her breath as they are marched, all in a line, to the river and forced out onto the frozen surface. Under the snow, the ice is impossibly blue, and under the blue, the water is impossibly black. She is separated from everyone but her mother, who grips her hand so tight their bones grind together, and refuses to let go. There are other families, nearly the whole village, teeth chattering, shivering, confused. One man protests, and a soldier in his warm coat and fur hat breaks the man’s nose with the butt of his gun. The man makes a choking noise. He spits blood on the ice, and one yellow-white tooth. He doesn’t protest again.One of the soldiers wears a star on his hat. He barks a command in a language she doesn’t understand, and two of his men go to either end of the shivering line. They walk slowly, with their guns drawn, and shoot every third person they come upon.One, two, three. Crack. One, two, three. Crack. Her father, uncle, and cousin are sixth, eighteenth, and twenty-first in line. Her mother is thirtieth, and she is thirty-first.Each bullet is the sound of the ice cracking, her heart breaking, the feel of her mother’s cold-chapped hand grinding against her bones then letting go as the force of gravity and the terrible color of blood upon the snow pull her down.Her brother survives. She survives. The solider with the star on his hat lays a heavy hand on her shoulder. He leans forward and breathes in her face, against her ear. His breath, the only hot thing on the frozen lake, smells of sausage and cheap whiskey.“Go,” he says. “Go, and take your brother with you. I want you to remember. I want you to carry this moment with you wherever you go.”There are tears on her lashes, freezing in place. She will never let them fall. They are perfect, inverted globes, holding the last image of her family. If they fall, they will shatter, and her family will be lost forever.This is what the architect dreams.The city changes. Weak and rotten flesh is scraped away to reveal shining bone. Towers rise. Bridges cross and re-cross the city. A train thunders from uptown to midtown and beyond, rattling windows paned in sparkling glass.The architect recruits an army of children, urchins with dirty fingers. The architect’s lover sees them in the shadows of old bridges, chipping away fragments of old stone. She sees them in the streets, hurling those chunks of stone through dirt-streaked windows, exploding brick dust from ancient buildings, hastening decay. She sees them digging between the cobbles, pulling them like teeth, prying between ancient boards until they snap. Their fingers are everywhere.She listens to the architect’s plans. She listens to the trains run beneath the architect’s skin when she sleeps. The city will never be finished, never be done. By night the children will build it up, by day the children will pull it down, and put new, shining structures in its place when the moon rises again.The city will never be complete. The architect will never be complete.Although they have never spoken of it, the architect and the architect’s lover disagree.To the architect’s lover, the river smells of promise, a particular promise that smells of her mother’s skin — fried onions, boiled cabbage, and harsh soap.To the architect, the river is the smell of sickness. It is the feel of her brother’s fevered skin under the palm of her hand. The river is the color of his eyes, glazed, muddy silt from its bottom occluding his sight. It is the sound of him parting blood-cracked lips at the end, rattling out one last breath, and calling her by her mother’s name. It is the memory of him surviving the ice, and dying — as so many others did — on the refugee-choked boat carrying them to a new life, a new shore.The architect is determined she will stitch the river closed. Her thread will be iron and steel, binding up the city’s wounds, sealing her brother’s ghost underneath its skin like a bruise, where it needs must fade.Sometimes the architect likes to imagine she never touched down on the city’s shore. When her brother died, she climbed up on the rail of the boat, crowded with so many stinking refugees, and let herself fall into the churned, muddy water. She sank, rag doll arms and legs drifting loose around her, hair trailing like weeds. She breathed out and out, silver bubbles rising toward the surface, the only bright and beautiful thing in all the muck. She did not jump, but sometimes she wishes she did. Sometimes, even though she knows it is not true, she convinces herself she did jump. The river swallowed her whole. Some other girl, a drowned girl, a ghost, entered the city in her place.At her core, who the architect truly is, is different. She is still under water, still exhaling, watching those bubbles rise. She is waiting. And one day soon, she will breathe in, light, perfect, and stripped clean. She will breathe in. And wake.She tries to tell her lover these things, but she knows her lover doesn’t hear them. Somewhere, somehow, they lost their way. They met in one city, and somewhere along the way, they diverged. They look at the city now, and they see different things. The architect wonders if she can ever build a bridge strong enough to pull her lover across. And if she can’t, what will happen to them, then?The architect’s lover takes to drinking. She drinks in cafes and bars along the ever-changing river, which she scarcely recognizes anymore.Is that the place where she met the architect? Or was it over there? What of the factory, the stone bridge? What of the taste of the architect’s skin, smoky with the factory’s ghosts, sweat-slick beneath her lover’s lips? What of absinthe cradled on the architect’s tongue, and their hands held palm to palm — so tight — bone to bone? So tight they will never let go. Where are the echoes of their heels cracking in rhythm, one, two, three, as they run from one place to the next, running wild into the future?The architect’s lover doesn’t recognize herself anymore. She doesn’t know where she fits — not on the streets, where cobbles no longer rise to meet the arches of her feet; not against the architect, where sharp juts of bone meet her fingers in place of the soft hollow of a throat, the gentle curve of a hip, or the warm swell of a breast.She drinks and she smokes until her memories blur, until their edges round and grow soft like the scarcely-remembered thousand-year cobble stones. The architect’s lover shouts at strangers, her words slurring as she tells them of factories and piers and bridges that never existed.She tells them of home.When she slips up and says she is the architecture’s lover, not the architect’s, no one corrects her.She is a ghost, in love with a city.And in time, because she is afraid and she doesn’t know how to fall out of love, the architect’s lover takes home a beautiful boy whose name she can’t be bothered to remember. She fucks him precisely because it means nothing. Smoking still more cigarettes, eating chilled and bruised plums, watching him sleep, she is terribly afraid she’ll marry him one day. Still never knowing his name, the architecture’s lover will use up her body bearing the beautiful boy’s children. Children who will become the monsters of the architecture’s dream.The architect, the architecture, is all angles and planes now, the glint of steel, concrete skin. The architecture’s lover doesn’t recognize anything anymore. She is a stranger in a city she once loved, a city that held so much promise. A city she called home.The architect’s lover remembers her mother putting her on a boat. There were so many boats in those days, all leaving from different places, but all traveling to the city — a place of promise, a place of dreams. She remembers clinging to her mother’s skirt, sobbing and not wanting to let go as her mother’s hands — red and blistered from washing — urged her up the wooden gangway.“It’s a better life,” her mother told her. “You’ll have opportunities I never had, things I can’t give you. You’ll be happy there, in time. Promise me you’ll try.”She remembers gripping the ship’s rail so hard her knuckles turned white, leaning out over the churning water, waving and straining her eyes until her mother was only a vanished speck on the horizon. Landing on the city’s shore didn’t take the pain away, but stepping from the boat’s swaying deck onto firm land once more, the architect’s lover straightened her spine, keeping her promise to try. Determined to make her mother proud.This is not the city she once called home.This city is hostile. It is like the place she came from, on a boat, so long ago, a place that pushed her out, not wanting her anymore. It does not love her. It barely knows she’s alive.And yet, still, she cannot fall out of love.The architecture’s lover looks at the beautiful boy whose name she doesn’t know, and tries to love him. Silent tears run down her cheeks; she doesn’t remember why.The architect stands on her balcony high above the shining city. Her city. Towers stab defiant at the sky, bridges stitch old wounds closed, trains hum deep underground, and the winking glass that is everywhere catches the sun. Strong and true, it will never crack, never break, never crumble.Her skin is planed clean, scraped thin. Still, it is too heavy for her bones. But there is time, she knows. This is only the beginning.The architect shades her eyes, and looks toward what was once the river. People stride along what are no longer banks, small as ants from up here. They are laughing, smiling. Women, sleek in cool silk the color of her towers. Men, in crisp suits the color of ice cream that will never melt. Their teeth are impossible in the sun. They don’t remember a life other than this one. She has made it so.Everyone should have the luxury of forgetting the times when they weren’t as happy as they must be now.Still, something tugs at the edges of the architect’s mind. There is a ghost in the city. The shadow of towers, spewing smoke, and the memory of a kiss, and salt-tasting skin against her lips haunt her mind. Before her marble skin, before the columns of her spine, the tension bridge of her jaw, before the diamond pane windows of her eyes, wasn’t she someone else? Wasn’t there someone who knew her as she was, and loved her just the same?There, amid the ant-bustle on the once-shores, is a lone girl. Her feet are bare and spattered with mud. She is looking straight at the architect, across all the distance, and the people part around her like water breaking around a stone. Like she isn’t there.The architect wonders: Is that her? Or someone she used to know?Even though she can’t see them from her balcony, the architect knows: The girl’s eyes are the color of stirred silt, and blue ice. There are weeds in her hair. She raises her hand — a drowned girl, waiting to breathe, waiting to rise from the river and come ashore — and waves to the architect, but she does not smile.The architect’s lover leaves the café. She is utterly lost. She recognizes nothing here.She goes toward the water, some vague memory pulling her. But the map written on her skin is muddled. The streets, everything she thinks she knows, has been re-written.The architect’s lover is looking for someone, but she doesn’t know who. No one looks familiar here. Except…Except there is a girl, standing and looking across the water. It is a girl the architecture’s lover almost knows. The girl has eyes like silt and ice. They remind the architect’s lover of home.The architecture’s lover raises her hand, catching the girl’s attention. The girl looks at her, and the architect’s lover falls to her knees. A name catches in her throat and stalls. She can’t remember. She weeps, and doesn’t know why. In her mind, there is one word, echoing persistently and meaning nothing: Home.The architect stands on her balcony, and looks at the girl and the water. For a moment, the architect thinks there is something she has forgotten. Then she puts the thought from her mind.Soon the city will be perfect. She will tear it down and rebuild it until it is so.The architect turns. She does not raise her hand to the girl on the shore. Or the weeping woman on her knees by the girl’s side.The architect goes inside. And she does not say goodbye.END"Her Last Breath Before Waking" was originally published in 3-Lobed Burning Eye in December 2013.This recording is a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license which means you can share it with anyone you’d like, but please don’t change or sell it. Our theme is “Aurora Borealis” by Bird Creek, available through the Google Audio Library.Thanks for listening, and I'll be back on February 16th with "Into the Nth Dimension" by David D. Levine.
Jim gets involved in a deadly Christmastime mystery at a Boston department store. Jim Nolan, Private Eye was created by Mike Murphy and Arlene Osborne. Starring our regular cast: Russell Gold as Jim Nolan, Joyce Bender as Gladys Nolan, Brian Bedard as Lt. Walter Carmichael and Katie Dehnart as the Narrator. Guest starring in this episode: JOE STOFKO as Charles Murdock, JOANIE DEHNART as Kid #1, VICTOR GATES as Man #1, LYN CULLEN as Woman, AMANDA FITZWATER as Lucille Ballard, HAILEY LYNN STOFKO as Kid #2, BRIAN M. OLDHAM as Man #2 CHLOE DEHNART as Kid #3, JIM PATTON as Dr. David Swenson, KATIE DEHNART as Miss Ellen Landers, PAUL LAVELLE as Sgt. McManus, PETER KATT as Dr. Norden, H KEITH LYONS as Joe Blackmore, and KIM GIANOPOULOS as Helen Bagley. “Ho, Ho, Homicide” was written by Mike Murphy. Jim Nolan, Private Eye Theme: Composed and performed by Vivian Doskow. Please visit her web site to listen to more of her wonderful music. Producer: Capt. John Tadrzak Assistant Producer: Mike Murphy Mixer: Tasos Kostopoulos Script Editor: Arlene Osborne Webmaster: April Sadowski We would also like to thank Capt. John Tadrzak of Misfits Audio for airing this show. Mike Murphy, the […]
"Not What You See, What You Feel" by Victoria Blisse, read by Amanda Fitzwater (straight)
Nash's quiet vacation in the Tennessee Woodlands is interrupted by a call from the Museum - Dr. Mancuso has disappeared from those very same woods while doing research for a local college. Has she met the same fate as the others who have mysteriously vanished from that site? More importantly, are the fish biting today?Tales From The Museum 3.02: Bloody Haven(24:15, 22.4 MB mp3, released 2010.10.17)Written by Charles RussellFeatured in this episode were:Perry Whittle as Keith NashAmanda Fitzwater as Dr. Helene MancusoAlasdair Stuart as CaseyShane Harris as PappyM S Garcia as Deputy Lisa HendrickGwendolyn Jensen Woodard as HildaSteven Scott as MarxDavid Smith as Captain James Robert LeFontaine Haven, CSAOriginal music composed by Joey Stuckey and Kevin MacLeodThis series is produced by Elie HirschmanPost-production work by Greg Wilkinson
Casey tells Nash and Dr. Mancuso about Jane - one of the ghosts who appears at the museum - and how she came there because of him. The problem is that someone else now appears to be interested in Casey... and Jane.Tales From The Museum, Season 3, Episode 1: The Trouble with Jane(23:31, 27.1 MB mp3, released 2010.04.29)Written by Charles RussellFeatured in this episode were:Perry Whittle as Keith NashAlasdair Stuart as CaseyAmanda Fitzwater as Dr. Helene MancusoEleiece Krawiec as AnnaRebecca Thrasher as Janeand Cap'n John Tadrzak as Dr. SteinOriginal music composed by Joey Stuckey and Kevin MacLeodThis series is produced by Elie HirschmanPost-production work by Greg WilkinsonThe executive producer for Darker Projects is Eric BusbyThe National Transportation Safety Board advises motorists not to pick up hitchhikers. Especially ones that glow.
This week's story is a lesbian bondage story with a mythic twist, read by Amanda Fitzwater.
"I'm going to eat you... eat your pretty face!"The Byron Chronicles 3.02: Sam(23:25, 33.7 MB MP3, released 2010.06.18)Written by Eric BusbyFeaturing:David Ault as ByronAmanda Fitzwater as MaggieElie Hirchman as FreakshowMeghan Donathan as The Voices of Flameand introducing Natalie Van Sistine as Sam BealMusic Performed by Midnight Syndicate Produced and directed by Eric BusbySound design by Eric Busby
This week's story is "Not What You See, What You Feel" by Victoria Blisse, originally published in Coming Together: The Erotic Cocktail, Volume 1, read by Amanda Fitzwater.Promo for Braindouche!More short story ebooks are now available at Smashwords.I'm going to Balticon, where there will be a launch event for the Scouts novel.
The Spaceship Art Bell encounters an alien ship adrift in space, but what horrors await them on board?Far Horizons 6 - Dark EncountersDownload (31:45, 36.5 MB mp3, released 2009.11.12)Written by Eric L. BusbyFeatured in the cast wereDavid Ault as Nicholas LancerJon Specht as Artimus KaneLaura Post as Donna BriggsElie Hirchman as Joshua BakerJudah Friese as Max HowlettAmanda Fitzwater as Susan LockhartBill Hollweg as John CollinsGareth Preston as Doctor StarkMegan Pressley as Katlin CullenMichael Hudson as Gareth ShawTom Davis Beal as Todd EccelstonBruce Busby as the HostPaul Levelle as MorganChristina Boyd as the Medicwith Mike 'Dr. Pus' Westand Mark BruzeeFar Horizons theme by Kai HartwigAdditional music composed by Ambient Light and Kevin MacLeodThis episode was directed and produced by Eric L. BusbyPost Production work by Eric L. Busby
Mankind makes first contact when an alien construct is discovered drifting in the asteroid belt.Far Horizons 1 - ConstructDownload (32:07, 44.2 MB mp3, released 2007.02.19)Written by Eric L. BusbyFeatured in the cast were:David Ault as Nicholas Lancer Mark Kalita as Artimus Kane Laura Post as Donna Briggs Elie Hirchman as Joshua Baker Judah Friese as Max Howlett Amanda Fitzwater as Susan Lockhart Bill Hollweg as John Collins Zach Ricks as Sam Reed Eric L. Busby as Gareth ShawMusic by Kai Hartwig www.hartwigmusic.deThis episode was written, directed and produced by Eric L. Busby Post Production work by Eric L. Busby
The crew of the Art Bell begin the journey back to Earth, but the road home is long and full of dangers.Far Horizons 4 - The Long Road Home(18:37, 25.8 MB mp3, released 2009.09.14)Written by Eric L. BusbyFeatured in the cast wereDavid Ault as Nicholas LancerJon Specht as Artimus KaneLaura Post as Donna BriggsElie Hirchman as Joshua BakerJudah Friese as Max HowlettAmanda Fitzwater as Susan LockhartBill Hollweg as John CollinsMegan Pressley as Katlin CullenMichael Hudson as Gareth ShawTom Davis Beal as Todd EccelstonBruce Busby as the HostFar Horizons theme by Kai HartwigAdditional music composed by Ambient Light and Kevin MacLeod This episode was directed and produced by Eric L. BusbyPost Production work by Eric L. Busby
The Spaceship Art Bell encounters an alien ship adrift in space, but what horrors await them on board?Far Horizons 5 - The DerelictDownload (19:33, 27.1 MB mp3, released 2009.10.08)Written by Eric L. BusbyFeatured in the cast wereDavid Ault as Nicholas LancerJon Specht as Artimus KaneLaura Post as Donna BriggsElie Hirchman as Joshua BakerAmanda Fitzwater as Susan LockhartBill Hollweg as John CollinsGareth Preston as Doctor StarkMegan Pressley as Katlin CullenMichael Hudson as Gareth ShawTom Davis Beal as Todd EccelstonBruce Busby as the HostEric Busby as the guardWith Mark BruzeeFar Horizons theme by Kai HartwigAdditional music composed by Ambient Light and Kevin MacLeodDirected and produced by Eric L. BusbyPost Production work by Eric L. Busby
Lost in deep space. The crew of the Earthship Art Bell attempt to find a way to return to Earth.Far Horizons 3 - Into the UnknownDownload (26:50, 37.1 MB mp3, released 2009.07.31)Written by Eric L. BusbyFeatured in the cast wereDavid Ault as Nicholas LancerJon Specht as Artimus KaneLaura Post as Donna BriggsElie Hirchman as Joshua BakerJudah Friese as Max HowlettAmanda Fitzwater as Susan LockhartBill Hollweg as John CollinsZach Ricks as Sam ReedGareth Preston as Doctor StarkMegan Pressley as Katlin CullenMichael Hudson as Gareth ShawTom Davis Beal as Todd EccelstonBruce Busby as the HostLucien Dodge as the Crew Member Far Horizons theme by Kai HartwigAdditional music composed by Ambient Light and Kevin MacLeod This episode was directed and produced by Eric L. BusbyPost Production work by Eric L. Busby
Professor Baker conducts an experiment that will have profound effect on the crew of the Art Bell. Download (30:59, 28.6 MB mp3, released 2007.04.03)Written by Eric L. BusbyFeatured in the cast were:David Ault as Nicholas Lancer Mark Kalita as Artimus Kane Laura Post as Donna Briggs Elie Hirchman as Joshua Baker Judah Friese as Max Howlett Amanda Fitzwater as Susan Lockhart Bill Hollweg as John Collins Zach Ricks as Sam Reed Eric L. Busby as Gareth ShawMusic by Kai Hartwig www.hartwigmusic.deThis episode was written, directed and produced by Eric L. Busby Post Production work by Eric L. Busby
Everyone hates it when they are finally called into Pierpoint's office. It usually means being "let go". So... why is Nash on his way? Tales From The Museum, Season 2, Episode 2: Haunting Pierpoint(29:03, 26.6 MB MP3, released 2008.12.15)Written by Charles RussellFeatured in the cast were: Perry Whittle as Keith Nash Alasdair Stuart as Casey Amanda Fitzwater as Dr. Helene Mancuso Bruce Busby as Julius PierpointM S Garcia as Mala MonroeApril Sadowski as Adrienne and AngieAbner Senires as the Telephone VoiceEleiece Krawiec as Monaand Melissa Johnson as ClaireThis series is produced by Elie Hirschman Post Production by MJ Cogburn Original music composed by Joey Stuckey and and Kevin MacLeod The executive producer for Darker Projects is Eric Busby This has been a Darker Projects production To Purchase "The Complete History of Blake's Ferry: The Civil War's Forgotten Battle", by Ambrose Montgomery, please visit the gift shop of the Johnson City Regional Museum.
Presented in classic P.I. style, Helene Mancuso (AKA Jenna Tombs, Private Investigator) weaves the tale of the screaming woman. Is the statue currently in the regional museum truly possessed by the spirit of its creator? Tales From The Museum, Season 2, Episode 1: The Screaming Woman(26:44, 33.3 MB MP3, released 2008.09.15)Written by Charles RussellFeatured in the cast were: Perry Whittle as Keith Nash Amanda Fitzwater as Dr. Helene Mancuso Captain John Tadrzak as Dr. Stein Alasdair Stuart as Casey David MacIver as Phil the security guard and Gwendolyn Jensen-Woodard as The Screaming Woman Original music composed by Joey Stuckey and Kevin MacLeod This Series is produced by Elie Hirschman Post-production by MJ Cogburn The Executive producer for Darker Projects is Eric Busby The Regional Museum urges all patrons to refrain from screaming in any of the exhibit halls.
Dr. Stein has a secret past he's been reluctant to share with anyone. Now, as an old foe closes in, Stein tells all to his co-workers. Can a precious artifact be kept out of the hands of the evildoers? Tales From The Museum, Episode 7: The Amulet and the Scroll(24:15, 33.3 MB MP3, released 2008.07.04)Written by Charles RussellFeatured in the cast were: Perry Whittle as Keith Nash Amanda Fitzwater as Dr. Helene Mancuso Alasdair Stuart as Casey Captain John tadrzak as Dr. Stein Chip Joel as Morton the security Guard David Alexander Macdonald as the computer voice David Ault as Jergen Werner Chris Williams as Curt Blutbad M S Garcia as Hotel Clerk and Jules Ismail as Detective Hogan This series is produced by Elie Hirschman Post Production by MJ Cogburn Original music composed by Joey Stuckey and and Kevin MacLeod The executive producer for Darker Projects is Eric Busby This has been a Darker Projects production To learn more about milking snakes, contact Dr. Stein c/o the Regional Museum, Johnson City, TN
Star Trek - Lost Frontier : 01.09 By the SwordAs the Enterprise prepares for departure. The crew looses one of their own while Commander Niles is made a proposition from the Federations true masters.Download (20:05, 27.6 MB, released 2008.05.01)Written by Eric BusbyFeatured in the cast were:Mark Bruzee as Rupert TraskLaura Post as Kate NilesDavid Ault as Andrew WinfredElie Hirchman as ZogBen Harmer as Liem KincaidLucien Dodge as Sid KirkEric Busby as Agent BishopJudah Friese as the EMH DoctorEleceice Krawiec as the MedbotAmanda Fitzwater as Katwith Chris WilliamsThis episode was written by Eric BusbyDirection, production, and audio engineering by Eric BusbyThis has been a Darker Projects production.
Hear how it all began! It's Keith Nash's first day on the job at the Regional Museum, and a tape recorder left in his new office's desk drawer tells the horrifying tale of the person who sat in his chair before him as Special Services Coordinator. Who was Ellen Arbogast? Why did she last less than a month in her job? Was she driven insane... or worse?Tales From The Museum, Episode 6: Day One(25:11, 34.7 MB MP3, released 2008.04.01)Written by Charles RussellFeatured in the cast were:Perry Whittle as Keith NashAlasdair Stuart as CaseyAmanda Fitzwater as Dr. Helene MancusoKimberly Gianopoulos as Ellen ArbogastBruce Busby as Professor PierpointeChip Joel as Morton the security GuardElie Hirschman as the voiceDemon noises provided by Garry Cobbum, Alexa Chipman, David MacIver, and April and Devon SadowskiThis series is produced by Elie HirschmanPost Production by MJ CogburnOriginal music composed by Joey Stuckey and and Kevin MacLeodThe executive producer for Darker Projects is Eric BusbyThis has been a Darker Projects productionDarker Projects cannot be help responsible for any demonic possession which may result from listening to this episode.
Star Trek - Lost Frontier, Episode 8: A Legend FallsAs the Enterprise under goes repairs. One of the crew is murdered by a deadly assassin.(19:20, 17.9 MB, released 2008.03.26)Written by Eric BusbyFeatured in the cast were:Mark Bruzee as Rupert TraskLaura Post as Kate NilesDavid Ault as Andrew WinfredElie Hirchman as ZogBen Harmer as Liem KincaidJeanine Yamanaka as T'LocBill Hollweg as PopeMark Kalita as MakAmanda Fitzwater as KatSeth Adam Sher as the announcer This episode was written by Eric Busby and Mark KalitaDirection, production and audio engineering by Eric Busby
The New Lords of Time have invaded of Earth in search of the Legacy of Gallifrey. Jason Tate hold the means to stopping them. But to do so will mean his death.Doctor Who: 03.03 The Legacy of GallifreyDownload (18:04, 25 MB mp3, released 2008.02.15)Written by Eric BusbyFeatured in the cast were:M Sieiro Garcia as Emma CollinsElie Hirschman as Dominic MorinMark Brusie as Noah CovingtonAmanda Fitzwater as Lauren DrakeLaura Post as MinaBruce Busby as RavnosLucan Dodge as DarklessSteve Riekbery as the Torchwood SoliderBen Harmer and Eric Busby were the Air traffic controllersApril and Devon Sadowski played the VampiresAnd introducing David Ault as the Doctor This episode was written and directed by Eric Busby Production and sound design by Eric BusbyThis has been a Darker Projects Production.
Jason Tate learns the truth about himself. While an age old menace rises from the shadows to claim dominance over creation.Doctor Who: 03.02 The Lords of TimeDownload (20:26, 28.2 MB mp3, released 2008.02.07)Written by Eric BusbyFeatured in the cast were:David Ault as Jason TateM Sieiro Garcia as Emma CollinsElie Hirschman as Dominic MorinMark Brusie as Noah CovingtonAmanda Fitzwater as Lauren DrakeLaura Post as MinaBruce Busby as RavnosGareth Preston as SpencerLucien Dodge as DarklessApril Smith as the voice of the ComputerChris Snyder was the Servant BoyThis episode was directed by Eric BusbyProduction and sound design by Eric Busby
Jason Tate is your average fellow in his early thirties. He has a nice normal life. A nice normal girlfriend. There is nothing all that remarkable about Jason Tate ... So why does he keep having nightmares about aliens ... and why are Torchwood keeping tabs on him?Doctor Who: 03.01 The Long RoadDownload (19:54, 18.4 MB mp3, released 2008.02.01)Featured in the cast were:M Sieiro Garcia as Emma CollinsLaura Post as Beth HawkinsElie Hirschman as Dominic MorinMark Bruzee as Noah CovingtonAmanda Fitzwater as Lauren DrakeTom Davis as the CourierDavid Ault as Jason TateThis episode was written and directed by Eric BusbyProduction and sound design by Eric Busby
An old enemy returns, bent on vengeance. The return of the Serpent Clan forces Nash to play a deadly game to save the lives of his friends, and his own life as well. Will Nash run out of time before the cold-blooded killer unleashes his deadly venom?Tales From The Museum, Episode 5: Return of the Serpents(22:20, 20.5 MB mp3, released 2007.11.25)Written by Charles RussellFeatured in the cast were:Perry Whittle as Keith NashAmanda Fitzwater as Dr. Helene MancusoCaptain John Tadrzak as Dr. SteinDavid Ault as ArgusDavid A. Macdonald as the Computer voiceChip Joel as Skippy the Goon and MortonOriginal music composed by Joey Stuckey and Kevin MacLeodThis Series is produced by Elie HirschmanPost-production by MJ CogburnThe Executive producer for Darker Projects is Eric BusbyDeath is but a doorway ... and to every locked door, there is a key.
On a cold, full moon night a peculiar gathering takes place at the museum. This is the Second Annual Haunted Museum Mystery Tour. Psychics, mediums and fans of the occult pack into the museum for an overnight program packed with supernatural activity. As with much of what goes on in the regional museum, it's all fun and games... until the ghosts show up.Tales From The Museum, Episode 4: Beneath the Foundation(24:22, 33.5 MB mp3, released 2007.10.30)Written by Charles RussellFeatured in the cast were:Perry Whittle as Keith NashAlasdair Stuart as CaseyAmanda Fitzwater as Dr. Helene MancusoM. Sieiro Garcia as Mala MonroeApril Smith as Angie Monroe and AdrienneAdditional voices by Colin Snow, Zack Fester, MJ Cogburn and Paula CartwrightOriginal music composed by Joey Stuckey and Kevin MacLeodThis Series is produced by Elie HirschmanPost-production by MJ Cogburn
The museum has been bequeathed some priceless pieces of art from the collection of the late Carlo Colletti. One of the items is an ancient tapestry dating back to the dark ages, featuring an image of the Grim Reaper standing on a pile of human skulls. But one day before the auction, a Dr. Augustus Spears shows up, claiming to be the rightful owner of the tapestry. According to the doctor, the tapestry was woven during the Black Plague and is cursed... and must be destroyed at all costs.Tales From The Museum, Episode 3: The Reaper Tapestry(23:45, 43.5 MB mp3, released 2007.09.21)Written by Charles RussellFeatured in the cast were:Perry Whittle as Keith NashAmanda Fitzwater as Helene MancusoAlasdair Stuart as CaseyMJ Cogburn as Worker 1Miles Reid as Worker 2David Alexander MacDonald as the Computer voicePaul Mannering as Dr. Augustus SpearsColin Snow as HorstElie Hirschman as the ReaperOriginal music composed by Joey Stuckey and Kevin MacLeodThis Series is produced by Elie HirschmanPost-production by MJ CogburnThe Reaper reminds you to always smoke Llucky Llama cigarettes.
All actions have consequences.On a planet facing a fate not too dissimilar to Earth's, the Doctor joins a group of vigilantes as they attempt to put a stop a corrupt government and its greed for energy.What consequences will their actions bring about?... Only time will tell.02.06 Materia(34:07, 62.5MB mp3, released 2007.09.15)Written by Fiona ConnFeatured in the cast are:Mark Kalita as the DoctorMark Bruzee as GeorgeAmanda Fitzwater as MaraPaul Mannering as MatthewJudah Friese as PatakiJames Leeper as TeakEric Busby as IsaiahDamaris Mannering as RebeccaMiles Reid as JoshuaGareth Preston as Minister HassarMJ Cogburn as the NewsreaderShire Smith as Guard 1David Sobkowiak as Guard 2John Tadzrak as Guard 3Garry Cobbum as the Head ResearcherFiona Conn as the ReceptionistDan Gorgone as the CommanderShire Smith as Lady 1Phillip Moxley as Man 1This series is produced and directed by Mark KalitaPost production by Byron LeeThe executive producer for Darker Projects is Eric Busby
All actions have consequences.On a planet facing a fate not too dissimilar to Earth's, the Doctor joins a group of vigilantes as they attempt to put a stop a corrupt government and its greed for energy.What consequences will their actions bring about?... Only time will tell.02.05 Materia(38:15, 52.6MB mp3, released 2007.09.08)Written by Fiona ConnFeatured in the cast are:Mark Kalita as the DoctorMark Bruzee as GeorgeAmanda Fitzwater as MaraPaul Mannering as MatthewJudah Friese as PatakiJames Leeper as TeakEric Busby as IsaiahDamaris Mannering as RebeccaMiles Reid as JoshuaGareth Preston as Minister HassarMJ Cogburn as the NewsreaderShire Smith as Guard 1David Sobkowiak as Guard 2John Tadzrak as Guard 3Garry Cobbum as the Head ResearcherFiona Conn as the ReceptionistDan Gorgone as the CommanderShire Smith as Lady 1Phillip Moxley as Man 1This series is produced and directed by Mark KalitaPost production by Bill Hollweg.The executive producer for Darker Projects is Eric Busby.
The Bannon family of Louisiana carries a curse that is passed from generation to generation ... and an artifact belonging to that family is on its way to the Regional Museum. Keith Nash must find out what this artifact has to do with a series of grizzly murders in the Tennessee area. But in carrying out his investigation, he has to be careful, or he may bring upon himself the Curse of the Wolf.Tales From The Museum, Episode 2: The Curse of the Wolf(19:30, 26.8 MB mp3, released 2007.08.23)Written by Charles RussellFeatured in the cast were:Perry Whittle as Keith NashAmanda Fitzwater as Helene MancusoAlasdair Stuart as CaseyM. Sieiro Garcia as JennaApril Smith as MarciaZack Fester as HollandOriginal music composed by Joey Stuckey and Kevin MacLeodThis Series is produced by Elie HirschmanPost-production by MJ CogburnNo werewolves were harmed in the recording of this episode.
The mysterious poisoning of a graduate student brings Keith Nash and his colleagues into a confrontation with a sinister cult. Their intentions are unclear, but the threat they pose is certain and immediate. Will Nash, Dr. Stein and Dr. Mancuso be able to overcome the danger of the Cult of Serpents?Tales From The Museum, Episode 1: The Cult of Serpents (20:56, 28.8 MB mp3, released 2007.07.21)Written by Charles RussellFeatured in the cast were: Perry Whittle as Keith Nash Amanda Fitzwater as Helene Mancuso Alasdair Stuart as Casey Captain John Tadrzak as Dr. Stein David Ault as ArgusOriginal music composed by Joey Stuckey and Kevin MacLeod This Series is produced by Elie Hirschman Post-production by MJ CogburnNo snakes were harmed in the recording of this episode.
Listen: Star Trek - The Section 31 Files : 03.03 Escape from Rura Penthe, Part 3(35:50, 32.8 MB, released 2006.11.30)Written by Mark KalitaFeatured in the cast were:Mark Kalita as MakElie Hirschman as Tom Backus and WeaverBen Harmer as O'KeefeDave Ault as selekAmanda Fitzwater as the Section 31 operativeJudah Friese as Lt. Cmdr. Judah FrieseBill Hollweg, Eric Busby and Jim Barbour as the Romulan GuardsThe episode was produced by Eric Busby Post Production by Eric Busby
When all contact is lost with the Starship Defiant and Starbase Gateway. Section 31 is sent to investigate. Only to make a dark discovery.Listen: Star Trek The Section 31 Files : 03.04 Invasion, Part 1 - The Gateway (25:38, 23.5 MB, released 2006.12.07)Written and directed by Eric Busby.Featured in the cast wereLara Post as Captain Dalonna Mark Kalita as Commander Mak Judah Friese as Lt. Friese Elie Hirschman and Lt. Backus Karl Puder as Chancellor Korg Ben Harmer as Ensign Sovor Mark Bruzee as Rook Seth Adam Sher as Lt. Rekla Damaris Mannering as The Founder Paul Mannering as Ensign Fields David Ault as the Away Team Commander and the Borg Drone Fiona Conn, Amanda Fitzwater and Bill Hollweg as the Away Team And Chris Snyder as The DaleksThis episode was produced by Eric Busby Post Production work by Eric Busby
Listen: Hallowed Ground(5:00, 4.6 MB mp3, released 2006.12.23)Written by Amanda FitzwaterFeaturing:Perry Whittle as PaulJoan Hall Hovey as StephShire Smith as JenJohn Lipsey as MikeThe series is created and produced by Paul Mannering and Chris SnyderPost-production by Paul ManneringThe Executive producer for Darker Projects is Eric Busby
Listen: The Falcon Banner, Episode 7: Of Ships and Stars(52:18, 50.0MB mp3, released 2006.12.23)Scripted by Mark BruzeeBased on the Falcon Banner, a novel by Christopher Patrick LydonOriginal music composed and performed by Kai Hartwig and Kevin MacLeodFeaturing the voice talents of:Seth Adam Sher as Darien TaineJohn Lipsey as Doctor KyrChris Snyder as Matt Elias and Excalibur ControlMark Bruzee as ShaleEric Busby as NazzienAmanda Fitzwater as Nurse PiaBrandon Cole as Commander Kit DurnhamJack Scrimshaw as Major MayfairLaura Post as LaurenMark Kalita as KendrickAnd Miles Reid as The PilotProduced, directed and post-produced by Chris SnyderCo-produced by Mark BruzeeSpecial thanks to Christopher Patrick Lydon for making the series possible.
The Codger's Tale(5:48, 5.4 MB mp3, released 2006.10.31)Written by Paul ManneringEmilie Leadley was TinaMatt McLaren was BoydJosh DeLioncourt was The BarmanTimm Gillick was CharlieAmanda Fitzwater was RachelBrandon Cole was The CodgerDamaris Mannering was The WaitressChris Thomson was JimmyThe series is created and produced by Paul Mannering and Chris SnyderPost-production by Brandon ColeThe Executive producer for Darker Projects is Eric Busby
Special Halloween Episode!(25:51, 23.8 MB mp3, released 2006.10.29)Zombie Pumpkinheads from Outer Space!Written by Amanda FitzwaterProduced by Paul ManneringStarring:Garry Cobbum as Captain Abiteth RamohanChris Snyder as Billigan DuPraeCharles Pratt, Jr. as The AIAmanda Fitzwater as Division ControlPost production by Paul Mannering and Chris Snyder
Five Minute Fears #5: Black Angels(6:06, 5.8 MB mp3, released 2006.09.24)Written by Robert TinsleyFeaturing:Miles Reid as PaulAmanda FitzWater as MaryEmilie Leadley as Public Address Voiceand Perry Whittle as KennyThe series is created and produced by Paul Mannering and Chris SnyderPost-production by Paul ManneringThe executive producer for Darker Projects is Eric Busby