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One of the key minds behind the hit series 'Adolescence' sat down with Sarah Shachat of IndieWire to break down the show's complex emotions and technical genius. Graham dives deep into the casting process for each character, and walks us through the elaborate dance they did with the camera crew for each 'oner' filmed episode. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
That's right - our old friends Eiffel and Hilbert are back with important news! There's a new audio fiction series called Hit Singles, created by Wolf 359 creator Gabriel Urbina and produced by Urbina, Sarah Shachat, and Zach Valenti! It's a romantic comedy all about friendship, love, the struggles of trying to make it in a big city, and loving music way too much. You can listen to the show over on Audible. If you have an Audible Plus membership, you can listen to it at no additional cost. (And if you still have a free trial, you can listen to it for free for 30 days.) Besides the show's three producers, you'll also hear Wolf 359 alumni Noah Masur, Zach Libresco, Michelle Agresti, and Mary Kate Wiles in the series. (As well as veterans from many of our sibling series, such as The Bright Sessions, Life With Leo(h), and 36 Questions!) It was a real labor of love, and we'd love to help it find as wide an audience as it can. So please check it out, and, if you love it as much as we think you will, please leave a rating and a review. Here is the official description for Hit Singles: From the creators of the hit audio drama Wolf 359 and with original music by Jeremy Warmsley comes a modern story about friendship, love, and chosen family starring Evangeline Young (Emergence), Nicholas Podany (Harry Potter and the Cursed Child), Simone Policano (Blue Bloods), Julia Rehwald (Fear Street), Briggon Snow (Masters of Sex) and a full cast. A captivating listen perfect for fans of New Girl and High Fidelity. When struggling DJ Faith Adler comes to couch surf with her best friend Tori in NYC, she finds herself drawn into the world of Tori's eclectic friend group. Right from her chaotic first night, Faith's new friends take her under their wing and help her navigate the ups and downs of trying to make it as an artist in the big city. There's Tori, the bubbly one; Ginah, the high-strung but loyal one; Matt, the flirtatious one; and David, the cynical one. Tori and Ginah's apartment becomes a sanctuary where lasting bonds are forged over late nights, drink-filled conversations, impromptu dance parties, and the occasional Sense and Sensibility marathon. Falling in love definitely isn't part of Faith's plan, but that all changes when she meets David, a former law student (and current bartender) who has recently come to the conclusion that romance is for suckers and sworn it off altogether. From the moment they meet at a New Year's in the Summer party, their will-they-or-won't-they chemistry is electric. As Faith and David grow closer over whiskey-soaked nights and heart-to-heart talks on the fire escape, their flirtation deepens into something more meaningful. Are they friends? Lovers? Romantic partners? Casual sex acquaintances? The answer is, simultaneously, all and none of the above. Let the overthinking commence! With rich character development and an ensemble cast that feels like friends you've known forever, Hit Singles deftly balances comedy, romance, and poignant drama. It's a beautifully rendered celebration of the family we choose, the cities that choose us back, and the life-altering power of human connection. * * * Today's message features the sound effect UI Seatbelt Signal by newlocknew. (UI_Seatbelt signal similar(Sytrus,Eq,chrs,flngr,xctr,rvrb).wav by newlocknew -- https://freesound.org/s/568785/ -- License: Attribution 4.0) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
That's right - Blackstar agent and magical detective Edmond LaValle is back! And he's here to share important news! There's a new audio fiction series called Hit Singles, made by Unseen creators and co-producers Zach Valenti, Sarah Shachat, and Gabriel Urbina! It's a romantic comedy all about friendship, love, the struggles of trying to make it in a big city, and loving music way too much. You can listen to the show over on Audible. If you have an Audible Plus membership, you can listen to it at no additional cost. (And if you still have a free trial, you can listen to it for free for 30 days.) Within the show's episodes, you'll hear a lot of familiar voices from the world of podcasting - lots of alumni from previous Long Story Short shows and from our beloved sibling series like The Bright Sessions. It was a real labor of love put together by an amazing team, and we'd love to help it find as wide an audience as it can. So please check it out, and, if you love it as much as we think you will, please leave a rating and a review. Here is the official description for Hit Singles: From the creators of the hit audio drama Wolf 359 and with original music by Jeremy Warmsley comes a modern story about friendship, love, and chosen family starring Evangeline Young (Emergence), Nicholas Podany (Harry Potter and the Cursed Child), Simone Policano (Blue Bloods), Julia Rehwald (Fear Street), Briggon Snow (Masters of Sex) and a full cast. A captivating listen perfect for fans of New Girl and High Fidelity. When struggling DJ Faith Adler comes to couch surf with her best friend Tori in NYC, she finds herself drawn into the world of Tori's eclectic friend group. Right from her chaotic first night, Faith's new friends take her under their wing and help her navigate the ups and downs of trying to make it as an artist in the big city. There's Tori, the bubbly one; Ginah, the high-strung but loyal one; Matt, the flirtatious one; and David, the cynical one. Tori and Ginah's apartment becomes a sanctuary where lasting bonds are forged over late nights, drink-filled conversations, impromptu dance parties, and the occasional Sense and Sensibility marathon. Falling in love definitely isn't part of Faith's plan, but that all changes when she meets David, a former law student (and current bartender) who has recently come to the conclusion that romance is for suckers and sworn it off altogether. From the moment they meet at a New Year's in the Summer party, their will-they-or-won't-they chemistry is electric. As Faith and David grow closer over whiskey-soaked nights and heart-to-heart talks on the fire escape, their flirtation deepens into something more meaningful. Are they friends? Lovers? Romantic partners? Casual sex acquaintances? The answer is, simultaneously, all and none of the above. Let the overthinking commence! With rich character development and an ensemble cast that feels like friends you've known forever, Hit Singles deftly balances comedy, romance, and poignant drama. It's a beautifully rendered celebration of the family we choose, the cities that choose us back, and the life-altering power of human connection. * * *
This impressive indie film documents the groundbreaking work of physician and co-founder of Ronald McDonald House Charities, Dr. Audrey Evans. Director Ami Canaan Mann joins IndieWire's Sarah Shachat to discuss illuminating this incredible woman's life, and share how she made such a handsome looking feature on a truly indie budget (it involves an abandoned hospital!) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
'Universal Language' is a charming, deceptively deep indie film about a town that is somehow both Winnipeg, Canada and Tehran, Iran, and the lives of its citizens. Director Mathew Rankin sat down with IndieWire craft writer Sarah Shachat to discuss what it takes to live in community, finding his family on set, and of course filming with live turkeys. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The director of the most celebrated animated film of the year sat down with IndieWire's Sarah Shachat to share how he made this charming and powerful film on a micro-indie budget. You can watch the full intrerview with Glints at Youtube.com/IndieWire. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Have you heard about this movie where Amy Adams turns into a dog? Writer and Director Marielle Heller (Can You Ever Forgive Me?, A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood) spoke with IndieWire's Sarah Shachat about how she related to this wild and thought-provoking story, and explains how she tackled the famous Hollywood no-no, working with both children and dogs in one film. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Wolf 359 creator Gabriel Urbina is back to present a quick preview of his new show Dracula: The Danse Macabre. It's a four-part adaptation of Bram Stoker's novel, bringing the horror classic to audio fiction. Performed by just two performers - the incredible Evangeline Young and Change of Mind's Peter Coleman - who bring 15 distinct characters to life, it tells the story of the evil Count Dracula's plan to bring death and destruction to the new world... as well as those who would risk everything to stop him. Featuring a new score from Wolf 359 composer Alan Rodi and sound design by Unwell producer Jeffrey Nils Gardner. To listen to full episodes of Dracula: The Danse Macabre, visit their website or subscribe to the show's feed on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or Pocket Casts. TRANSCRIPT OF TODAY'S MESSAGE: Gabriel Urbina: Hey everyone. My name is Gabriel Urbina. I'm the creator of Wolf 359, and the co-creator of Zero Hours, Time:Bombs, and Unseen. I'm back here on the feed to send you all a short transmission to tell you about a new audio fiction podcast I've made, and which you can listen to right now. It's called Dracula: The Danse Macabre, and it's a new adaptation of Bram Stoker's novel. Over four episodes, it tells the story of the evil Count Dracula, his plans to leave his home of Transylvania to terrorize the new world, and the married couple who do everything in their power to stop him. It's the timeless horror classic given a new coat of podcast paint for the 21st Century, and the whole thing is performed by just two actors, who together bring 15 different different characters to life. I wrote every installment of this adaptation, and I also got to work with some amazing people on these four episodes. Our two actors, Evangeline Young and Peter Coleman - the latter of whom you may remember from our Change of Mind special here on Wolf 359 - they are both unstoppable forces of nature. It has a new gorgeous score from Wolf 359 composer Alan Rodi and incredible sound design from Unwell producer Jeffrey Nils Gardner. And I was even able to twist our old friend Sarah Shachat's arm enough that she agreed to come by the studio and direct an episode. You're about to hear a little preview of the show in just a second, but the first two episodes are actually out right now. So if you find yourself at all intrigued and you need some new spooky content in your life for the end of the year, please consider checking out Dracula: The Danse Macabre. There are links in the episode description for all the places where you can hear it. I hope you'll check it out, I hope you'll enjoy it, and - as always - thank you for listening. TRANSCRIPT OF THE TRAILER: Woman: The rules that govern the vampire are well known. (Thunder crashes behind her. A storm grows in power beneath the following:) Woman: He does not die, but clings to life forever. (Dark, foreboding music plays beneath her words.) Woman: Having lost his own life, he must steal the life of others by drinking their blood. Woman: If a place is a home, he may only enter after he's been invited in. Woman: He is destroyed by the sun and cowers at the sight of religious symbols. Woman: He can be put to rest by a stake through the heart, or by the removal of his head, or by means of fire. Woman: And when he crosses a mirror... he leaves behind no reflection. Woman: And though the vampire may look like a man, all traces of intelligence vanish upon death, leaving behind nothing but a beast. There are no vampires that can think like a man. Man: None... except for one. (A powerful crash of thunder.) Announcer: Dracula: The Danse Macabre. A four-part fiction podcast event from Gabriel Urbina, the creator of Wolf 359, bringing Bram Stoker's timeless horror classic to audio. Coming November 13th, wherever you get your podcasts. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Director Elizabeth Sankey's new documentary examines depictions of Witches across media and pop culture, using her own journeys with motherhood and mental illness as a powerful lens. She has a great chat with IndieWire's Sarah Shachat about the complex filmmaking and personal details that make the film special. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The trio of directors behind Ken Burn's new film join IndieWire's Sarah Shachat for a deep dive into documentary filmmaking, and how they pushed their form forward to capture one of the most fascinating minds in history. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Director Megan Park sat down with IndieWire's Sarah Shachat to discuss her new time-travel coming of age movie. Park discusses the wonderfully quirky Canadian-ness of the movie, and how she found the perfect "Old Ass" late in the process with Aubrey Plaza. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
[Due to our last-minute addition of two episodes, the podcast feed mistakenly had S5E09a queued here for a few hours this morning - it should now be fixed!] How Would Lubitsch Do It comes to a close with a grand finale. Tim Brayton returns to discuss Cluny Brown and look back on both Ernst Lubitsch's career and the past five seasons of this show. First, we discuss everything Cluny Brown: the film's generosity and humanism, its commentary on British class society, its relationship with the second world war, its full-throated embrace of absurdism, the title character's magnetism, Adam Belinski's status as a revision on a stock villain, and the film's somewhat autobiographical and wonderfully optimistic ending. Second, we close out the show with a look back: we debate our respective rankings (Tim, Devan) of Lubitsch's filmography, highlight our favourite cast members, crew members and collaborators, discuss subsequent filmmakers who bear distinct marks of Lubitsch's influence, discuss whether or not the show's structure accurately reflects the ebbs and flows and our subject's career, and answer the key questions: why Lubitsch? Why a podcast? Edited by Griffin Sheel. A Thanks I started this quixotic project two years ago with the hope of making something that spoke to me and, if anyone else was interested, so be it. Turns out some other people were interested, and if you're reading this now, that's probably you. My endless and sincere thanks for sticking it through. Thanks to the many guests who lent their time and support throughout the show: Lauren Faulkner Rossi, Fran Hoepfner, Bram Ruiter, Luci Marzola, Jaime Rebenal, Maddie Whittle, Paul Cuff, Kristin Thompson, Stefan Droissler, Molly Rasberry, Sarah Shachat, James Penco, Dave Kehr, Julia Sirmons, David Neary, Patrick Keating, Jennifer Fleeger, Katharine Coldiron, Jonathan Mackris, Will Sloan, Lea Jacobs, Tanya Goldman, Krin Gabbard, Jordan Fish, Ray Tintori, Z Behl, Eric Dienstfrey, Scott Eyman, Imogen Sarah Smith, Chris Cassingham, Olympia Kiriakou, Griffin Newman, Kevin Bahr, Whit Stillman, Adrian Martin, Jose Arroyo, Lance St. Laurent, Tim Brayton, William Paul, Dara Jaffe, Gary Jaffe, Peter Labuza, Willa Harlow Ross, Eloise Ross, David Cairns, Noah Isenberg, Matt Severson, Mateusz Pacewicz, and Charlotte Garson. Our editors: Griffin Sheel, Gloria Mercer, Willa Harlow Ross, Sophia Yoon, Rylee Cronin, Brennen King, & Eden Cote-Foster Our location sound engineer, Anna Citak-Scott. And others who lent valuable counsel and support: the Margaret Herrick Library, the Museum of Modern Art, the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures and most of all to Ernst Lubitsch, who taught me more than it could possibly take the sixty-eight episodes of this podcast to describe. This entire experience - hundreds of hours of research, recording, and editing - has been among the great pleasures of my life, and everyone's contributions have meant a great deal to me. Onwards to whatever's next!
How Would Lubitsch Do It comes to a close with our grand finale. Tim Brayton returns to discuss Cluny Brown and look back on both Ernst Lubitsch's career and the past five seasons of this show. First, we discuss everything Cluny Brown: the film's generosity and humanism, its commentary on British class society, its relationship with the second world war, its full-throated embrace of absurdism, the title character's magnetism, Adam Belinski's status as a revision on a stock villain, and the film's somewhat autobiographical and wonderfully optimistic ending. Second, we close out the show with a look back: we debate our respective rankings (Tim, Devan) of Lubitsch's filmography, highlight our favourite cast members, crew members and collaborators, discuss subsequent filmmakers who bear distinct marks of Lubitsch's influence, discuss whether or not the show's structure accurately reflects the ebbs and flows and our subject's career, and answer the key questions: why Lubitsch? Why a podcast? Edited by Griffin Sheel. A Thanks I started this quixotic project two years ago with the hope of making something that spoke to me and, if anyone else was interested, so be it. Turns out some other people were interested, and if you're reading this now, that's probably you. My endless and sincere thanks for sticking it through. Thanks to the many guests who lent their time and support throughout the show: Lauren Faulkner Rossi, Fran Hoepfner, Bram Ruiter, Luci Marzola, Jaime Rebenal, Maddie Whittle, Paul Cuff, Kristin Thompson, Stefan Droissler, Molly Rasberry, Sarah Shachat, James Penco, Dave Kehr, Julia Sirmons, David Neary, Patrick Keating, Jennifer Fleeger, Katharine Coldiron, Jonathan Mackris, Will Sloan, Lea Jacobs, Tanya Goldman, Krin Gabbard, Jordan Fish, Ray Tintori, Z Behl, Eric Dienstfrey, Scott Eyman, Imogen Sarah Smith, Chris Cassingham, Olympia Kiriakou, Griffin Newman, Kevin Bahr, Whit Stillman, Adrian Martin, Jose Arroyo, Lance St. Laurent, Tim Brayton, William Paul, Dara Jaffe, Gary Jaffe, Peter Labuza, Willa Ross, Eloise Ross, David Cairns, Noah Isenberg, Matt Severson, Mateusz Pacewicz, and Charlotte Garson. Our editors: Griffin Sheel, Gloria Mercer, Willa Ross, Sophia Yoon, Rylee Cronin, Brennen King, & Eden Cote-Foster Our location sound engineer, Anna Citak-Scott. And others who lent valuable counsel and support: the Margaret Herrick Library, the Museum of Modern Art, the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures and most of all to Ernst Lubitsch, who taught me more than it could possibly take the sixty-eight episodes of this podcast to describe. This entire experience - hundreds of hours of research, recording, and editing - has been among the great pleasures of my life, and everyone's contributions have meant a great deal to me. Onwards to whatever's next!
Transcripts are available here: https://www.tincanaudio.co.uk/camlann-s1e9-transcript-bonfire Content Warnings can be found at the end of the show notes. Keep the fires burning. Follow us on social media @camlannpod to stay updated. Share your thoughts with us using #Camlann. If you'd like to support the future of the show, you can do so on Ko-Fi and Patreon. This is the final episode of Camlann - for now. If you'd like to join us for our finale listen along with Ella, Amber and some of the cast and crew, you can do that on Tin Can Audio's Twitch from 8-10pm GMT on Monday 6th May 2024. If you missed it, don't worry - this and all of our livestreams are available to be watched back on Tin Can Audio's YouTube channel. The first season of Camlann was made possible with funding from Creative Scotland and the Inevitable Foundation. We'll be applying for funding to make more. Funding applications do much better if shows have: high listener figures, public reviews, and if they can provide some of their own seed money to get started. So please consider leaving us a review, donating to our Ko-Fi or Patreon @camlannpod, or just telling a friend about the show. We really appreciate it. The Welsh folk song Dai is humming in this episode is Lisa Lân, a lament for a dead lover. This episode featured: Tobias Weatherburn as Dai, Angharad Phillips as Morgan, Robyn Holdaway as Perry, Nicole Miners as Gwen (or Shújūn), Paul Warren as Gwaine, Felix Trench as Kay and Pip Gladwin as Arthur. Additional voices were provided by Marc Sollinger, Amber Devereux and the cast. Special thanks to Hobbes the Lion for playing Gelert. This episode was written and directed by Ella Watts, with original scoring and sound design from Amber Devereux at Tin Can Audio, and additional Music Direction from Alessa Catterall. Our Production Manager is Ross McFarlane. Special thanks to: Angharad Gilbey, Holly Thwaites Bee, Samuel Thompson, Sara-Luise Edge-Smith, Elizabeth Campbell, Marc Sollinger, Sarah Shachat, David K. Barnes, Rosenkranz Vermilion and Max Degan. We wouldn't have got here without you. Diolch yn fawr iawn am wrando. Thank you so much for listening. Content Warnings: Attempted Mind Control, Loss of Agency, Threatening Behaviour, Strong Language
Transcripts are available here: https://www.tincanaudio.co.uk/camlann-s1e8-transcript-christmas Content Warnings can be found at the end of the show notes. Everybody finds each other. Follow us on social media @camlannpod to stay updated. Share your thoughts with us using #Camlann. If you'd like to support the future of the show, you can do so on Ko-Fi and Patreon. If you'd like to listen along live to episodes as they come out with Ella and Amber, you can do that on Tin Can Audio's Twitch channel from 8-10pm GMT on Mondays. On Wednesdays at the same time, Amber will be going through the process of composing the score, and on our ‘off weeks' on Mondays, Amber will go through the sound design for the show. Camlann is made possible with funding from Creative Scotland and the Inevitable Foundation. The English folk song featured in this episode is The Gower Wassail, a song traditionally sung with friends and neighbours at Christmas in orchards and the countryside. The tradition has begun to be picked up in orchards in Scotland. This episode featured: Tobias Weatherburn as Dai, Angharad Phillips as Morgan, Robyn Holdaway as Perry, Nicole Miners as Gwen (or Shújūn), Paul Warren as Gwaine, and Felix Trench as Kay. Additional voices were provided by the cast. Special thanks to Hobbes the Lion for playing Gelert. This episode was written and directed by Ella Watts, with original scoring and sound design from Amber Devereux at Tin Can Audio, and additional Music Direction from Alessa Catterall. Our Production Manager is Ross McFarlane. Special thanks to: Angharad Gilbey, Holly Thwaites Bee, Samuel Thompson, Sara-Luise Edge-Smith, Elizabeth Campbell, Marc Sollinger, Sarah Shachat, David K. Barnes, Rosenkranz Vermilion and Max Degan. We wouldn't have got here without you. Diolch yn fawr iawn am wrando. Thank you so much for listening. Keep the fires burning. Content Warnings: Discussion of Bereavement, Strong Language, Mention of Child Abuse, Fantasy Violence, Major Character Death (22:09-23:10)
Transcripts are available here: https://www.tincanaudio.co.uk/camlann-s1e7-transcript-hill Content Warnings can be found at the end of the show notes. In the Otherworld. Follow us on social media @camlannpod to stay updated. Share your thoughts with us using #Camlann. If you'd like to support the future of the show, you can do so on Ko-Fi and Patreon. If you'd like to listen along live to episodes as they come out with Ella and Amber, you can do that on Tin Can Audio's Twitch channel from 8-10pm GMT on Mondays. On Wednesdays at the same time, Amber will be going through the process of composing the score, and on our ‘off weeks' on Mondays, Amber will go through the sound design for the show. Camlann is made possible with funding from Creative Scotland and the Inevitable Foundation. The Welsh folk song featured in this episode is Robin Ddiog, a nursery rhyme. This episode featured: Tobias Weatherburn as Dai, Angharad Phillips as Morgan, Robyn Holdaway as Perry, Nicole Miners as Gwen (or Shújūn), Felix Trench as Kay, Fay Roberts as Rhiannon, David Charles as Lapwing, and Peter Wicks as The News Anchor. Additional voices were provided by the cast. Special thanks to Hobbes the Lion for playing Gelert. With thanks to Méabh de Brún for her advice on Gaeilge, and to Angharad Philips and Tobias Weatherburn for their guidance on pronunciation in Welsh. This episode was written and directed by Ella Watts, with original scoring and sound design from Amber Devereux at Tin Can Audio and special guest sound designer Oliver Morris. Our Production Manager is Ross McFarlane. Special thanks to: Angharad Gilbey, Holly Thwaites Bee, Samuel Thompson, Sara-Luise Edge-Smith, Elizabeth Campbell, Marc Sollinger, Sarah Shachat, David K. Barnes, Rosenkranz Vermilion and Max Degan. We wouldn't have got here without you. Diolch yn fawr iawn am wrando. Thank you so much for listening. Keep the fires burning. Content Warnings: Discussion of Mental Illness, Brief Reference to Attempted Suicide (3:15-3:30), Discussion of Bereavement, Reference to Starvation, Emotionally Heightened Scenes and Dialogue.
Transcripts are available here: https://www.tincanaudio.co.uk/camlann-s1e6-transcript-odysseus Content Warnings can be found at the end of the show notes. Elsewhere. Follow us on social media @camlannpod to stay updated. Share your thoughts with us using #Camlann. If you'd like to support the future of the show, you can do so on Ko-Fi and Patreon. If you'd like to listen along live to episodes as they come out with Ella and Amber, you can do that on Tin Can Audio's Twitch channel from 8-10pm GMT on Mondays. On Wednesdays at the same time, Amber will be going through the process of composing the score, and on our ‘off weeks' on Mondays, Amber will go through the sound design for the show. Camlann is made possible with funding from Creative Scotland and the Inevitable Foundation. The Greek folk song featured in this episode is Ikariotikos - it's a traditional dance and song from the island of Ikaria which has a ‘slow' and ‘quick' version. Odysseus sings the slow version. This episode featured: Dimitri Gripari as Odysseus, Christina Appana as Ariadne, and Will de Renzy-Martin as Polyphemus. Additional voices were provided by the Camlann ensemble. Special shoutout to Ross McFarlane, for getting eaten by a cyclops. With thanks to Eleni Sfetsiori for her work proofreading and consulting on this episode. This episode was written and directed by Ella Watts, with original scoring and sound design from Amber Devereux at Tin Can Audio, and additional Music Direction from Alessa Catterall. Our Production Manager is Ross McFarlane. Special thanks to: Angharad Gilbey, Holly Thwaites Bee, Samuel Thompson, Sara-Luise Edge-Smith, Elizabeth Campbell, Marc Sollinger, Sarah Shachat, David K. Barnes, Rosenkranz Vermilion and Max Degan. We wouldn't have got here without you. Σας ευχαριστώ πολύ που με ακούσατε. Thank you so much for listening. Keep sailing. Content Warnings: Fantasy Violence, Discussion of Death and Grief, Gore and Violent Death (11:41-11:50), Eye Trauma (18:49-19:09)
As a huge of of post-apocalyptic shows and King Arthur mythology, I am delighted to introduce to this great new show . . . Camlann.Camlann is a post-apocalyptic urban fantasy podcast inspired by folklore and Arthurian legends. It's written and directed by Ella Watts (Doctor Who: Redacted, Eliza: A Robot Story), and produced by Amber Devereux at Tin Can Audio (The Tower, Folxlore), with production management from Ross McFarlane (Folxlore). The show is made possible with funding from Creative Scotland and the Inevitable Foundation.Transcripts are available here: https://www.tincanaudio.co.uk/camlann-s1e1-transcriptContent Warnings can be found at the end of the show notes.Dai lights a fire.Follow us on social media @camlannpod to stay updated. Share your thoughts with us using #Camlann. If you'd like to support the future of the show, you can do so on Ko-Fi and Patreon.If you'd like to listen along live to episodes as they come out with Ella and Amber, you can do that on Tin Can Audio's Twitch channel from 8-10pm GMT on Mondays. On Wednesdays at the same time, Amber will be going through the process of composing the score, and on our ‘off weeks' on Mondays, Amber will go through the sound design for the show. Camlann is made possible with funding from Creative Scotland and the Inevitable Foundation.The Welsh folk song featured in this episode is Tân yn Llŷn, a protest song about the destruction of Penyberth.This episode featured: Tobias Weatherburn as Dai, Angharad Phillips as Morgan, Robyn Holdaway as Perry, Paul Warren as Gwaine and Peter Wicks as The News Anchor. Special thanks to Hobbes the Lion for playing Gelert. This episode was written and directed by Ella Watts, with original scoring and sound design from Amber Devereux at Tin Can Audio, and additional Music Direction from Alessa Catterall. Our Production Manager is Ross McFarlane.This episode is dedicated to Angharad Gilbey, without whom this show would not exist. Caru ti, cariad.Special thanks to: Angharad Gilbey, Holly Thwaites Bee, Samuel Thompson, Sara-Luise Edge-Smith, Elizabeth Campbell, Marc Sollinger, Sarah Shachat, David K. Barnes, Rosenkranz Vermilion and Max Degan. We wouldn't have got here without you.Diolch yn fawr iawn am wrando. Thank you so much for listening.Keep the fires burning.Content Warnings: Fantasy Violence, Strong Language, Fantasy Disaster, Death and Grief.Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/ostium. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcripts are available here: https://www.tincanaudio.co.uk/camlann-s1e5-transcript-voicemail Content Warnings can be found at the end of the show notes. Gwaine finds what he's been looking for. Follow us on social media @camlannpod to stay updated. Share your thoughts with us using #Camlann. If you'd like to support the future of the show, you can do so on Ko-Fi and Patreon. If you'd like to listen along live to episodes as they come out with Ella and Amber, you can do that on Tin Can Audio's Twitch channel from 8-10pm GMT on Mondays. On Wednesdays at the same time, Amber will be going through the process of composing the score, and on our ‘off weeks' on Mondays, Amber will go through the sound design for the show. Camlann is made possible with funding from Creative Scotland and the Inevitable Foundation. The Welsh folk song featured in this episode is Cariad Cyntaf, it means “first love”. This episode featured: Tobias Weatherburn as Dai, Angharad Phillips as Morgan, Robyn Holdaway as Perry, Nicole Miners as Gwen (or Shújūn) and Paul Warren as Gwaine. Special thanks to Hobbes the Lion for playing Gelert. This episode was written and directed by Ella Watts, with original scoring and sound design from Amber Devereux at Tin Can Audio, and additional Music Direction from Alessa Catterall. Our Production Manager is Ross McFarlane. Special thanks to: Angharad Gilbey, Holly Thwaites Bee, Samuel Thompson, Sara-Luise Edge-Smith, Elizabeth Campbell, Marc Sollinger, Sarah Shachat, David K. Barnes, Rosenkranz Vermilion and Max Degan. We wouldn't have got here without you. Diolch yn fawr iawn am wrando. Thank you so much for listening. Keep the fires burning. Content Warnings: Fantasy Violence, Strong Language, Heroic Suicide (25:14-27:09), Major Character Death (25:14-27:09)
Transcripts are available here: https://www.tincanaudio.co.uk/camlann-s1e4-point-5-transcript Content Warnings can be found at the end of the show notes. Dydd Gŵyl Dewi Hapus! Follow us on social media @camlannpod to stay updated. Share your thoughts with us using #Camlann. If you'd like to support the future of the show, you can do so on Ko-Fi and Patreon. If you'd like to listen along live to episodes as they come out with Ella and Amber, you can do that on Tin Can Audio's Twitch channel from 8-10pm GMT on Mondays. On Wednesdays at the same time, Amber will be going through the process of composing the score, and on our ‘off weeks' on Mondays, Amber will go through the sound design for the show. Camlann is made possible with funding from Creative Scotland and the Inevitable Foundation. This episode featured Paul Warren as Gwaine. This episode was written and directed by Ella Watts, with sound design from Amber Devereux at Tin Can Audio. Our Production Manager is Ross McFarlane. Special thanks to: Angharad Gilbey, Holly Thwaites Bee, Samuel Thompson, Sara-Luise Edge-Smith, Elizabeth Campbell, Marc Sollinger, Sarah Shachat, David K. Barnes, Rosenkranz Vermilion and Max Degan. We wouldn't have got here without you. Diolch yn fawr iawn am wrando. Thank you so much for listening. Keep the fires burning. Content Warnings: Fantasy Violence, Strong Language.
Transcripts are available here: https://www.tincanaudio.co.uk/camlann-s1e3-transcript-lantern Content Warnings can be found at the end of the show notes. Turn off the lights. Follow us on social media @camlannpod to stay updated. Share your thoughts with us using #Camlann. If you'd like to support the future of the show, you can do so on Ko-Fi and Patreon. If you'd like to listen along live to episodes as they come out with Ella and Amber, you can do that on Tin Can Audio's Twitch channel from 8-10pm GMT on Mondays. On Wednesdays at the same time, Amber will be going through the process of composing the score, and on our ‘off weeks' on Mondays, Amber will go through the sound design for the show. Camlann is made possible with funding from Creative Scotland and the Inevitable Foundation. The Welsh folk song featured in this episode is Dacw ‘Nghariad, a love song. Huge thanks to the podcast Wooden Overcoats, and its lead writer David K. Barnes for letting us quote their show this episode. The phrase “other people are all there is” is a recurring motif throughout the series, and we echo the sentiment wholeheartedly. This episode featured: Tobias Weatherburn as Dai, Angharad Phillips as Morgan, Robyn Holdaway as Perry, Nicole Miners as Gwen (or Shújūn), Felix Trench as Kay, Peter Wicks as The News Anchor and Will de Renzy-Martin as The Lantern Man. Special thanks to Hobbes the Lion for playing Gelert. This episode was written and directed by Ella Watts, with original scoring and sound design from Amber Devereux at Tin Can Audio, and additional Music Direction from Alessa Catterall. Our Production Manager is Ross McFarlane. Special thanks to: Angharad Gilbey, Holly Thwaites Bee, Samuel Thompson, Sara-Luise Edge-Smith, Elizabeth Campbell, Marc Sollinger, Sarah Shachat, David K. Barnes, Rosenkranz Vermilion and Max Degan. We wouldn't have got here without you. Diolch yn fawr iawn am wrando. Thank you so much for listening. Keep the fires burning. Content Warnings: Emotional Manipulation, Misgendering (10:53-11:05), Triggered Anxiety (11:05-11:19) Fantasy Violence, Extreme Stress.
Transcripts are available here: https://www.tincanaudio.co.uk/camlann-s1e2-transcript-horses Content Warnings can be found at the end of the show notes. The gang deals with the local wildlife. Follow us on social media @camlannpod to stay updated. Share your thoughts with us using #Camlann. If you'd like to support the future of the show, you can do so on Ko-Fi and Patreon. If you'd like to listen along live to episodes as they come out with Ella and Amber, you can do that on Tin Can Audio's Twitch channel from 8-10pm GMT on Mondays. On Wednesdays at the same time, Amber will be going through the process of composing the score, and on our ‘off weeks' on Mondays, Amber will go through the sound design for the show. Camlann is made possible with funding from Creative Scotland and the Inevitable Foundation. The Welsh folk song featured in this episode is Pais Dinogad, an Old Welsh lullaby. This episode featured: Tobias Weatherburn as Dai, Angharad Phillips as Morgan, Robyn Holdaway as Perry, Paul Warren as Gwaine, Peter Wicks as The News Anchor and Beth Crane as The Kelpie. Special thanks to Hobbes the Lion for playing Gelert. This episode was written and directed by Ella Watts, with original scoring and sound design from Amber Devereux at Tin Can Audio, and additional Music Direction from Alessa Catterall. Our Production Manager is Ross McFarlane. Special thanks to: Angharad Gilbey, Holly Thwaites Bee, Samuel Thompson, Sara-Luise Edge-Smith, Elizabeth Campbell, Marc Sollinger, Sarah Shachat, David K. Barnes, Rosenkranz Vermilion and Max Degan. We wouldn't have got here without you. Diolch yn fawr iawn am wrando. Thank you so much for listening. Keep the fires burning. Content Warnings: Child Death (4:20-4:33), Drowning (19:12-19:28), Fantasy Violence, Death and Grief, Loss of a Family Member, Strong Language.
Transcripts are available here: https://www.tincanaudio.co.uk/camlann-s1e1-transcript Content Warnings can be found at the end of the show notes. Dai lights a fire. Follow us on social media @camlannpod to stay updated. Share your thoughts with us using #Camlann. If you'd like to support the future of the show, you can do so on Ko-Fi and Patreon. If you'd like to listen along live to episodes as they come out with Ella and Amber, you can do that on Tin Can Audio's Twitch channel from 8-10pm GMT on Mondays. On Wednesdays at the same time, Amber will be going through the process of composing the score, and on our ‘off weeks' on Mondays, Amber will go through the sound design for the show. Camlann is made possible with funding from Creative Scotland and the Inevitable Foundation. The Welsh folk song featured in this episode is Tân yn Llŷn, a protest song about the destruction of Penyberth. This episode featured: Tobias Weatherburn as Dai, Angharad Phillips as Morgan, Robyn Holdaway as Perry, Paul Warren as Gwaine and Peter Wicks as The News Anchor. Special thanks to Hobbes the Lion for playing Gelert. This episode was written and directed by Ella Watts, with original scoring and sound design from Amber Devereux at Tin Can Audio, and additional Music Direction from Alessa Catterall. Our Production Manager is Ross McFarlane. This episode is dedicated to Angharad Gilbey, without whom this show would not exist. Caru ti, cariad. Special thanks to: Angharad Gilbey, Holly Thwaites Bee, Samuel Thompson, Sara-Luise Edge-Smith, Elizabeth Campbell, Marc Sollinger, Sarah Shachat, David K. Barnes, Rosenkranz Vermilion and Max Degan. We wouldn't have got here without you. Diolch yn fawr iawn am wrando. Thank you so much for listening. Keep the fires burning. Content Warnings: Fantasy Violence, Strong Language, Fantasy Disaster, Death and Grief. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Camlann is a post-apocalyptic urban fantasy podcast inspired by folklore and Arthurian legends. It's written and directed by Ella Watts (Doctor Who: Redacted, Eliza: A Robot Story), and produced by Amber Devereux at Tin Can Audio (The Tower, Folxlore), with production management from Ross McFarlane (Folxlore). The show is made possible with funding from Creative Scotland and the Inevitable Foundation. Camlann will begin releasing episodes fortnightly from 15th January 2024. Subscribe to their feed wherever you get your podcasts and follow them on social media @camlannpod to stay updated. Share your thoughts with them using #Camlann Transcripts are available here: https://www.tincanaudio.co.uk/camlann-s1e1-transcript Content Warnings can be found at the end of the show notes. Dai lights a fire. Follow us on social media @camlannpod to stay updated. Share your thoughts with us using #Camlann. If you'd like to support the future of the show, you can do so on Ko-Fi and Patreon. If you'd like to listen along live to episodes as they come out with Ella and Amber, you can do that on Tin Can Audio's Twitch channel from 8-10pm GMT on Mondays. On Wednesdays at the same time, Amber will be going through the process of composing the score, and on our ‘off weeks' on Mondays, Amber will go through the sound design for the show. Camlann is made possible with funding from Creative Scotland and the Inevitable Foundation. The Welsh folk song featured in this episode is Tân yn Llŷn, a protest song about the destruction of Penyberth. This episode featured: Tobias Weatherburn as Dai, Angharad Phillips as Morgan, Robyn Holdaway as Perry, Paul Warren as Gwaine and Peter Wicks as The News Anchor. Special thanks to Hobbes the Lion for playing Gelert. This episode was written and directed by Ella Watts, with original scoring and sound design from Amber Devereux at Tin Can Audio, and additional Music Direction from Alessa Catterall. Our Production Manager is Ross McFarlane. This episode is dedicated to Angharad Gilbey, without whom this show would not exist. Caru ti, cariad. Special thanks to: Angharad Gilbey, Holly Thwaites Bee, Samuel Thompson, Sara-Luise Edge-Smith, Elizabeth Campbell, Marc Sollinger, Sarah Shachat, David K. Barnes, Rosenkranz Vermilion and Max Degan. We wouldn't have got here without you. Diolch yn fawr iawn am wrando. Thank you so much for listening. Keep the fires burning. Content Warnings: Fantasy Violence, Strong Language, Fantasy Disaster, Death and Grief. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This week we chat with Sarah Shachat and David K Barnes to talk about writing historical fictionContent Notes:Discussions of: Historical medical procedures, homophobia, misogyny, classism Mentions of: Covid-19 pandemic, quarantine, spiders, transphobia, sexual abuse, enslavement SFX: Crowds, beepsDirected by Amani ZardoeProduced by Lowri Ann DaviesExecutive Producers Alexander J Newall & April SumnerFeaturingLowri Ann Davies, Sarah Shachat and David K BarnesDialogue Editor – Lowri Ann DaviesSound Designer - Lowri Ann Davies and Catherine RinellaMastering Editor - Catherine RinellaMusic by Sam JonesArt by Guerrilla CommunicationsSFX from Soundly and previously credited artistsSupport us on Patreon at https://patreon.com/rustyquillCheck out our merchandise available at https://www.redbubble.com/people/RustyQuill/shop and https://www.teepublic.com/stores/rusty-quillJoin our community:WEBSITE: rustyquill.comFACEBOOK: facebook.com/therustyquillTWITTER: @therustyquillREDDIT: reddit.com/r/RustyQuillEMAIL: mail@rustyquill.comCry Havoc! Ask Questions Later is a podcast distributed by Rusty Quill Ltd. and licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share alike 4.0 International Licence. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Transcripts are available here: https://www.tincanaudio.co.uk/camlann-s1e1-transcript Content Warnings can be found at the end of the show notes. Dai lights a fire. Follow us on social media @camlannpod to stay updated. Share your thoughts with us using #Camlann. If you'd like to support the future of the show, you can do so on Ko-Fi and Patreon. If you'd like to listen along live to episodes as they come out with Ella and Amber, you can do that on Tin Can Audio's Twitch channel from 8-10pm GMT on Mondays. On Wednesdays at the same time, Amber will be going through the process of composing the score, and on our ‘off weeks' on Mondays, Amber will go through the sound design for the show. Camlann is made possible with funding from Creative Scotland and the Inevitable Foundation. The Welsh folk song featured in this episode is Tân yn Llŷn, a protest song about the destruction of Penyberth. This episode featured: Tobias Weatherburn as Dai, Angharad Phillips as Morgan, Robyn Holdaway as Perry, Paul Warren as Gwaine and Peter Wicks as The News Anchor. Special thanks to Hobbes the Lion for playing Gelert. This episode was written and directed by Ella Watts, with original scoring and sound design from Amber Devereux at Tin Can Audio, and additional Music Direction from Alessa Catterall. Our Production Manager is Ross McFarlane. This episode is dedicated to Angharad Gilbey, without whom this show would not exist. Caru ti, cariad. Special thanks to: Angharad Gilbey, Holly Thwaites Bee, Samuel Thompson, Sara-Luise Edge-Smith, Elizabeth Campbell, Marc Sollinger, Sarah Shachat, David K. Barnes, Rosenkranz Vermilion and Max Degan. We wouldn't have got here without you. Diolch yn fawr iawn am wrando. Thank you so much for listening. Keep the fires burning. Content Warnings: Fantasy Violence, Strong Language, Fantasy Disaster, Death and Grief.
In our Season 3 finale, returning guest Bram Ruiter joins us to discuss the final film Ernst Lubitsch ever directed that didn't involved on-set sound recording: ETERNAL LOVE! We discuss the film's unusual status as a hybrid silent/sound picture, the strange story of how this film was lost and then discovered, John Barrymore's dipsomaniacal tendencies, and the film's terrific ending amidst long tangents in which break down how, exactly, one might deign to fix this rickety screenplay. Edited by Will Ross. Thanks to the guests who lent their time and support to this season: Peter Labuza, Tim Brayton, Molly Rasberry, Sarah Shachat, James Penco, Will Ross, Dave Kehr, Julia Sirmons, David Neary, David Cairns, and Bram Ruiter. Our editors, Griffin Sheel, Gloria Mercer, and Will Ross, and our sound recordist, Anna Citak-Scott. And others who lent valuable counsel and support: William Paul, the MOMA, Jose Arroyo, Matt Severson, the Margaret Herrick Library, Dara Jaffe, Scott Eyman, Patrick Keating, Paul Cuff, and many others. We have a Discord! NEXT SEASON: We return on October 31st with Season 4, in which the movies begin to talk! Yes, we're entering the sound era as well as the height of Lubitsch's influence in Hollywood!
When Gaius takes over her latest production, Octavia resorts to drastic measures to get him out of her theatre for good.Content Notes:Alcohol & Alcohol UseFamily ConflictSFX: Loud vocalisations, metallic clanking & scraping, crowds Transcripts: https://bit.ly/3MNrckc Created by David K. BarnesDirected by Amani ZardoeExecutive Producers Alexander J Newall & April SumnerWritten by Sarah Shachat and David K BarnesProduced by Natalie Winter, Katherine Lindeman, Natasha Johnston, and April SumnerCreative Consultation by Amani ZardoeScript Editing by David K BarnesHistorical Consultation by Dr. Emma SouthonSpecial Thanks to Areinne KingSensitivity Consultation by Salt and SageFeaturingHarry Roebuck as Gaius Octavius CaesarSarah Lambie as OctaviaBenjamin Garrison as QuintusAaron-Louis Cadogan as AntyllusSarah Agha as CharmianKazeem Tosin Amore as Mark AntonyAndy Secombe as LepidusTom Crowley as MacisKarim Kronfli as Tavern KeeperRyan Hopevere-Anderson as SextusMark Thompson as GracchusHelen Gould as Woman 1Ian Hayles as Man 1Cathy Rinella as Woman 2Ryan Hopevere Anderson as Man 2Dialogue Editor – Nico VetteseSound Designer - Katharine SeatonMastering Editor - Catherine RinellaMusic and Scoring by Sam JonesArt by Guerrilla CommunicationsSFX from CC0: martian, usamah, leonelmail, sheepfilms; CC-by-4.0: duckduckpony, Harbour11. Other: Katharine Seaton, Soundly, Soundsnap and previously credited artists from Freesound.orgCheck out our merchandise available at https://www.redbubble.com/people/RustyQuill/shop and https://www.teepublic.com/stores/rusty-quillJoin our community:WEBSITE: rustyquill.comFACEBOOK: facebook.com/therustyquillTWITTER: @therustyquillREDDIT: reddit.com/r/RustyQuillEMAIL: mail@rustyquill.comCry Havoc! Ask Questions Later is a podcast distributed by Rusty Quill Ltd. and licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share alike 4.0 International Licence. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Sarah Shachat joins us on-location in New York City to discuss THE MARRIAGE CIRCLE.. We mull over the evolution this film represents in Lubitsch's tone, the strange pairing of Ernst Lubitsch and the Warner Brothers, the luminous Adolphe Menjou, Lubitsch's bewilderingly advantageous contractual terms, his filmmaking philosophy circa the mid 1920s, the art of splitting couples up at parties, and, of course, Harry The Cameraman's unbelievable story about nickels and bodily organs. Come join our Discord! NEXT WEEK: James Penco joins us to discuss THREE WOMEN. For details as to where to find this film, check out our resources page.
Greater Boston is created by Alexander Danner and Jeff Van Dreason with help from T.H. Ponders, Bob Raymonda, and Jordan Stillman. Recording and technical assistance from Marck Harmon. This episode was sound designed by Jeff Van Dreason and written by Alexander Danner, ItMe, Amanda McCormack, TH Ponders, Bob Raymonda, Jordan Stillman, Theo Wolf, and Jeff Van Dreason. Dialogue editing by Bob Raymonda. Portions of this episode were written at The Bridge Sound and Stage with recording engineers Javier Lom and Alex Alinson. CAST In order of appearance, this episode features: Sophie Bjorn as Lucia (she/her) Graham Rowat as Bartender (he/him) Eli McIlvaine as Man In Bar (he/him) Vinay Narani as Fat Stanley (she/her) Adam Raymonda as Stinky Pete (he/him) Neil Johnson as Weasel (he/him) Kenny Garcia as Bruce Bosley (he/him) Jordan Cobb as Valiance Johnson (she/her) Lydia Anderson as Gemma Linzer-Coolidge (she/her) Kelly McCabe as Nica Stamatis (she/her) James Johnston as Dimitri Stamatis (he/him) Nora Van Dreason as Monty Linzer-Coolidge (he/him) James Capobianco as Freed Friend Poletti (he/him) Cornelius Mohr as Sean from Brockton (he/him) Ian DePriest as Brian Brown (he/him) Richard Penner as Thomas Thomas (he/him) Tal Minear as Florence (they/them) Austin Allen as Moving Person (they/them) Cass McPhee as Jimmy (he/him) Tanja Milojevich as Wanda McIntosh (she/her) Tyrell Worrel Jr as Legion Assistant Daisy Guevara as Kavllyn (she/her) Sam Musher as Emily Bespin (she/her) Rich Zieff as Mayor (he/him) Bonnie Calderwood Aspinwall as Jackie (she/her) Lark Rodenbush as Dina (they/them) Mike Linden as Funeral Director (he/him) Beth Eyre as Autumn West (she/her) Julian Danner as Ada West (he/him) Julia Propp as Louisa Alvarez (she/her) Summer Unsin as Charlotte Linzer-Coolidge (she/her) Mario da Rosa Jr as Isaiah Powell (he/them) Braden Lamb as Leon Stamatis (he/him) James Oliva as Michael Tate (he/him) Jeff Van Dreason as Chuck Octagon (he/him) Sawyer Greene as Frankie (he/him) Ester Ellis as Vincenzo Wellington (he/him) James Capobianco as Professor Paul Montgomery Chelmsworth (he/him) Mike Linden as Marlo (he/him) Clare Lopez as Pauline (she/her) Mike Linden as Guy (he/him) Pat King as Danny Campanelli (he/him) TH Ponders as Rodger (they/them) Jim Johanson as Jonas Wright (he/him) Jordan Stillman as Allison (she/her) Bob Raymonda as Tom (he/they) Eli Barraza as Natalie (she/her) Felix Trench as Mark Wahlberg (he/him) Kristen DiMercurio as Nichole Fonzarelli (she/her) Gabby Hall as Penny (they/them) Rocky Goldman as Jamie (she/her) Ishani Kanetkar as Lily of the Small Urban Community Garden (they/them) Caleb Del Rio as Fox Fossil (he/him) Sarah Shachat as Joey (he/him) Gabriel Urbina as Edgar (he/him) Tau Zaman as Abdul (they/them) Jay Townsend as Oswald (they/them) Josh Rubino as Bernie (he/him) Mama Bang Bang as Candice (she/her) Jessica Washington as Isabelle Powell (she/her) Oliver Morris as Singer (he/him) Jenny Pan as Petal (they/them) Mike Linden as Wendell Jorgenson (he/him) Arun Sanuti as Tyrell Fredericks (he/him) Johanna Bodnyk as Mallory (she/her) James Johanson as Rusty (he/him) Ben Flaumenhaft as Uriah Connolly (he/him) MUSIC Charlie on the MTA recorded by Emily Peterson and Dirk Tiede Pictures of Rivers written by Oliver Morris and Jeff Van Dreason, performed by Oliver Morris Train Jam and Circus Music by Adrienne Howard, Emily Peterson, and Dirk Tiede Eulogy for Leon by TH Ponders Content Notes Multiple discussions of suicide Death Language Intense grief Euthanasia and assisted suicide Emotional distress Collective malaise and sadness Alcoholism and addiction Pet death and sickness Animal cruelty Dedication This season is dedicated to Vicky Anderson, Harry Melia, Ellen O'Keefe, Shreyas Roy, Zachary Winterton, and everyone we've lost these last few years. Greater Boston is a ThirdSight Media Production Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Coming 1 June 2023SUBSCRIBE now for updates!Cry Havoc! Ask Questions Later takes place two years after Julius Caesar failed to beware the Ides of March and got stabbed to death by a band of well-wishers. Now the assassins have been rounded up and slaughtered in battle, so we can all breathe a sigh of relief. But who's in charge now? With things on the verge of absolute collapse, the cool and calculating Cleopatra, the Queen of the Nile, has swung by for an extended visit. She's eager to renew an alliance with Rome by any means necessary – including marriage and/or murder. A dramatic comedy of power politics, whirlwind romances, and running fast to get nowhere Transcripts: https://bit.ly/3MNrckc Created by David K. Barnes Directed by Amani Zardoe Executive Producers Alexander J Newall & April Sumner Written by David K. Barnes, Grace Knight, Maud Dromgoole, Robert Valentine, Octavia Bray, Rhys Tirado, Tom Crowley, Sarah Shachat, and Rafaella Marcus Featuring: Kazeem Tosin Amore, Harry Roebuck, Lara Sawalha, Sarah Agha, Sarah Lambie, Andy Secombe, Benjamin Garrison, Aaron-Louis Cadogan, Ellie Dickens, & Ryan Hopevere-Anderson Edited by Lowri Ann Davies, Nico Vettese, Katharine Seaton, Catherine Rinella, James Austin, Meg McKeller, Tessa Vroom Produced by Natalie Winter, M Lindeman, Natasha Johnston, and April Sumner Creative Consultation by Amani Zardoe Historical Consultation by Dr. Emma Southon Special Thanks to Areinne King Sensitivity Consultation by Salt and SageSupport us on Patreon at https://patreon.com/rustyquill Check out our merchandise available at https://www.redbubble.com/people/RustyQuill/shop and https://www.teepublic.com/stores/rusty-quillJoin our community: WEBSITE: rustyquill.com FACEBOOK: facebook.com/therustyquill TWITTER: @therustyquill REDDIT: reddit.com/r/RustyQuill EMAIL: mail@rustyquill.comCry Havoc! Ask Questions Later is a podcast distributed by Rusty Quill Ltd. and licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share alike 4.0 International Licence. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
UNSEEN is the new urban fantasy audio fiction podcast by Long Story Short Productions. The premise behind it is simple: In a world where magic is real but invisible to almost everyone, the few magical beings that do exist struggle, every day, just to be seen. Season one of UNSEEN will feature ten different stories of identity, connection, and personhood (and, of course, magic) in the modern world. Some of them will be thrilling adventures. Others may be sad and melancholic. Some may be creepy and unsettling. Each of them will feature a single performer, guiding the audience through a new, original modern fantasy landscape. Every week, a new story. A new voice. A new glimpse into the world of magic. Unseen was created by Gabriel Urbina, Sarah Shachat, and Zach Valenti. Learn more at https://www.unseen.show/ And follow the show at https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/unseen/id1536343148 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A young woman in London notices a mysterious shop in Covent Garden, one no one else seems to be able to see. She gets a job there, but discovers that nothing - not even magic - can magically fix what's wrong with your life. Starring Dottie James as Harry Winter. Written and Directed by Gabriel Urbina. Script Editing by David K. Barnes. Original Music by Alan Rodi. Sound Design by Zach Valenti. Produced by Sarah Shachat, Zach Valenti, and Gabriel Urbina, along with Angel Acevedo, Jenn Schneider, and Amy Tanguay. A transcript for this episode is available here. Visit our website for additional information on our show, the team behind UNSEEN, and more episodes. Ad sales by Multitude. Today's episode is brought to you by BetterHELP, the world's largest online counseling service. As a special offer for UNSEEN listeners, you can get 10% off your first month by visiting betterhelp.com/unseen. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Sarah Shachat, decorated audio fiction writer of shows like Wolf 359 and Unseen, joins to talk about her relationship with The Lord of the Rings. We chatted about reading The Hobbit in elementary school, escaping to somewhere that it was okay to be smart, and her experience with collaborative fan fiction writing. Tangents include whether prequels ever work, how our relationship with fandom has changed since we have become creators ourselves, and how to learn to spot the flaws in your favorite thing. Sign up for my newsletter at our website, tandonproductions.com, and let me know what you thought of the episode by finding me on Twitter, Instagram, and Tik Tok @marissakumari. We'll be back next week with Christiane Jacquemetton! To learn more about Heard.FM and sign up for early access to the app as a Beta Tester, visit their website, Heard.FM
Berklie (@icaruspendragon), content creator and fandom educator, joins this week to talk about the long enduring CW show, Supernatural. We chatted about her first experience with fan fiction, her mission to make everyone feel at home in fandom, and how Supernatural and the community of fandom saved her from grief after extreme loss. Tangents include handmade lists of fan fiction links, being a band kid in Alabama, and becoming Misha Collins' arch nemesis. Sign up for my newsletter at our website, tandonproductions.com, and let me know what you thought of the episode by finding me on Twitter, Instagram, and Tik Tok @marissakumari. We'll be back next week with Sarah Shachat! To learn more about Heard.FM and sign up for early access to the app as a Beta Tester, visit their website, Heard.FM
Welcome to a new show where the creators you love talk about the film scores they love. Welcome to My Big Score. In our first episode, Chris sits down with writer Sarah Shachat (Wolf 359, Unseen) to discuss Howard Shore's monumental score for The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003). Symphonic movie-making, which piece Sarah used as her pump-up music during college, which beacon of Gondor is the best, an extended discussion of Shelob's lair, and much more mark our discussion of one of the most storied scores of the 21st century. My Big Score was created, hosted, and edited by Christopher Dole Show theme composed by Erik Jourgensen Show art by Chandler Candela Social media consultant Ellie Warren Subscribe to My Big Score on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, or your podcatcher of choice! Our sponsors today: Shaker and Spoon, Tab for a Cause Support us on Patreon Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In our first episode, Chris sits down with writer Sarah Shachat (Wolf 359, Unseen) to discuss Howard Shore's monumental score for The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003). Symphonic movie-making, which piece Sarah used as her pump-up music during college, which beacon of Gondor is the best, an extended discussion of Shelob's lair, and much more mark our discussion of one of the most storied scores of the 21st century. My Big Score was created, hosted, and edited by Christopher Dole Show theme composed by Erik Jourgensen Show art by Chandler Candela Social media consultant Ellie Warren Our sponsors today: Shaker and Spoon, Tab for a Cause Support us on Patreon
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for July 13, 2022 is: saga SAH-guh noun A saga is a long and complicated story or series of events. Saga first referred to ancient Icelandic narratives that tell of legendary figures and events of the heroic age of Norway and Iceland. // What was supposed to be an easy return from the airport turned into quite a saga. See the entry > Examples: "Hill said that the key to the show's look and tone is always influenced by 'The Godfather.' The show is simply a version of the Corleone family saga that continually undermines its heroes' attempts at maintaining power, keeping their enemies close, and their dinner rolls closer." — Sarah Shachat, IndieWire, 20 June 2022 Did you know? The original sagas were Icelandic prose narratives that were roughly analogous to modern historical novels. They were penned in the 12th and 13th centuries, and blended fact and fiction to tell the tales of famous rulers, legendary heroes, and average folks of Iceland and Norway. And they were aptly named: saga traces back to an Old Norse root that means "tale." The English word first referred only to those original Icelandic stories, but saga later broadened to cover other narratives reminiscent of those, and the word was eventually further generalized to cover any long, complicated scenario.
Minus a mortifying impression, Sarah Shachat is out this week, but heroically filling the third spot in NBI hot seat is one of our favorite sci-fi creators, the great Erik Saras! We start with the story of a very off-his-game, but very well armed burglar, and the boys prove that even the world's most fractured fairy tale can be perfected. It just takes Keanu Reeves. Next, we marvel at the resilience of Hank the Tank, and take this giant bear's story and turn it into a gritty reboot of a beloved cartoon for a more adult audience, with a bit of a Robin Hood angle. Finally, we talk to Erik about his audio journey from music down into the pit of podcasting, the evolving nature of work-life balance, managing long-running mysteries, the importance of score, and the allure of making rip-offs of LOST. Plus: low key Kill Bill energy, covert Airbnb ads, bear gangs, quality nicknames, punching up… and clawing down. Today's Bad Ideas™: Idea #1 Idea #2 For more of Erik, check out Marsfall and follow them and Erik on twitter. Support the show: http://patreon.com/NoBadIdeas See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Sarah Shachat (Unseen, Wolf 359) returns and continues our coverage of The Sea of Monsters, mainly joining Schubes in wanting to give Tyson the biggest possible hug. Topics include: motion sickness, Bronze-plated booties, James Joyce, Hades DLC, the Tchotchke Bulls, Georgia, Draco Malfoy, Encanto, guests hiding spoilers, composting, retail therapy, tree love, Star Wars, Inside Llewyn Davis, infomercials, Cadet Kelly, jellyfish, Stanley Tucci, horse legs, and more!Thanks to our sponsors:Inked Gaming - Get 10% off with code "TNO" at www.inkedgaming.com/tnoSkillshare - Get 1 month of Skillshare Premium free at www.skillshare.com/tnoAthletic Greens - Get 5 free travel packs and 1 year of Vitamin D at www.athleticgreens.com/newestolympian— Find The Newest Olympian Online — • Website: www.thenewestolympian.com• Patreon: www.thenewestolympian.com/patreon• Twitter: www.twitter.com/newestolympian• Instagram: www.instagram.com/newestolympian• Facebook: www.facebook.com/newestolympian• Reddit: www.reddit.com/r/thenewestolympian• Merch: www.thenewestolympian.com/merch— Production — • Creator, Host, Producer, Social Media, Web Design: Mike Schubert (https://schub.es)• Editor: Sherry Guo• Music: Bettina Campomanes and Brandon Grugle• Art: Jessica E. Boyd• Multitude: www.multitude.productions— About The Show — Is Percy Jackson the book series we should've been reading all along? Join Mike Schubert as he reads through the books for the first time with the help of longtime PJO fans to cover the plot, take stabs at what happens next, and nerd out over Greek mythology. Whether you're looking for an excuse to finally read these books, or want to re-read an old favorite with a digital book club, grab your blue chocolate chip cookies and listen along. New episodes release on Mondays wherever you get your podcasts!
Sarah Shachat (@SarahShachat) grabs the guest helm as we continue our voyage along The Sea of Monsters! Topics include: Roger Bennet, medic, Gen Z, Seinfeld drip, Globo Gym, Gulliver's Travels, pockets, Greek figure food chain, Sicilian biker gangs, Thomas & Trimble, The Williamsburg Bridge, stressful reading, Kathmandu, LOST, Doylestown, Ace Ventura, and more!Thanks to our sponsor, Athletic Greens! Get a year's worth of Vitamin D plus free travel packs of AG1 at www.athleticgreens.com/newestolympian— Find The Newest Olympian Online — • Website: www.thenewestolympian.com• Patreon: www.thenewestolympian.com/patreon• Twitter: www.twitter.com/newestolympian• Instagram: www.instagram.com/newestolympian• Facebook: www.facebook.com/newestolympian• Reddit: www.reddit.com/r/thenewestolympian• Merch: www.thenewestolympian.com/merch— Production — • Creator, Host, Producer, Social Media, Web Design: Mike Schubert (https://schub.es)• Editor: Sherry Guo• Music: Bettina Campomanes and Brandon Grugle• Art: Jessica E. Boyd• Multitude: www.multitude.productions— About The Show — Is Percy Jackson the book series we should've been reading all along? Join Mike Schubert as he reads through the books for the first time with the help of longtime PJO fans to cover the plot, take stabs at what happens next, and nerd out over Greek mythology. Whether you're looking for an excuse to finally read these books, or want to re-read an old favorite with a digital book club, grab your blue chocolate chip cookies and listen along. New episodes release on Mondays wherever you get your podcasts!
Merry Christmas, and Happy 4-year Anniversary to the finale of Wolf 359! To celebrate, Pairing Commander Emma Sherr-Ziarko gathered (most) of the cast and crew of the show for a reunion. We reminisce about our favorite memories of making this show, what episodes we loved most, and we discuss what we think our characters would drink. Plus: Noah's slates, Zach Valenti breaking into song, recording at Spaceman, building and living in a character, Hilbert's commercial reads, forgetting episode titles, Horse Wines, predicting the future, Alan's track titles, Gabriel the master synthesizer, How Could Dare You, and, of course, Funzo. This episode features: Julian Silver, Scotty Shoemaker, Zach Valenti, Ariela Rotengold, Noah Masur, Michelle Agresti, Sarah Shachat, Zach Libresco, Michaela Swee, Cecilia Lynn-Jacobs, Alan Rodi, and Gabriel Urbina. It also features music by Alan Rodi. Special thanks to Zach Valenti for helping edit this episode! Zach is doing a Wolf 359 re-listen starting December 25th, 2021, at 3:59pm EST. Join him at wolf359.fm/relisten! If you would like to access an ad-free feed of Wolf 359, check out the newly relaunched Wolf 359 patreon. Emma humbly asks that you sign up for the pre-launch of Moira Katson's new book, A Sundered Throne, which Emma is on deck to narrate if we raise enough money from the kickstarter. It's free to sign up, and you get a sneak peek of the first 8 chapters! You can also find Emma as an acting coach on SkillsHub, a website founded by another commander (Jennifer Hale). Check out her website and patreon for more info on what she's up to! You can also hear Emma on a new Audio Drama called Wolfwhistle: In New York City in 1934, two idealistic radio hosts battle shadowy forces for the soul of America. Listen on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and more, and follow @104_wpr on Twitter. Make sure to catch up and be ready for the fourth and last season of Wooden Overcoats! Find Us Online: If you enjoy Pairing, follow us on social media and tell your friends! Follow us on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, & Tumblr @PairingPodcast. Also check out our website, www.thepairingpodcast.com Please consider leaving us a review on Apple Podcasts, as that's one of the best ways to get more people listening in! Support Us: Become a Pairing Patron on Patreon to get access to exclusive content, personalized pairings, bonus episodes, and more! And do't forget to check out our Merch store! About Pairing: Pairing was created, hosted, and produced by Emma Sherr-Ziarko, with music and audio recording by Winston Shaw, and artwork by Darcy Zimmerman and Katie Huey. This episode was edited by Emma Sherr-Ziarko and Zach Valenti.
Merry Christmas, and Happy 4-Year Anniversary to the finale of Wolf 359! To celebrate, Commander Emma Sherr-Ziarko gathered (most) of the cast and crew of the show for a reunion on her own podcast, Pairing, and we wanted to bring it directly to all of you. We reminisce about our favorite memories of making this show, what episodes we loved most, and we discuss what we think our characters would drink. Plus: Noah's slates, Zach Valenti breaking into song, recording at Spaceman, building and living in a character, Hilbert's commercial reads, forgetting episode titles, Horse Wines, predicting the future, Alan's track titles, Gabriel the master synthesizer, How Could Dare You, and, of course, Funzo.This episode features: Julian Silver, Scotty Shoemaker, Zach Valenti, Ariela Rotengold, Noah Masur, Michelle Agresti, Sarah Shachat, Zach Libresco, Michaela Swee, Cecilia Lynn-Jacobs, Alan Rodi, and Gabriel Urbina. It also features music by Alan Rodi.Special thanks to Zach Valenti for helping edit this episode! Zach is doing a Wolf 359 re-listen starting December 25th, 2021, at 3:59pm EST. Join him at wolf359.fm/relisten!Check out more of Pairing - including many episodes featuring members of the Wolf 359 cast and crew as guests - at the show's website! If you would like to access an ad-free feed of Wolf 359, check out the newly relaunched Wolf 359 patreon.Emma humbly asks that you sign up for the pre-launch of Moira Katson's new book, A Sundered Throne, which Emma is on deck to narrate if we raise enough money from the kickstarter. It's free to sign up, and you get a sneak peek of the first 8 chapters!You can also find Emma as an acting coach on SkillsHub, a website founded by another commander (Jennifer Hale). Check out her website and patreon for more info on what she's up to!If you enjoy Pairing, follow us on social media and tell your friends! Follow us on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, & Tumblr!Pairing was created, hosted, and produced by Emma Sherr-Ziarko, with music and audio recording by Winston Shaw, and artwork by Darcy Zimmerman and Katie Huey. This episode was edited by Emma Sherr-Ziarko and Zach Valenti. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Go check out all of Sarah's awesome shows! Unseen, Zero Hours, Wolf 359, and more! Find all your BMiS needs at butmakeitscary.com
Be Advised: The following episode contains depictions of fantasy violence and gore, discussions of child abuse, and mentions of miscarriage. Listener discretion is advised. A woman tells the story of the strange mansion her family left her, the unsettling presence that has followed her for much of her life, and the mysterious disappearance of her husband. Starring Libby Woodbridge as Janie Lynnwood. Featuring Mark Pagán as Tom Lynnwood. Written by Emily VanDerWerff and Libby Hill and Directed by Zach Valenti. Script Editing by Sarah Shachat and Gabriel Urbina. Sound Design by Zach Valenti. Original Music by Alan Rodi. It also features the song "Oval Window" by Yehezkel Raz. Produced by Sarah Shachat, Zach Valenti, and Gabriel Urbina, along with Angel Acevedo, Jenn Schneider, and Amy Tanguay. A transcript for this episode is available here. Visit our website for additional information on our show, the team behind UNSEEN, and more episodes. Ad sales by Multitude. Today's episode is brought to you by BetterHELP, the world's largest online counseling service. As a special offer for UNSEEN listeners, you can get 10% off your first month by visiting betterhelp.com/unseen. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
HelloooHOW ARE YOU CRAZY WORLD!>?? Welcome to THEEE podcast that chats to folks all about and in and around VOICE ACTING FOR INDIE AUDIO FICTION.Today, just for glorious you, here's a super jam packed episode in conversation with THE AMAZING Sarah Shachat on all things DIRECTING VOICE ACTORS. Sarah shares some fabulous useful insightful tips on remote voice acting, working on monologues, and getting the best out of those wonderous souls doing their best behind a mic - yeah, VOICE ACTORS OF AUDIO JOYTHANK YOU FOR LISTENINGThank you to my patreons who make this show happen - and who, as this week's perk get 50% off the price of the QUIRKY VOICES VOICE ACTING COURSE starting next week....such fun! Join me do if you. are just starting to get head and shoulders and a mic stand above the rest in kicking off your VA career - sign up here doooo....QUIRKY VOICES COURSE LINK. If you are a listener, and say I HEART MADIVA on your application form, get 20% off as a thank you for listening too! Huzzahs all round!HAVE A WONDEROUS WEEK AND Happyyy listeningSarahxxPS Dashingly Quirky Live 2021 -BRIGHT SIDES - is in machination and I AM SO EXCITED about sharing some new scripts with the world - keep August 21 free to join us and some amazing and brilliant voice actors in 2 super fun comedic / hope punk scripts by Paul Spencer and Fiona Thraille! WoohoooSARAH SHACHAT'S LINKS TO AUDIO JOYSarah TwitterLong story Short Productions Wolf 359Unseen Dot showZero HoursNo bad ideas podcastNo bad ideas PatreonSARAH GOLDING'S LINKS TO WARES OF AUDIO HAPPINESSSarahs TwitterSarah's Quirky WebsiteADWIT PodcastFiction Podcast News WeeklySarah's KO-FI account of funding alllll her projects for TRYING to pay her actors n crewSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/QuirkyVoices)
Be Advised: The following episode contains depictions of body horror and fantasy violence. A young woman recounts her quest to become a sorcerer's apprentice. Starring Lisette Alvarez as Verena Morisseau. Written by Jordan Cobb. Directed by Sarah Shachat. Script Editing by Gabriel Urbina and Sarah Shachat. Original Music by Alan Rodi. Sound Design by Zach Valenti. Produced by Sarah Shachat, Zach Valenti, and Gabriel Urbina, along with Angel Acevedo, Jenn Schneider, and Amy Tanguay. Additional music featured in this episode: "Blue Waltz" by Kadir Demir. A transcript for this episode is available here. Visit our website for additional information on our show, the team behind UNSEEN, and more episodes. Ad sales by Multitude. Today's episode is brought to you by The Magnus Archives, Europe's premier horror podcast, produced by our friends at Rusty Quill. Make your statement. Face your fear. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
A young man recounts the unusual way he made and lost his fortune over a Valentine’s Day weekend at a luxury hotel for magicians. Starring Leo Wan as Dudley Carmichael. Written by David K. Barnes and Directed by Gabriel Urbina. Script Editing by Sarah Shachat and Gabriel Urbina. Sound Design by Zach Valenti. Original Music by Alan Rodi. It also features the songs "Coming Of Age" by Bob Hart and "Chunky Monkey" by Shtriker. Produced by Sarah Shachat, Zach Valenti, and Gabriel Urbina, along with Angel Acevedo, Jenn Schneider, and Amy Tanguay. A transcript for this episode is available here. Visit our website for additional information on our show, the team behind UNSEEN, and more episodes. Ad sales by Multitude. Today's episode is brought to you by BetterHELP, the world's largest online counseling service. As a special offer for UNSEEN listeners, you can get 10% off your first month by visiting betterhelp.com/unseen. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Be Advised: The following episode contains depictions of fantasy violence and drinking. Listener discretion is advised. A member of the mysterious Order of the Blackstar spends New Year’s Eve wandering through Paris and wondering how to spend a day off. Starring Beth Eyre as the Narrator. Written and Directed by Sarah Shachat. Script Editing by David K. Barnes. Sound Design by Zach Valenti. Original Music by Alan Rodi. Featuring Magic, written by Sam Long and performed by Sour Flour. Produced by Sarah Shachat, Zach Valenti, and Gabriel Urbina, along with Angel Acevedo, Jenn Schneider, and Amy Tanguay. A transcript for this episode is available here. Visit our website for additional information on our show, the team behind UNSEEN, and more episodes. Ad sales by Multitude. Today's episode is brought to you by Shaker & Spoon, a subscription cocktail service that helps you learn how to make hand-crafted cocktails right at home. As a special offer for UNSEEN listeners, visit shakerandspoon.com/unseen to get $20 off your first box! Today's episode is also brought to you by Loot Crate, the original fan-powered subscription box. Use promo code "UNSEEN" to get 15% off your first order! This episode also features the voice of Felix Trench. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
A young woman in London notices a mysterious shop in Covent Garden, one no one else seems to be able to see. She gets a job there, but discovers that nothing - not even magic - can magically fix what's wrong with your life. Starring Dottie James as Harry Winter. Written and Directed by Gabriel Urbina. Script Editing by David K. Barnes. Original Music by Alan Rodi. Sound Design by Zach Valenti. Produced by Sarah Shachat, Zach Valenti, and Gabriel Urbina, along with Angel Acevedo, Jenn Schneider, and Amy Tanguay. A transcript for this episode is available here. Visit our website for additional information on our show, the team behind UNSEEN, and more episodes. Ad sales by Multitude. Today's episode is brought to you by BetterHELP, the world's largest online counseling service. As a special offer for UNSEEN listeners, you can get 10% off your first month by visiting betterhelp.com/unseen. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. Indiegogo Campaign: https://igg.me/at/universe25/x/27669330#/ Email us john@mercurytheatrepodcast.com Follow us on Twitter https://twitter.com/MercuryPodcast Join the private Facebook Group https://www.facebook.com/groups/mercurytheatrepodcast Learn more about Mercury Theatre Podcast at www.mercurytheatrepodcast.com Mercury Theatre Podcast Merch at https://www.redbubble.com/shop/ap/62185616 Follow our Instagram https://www.instagram.com/mercurytheatrepodcast/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/john-badger/message