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438 lines
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438 lines
27 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 334
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Title: HPR0334: Toti
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0334/hpr0334.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-07 16:36:36
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---
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You
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Hello, my name is Lost in Bronx.
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Today I'm going to talk to you about audio books and audio plays, how they differ and
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how they're the same.
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It's basic stuff that you all know, but I'm hoping to cover at least a little fresh
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ground.
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Each of these audio media have a history and a pedigree, all of their own, and to one
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extent or another they demand different disciplines of their producers and performers, yet they're
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closely related, and appreciating one lends greater appreciation for the others.
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The podio books are all the rage these days.
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There are other sources out there tracing the history and current form of the podio book
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movement, so there's a little reason to cover all that here, especially considering that
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few listeners of this show would be entirely unfamiliar with them.
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But let's settle on a general definition.
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Podio books are a form of audio media, often fictive, but not always, that is serialized
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and published on the internet for download, at least semi-regularly.
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With an RSS feed, podio book chapters are made available to their audiences automatically
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through some sort of pod catcher software, but this is only one method of dissemination.
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The delivered quality of the RSS distribution format places podio books squarely into the
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old serialized novel family of publishing methods popular a century or so ago.
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That is to say, books broken up into regular parts, over time, delivered automatically
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to the consumer.
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In both the historical and modern cases of this publishing method, said consumers have had
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to have subscriptions of some sort, or else seek out the story chapters on their own,
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either at a new stand for a paper-based serial or through a direct download on a website
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for the more modern audio-based version thereof, it's both the serialized quality and
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the automatic delivery potential of podio books which, in my opinion, separate them from
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their sibling literary form, the audio book.
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Audio books, by and large, are published and distributed complete, that is to say not
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in a serialized form, there are some notable exceptions though, especially in the so-called
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amateur or volunteer areas of the web, such as the usual method by which public domains
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are recorded at places like Librevox.org and Project Gutenberg.
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It's even possible to get updates of these public domain works as they're being published,
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either through automatic email or RSS feed or what have you, which then, going solely by
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my previous definition, turns them into podio books.
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The popularity of audio books, however, predates the podio book, especially in the commercial
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end of things.
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Audio book versions of most popular fiction and non-fiction titles, produced by the major
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publishing houses, have been available for many years and continue to be so.
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They are a lucrative end of the publishing industry.
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Podio books, by contrast, are often, though certainly not exclusively, released free of charge
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and, as such, commercializing these products, like many other aspects of the digital age,
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has had to come indirectly.
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Merchandising, donations, and memberships of different kinds are being pursued in the
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podio book work, and, while decent livings for the authors involved seem possible through
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these methods, thus far, true fortunes have proven elusive.
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With the possible exception of Scott Sigler, about whom I'll speak more of in a bit, it
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seems doubtful to me, at least as things currently stand, that the kind of revenue engines
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created by authors like Stephen King and J.K. Rowling are even remotely possible for
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a podio book author.
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As a writer myself, I lament this conclusion, but as reader, I welcome it.
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Some of the finest authors in history can currently be found in audio format for free
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on the internet.
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I predict that some of the finest that the future will produce will choose to publish their
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works exclusively, or at least initially, in the podio book format.
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One of the roadblocks to this, beside the previously mentioned financial concern, is
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a performance-based one.
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The best authors are not necessarily the best readers or performers.
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Some have no interest in or technical ability to record themselves, some have no talent
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in that regard, and some are just shy.
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Conversely, the best readers are not necessarily the best authors.
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Performance for an audience is an inherently different discipline than writing for one.
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Once the future will bring about an organization or a website that acts as a network or clearing
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house between authors interested in the podio book format, but who lack the means to pursue
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this interest, and audio producers and performers who do have the means, but not the material
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to work with.
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For the moment, though, this sort of easy connection doesn't seem to exist.
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A pioneer in the podio book format, as I have defined it already, is Scott Sigler, who
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in 2005, released installments of his podio book, Earthcore, to an ever-growing, loyal
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and eager audience.
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According to his site, much of which is written in a humorous or tongue-in-cheek manner,
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so make of this what you will, quote Scott reinvented book publishing when he released Earthcore
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as the world's first podcast-only novel.
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Released in 20 weekly episodes, Earthcore harkened back to the days of serialized radio fiction
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and picked up 10,000 subscribers along the way.
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Unquote.
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As mentioned, podio books have an ancestry that goes back a long way, but as an art form
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of their own, if they are in their infancy, then Scott Sigler is easily their wet nurse.
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Again, places like Librevox.org were publishing chapters of public domain books as they were
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being recorded and became available, true serialization, in and around the same time.
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But Scott Sigler may be said to be the one to define what we currently understand podio
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book to mean, even if it's debatable that he was the first to do it, nor did he even
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coin the phrase.
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He popularized and found a way to make money off of it, something that still eludes most
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podio book authors.
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Now where does one get podio books?
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Well first and still foremost is the dreaded iTunes.
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I don't like iTunes and I don't like the Apple Corporation or their products, but they
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knew what they were doing from a business standpoint when it came to iTunes because
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they've been very successful with it.
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It's been said of podcast, and by extension we can include podio books that if you're
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not on iTunes, then you don't really have an audience.
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Now that may be an exaggeration, maybe iTunes is a huge source of podio books.
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If you're a member there, if you like it, you can find lots of free content.
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If iTunes isn't an option, try podcastally.com or podcast directory.com, podcastpickle.com.
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You can generally go to the authors website for downloads if searching through a massive
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index isn't thrilling, and you already know who or what it is you're looking for.
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Now where does one get audiobooks?
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Well if you want them for free, because we like free, free is good, try iTunes again,
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audible.com, audiobooks.org, leaverevox.org, and projectgootenberg.org.
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And there are quite a few others obviously, so do a web search.
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Many of the free as in beer offerings in these places will be classics or newer public
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domain works.
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If you're looking for the latest best sellers, you'll either have to pay for them at places
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like iTunes or Amazon or download them off a torrent or something, which is generally
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considered bad form by the major publishing houses and the governments that support
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them, so just be aware.
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Audio dramas.
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My definition of an audio drama, as opposed to a dramatic audio production, is something
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we can more properly describe as an audio play.
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Often multicast and containing careful direction and, when not produced live, careful editing.
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They can involve the efforts of many people, theme and background music are typically included
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as our sound effects and what may be defined as voice acting.
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Audio plays can be of any genre, ranging from high adventure, to comedy, to drama, musical,
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and even the doctor drama.
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As represented by old time radio or OTR as it is referred, audio plays are an intermediary
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electronic form of performance that span the revolutionary moment of time between the
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vast period in human history of live theater and the newer one of the various technologically
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produced media.
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It ran concurrently with the advent of the motion picture and borrowed heavily from
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the conventions and formats of that medium, but it also informed it with its own set
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of innovations and then came television, which, since pretty much all the early forms
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of audio drama were commercialized to one degree or another, stole away the money.
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Hardly the first time one technology displaced another, nor the last, but right there is
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where we begin to go wrong and misunderstanding begins to creep in, because the audio play
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in and of itself is not a technology, radio is a technology.
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Video could kill the radio star, but it could not kill the audio play.
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The audio play is simply a method of production, a way of telling a story.
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In that period of time, the audio play was dependent upon the radio industry for its creation
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and distribution, and thus, because it was a commercial interest, it depended upon the
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money flowing into radio from advertisers.
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The audio play, when directly compared to video, is a preferable form of storytelling
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in some cases and vice versa, but by and large, they are two different animals depending
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entirely upon technologies that cater directly to their needs.
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Side-by-side comparisons therefore tend to be pointless or at least misleading.
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And before I go further, for the sake of this episode, I want to clarify what I'm not
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talking about when I say old-time radio.
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I'm not talking about news, game shows, talk shows, or programs that were strictly musical
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or a variety in nature.
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So truthfully, shows like, say, Jack Bannies, defy easy categorization with their sitcom
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like structures, guest stars, and musical interluse.
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I'm making broad generalizations, and there were, and continue to be, exceptions to each
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one.
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Still, I'm eliminating these, specifically, from this talk for three reasons.
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First, I don't want this episode to be hours long, and it could be if I drew on every
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possible historical influence.
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Secondly, I don't really know those things very well, and thirdly, while they too have
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much in common with dramatic audio media past and present, they are, at least in my book,
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the furthest such relatives from my subject today.
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So how do audio plays differ from patio books and audio books?
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Well sometimes they don't, at least not to any great extent, but they can include a wider
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range of effects and performers.
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First of a movie compared to the book that inspired it.
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The latter, even if it has a clever narrative structure, is a story.
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Stories can be read by a single person.
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The former is an inherently larger production, often involving multiple performers, and
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in the old days, they were oftentimes performed in front of a live audience.
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That's right.
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People used to dress up and stand in line for the chance to watch a bunch of actors
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stand in front of a microphone on stage and read their lines from a script.
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I read about that when I was a kid, and my parents, who were kids during that time period,
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often told me about it, and I could never quite get why anyone would want to go watch
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actors standing in front of a microphone.
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That is, until I got a chance to see it for myself.
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More about that in a moment.
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For now, you might wonder where one gets old time radio shows.
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For free of charge, try archive.org.
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They don't have everything, but they have a lot.
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It is, however, often convenient to buy a disc of shows from somewhere, as tracking episodes
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down can take forever.
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One of my favorite places is OTRCAT.com, that's OTRCAT.com, which offers a huge range of
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old programs from around the world.
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Many, if not all, for only $5 US, for a full disc of shows.
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That can amount to anywhere from 20 to 40 hours of entertainment for only 5 bucks.
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That's tough to beat.
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The service is good there, and the disc quality is high.
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Sound quality, of course, varies greatly from show to show, depending upon how they were
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originally recorded and preserved over the years.
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But I would hazard to say that if you're listening to a lot of podcasts, you can't be an
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audio snob as it is.
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Some sources of newer audio plays include darkerprojects.com, which produces original productions
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and fan fiction style shows based on Star Trek, Doctor Who, and others.
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I kind of think of them as the hacker public radio of genre audio plays, and if you check
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out their site, you'll know what I mean.
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While you're at it, check out decoderringtheater at decoderring.libson.com, who do new original
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shows in the OTR style, featuring a Canadian superhero following the shadow or green
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hornet tradition, going by the moniker of the red panda, its corny fun, and suitable for
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the little ones.
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But why stop with audio only?
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If you're lucky or do your research, you may just have the opportunity to see new live
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radio style productions performed on stage by actors in a theater, yes, just like the
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old days.
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I put a couple links in the show notes.
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Again, fans of dramatic audio media, those that get the opportunity anyway, should do
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themselves the favor of checking out what this kind of entertainment is like, because it
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can be so involving and compelling, it'll make you wish you had a time machine.
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Snapshot, it's 1996 and I'm walking down a side street in the Soho section of Manhattan
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in New York City.
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With me is a lady friend from out of town, who's in just for the night to see me.
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And yes, I thought I was going to get me some too, yet it never happened, but that's
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another story.
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Anyway, we're walking down the street, it's, I don't know, maybe 630 in the evening
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on a Saturday, just late enough that most of the art galleries and studios were closed
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or closing.
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The industrial culinary supply shops were pulling down their gates, and we were looking
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for a place to eat.
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Suddenly, we walked by a sign on the sidewalk, have to walk around it really, which by chance
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alone, I happened to glance at.
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It advertises a night of old time radio to be performed at 8 o'clock that evening at
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a hidden theater of the stairs.
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Well, by this point, for reasons again, I won't go into, I knew that romance was not
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in the wind, so why not do something else, something different, maybe fun.
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We had no plans, so we went in, and by chance found someone at the box office, one of
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those old-fashioned little gilded cage things that made the girl in it look like a canary.
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And we grabbed some tickets in advance.
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We left then, and I forget where we ate, where we were just killing time anyway, but we
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made it back for the show and climbed up four, four flights of stairs in an old renovated
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garment factory and found ourselves in a large, pretty theater, spacious, plush seats, purple
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velvet curtains and all.
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And the place was packed, I was really glad we didn't count on tickets being available
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at curtain time.
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I mean, there are often tickets for sale from no shows on the reservations, and you can
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jump on those if you're willing to wait and take a chance.
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But not this night, no, sir.
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This was a theatrical secret we'd stumbled upon, an open one by the size of the crowd, but
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I had my eye on off Broadway stuff in those days, and I am telling you, I'd never heard
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of this.
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A professional production company dedicated to doing live recreations of old-time radio
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shows on stage in period costumes and makeup.
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Yeah, it's slick guys in their monkey suits, and pretty veins all dialed up.
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There was a small orchestra and an honest-to-god period style sound-defect station on stage near
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the actors, manned by a gallast and drudgeonous creature of tremendous talent and energy, who
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ended the night with a well-deserved standing ovation of his or her own.
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On the bill was a slice of ABC radio from the late 1940s, quaint news, hilarious old commercials,
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and for the main attraction, the piece of resistance, a full recreated episode of The Fat Man.
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There he goes into that drugstore.
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He's stepping on the scales.
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Wait 239 pounds.
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Fortune, danger.
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Who is it?
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The Fat Man.
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Theater can be magical, but man, this was in a class of its own.
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The costumes and pageant of it all really helped cement it, but it was a kickass audio production
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in its own right.
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Yep, I'm saying it.
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Dramatic audio media, watched live, beats the living crap out of almost anything on television
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or in the movies.
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Speak it out if you can, you will not be sorry.
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Now we often hear about the golden age of radio when we study the history of radio drama,
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and often times it's assumed that this was the beginning and end of quality audio productions.
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Expressed more inclusively though, we should probably place the classic era of radio production
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ranging from the 1930s to the early 1960s into a broader context of audio media.
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This would certainly include classic and golden age radio productions of various kinds,
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but it would neither begin nor end there.
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The antecedent of all distributed audio media known today is, surprise, surprise, the
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live performance.
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Before the advent of audio recording technology, this was the only audio medium known and writing
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and performance specialties sprang up to take on many of the similar formats we recognize
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today.
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In ancient times, for instance, there were professional balladiers and storytellers.
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They recited stories and books from memory for the enjoyment and enlightenment of others,
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much as patio and audiobook authors do today.
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There were also ancient theatrical performance styles which involve little action and a great
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deal of vocal performance.
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In such productions, the actors would wear costumes and masks, but for the most part stand
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around on the stage, statically reciting their lines.
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It's not hard to imagine that a person sitting outside listening to the show but not seeing
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it directly would get pretty much the same show as those that were viewing it.
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In modern times, as I mentioned before, there have been a large number of quality radio
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productions that fell and continued to fall outside of the generally regarded era of the
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so-called golden age.
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But there have been audio media productions since that time that are or have been of high
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merit, yet which were not necessarily delivered by radio.
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Now, this might seem like an academic distinction, but it is important since the rise of the
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internet podcast in recent years has allowed audio media productions to once again take wing
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in a highly creative, less derivative manner than commercial radio in the modern era.
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Now, there are notable exceptions to even this, such as Garrison Killers, a prairie home
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companion in the United States, which has been running for many years now, and BBC Radio
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out of the UK, which has a long history of producing high quality audio dramas for radio,
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up to and including recent years.
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But certainly, recent production, even where some semblance of the old days has survived,
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is at a vastly reduced production rate.
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This dearth of newly produced commercial radio drama is global in nature, just as it once
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was a plethora, but computer technology has allowed enthusiasts of audio media to produce
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and distribute their own creative endeavors for little or no money.
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Now, at least since the availability of inexpensive tape recording equipment for home use, it
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has been within the realm of possibility for enthusiasts to write, act, and edit, at
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least to a certain extent, their own productions.
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But distribution was limited only to those people who could get a copy, and that rarely
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amounted to more than a handful, that has changed.
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A web search of no great depth reveals new audio productions out there, ranging from genre
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favorites like science fiction and fantasy to comedy, mystery, and everything else.
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Shows like these are being made at an impressive rate, consisting of writing, voice acting, sound
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effects, music, and editing, at all levels of accomplishment, ranging from the highly
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polished to the highly painful, and in that regard things are certainly in keeping with
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tradition.
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While we like to remember the great shows of the Golden Age, we also like to forget that
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for every gem that was broadcast there were dozens of duds.
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So where am I going with all this?
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Well, as I see it, and I emphasize again, this is purely my opinion, we stand on the edge,
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or in fact may already be in the midst of a new Golden Age of audio media production.
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Like the original, no one at the time necessarily knew how good things were until they were
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no more, so to speak.
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I think it would be who of anyone who has an interest in audio media drama passed or present
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to investigate the historical and current trends and milestones.
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Potty book authors and producers can certainly learn a lot from listening to the very best
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audio drama of days passed and present, arguably the apex of the first Golden Age in the
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United States was the old time radio show Gunsmoke.
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Now I'm not a fan of the Western genre, but you don't need to be in order to appreciate
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the quality of this show or indeed to enjoy its stories, and that broad appeal was the
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key to its enduring success and make no mistake it was very successful.
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It enjoyed a run of almost 9 years on radio and with a different cast crossed over to television
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and ran for 20 years.
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On radio it was smart, the writing was tremendous and the acting outstanding, it was a program
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in a medium which was then quite mature and it was intended for a mature audience.
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It was surprisingly violent and even disturbing at times, much more so than its television
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descendant was ever allowed to be, often featuring psychopaths, rapists and murderers of all
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stripes, not to mention the occasional duel at high noon, and the discipline of sound
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effects reached its zenith with that show, crossing in and of itself and without question
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into the realm of art.
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The episodes that survive and most of them do can be found at the internet archive, I'll
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have a link in the show notes and I urge you, no, I'd mnemonish you to check it out.
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I bring up that show because it is a stellar example of what dramatic audio media can be.
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Radio has been described as the theater of the imagination, and if you agree with my
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earlier descriptors so indeed are all forms of dramatic audio media, whether live, recorded,
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audio book, audio book, or full-blown production with cast and crew.
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The best example I ever heard to illustrate this power of audio media was something this simple.
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Say for the sake of argument you have a sound effect like this.
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You are producing a silly audio-based comedy of some sort.
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At one point, you're a performer, says to someone else, either real or imagined,
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Hey you there! Toss me that piano!
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Your performer was just tossed a piano, something absolutely impossible to do live,
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or without animation of some sort on film or television.
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With one single sound effect and a spoken line to support it,
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you have enabled the listening audience to create the action
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however absurd for themselves.
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No one listening has any confusion over what just happened,
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done with the proper comedic timing,
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not one member of the audience will question the propriety of the gag
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within context of the performance,
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which is never the case with visual-based gags,
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especially those relying upon special effects.
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This is audio media's inherent strength.
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The power to control, the finest, most perfectly tuned and tailored
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cinematographic and special visual effect device on Earth,
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the listener's own imagination.
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No CGI, no animation and no amount of celebrity can compare.
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Indeed, these things are distracting,
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taking the freedom and power to create the structure and detail of the moment
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away from the audience.
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An unlike visual-based media,
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everything the listener hears can be a sound effect,
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including the speaking voice of the performers,
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simply reading their scripts.
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Butting audio media performers would do well to practice the disciplines
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and conventions of public speaking.
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As wit and a good script are only two of the tools available.
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Diction, volume, careful emphasis,
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these are talents for some people,
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but they are learnable skills for everyone else.
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Actors, presenters and lecturers who are skilled in the reading of a line
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or in the delivery of a joke,
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enjoy an increased level of power over the imaginations of the listeners.
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In other words, talent and skill in speaking puts the audio performer
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on the same level as sound effects,
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greatly enhancing the visual aspect of the show,
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occurring in the listener's head.
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In this regard,
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podio books and audio books can have an edge over audio plays,
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since sound effects, music and dramatic editing,
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while often incorporated, are generally less emphasized,
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and the onus of the imagined visuals is on the performer to a far greater extent.
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It takes a fine reader and speaker to give a fine performance in audio books and podio books.
|
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There's more wiggle room in this regard, obviously,
|
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when it's a multicast, music and sound effects laden dramatic performance
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|
with careful direction and editing.
|
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Yet each of these forms,
|
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the audio play,
|
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the podio book and the audio book are related
|
|
and can draw on the strengths normally associated with the others
|
|
in order to enhance the final production.
|
|
Anyone serious about audio presentation,
|
|
whether they're actors, writers, readers, podcast presenters,
|
|
podcast guests or even disc jockeys,
|
|
can enhance their skills and understanding of their chosen medium
|
|
through a study of the forms, formats,
|
|
and formalized conventions of audio production.
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|
Listen to old-time radio.
|
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Listen to audio books.
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|
Listen to podio books.
|
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Carefully listen to radio DJs and announcers.
|
|
Enhanced public speaking and quality vocal performance are learned skills.
|
|
With the possible exception of throat cancer survivors,
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anyone who wants to increase the net quality of their dramatic audio media production,
|
|
whatever it happens to be can do so simply with practice
|
|
and by listening to themselves as they speak.
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Now, you might think I've diverged the talk dreadfully
|
|
from an overview of the various forms of dramatic audio media,
|
|
but consider this.
|
|
The most dynamic and creative works of this type are not being produced
|
|
by a monolithic industry intent on generating revenue
|
|
for people, companies, and organizations
|
|
who are essentially divorced from the art form and creative products they own.
|
|
In fact, the best stuff happening today is community-based,
|
|
produced by enthusiasts who love what they do and want to do it better.
|
|
Some of them are trying to find a way of making a living at their chosen application,
|
|
and if they are successful, it can only benefit the listener
|
|
who, well at least in theory, will have a greater abundance of dramatic audio media to choose from in the future.
|
|
Supply and demand offered and sought out by ordinary people,
|
|
the kind who listen to podcasts like this one.
|
|
So, the audio book, the audio book, the audio play.
|
|
These are exciting times for dramatic audio media.
|
|
All across the world, the potential of these forms
|
|
are being rediscovered and experimented with.
|
|
And I am convinced we can fully expect great things,
|
|
not just a good way to kill an hour's commute,
|
|
or something to listen to while other work is being done,
|
|
unarguably, another strength of these media,
|
|
but beyond that, great things are coming.
|
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It's an art form with many faces, and it's alive and kicking.
|
|
The future is bright, and the best is yet to come.
|
|
Now, when was the last time you heard those clichés
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that they actually meant something?
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This has been Lost in Bronx.
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You can contact me at Lost in Bronx at gmail.com.
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That's L-O-S-T-N-B-R-O-N-X at Gmail.
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I'd love to hear any commentary agreeable or otherwise.
|
|
Take care.
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Thank you for listening to H.P.R.R. sponsored by Carol.net.
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So head on over to C-A-R-O dot-E-T for all of us here.
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