In the arcane land of Aaru, full of regal country sides and forests, it\u2019s once halcyon days now gone, and people are resolved to live separate from each other. The prophecy passed down, followed by believers, will set forth the path for the One, leading the land of the Aaru back to its days of lore.<\/span><\/i><\/p>\n Fiction podcasts are exploding.<\/span><\/p>\n And as the podcast creator, you can make your audio drama as simple or as complex as you\u2019d like.<\/span><\/p>\n It\u2019s even possible to create a fiction podcast all by yourself (although you\u2019d have to wear an awful lot of hats: writer, actor, and audio engineer).<\/span><\/p>\n Welcome to <\/span>Carcerem<\/span><\/i>, an original story fantasy audio drama series complete with a full star-studded cast, awesome sound effects, and a full, original musical score. Some of the actors are household names, including Jane Lynch (<\/span>Glee<\/span><\/i>), Piper Laurie (<\/span>Twin Peaks<\/span><\/i>, <\/span>Fraiser<\/span><\/i>), Sharon Muthu (<\/span>Modern Family<\/span><\/i>), and Writer\/Actor\/Producer Cameron Crowe.<\/span><\/p>\n \u201c<\/span>It takes place in the land of Aaru<\/span><\/i>,\u201d said Shane Salk, one of the creators. \u201c<\/span>At one point, magic had been used to make the land very nice and prosperous. But years before, everything kind of turned to dark magic, which was once glorious, but is now feared by all and tracked down. And there\u2019s a group of basically state-run marauders called \u2018vigiles\u2019 who come around and take children who are shown to have magic. There\u2019s a prophecy that’s been passed down through generations that talks about how there is a one true Savior, and our heroes go off to try to help, because they think they found that One, and want to help him save the land of Aaru.\u00a0<\/span><\/i><\/p>\n \u201cThere’s monsters and magic and sword fighting, and we actually start right into the middle of the action. There are over 120 characters and actors in the first season\u2026 which is a lot, as it turns out.<\/span><\/i>\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n If that weren\u2019t enough, there\u2019s also 31 episodes in the first season (whereas most audio dramas have 10 or less episodes per season).\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n \u201c<\/span>My daughter and I were watching Disney+<\/span><\/i>,\u201d said co-creator William Holmes, \u201c<\/span>and they have a 10-episode documentary around the making of <\/span><\/i>Frozen 2<\/span>. It was really interesting. So, I\u2019m about three episodes in, and I kept looking at my daughter and saying, <\/span><\/i>\u2018This is what we\u2019re doing. But they have 1500 people working on it, and we\u2019re putting ours together with just me, Shane, and a handful of people.\u2019<\/span> So, it\u2019s a been an eye-opening experience. It\u2019s a hell of a project we took on.<\/span><\/i>\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n Part of the inspiration for <\/span>Carcerem<\/span><\/i> came from Salk\u2019s childhood. \u201c<\/span>I grew up listening to old-time audio, from like the 40s, 50s, and 60s. And so, I have a great mind for sound design and bringing it up to date.\u201d<\/span><\/i><\/p>\n Holmes adds: \u201c<\/span>One thing I love about this medium, and I’ve done everything from film, to animation, to everything, is that the audience totally gets to create what they see in their own head. For instance, my own son, when he was listening to it, he said, <\/span><\/i>\u2018Oh, it’s kind of like I’m reading a book. I’m seeing it like I’m reading a book.\u2019<\/span> Even Shane and I argue about it while we’re making the thing. Occasionally, I go, <\/span><\/i>\u2018Wait, no, no, no. When we’re in the bar, this is over here.\u2019 <\/span>And he’s like,<\/span><\/i> \u2018No, no, no, it\u2019s over there.\u2019<\/span> But I love it when people say things to us like, <\/span><\/i>\u2018Listen, when they were running up that hill and blah, blah, blah…\u2019<\/span> And Shane and I look at each other like, <\/span><\/i>\u2018Did you see a hill? I didn’t see a hill.\u2019\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n \u201c<\/span>We create it like a movie,\u201d<\/span><\/i> Salk said. \u201c<\/span>When we wrote it, we wrote it like a movie. We don\u2019t downplay it because you don\u2019t see things. We talk about the sound design like it\u2019s a film shot. For instance, the shot zooms in on the person here. And then we pull back. And we see there are two people here, and then push in and go to a two shot. So we create it like a movie.<\/span><\/i>\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n Holmes continued: \u201c<\/span>In fact, we actually had to educate the writers we hired to write it like that. They would ask, <\/span><\/i>\u2018Do you want us to write stuff like \u2018<\/span>He goes to the window and opens it?<\/span><\/i>\u2019\u2019 <\/span>And we\u2019d say, <\/span><\/i>\u2018No, just write it like a film.\u2019<\/span> And they would always look at Shane and go, <\/span><\/i>\u2018Well, how are you going to get people to see that?\u2019<\/span> We’re like, <\/span><\/i>\u2018Relax, it’ll happen.\u2019<\/span>\u201d\u00a0<\/span><\/i><\/p>\n \u00a0\u201c<\/span>It really is how we think about it\u2014it\u2019s more than an audio experience\u2014it\u2019s an immersive experience,\u201d <\/span><\/i>Salk explained.<\/span> \u201cWhen I came to this project, I knew I didn\u2019t want to do it like a typical audio drama. I wanted to make <\/span><\/i>Game of Thrones<\/span>. I want to be the HBO of audio theater. I don’t want to use the excuse, <\/span><\/i>\u2018Oh, well, because it’s audio, people will buy it,\u2019<\/span> or <\/span><\/i>\u2018Because it\u2019s audio, people will understand the quality.\u2019<\/span> I didn’t want that. So I’ve been working on putting all of this together for many, many years. And we pulled it off<\/span><\/i>.\u201d<\/span><\/p>\n As for what\u2019s next for <\/span>Carcerem<\/span><\/i>,<\/span> once this first season is complete, we\u2019re just going to have to wait and find out. Salk isn\u2019t talking.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n May 2021 Issue<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" In the arcane land of Aaru, full of regal country sides and forests, it\u2019s once halcyon days now gone, and people are resolved to live separate from each other. The prophecy passed down, followed by believers, will set forth the path for the One, leading the land of the Aaru back to its days of lore. Fiction podcasts are exploding. And as the podcast creator, you can make your audio drama as simple or as complex as you\u2019d like. It\u2019s even possible to create a fiction podcast all by yourself (although you\u2019d have to wear an awful lot of hats:<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":8,"featured_media":10273,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[6],"tags":[1038,1034,187,1035,1036,1040,1037,1039],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\nOr, you could go in the complete opposite direction and enlist a small army of talent.<\/span><\/h3>\n
Salk has been working in the audio drama space for over a decade, starting with <\/span>We\u2019re Alive<\/span><\/i> (which has now well over 200 million downloads) in 2009. \u201c<\/span>So, I was at the very forefront of this audio series movement<\/span><\/i>.\u201d<\/span><\/h3>\n