Legendary newsmen Edward R. Murrow and Bob Trout share breaking news about the third and final season of The Adventures of Captain Radio. You can support the production of Season 3 by making a one-time or monthly pledge at Ko-Fi.com/obscurestudios. Thank you for supporting independent creators and making this show possible.
Category: podcast
Onward to Season 3

We just wrapped the second season of our audio drama podcast, The Adventures of Captain Radio, and we think it’s one of the best things we’ve ever produced. But we’re not done yet. We’re heading straight into production for our third and final season, which promises to be our masked hero’s finest hour.
To make it a really, we need your help. For 20 years, we’ve done this because we love it, and paid for it out of our own pockets. But creating top-notch audio fiction takes talents we don’t have, from professional mixing and sound design to voice actors.
So here’s the deal. We need to raise $800 to make this next season of Captain Radio. It’s not a lot in the grand scheme and we’re confident that we can reach our goal with your help.
We’re offering awesome rewards when you pledge today on our Ko-Fi campaign page, from a co-producer’s credit to early access to the season premiere to a bonus episode only for backers.
When you back Obscure Studios, you’re helping us tell more stories. Your pledge will not only make it possible us produce The Adventures of Captain Radio Season 3, but you’ll be giving us the momentum to tackle our next creative endeavor. Whether you give one time, pledge monthly, or select one of our tiers, your support enables us to keep the lights on and pay some of the talented folks we work with.
Thank you for your support! Let’s do this.
Obscure Studios has been making podcasts and short films with dreams and a small budget since 2004.
Don’t Miss the Epic Season Finale: Obsession’s End
The Adventures of Captain Radio Season 2 comes to a close this weekend with the release of “Chapter 5: Obsession’s End.” In this episode, Captain Radio and company must make their final stand against the malevolent Lithostar and the bloodthirsty treasure hunters who would claim it for themselves at any cost. To prevent an interstellar genocide, Captain Radio, Andromeda, Orion, and Ace must overcome impossible odds to save the galaxy once again.
We’re so excited to share this story with you. Our amazing cast has done a phenomenal job bringing the world of Captain Radio to life. Huge shout-out to our series regulars William McDonald, Abigail Stokley, DeLano Hays, Christian Carvajal, and Jonny Eberle, and to our guest stars Laura Burt, Richard Burt, and Hanna Wonders for contributing their talents to our show. And massive thanks to Trask Snow for sound designing and mixing the final three episodes of this season.
You can listen to every episode of The Adventures of Captain Radio on your favorite podcast player—Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, and many others. Learn more about the show and how to listen at obscurestudios.net.
And we’re already working on Season 3. Captain Radio’s final adventure will pit him against his most diabolical enemy yet. If you love the show, please consider making a donation to our Ko-Fi campaign to help us cover the costs of production. Or you can buy merchandise to support us.
A World of Rocket Ships, Robots, and Rayguns: Captain Radio’s Triumphant Return
The creator of The Adventures of Captain Radio, Jonny Eberle, reflects on Season 2—and how you don’t have to be a fan of Season 1 to jump in. New episodes drop Sundays on all major podcast players.
Read more:
The Adventures of Captain Radio is available now wherever you listen to podcasts. Obscure Studios is an independent production studio bringing you short films and podcasts since 2004 and we rely on word of mouth — so if you like what we’re doing, please share it with a friend. Thank you for your support!
Obscure Origins: Obscure Studios Turns 20

It’s hard to believe, but Obscure Studios is marking a major milestone—we are 20 years old! Founded waaaaay back in 2004, Obscure Studios has gone from a dream to a full-fledged independent production company, with over 100 creative projects to our name and more currently in development.
To celebrate our birthday, Jonny and Will sat down to discuss how it all began, reflect on our favorite moments, and share a sneak peek of what’s next for Obscure Studios. You can listen in the latest episode of our podcast, Dispatches with Jonny Eberle, or check out the extended video on our YouTube channel, complete with archival footage.
Twenty years in, we’re just getting started. It’s been a wild ride. Thank you for your continued support and enthusiasm for our hare-brained schemes. To everyone who’s contributed their talents to one of our projects and all the folks who’ve cheered us on over the years, we are deeply grateful.
Want to help us celebrate? The easiest thing to do is share this blog post, the podcast, or the video on social media. Then, head over to our TeePublic store to browse Obscure Studios merch, from t-shirts to coffee mugs. Finally, you can support our creative endeavors by donating on KoFi. Every dollar raised goes towards keeping the lights on and making future projects possible. Thank you!
About Obscure Studios
Obscure Studios is a small, independent production company making films and podcasts with big dreams and a small budget since 2004.
News Flash: Captain Radio to Return to the Airwaves

The Adventures of Captain Radio announces the start of production on Season 2
Don’t touch that dial! The Adventures of Captain Radio, the full-cast science fiction audio drama produced by Obscure Studios, is returning for a second season! The five-episode second season is written by Jonny Eberle and produced by Jonny Eberle and William McDonald, with original music by Simon Cunningham, and artwork by Tami King. The adventure sees our embark on a treasure hunt of galactic scale as they face deadly adversaries in search of an ancient power.
Returning members of the cast include William McDonald as Captain Radio, Abigail Stokely as Andromeda, DeLano Hays as Ace, and Scott Kennedy as the Narrator. Returning voice actor Simon Cunningham will be voicing a new character, Pollux Von Luna, and Jonny Eberle will take on the role of the Newscaster. New voices joining the crew of the Phaeton include Laura Burt as Madame Celesta, Richard Burt as Magnus Hostillian, and Hanna Wonders as the mysterious Lithostar.
The Adventures of Captain Radio Season 2 will debut in mid-2024 on all major podcast platforms, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and Amazon Music. All their work is available for free, but you can support Obscure Studios by donating on Ko-fi or you can purchase exclusive Captain Radio merchandise, including t-shirts, hoodies, pins, mugs, and magnets on the Obscure Studios TeePublic store.
Founded in 2004, Obscure Studios is a small, independent production company making podcasts and short films. Their first audio drama, The Adventures of Captain Radio, premiered in 2021, and Dispatches with Jonny Eberle, a podcast about writing, travel, and the creative process, premiered in 2022. You can find them across the social universe on Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and Tumblr.
Stay tuned for more details, a trailer, and an official release date soon!
Remembering Our Friend, Rob Peters

We are devastated to announce that our dear friend Rob Peters has passed away at the age of 48. Rob was a huge supporter of Obscure Studios as well as a talented actor. Not only did he lend his talent and voice for Captain Radio in the role of Orion, but he was also a thespian with Theatrikos Theatre Company in Flagstaff, Arizona.
We are so grateful to have been able to work with someone so talented and passionate about everything he did. We here at Obscure Studios send our love and condolences to Rob’s family and friends. He truly was a man with a great heart and a love of all things theatre. He will forever live in a special place in our hearts. Rest easy, sir.
Rob’s family has organized a GoFundMe campaign to cover some of their expenses. You can help by making a donation here: https://www.gofundme.com/f/2500-to-bring-him-home-to-rest. Thank you for your kindness and generosity. A memorial service will be held on what would have been Rob’s 49th birthday—now officially known as Rob Peters Day—May 18, 2024, at Theatrikos Theatre Company in Flagstaff, AZ. The memorial will begin at 10 a.m. and will be followed by continued story sharing at Uptown Pubhouse.
You can read more about Rob’s life and legacy in his obituary, which was recently published by the Arizona Daily Sun.
Movies For Your Mind: Creating an Audio Drama Soundscape

In the first episode of our audio drama podcast “The Adventures of Captain Radio,” our heroes step into a noisy bar, exchange ray gun blasts with a couple of disgruntled aliens, and witness the opening of a time portal. If we were making a movie, we’d have to scout locations, build sets, populate these scenes with actors and extras, and invest in costly special effects to do all of that—but in the world of audio storytelling, we instead have to make you believe all of these things are happening using only sound. Here’s how we did it.
Foley Art for Fiction Podcasts
Filmmaking has a long history of using foley artists to add texture and nuance to movies and TV shows through the clever use of sound. Most of the little sounds (rustling leaves, jingling car keys, background chatter in a coffee shop) are not captured on set, but added later, lending realism to the world onscreen.
Sound effects play the same role in a fiction podcast, but they have to carry all the worldbuilding, not just part of it. Sound effects have to do all the work to establish and immerse the listener in the world of the story. Dialogue and music may be the most obvious elements of an audio drama, but it’s the effects and environmental sound design that draw you in. Sounds like footsteps and doors swinging open suggest that our characters are interacting with a larger world and not just floating in a vacuum—they’re an essential tool for audio drama creators.
Anatomy of a Sound Effect
So, let’s break down a couple of the sound effects you hear in “The Adventures of Captain Radio.” As a science fiction show with heavy speculative elements, the design of our soundscapes fall mainly into one of two camps: something familiar and something strange.
For the familiar, the trick is creating a sound your audiences will recognize and can use to anchor the setting. For a scene that required our characters to trudge through a blizzard on an ice moon, I recorded myself making whistling wind noises and looping it so it felt continuous. I tried some classic techniques for mimicking the sound of footsteps in snow, including pressing on a plastic bag full of cornstarch, but it was difficult to make it sound believable. Thankfully, a real life snowstorm came to the rescue and my neighbors got to watch me stomp around in the fresh snow with my recorder. Easy enough.
But getting the background chatter in the bar on Alpha Centauri was a lot more work. To create a realistic environment, I recorded twenty separate tracks of myself mumbling dialogue, shuffling chairs around my dining room, and pouring water into various bottles and glasses. The end result was tedious to assemble, but it made the space our heroes were in feel like a real place. And hopefully, it didn’t call attention to itself, but rather served the needs of the story by fading into the background of the scene.
For sounds in the second camp, the strange and unusual noises like crashing spaceships, howling space whales, and whirling extra-dimensional portals, the task was to find familiar sounds and make them unrecognizable. This is where the tools within my audio editing software, Audacity, came into play. There, I could take recordings of the clothes dryer and a slamming file cabinet drawer and make them sound like a spacecraft hitting a mountain by adding distortions, reverberation, and extra bass to imply something far larger than the real life source. The same process helped transform my puppy’s growls and play barks into the pained vocalizations of a massive interstellar beast.
When it came to making sounds with no analog in the real world, like the portal to the Eleventh Dimension, I had to build it up piece by piece with help from GarageBand instruments (shout-out to church organs and French horns) and many layers of effects, like playing sounds in reverse and adding distortion until it sounded appropriately spacey.
Worldbuilding with Audio
Sound is a powerful storytelling tool. When used correctly and with restraint, it can suggest an entire universe of possibilities and conjure incredible images in the mind of the listener. Our imaginations are so much richer than anything a Hollywood special effects budget could produce.
With nothing more than a microphone and a struck wineglass, I can make you imagine the bells of a hidden monastery. Loose change can become a broken robot. A wet sponge can plunge you into the digestive tract of the mighty leviathan.
So, the next time you put on your headphones to enjoy a fiction podcast, I hope you’ll take a moment to thank the foley artist who brought that world to life — and then I hope you forget all about what’s happening behind the curtain and allow yourself to be swept up by the story.
– Jonny Eberle, writer and co-producer of “The Adventures of Captain Radio.” New episodes coming early 2023.
Don’t forget to vote for “The Adventures of Captain Radio” for the Audio Verse Awards! Voting closes October 30, 2022! Learn more.
Announcement: Captain Radio Season 2 and the AVAs

We have big news to share about our retrofuturistic science fiction podcast, “The Adventures of Captain Radio.” First, we’re excited to announce that season 2 will be coming in early 2023. We’re polishing off our scripts, rounding out our cast, and will hit the recording booth soon to bring you more adventures with Captain Radio, Andromeda, Ace, and Orion in the distant future.
Second, our show has been nominated for the Audio Verse Awards, which honor the best audio dramas of the past year. Voting for the finalists is now open and we could really use your help. You can vote for “The Adventures of Captain Radio” and help us make it to the next round by going to audioverseawards.net/vote.
The ballot isn’t very mobile-friendly, so you may want to use a desktop or laptop to submit your vote (or you can switch to the desktop view on a mobile device by clicking the “Aa” symbol near the top of the page). On the New Productions category, simply find our show art in the lefthand column and drag it to the right column to rank us as one of your choices. The more shows you rank, the more weight your vote will carry. Voting closes October 30, 2022.
We’re a small, independent production and we couldn’t do it without your support. Thank you for your vote and until next time, keep your eyes on the stars…
Meet the Cast of Captain Radio: Jonny Eberle as Doctor Orban
Every villain thinks they’re the hero of the story, and that’s certainly true of the sinister Doctor Orban, the primary antagonist in season one of “The Adventures of Captain Radio.” Today, we journey to the Throne of Jupiter and come face-to-face with Captain Radio’s most lethal enemy to find out what makes the mad scientist tick.
This week, we’re continuing our series of interviews with the cast and crew of our science fiction audio drama podcast. William McDonald interviews Jonny Eberle about his dual role as the writer/creator of the series and the voice actor playing Doctor Orban. Check out the video to learn about the inspiration behind the show, why Jonny’s always wanted to play a mustache-twirling bad guy, and get a few of the secrets behind the show’s homemade sound effects:
Set in the distant future, “The Adventures of Captain Radio” follows the exploits of the masked hero Captain Radio as he fights the forces of evil. If you like your rocket ships with a side of robots and ray guns, you’ll love this retrofuturistic sci-fi serial. You can find “The Adventures of Captain Radio” wherever you listen to podcasts. Listen to the show now!


