The Adventures of Captain Radio has concluded its run…or has it? This morning, our bonus-level backers on Ko-Fi woke up to a post-Christmas surprise—a lost adventure pitting Captain Radio against the evil genius Doctor Orban. Set before the events of Season 1, Captain Radio and the Infinite Imposter Infantry is an excerpt from the finale of a seemingly lost adventure with hints about the life one of our main characters lived before their time aboard the Phaeton. The episode also offers a brief hint about our new audio drama coming in 2026.
Want to listen to the bonus episode? All you have to do is become a supporter on Ko-Fi! Pledge at any amount and we’ll send you the link. All proceeds go toward our next project and paying the creative and talented people who make our shows possible.
Thanks so much for listening and we’ll see you in the stars…
About Obscure Studios
Obscure Studios is a small, independent production company making podcasts and short films on big dreams and a tiny budget since 2004. Subscribe to our newsletter to learn more and be the first to know about new projects.
It’s finally here, the epic conclusion of The Adventures of Captain Radio. In the final episode, Once and For All, our heroes face off against their most powerful enemy to retake the ship, save the planet Alpha Centauri from being crushed by the graviton fold, and rescue Ace from the grip of Doctor Orban’s evil scheme. But it comes at a terrible cost.
It’s all led up to this. Listen to Season 3, Chapter 3, wherever you enjoy podcasts. a huge thank you to our cast and crew, including Will McDonald for being a steadfast producer and voicing our protagonist so ably across three seasons, our entire voice cast, Trask Snow for editing and sound design (and for enduring many rounds of edits from us), Simon Cunningham for composing our wildly catchy music, and Tami King for designing our artwork to capture the soul of this show.
We’re incredibly grateful also for you, our listeners, and we hope you love this final season as much as we have loved making it. Stay tuned for more audio adventures from Obscure Studios, starting with Belgrave, a small-town supernatural drama coming in 2026. Until then, we’ll see you in the stars…
Set in the distant future, The Adventures of Captain Radio follows the exploits of the masked hero Captain Radio, the alter-ego of Count Xavier of the planet Alpha Centauri. Along with his robotic sidekick Ace, Andromeda, and Orion, Captain Radio travels the galaxy, seeking out injustice and defending the powerless. Listen now wherever you find podcasts.
Season 3 is the epic final season of The Adventures of Captain Radio. But this doesn’t have to be the end. You can still unlock an exclusive bonus episode by becoming a backer atko-fi.com/obscurestudios.
Obscure Studios is a small, independent production company making podcasts and short films on big dreams and a tiny budget since 2004. Subscribe to our newsletter to learn more and be the first to know about new projects.
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.
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.
What danger lurks in the rings of Saturn? Find out in the latest episode of our sci-fi podcast! The Adventures of Captain Radio, is now available to stream on your favorite podcast player. Listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Amazon Music, and more. If you enjoy your rocketships with a side of robots and ray guns, we think you’ll enjoy the show. We’re a small, independent production studio—we’re not part of a large network and we don’t have a huge advertising budget—so if you want to support us, please subscribe and leave us a rating and review. That will help other people discover Captain Radio. You can also buy us a coffee on Ko-Fi. Thanks for listening!
Merchandise Now Available to Purchase
We’re so excited to announce that official Captain Radio merch is here! Show off your love for the show with a t-shirt, sticker, magnet, phone case, and more featuring quotes and artwork from the podcast (including some deep cuts for eagle-eared listeners). Check out the selection on our TeePublic store!
Chapter 4: The Leviathan
Andromeda attempts to warn Captain Radio about Orban’s trap. The Adventures of Captain Radio is a production of Obscure Studios written and edited by Jonny Eberle with production help from Will McDonald. Starring Will McDonald, Scott Kennedy, DeLano Hays, Rob Peters, Abigail Stokley, Jonny Eberle, and Bailey Cunningham. Find complete transcripts for all of our episodes here.
Set your astrocompass for the Plutonic Shoals, because the second episode of our podcast, The Adventures of Captain Radio, is now available to stream on your favorite podcast app! Listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Amazon Music, and more. If you enjoy your rocketships with a side of robots and ray guns, we think you’ll enjoy the show. We’re a small, independent production studio—we’re not part of a large network and we don’t have a huge advertising budget—so if you want to support us, please subscribe and leave us a rating and review. That will help other people discover Captain Radio. You can also buy us a coffee on Ko-Fi. Thanks for listening!
Chapter 2: Songs and Storms
While Captain Radio, Ace, and Orion navigate icy shoals, Andromeda confronts her captor.
The Adventures of Captain Radio is a production of Obscure Studios. Written and edited by Jonny Eberle with production help from Will McDonald. Starring Will McDonald, Scott Kennedy, DeLano Hayes, Rob Peters, Abigail Stokley, Bailey Cunningham, and Jonny Eberle, with special guests Kate Neale, Katie Gray, Rutger Wagner, and Scott Thorpe.
We didn’t set out to make a podcast, but these things happen when you least expect them. What started out as a throwaway gag movie title in a video we made a decade ago found new life in the dark days of the pandemic. Now, over a year after Jonny started writing the first script for Captain Radio and the Mutant Mole People from the Eleventh Dimension, we’re nearly ready to share it with the world.
The Adventures of Captain Radio is set in the distant future. Over the course of a six-episode series, we join Captain Radio, a masked vigilante fighting the forces of evil, his trusty robotic sidekick Ace, and interstellar criminal Orion as they travel across the stars to rescue Andromeda from the clutches of a mad scientist, outwit deadly space sirens, seek the mysteries of a reclusive order of monks, and race to stop a conspiracy to destroy the known universe. The show is fun and campy—and every episode ends with a cliffhanger in the style of the great radio dramas of the 1930s and ’40s.
New episodes will start beaming to your earbuds in early 2022, but you can listen to a trailer for the season right now wherever you enjoy your favorite podcasts. Just search “The Adventures of Captain Radio” in Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, and other fine purveyors of audio drama. If you like what you hear, do us a favor and subscribe to the feed. That way, you’ll be notified when the first episode drops. Once we’re in the swing of things, we also hope you’ll leave us a rating and review, and share it with your friends.
This podcast has been a labor of love. In addition to being produced by Jonny Eberle and Will McDonald, our talented main cast includes Will McDonald, Rob Peters, DeLano Hays, Scott Kennedy, Abigail Stokley, Jonny Eberle, and Bailey Cunningham. Tami King designed our gorgeous logo (coming soon to some merch near you), and Bailey Cunningham composed our theme music. We’re so thankful for everyone who’s contributed their time to make this a reality.
Now, without further ado, check out the brand new trailer for our first-ever podcast, The Adventures of Captain Radio: