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Hello!
We continue our chat with...
.... about their writing tools of choice for audio drama scripts. Some strategies to keep in your back pocket:
• Pronunciation guides with bold words in scripts help actors with difficult or made-up words
• Voice actors need clear notation for vocalizations (grunts, sighs, gasps) or they won't exist in the audio world
• Creating banks of reaction sounds provides useful resources for editing
• The importance of actors truly listening rather than just waiting to deliver their lines
• Audio drama is arguably "the most visual medium" because it creates images in listeners' minds
• Research shows listeners have stronger physiological responses to audio than visual media
• Remote recording challenges include actors working at 2AM when it's quiet enough
• Modern audio scripts need better notation systems for sound design elements like "helmet on/off"
• Writing tool preferences vary widely: Google Docs for collaboration, index cards for structure visualization
• Color coding scenes helps track tension levels and plot arcs throughout episodes
Contact us at [email protected] with your preferred writing tools and experiences and to share any thoughts on these episodes or ping us a review! Thank you!
Tools discussed and listed in the show
SCRIVENER - £50
GOOGLE DOCS - FREE
CELTX - $240 FOR 2 ‘SEATS’
Get the scoop on audio drama news, opportunities, creative resources and more with The Fiction Podcast Weekly newsletter. For more info, visit The Podcast Host's Fiction Podcast Weekly.
Want to get in touch? You can send us a text message with the link at the top, email us at [email protected], join our Discord server, or visit our website at adwit.org.
Share the love. Please write a review on Podchaser or on Apple Podcasts.
Thank you!
Sarah and Lindsay
5
22 ratings
Click here to tell us what you think!
Hello!
We continue our chat with...
.... about their writing tools of choice for audio drama scripts. Some strategies to keep in your back pocket:
• Pronunciation guides with bold words in scripts help actors with difficult or made-up words
• Voice actors need clear notation for vocalizations (grunts, sighs, gasps) or they won't exist in the audio world
• Creating banks of reaction sounds provides useful resources for editing
• The importance of actors truly listening rather than just waiting to deliver their lines
• Audio drama is arguably "the most visual medium" because it creates images in listeners' minds
• Research shows listeners have stronger physiological responses to audio than visual media
• Remote recording challenges include actors working at 2AM when it's quiet enough
• Modern audio scripts need better notation systems for sound design elements like "helmet on/off"
• Writing tool preferences vary widely: Google Docs for collaboration, index cards for structure visualization
• Color coding scenes helps track tension levels and plot arcs throughout episodes
Contact us at [email protected] with your preferred writing tools and experiences and to share any thoughts on these episodes or ping us a review! Thank you!
Tools discussed and listed in the show
SCRIVENER - £50
GOOGLE DOCS - FREE
CELTX - $240 FOR 2 ‘SEATS’
Get the scoop on audio drama news, opportunities, creative resources and more with The Fiction Podcast Weekly newsletter. For more info, visit The Podcast Host's Fiction Podcast Weekly.
Want to get in touch? You can send us a text message with the link at the top, email us at [email protected], join our Discord server, or visit our website at adwit.org.
Share the love. Please write a review on Podchaser or on Apple Podcasts.
Thank you!
Sarah and Lindsay