SARAH WAYNE CALLIES-AFTERSHOCK SEASON 2 - podcast episode cover

SARAH WAYNE CALLIES-AFTERSHOCK SEASON 2

Aug 28, 202310 min
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This is Later with Lee Matthews, the Lee Matthews Podcast, More What You Here, Weekday Afternoon's On the Drive. He's an actor, director, and writer. Sarah Wayne Callus, most recently seen in The Company You Keep, NBC's The Council of Dance and The Walking Dead, is now expanding her foray into something near and dear to my heart storytelling with sound. Sarah is the creator, writer and director and voice of the science fiction podcast after Shock,

now in its second season. Hello Sarah, glad to have you a long good morning, sir, thank you for having me. Let's start about the Let's just remind everybody what Aftershock is, and then we'll get into the differences of the first season in the second season. All right, So Aftershock is it's an audio drama, which is a television show that you watch with your eyes closed. Right this, we're going all the way back to the sort

of Twilight Zone radio drama, kind of roots of American storytelling here. And the story the first season is that that earthquake everybody's always been talking about finally comes and it levels La thirteen miles off the coast in international waters. A new island rises up out of the sea. So then it kind of becomes the story of westward expansion and there's new land, it's to the west,

who goes there and why? But I was curious about exploring some of those stories from the perspective of maybe writing in some women and some people of color and sort of seeing how those dynamics would all work out. So a bunch of people get to the island. Our hero played by me because I wrote it, is looking for a young woman who we think is her daughter.

And they get to the island, and people keep coming, and then people keep dying, and the body's sort of pile up, and by the end of the first season almost everybody has a fair amount of blood on their hands. And so in season two, what we're really kind of exploring is atonement and forgiveness. When you have done the unforgivable, what do you do then? Who do you become? And how do you make it right? How

do you ask for forgiveness? How do you give forgiveness? That seemed like something at this moment in our culture in North America, that seemed like something worth talking about. Aftershocks Season two is the podcast available on the iHeartRadio app and everywhere you get podcasts. Have you been personally through any earthquake or earthquakes.

I've been through a couple, none serious. Mercifully, I was you know, my John Burnthall as a close friend of mine, and years ago I was staying with him and his wife and there at the time new baby, and we were in Venice and John was somewhere else. He wasn't in the house. His wife was cleaning up the dishes and I felt the wall start to shake, so I ran upstairs. I grabbed the baby. I

run to the middle of the street. I'm waiting for everybody to come out so we can all be safe, and maybe ten minutes go by it I'm alone. His wife comes out and she goes, what the hell are you doing? I said, I'm saving the baby. It's not that better an earthquake. Get back inside and put my kid back to sleep. I'm so sorry. So that was my failed hero moment, but thankfully it was not any kind of a serious earthquake. I have been through several here in Oklahoma.

People don't realize it, but we're very seismically active, and in the last several years especially so. And I guess the biggest one I went through it. Yes. So the biggest one I went through was about a three point four, and I was more fascinated than fearful. I heard it coming in almost a Doppler effect. At first, I thought, why is there a helicopter landing in the backyard, because that's what it sounded like. It was. It was a wobble wabble wobble wappa sound. And then the whole

house was vibrating with that wabble wobble wappa sound. And my wife was in the shower. She came running out, what the hell is going on? I said, it's an earthquake. And about the time I said that, you felt it doppler to the south and to the east, and I went out the front yard and I heard. I didn't realize it would make a sound, but I heard it. I heard the effect of it leaving, and I guess the whole experience was maybe thirty seconds, and we didn't sustain

any damage, but it was. It was fascinating to me, not unnerving like many people were rattling. Yeah, well, and you know it was interesting to me. Was exactly that audio question is going through this right? You know? So I write this script, we get it to Jeff Schmidt, who is I think the best audio engineer in the business, and he goes, right, so all of this is audio, What does this sound like to you? And I was like, I don't know, buddy,

I I think I'm going to make that your problem. And that was kind of our partnership because I would write these things and I would write a tsunami, I'd write a kayak flipping over. I'd you know, write someone falling off the cliff, and Jeff would go, okay, well, and you know, he'll send me three options and I go, oh, b is great, but let's bring up the base here and let's make it rattle a

little more. And that has been in a really exciting part of this kind of audio journey is how do you take a natural master and land it fully in someone's ears in an immersive way. And this season, actually he's done something really cool. He's done three D sound. So you know, if you can take a second and you know, put your beats on or your bows or whatever your giant headphones are, then it'll the sound will actually move

around you and it's cool. A few times while I was editing, I couldn't help myself I'd look behind me because I'd hear the footsteps of somebody coming up in a scene, and I was like, oh, this is so cool. Yeah, that's the part that I love. Sarah Wayne Callous is with us Aftershock Season two is the podcast that she produced, and it's it's

it's going back to old school radio drama. But and I'm sure you've done this, Sarah, gone back and listen to some of the old dramas and listen to how they had to improvise to make various sound effects, whether it's a shaking a piece of ten to simulate thunder or a war of the world. I still have no idea how they how they made the sound of the artillery because I can't tell what it is. It sounds like a like a almost like a fire extinguisher going off, but I don't know what they used.

I think they put a mason jar down in a toilet when the spaceships were you know, we're unscrewing the lids of the spaceships and they were coming to But but that was my point. We have so many more resources available to us now in the digital age. We do we do, and you know what it allows us to do I think is tell more vibrant stories. And even you know, look, I'm recording this with actors who were all over the place. I mean we shot We recorded Dave Harbor I think in

a closet in rural England somewhere. I think he was out there shooting something. You know. We record Jeffrey Dean Morgan in his garage in between cigarette which is always amazing. I've always ended up. His wife is Hillary Bird Morgan, who's an absolutely brilliant actor and writer, and I've always got to call her and be like, hey, Hale, would you set your husband up because he's swearing at his TV screen and this tech is pissing him off.

But we can do these things remotely in a very different way, and then send the tracks over, yeah, to our audio engineer who pieces it all together. Whereas like back, you know, during the first season of prison Break, they asked me to do a couple episodes of the Twilight Zone radio dramas they were redoing it all with Stacy Keach as the host, and even then we were all in the same room. Fully, artist was right

there. There were a lot of after effects too, but it was limited by who you could get into the room and who was available that day. And now we don't have that, you know, we record things over riverside or squadcast, and it gives us access to brilliant actors wherever they are in the world. Sarah Wayne Cally's the podcast is after Shock. It's in season two. What is it about podcasting? I think it's because people want to have more going on when they're cutting the grass or going for a jog.

My brother in law no longer reads the newspaper. Every morning. He gets up, gets his cup of coffee and he listens to a couple of podcast You know, it's an interesting question. I mean, on the scripted side with what I'm doing. What I think is really great for people is I don't care how big your special effects budget is. In a movie, it's coming out of the minds of the director and the producers and the writers and the special effects team. When you listen to a podcast, those special effects

are coming right out of your brain. Whatever it is that scares you the most when you hear that door creak open, that's what you're imagining. Whatever it is that makes the most beautiful sunset to you. Wherever you've been your brain's pulling that image up and flooding it. When we talk about I'm on a boat in the middle of the ocean and the sun's coming up, And I think there's something extraordinary that allows people's imaginations to tailor the story to them

in a way that's not available in any other medium. So I'm gonna be fall in love with the medium at a young age. That's why I got into radio, because I wanted to do that kind of thing. And I was like, I was about five years old listening to a radio draw and I thought, Wow, this is great. I love this. I see something different than what my sister sees when we listen to this, and to me, it is magic. Yeah, it's exactly right. It's exactly right.

And you know, it also allows us as actors to play I think, a wider range of characters, right, because you can manipulate your voice in ways that you can't quickly manipulate your body. And then that's just it. It's a ton of fun. You get to play and play and play and play. I do think it's interesting that so much of our world is migrating to podcasts. You know, when you talk about your brother in law

and not wanting to read the paper, but to listen to it. To me, what I think is well, that allows him to listen and sit with a cup of tea and watch the sunrise and actually engage with the beauty around him and the piece around him at the same time that he's engaging with the cast and the news, and maybe that makes it a little easier to swallow. Give it how challenging these times stuff for everyone. Sarah Wayne Kelly's

the name of the podcast Aftershock season two. I thank you for the conversation and for the podcast. We look forward to talking to you again. Thank you so much for having me be well. Thanks for listening to Later with Lee Matthews the Lee Matthews Podcast, and remember to listen to The Drive Live weekday afternoons from five to seven and Ihearts Media Presentation

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