The Magnus Archives - Building the Panopticon - Making MAG 158
Episode Date: March 5, 2020SPOILERS NOTE: This ep includes discussion for the whole of Season 4, up to and including MAG160.Anil hosts in this peek behind the curtain as members of the TMA production team talk about what it too...k to get gargantuan episode Panopticon to your ears!Thanks to this week's Patrons: Michael Spiral DESERVES Rights, Andy Loth, Daniel Williams, Heather H ,Evil Angel, Vivianne Starlight, Coney's Mom, Kay-Jay Bee, Cato, planetsandmagic, Mariada, Stephanie Simon, Melissa Ponce, Olivia Pugh, Tatyana Beck, Brittany, The Paper Librarian, Kira Apple, Lena Williams, DaniIf you would like to join them, be sure to visit www.patreon.com/rustyquillEdited this week by Nico Vettese & Alexander J Newall.Check out our merchandise at https://www.redbubble.com/people/rustyquill/collections/708982-the-magnus-archives-s1You can subscribe to this podcast using your podcast software of choice, or by visiting www.rustyquill.com/subscribePlease rate and review on your software of choice, it really helps us to spread the podcast to new listeners, so share the fear.Join our community:WEBSITE: rustyquill.comFACEBOOK: facebook.com/therustyquillTWITTER: @therustyquillREDDIT: reddit.com/r/RustyQuillEMAIL: mail@rustyquill.comThe Magnus Archives is a podcast distributed by Rusty Quill Ltd. and licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Sharealike 4.0 International Licence Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Hi everyone, Alex here. I'd just like to take a moment to thank some of our patrons.
Michael, Spiral Deserves Rights, Andy Lott, Daniel Williams, Heather H, Evil Angel, Vivian Starlight,
Coney's Mom, KJB, Kato, Planets and Magic, Mariada, Stephanie Simon, Melissa Ponce,
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Thank you all. We really appreciate your support.
If you'd like to join them, go to www.patreon.com forward slash Rusty Quillthe-scenes look at the Magnus Archives.
I'm your host, Anil Gidgumur, and with me I have...
It's-a-me, Johnny.
I'm Lowri and I produce the Magnus Archives.
Alex, I play Martin and direct and help on production.
I'm Elizabeth Moffat and I work on the vocal cuts for Magnus.
She does the hard work.
She does the really hard work.
When Alex comes to get the door, I talk to her.
Thank you from all of us.
She can't respond.
I mean, I love our chats, Johnny.
They do.
It's very intimate moments.
It's great.
I love having a conversation the other person just can't interact with at all.
That doesn't surprise me on any level, John.
You're a writer, of course you do.
Today we're going to look at what I think is safe to say the most challenging episode of Season 4,
Episode 158, Panopticon.
Get away from my secrets, we're not going to be telling any.
Everything went fine, stop asking.
Yeah, it was great.
Well, let's delve a little bit deeper into that, shall we? I just wrote some words. I don't know
what the big deal is. Cool. Let's start with you then, Johnny. So, on the writing side,
what were you hoping to achieve with this episode? The two aspects of it, I think, were
probably revelation and resolution, because we knew what was going down in season five and we knew that
159 was going to be the emotional climax of one very important storyline and 160 was going to be
the start of the final phase 158 was very much our last chance to get all the other all the sort
of the disparate strands you can, put every single character in the entire
series into a single episode. Yeah.
It was our last chance to take all those different storylines
and put them, get all the
pieces in place for Season 5.
In some cases, tying them off
nicely, like with Gertrude,
or with Peter. In other cases,
getting them in a
position so that when we go
into Season 5, we can do all sorts of
interesting things with them i had a writing teacher once um called it which is a thing
from there as well like readying positions so it's like if you're going to do a multi-season
thing you need to make sure that everyone is in ready positions for next season yes it was
getting everyone in ready positions getting some of them dead. Dead is a ready position. Yeah, dead is a ready position.
A ready position for other people to be sad.
So that leads me on to the question,
at what point did you realise that it was going to involve so many characters?
I mean, pretty much from the off, to be honest.
Like when we were sitting down and planning out season four,
we did mark 158 as the episode that was going to cause us problems
um i think some of the problems that ended up causing us were not necessarily the exact ones
we'd anticipated some of them were unpredictable yeah but we certainly knew that we knew that it
was going to be a big complicated episode with a lot of different scenes and a lot of different
characters and interactions to it.
Well, it's because as well, thanks to Lowry,
we have a big shiny spreadsheet which changes colour
and one of the colours it can go is a nice big bright red
when there's too many people in an episode.
Alex, I don't understand. It's all red.
Red's the only colour it goes, I thought.
Yeah, there are other colours colours they've never come up
no it's different shades of red
there's one that's almost black
that's my favourite
I can't take credit for that spreadsheet
that was yours wasn't it
it changed a lot
I built a rudimentary little wagon
and then you turn it into a Ford
shock horror Alex and spreadsheets
spreadsheets solve most but not all problems.
There is the problem with too many spreadsheets.
In my experience, spreadsheets highlight the problems.
Bright red!
On the writing side, how long did it take you to write Mag 158?
Ooh, good question.
That is a good question and kind of a difficult one
because the scenes got written at different points,
both because of recording considerations
and because some of them were resolutions to different storylines
and so got written sort of concurrent to those storylines.
I think the Gertrude Elias one was actually written
a good few months before a lot of the other scenes
and there was a lot of the peter martin scenes
is 158 the one where we had to do a last minute rewrite due to a recording breaking that had
fey in it i think so yes yes i think it is uh yeah so that was one that had an emergency rewrite
especially and there was also there was some rewriting when we realised that Ben and Alistair weren't going to be able to record together,
that led to quite a few quite significant script revisions.
Yeah, we're going to come to that.
I have specific questions about that.
Absolutely, because writing dialogue that can be recorded in isolation,
it can be done and you can get good dialogue,
but it's something you need to be aware of when you're writing the lines
so that you don't have a lot of overlap,
you don't have a lot of direct back and forth.
Moving on to once you've finished the script,
we'll move to script editing.
Alex, when Johnny passed you the script,
what was your first reaction?
He loved it.
That is a very strong word, isn't it? A good word, love. He loved it that is a very strong word a good word love loved it um he was like johnny
you've done it again so we have a couple of rules which is to do with maximum number of people on a
thing we accepted that this was going to be a big one i cried a little bit with joy when i saw how
many scenes it was because there's one thing to bear in mind
on the production side which is worth noting which is this is gonna sound really weird to
bear with me more scenes even if it's with the same number of people is worse than the less scenes
with the same or even less people what it comes down to is if you have multiple scenes, you have to do
the audio equivalent of an establishing shot, which is where like people know from TV. So you've got
like your big, you start with the exterior, big spooky house exterior cut to interior. And I've
assembled all of the suspects here, blah, blah, blah. It's an establishing shot so that people
know what they're looking at before it starts. You have to do that with audio as well. But what
that means is that if you've got 10 scenes, you have to do establishing shots and you have to do that with audio as well. But what that means is that if you've got 10 scenes, you have to do establishing shots
and you have to make sure that everything is distinct
in pace and in soundscape and in tempo and so on
so that when you are bouncing them between those scenes,
people know where they are.
That I wasn't ready for.
I was ready for there to be lots of people.
I think at some point it must have flown under my radar
and I went, weren't there like 10 or something?
10, 10, 10.
There were 10 where we started the series
with an average of two.
And then we hit 10 on that one
and that one caught me by surprise.
I was expecting like maybe six, you know.
I was like, that's manageable.
10's a lot.
10's a lot.
So that threw me.
We had close to 10 for the unknowing.
That's fair, but I used a few tricks and cheats in the unknowing,
which made it a lot easier.
That leads me into, like,
how do you go about breaking it up for recording?
Something that is as large as that.
That's probably worth handing over to you, Lowrysofar as i think for 158 you broke it up
more than anyone just because you were handling the logistics at that point well i guess it's
breaking it up by person i mean ideally you want people to travel in the minimum number of times
and you want everyone in the room at the same time uh which can't always happen, as I discovered on 158.
I mean, I don't know that I did do much breaking down
because I, Alex and Johnny, had produced this, you know,
a spreadsheet that I work from, essentially,
which is breaking down all the scenes.
So I just saw, right, there are 10 scenes.
There are 10 people.
Some people are in scenes with different people,
so they need to be in the room at the same time.
That's a bit of a nightmare. Yeah, I don't know that. So I'm trying to think, with different people, so they need to be in the room at the same time. That's a bit of a nightmare.
Yeah, I don't know that.
So I'm trying to think.
With the spreadsheet, for instance, how it works is
you take an episode and we split it into scenes,
even if it's not like a clear transition between them.
So like, Elizabeth, you'll do this all the time,
where it's like, we'll have statement,
and then the post statement is a separate scene,
in inverted commas.
But for that one, we just record it together together there's no reason to separate it out whereas for one five eight and for anything that's got a huge number you end up having to go scene by scene and
you also can go by version and scene so you can have like scene one which has three people in it
now let's say that those three people can't be in the same room. So you'll have scene one
and then you'll have version one
which is with this person.
Version two which might be with these two people
and version three which is this person.
So you've got scene one, version one, two, three.
Then you have takes within versions.
So you have scene one, version two, take two.
Scene one, version three, take two.
And then you combine versions
and you pick the best take from each version.
You combine the versions and then you have a scene.
And then you combine the scenes into other scenes and you have an episode sorry i wasn't
listening could you say that again the vocal clapperboard basically honestly yeah um people
laughed when lydia playing melanie did the clap when she was going to do a recording and so on
that's what we literally do like we you literally do markers on tapes and so on but i think elizabeth would agree
that the process of combining all of those is trivial and requires almost no time investment
whatsoever and is is almost automated by this point really well i mean for episode 158 it ended
up being four hours and eight minutes of recording so some of those were the same scene but you had one like not sasha i think was um yeah she was
she was recorded separately yeah and then obviously we had been recorded in isolation and all of those combined so so in the end it was like yeah four
hours because i just did a quick check and then of course you're like well for those four hours
eight minutes you've also got at least two people on each scene on each record so there's probably
like maybe 11 12 hours worth of actual yeah yeah i did prepare myself for a half an hour episode yeah the things
bear in mind as well just because from production experience on other stuff this is going to sound
peculiar like for anyone who's like doing this professionally they're going to go that's actually
a decent like ratio of raw to thingy but what it is is the reason that we as a company function is
that we've paired processes down as much as we can and we keep shaving it and trying to make it more efficient.
So bizarrely, for like, let's say for a radio play
or if you were doing TV, for instance,
maybe not live broadcast, but you know what I'm talking about.
Like the ratio, that's not...
If you're doing one to four, I think in film,
it's considered pretty good.
Yeah, film, I think if last time I checked,
average is at one to ten.
One to four is like, yeah, you're doing a good job.
You're a good director if you're managing 1 to 4.
This is significantly higher than ours,
but it's also worth bearing in mind this is audio only.
We have like 140 episodes under the belt in terms of infrastructure.
So yeah, going up to that, that's what, a factor of maybe a factor of 10
higher than we would normally have relative to the...
It's hard to say i mean i guess the average
episode where it was like just a johnny episode would be maybe 40 minutes worth of recording yeah
that sounds well yeah because the statements they're they're the secret they're the trick
like the statements you get maybe 10 minutes more than you'll actually get because it's generally one storytelling take with sections
repeated if i've flubbed up a word or that sort of thing i think most dialogue scenes we generally do
maybe three four takes if we're struggling yeah that's fair so yeah as a as a rule magnus is
actually bizarrely like surprisingly efficient the wastage isn't that high but i mean obviously that time
includes you guys chatting at the start you know what you mean we give you nothing but pure gold
like going to get the door because the doorbell's gone never arrange multiple shows to record on
the same day yes it seems better on paper but it isn't it just isn't bing bong yeah don't don't
bing bong we've removed the doorbell today it's literally not gonna, but it isn't. It just isn't. Bing bong. Yeah, don't. Bing bong.
We've removed the doorbell today.
It's literally not going to ring.
Well, it does mean you get quite happy, nice little outtakes.
I have like a small collection of just doorbell noises.
You would be surprised what I've stored in a folder of things that are for me.
I'm happy to let it be known to the public.
There is a breath library that's been building.
We have a breath library for what's happening.
Well, this person's in the scene, but they're not speaking,
but we need them to feel in the scene.
We'll just use some of Johnny Breath 7.
Actually, you know what?
This feels more like a Breath 6.
That's actually a bit much.
But genuinely, we do have stock breath that's built up organically.
That's fairly natural because room tone is something
that is very consistently needed and used in audio and video productions.
Which is why it's a benefit.
So we actually record in an unusual room,
which is normally when you're recording vocal work,
you don't need this extreme like in terms of sound
proofing and baffling and so on because you end up in something called like a null space or like a
like dead space i'll be honest i haven't been in that many recording studios that have as many
cold iron glyphs embedded into the wall it helps with the resonance mainly um ethereal resonance
specifically sure but um so if you're doing like corporate
voiceovers yeah you'll be in a null room you know like i come to canada we've got bears i don't know
but like you put that in a null room but when you're recording like audio drama and scenes
it normally needs to sound like it's in a room shocker so as a result you just use standard
soundproofing which is a little bit whereas we've built this to be as dead as it can be
because we're bouncing around between locations
and stuff. But it does mean that we
add artificial room tone.
Plus it used to have Mike as a character.
Oh my god.
That guy could fill an auditorium without
anything else in it.
What a bassy boy.
Sandbags are a valid strategy
to deal with Mike. Much like
an enormous flood, a sandbag is a good way to deal with Mike. Much like an enormous flood,
a sandbag is a good way to deal with that problem. How do you apply a sandbag to deal with Mike?
You just fuck him with it.
Do you want the genuine answer?
You get him to hold it.
It absorbs the chest resonance so it doesn't just go boom.
Yeah, there's a reason that when we were recording off single Mike and stuff,
he used to stand at the back of the single file.
Amazing.
So that all of the fleshy meat sacks
could absorb his resonance.
I still remember just lining up in that corridor.
That was, what was it?
There was you, then it was me, then it was...
There were six of us, I remember that.
What was that for?
This is like in the early days
where we had to do a finale with multiple people,
like season one?
Yeah, I think it was you, then me, then Eve, then...
Season one then. No, it was season, then me, then Eve, then... Season one, then.
No, it was season two.
We were in the disco flat.
Oh, no, you're right.
We were in disco flat, yeah.
That would be just before brutal sounds of...
Yes, it was...
It sounded like a brutal pipe murder.
Yeah, that's it.
It was the era of getting my mother to sit on a chair
in a corridor under a disco light.
Yeah, I remember.
So let's run through the list then.
I realise I'm going completely off-piste here, but it's what I do.
Don't worry.
So we have
Setup 1. A clothes horse
with some
blankets on
the sofa in the flat
that I was a lodger.
Asbestos flat.
No, it's way pre-asbestos.
So this is clothes yurt in James Ross's
flat because he let me start Rusty Cool Gaming in there and the first episodes of Magnus were recorded there. No, it's way pre-asbestos. So this is Clothes Yurt in James Ross's flat. Oh, God, yes.
Because he let me start Rusty Cool Gaming in there
and the first episodes of Magnus were recorded there.
Yes, I'd forgotten that.
From there, we migrated to Asbestos Flat.
Sofa Yurt in Asbestos Flat.
Which was Sofa Yurt in Asbestos Flat.
Which was really weird because it was literally
one minute's walk away from where I had been living a year before.
But we thought we'd make weight.
And we just sort of missed it, yeah.
Then a Spestos gate happened where everything that I owned was destroyed.
So after the chaos, we bounced to another place called Twickenham.
No, I can say it, I'm not there now.
Twickenham Road, which was sort of near but not the same place.
So then we were recording there where I literally bought furniture specifically
because it was more useful to record with at that point.
That was where we piled, what, five duvets on Lottie?
That was where we did.
So she could scream at midnight.
Yeah, that's where we did screaming until 4 a.m. and none of the neighbours, oh, they heard.
They just didn't care.
Then after that one, we bounced.
Yep.
Then after that one, we had to bounce to, that's Disco Corridor.
Yeah.
Disco Corridor, because Martin, our head of tech, we found a corridor that he had in his flat.
And I was like, yeah, I can make this work.
It was nice.
It was on the 13th floor.
So up on the 13th floor, which was away from traffic.
Nice.
Although wind, big problem.
Martin thought it'd be hilarious if you replaced the light bulb
where we were recording with a disco light bulb.
So if you turn the light on while you're recording,
it was full at bright greens and yellows
it just sort of slowly
sadly rotated
it was a good disco ball
then we migrated from disco corridor
to here
but pre-studio here
oh when you just
pinned a bunch of
sleeping bags to a wall
and then we then converted my
poor father just staring into the staring into the sleeping bag wall he took such a leap of faith
he turned up when it was it was still sleeping bag wall it wasn't even corridor where like your
mum was like i understand what's happening here that's fine this is a temporary whereas your dad
was like so this is your permanent setup i was like yeah yeah it is put this sleeping bag on
okay let's bring this back to mac 158 in specific um lori when alex told you what the episode was
going to require what were your thoughts well i don't remember Alex telling me. I just remember looking at the spreadsheet and going,
oh, there are 10 scenes and 10 people
who all live scattered across the country.
Not everyone's in London.
Because it's the cast.
That episode happens to have all of the most far-flung people
all in the same episode.
Faye Cambridge,
Ian's down from Manchester.
Manchester, yeah.
Ben's coming up from Brighton
though that isn't that big a thing.
Yeah, we've got that one
down to a fine arm.
Eve was, I forget where,
but it certainly was
in London at that point.
She was away at that point.
Alistair in Reading,
your mum.
Oh, yeah.
No one was in London!
And do you know what else?
But the big thing for me,
so I had only
been producing Magnus
for I think
three months
oh yeah
this was horrendous
this was horrendous
mid season
which I cannot imagine
how dreadful that was
because you came in
to cover the previous
producer
because I will say
yeah that was
Story Sylvester
who did a fantastic job
oh she was great
she basically left
to pursue other projects
more power to her
and it was hilarious because I know for a fact that story was like we've got this it's all going
to be fine and then i was like i'm gonna have to move on at which one i was like story said that
we have this little did i think i should probably make sure that that is passed to lower you in some
way so i need to put this in the in the on set the record straight story was wonderful and all of the
reasons for any difficulty transfer was me this was all me i don't think it's it was there was a bit of a gap
between her leaving and me starting as well i think yeah because that's that's my point is
yeah i had to produce it for a while yeah and that's when problems start just because you have
so much on right yeah that's it i remember i remember there was a phone call i don't remember
why but i was in
seven dials at the time i was literally sitting on the little in the middle of the little roundabout
when you were talking and we were chatting and this was the conversation where we were like okay
well let's we'll have to do a bunch of it like recording separately like this is a this is a
was that me and you yeah this was this was the conversation where it's like okay well for this
episode we're suspending our policy of always try to have people in the same room um and uh you know it was it was
a lovely conversation you're like no i have had a little cry that's probably true the thing that
really put a spanner well there were two things that put a big spanner in the works that i did
not foresee was edininge. Oh, great.
So I looked at this and we, according to another spreadsheet,
we needed to have the recording done by mid-September.
And this was July at the time.
So I was emailing people, hey, can you come in?
We've got some scenes for you.
Lovely.
And of course, so many of the guests were in Edinburgh. So that took all of August out.
So I was like, like okay that's fine
we can do this
it is worth explaining
so for US listeners
there's the
is it formally
International Edinburgh Festival
okay
so there's a whole bunch
of festivals
at the same time
the Edinburgh International Festival
is one of them
the Fringe
is a separate thing
there was
the Edinburgh Film Festival
at the top
on at the same time
for a few years.
That's now shifted.
There's the Book Festival.
There's the Deer Festival.
The tattoo's on,
so you actually get Americans
come over for the tattoo, for example.
And they're like,
what the hell else is going on?
A huge comedy festival.
So long story short,
there's a massive, massive, massive festival
that happens in Edinburgh.
I say one, it's like eight of them,
but it uses up a whole month.
But there's a thing in the UK,
which is that pretty much everyone in the arts
will be there in some capacity.
And as a side effect,
it means that almost all things get made around that month.
It warps the production calendar for everything.
The last couple of years are the first first couple of years in 10 years,
I haven't been up there doing something with either Mechanisms
or some other project.
I only stopped basically once the company was running.
I miss it a bit.
You must enjoy your money, though,
because the problem about the Edinburgh Fringe is
whoever goes up there, regardless of what you're doing,
attending or performing, you're losing money.
With Mechanisms, we did all right, actually.
We were a free show, but we sold CDs afterwards.
It's like, oh, Fiverr will also get a CD.
So a lot of people were like, oh, well, it was free to come in,
so we'll just buy a CD.
So we actually did all right.
No, I don't miss it.
I would mostly be up in Edinburgh with, caveat here,
it would be with like six shows or something but it's because I'd be like
I'd be creative director on one
I'd be resident director on another which is where
you just make sure that the show doesn't fall apart but you didn't
build the thing. To be fair I did pitch you
I did pitch you this
I did pitch you Magnus at the Edinburgh Fringe
Oh yeah, I'm eventually going to have to go back but
yeah I'm not hugely
keen if I'm honest
I want to do the fridge.
I mean, go there doing something and be aware that it's not...
If you enjoy really intense kind of going a little unstable
across the course of a month because you're exhausted and stressed
and really busy all the time, if you enjoy that sort of thing, it's amazing.
If you don't, it's very bad.
But you don't have to do the whole month, though.
No, that's true.
A lot of folks just do a week or two.
I realise we're going off on one again.
I would say, as a caveat,
it depends whether it is a full professional business thing for you or not.
If it's a full professional, like This Is Your Livelihood,
you've got to do at least three shows a day to even begin looking at covering costs
plus you then want to have a side gig so for me it was teching other shows and things like that
but it does mean that you are genuinely working 12 to 13 hours a day like hard work as well not
sort of software i would hate to do it in any sort of professional capacity like it was it was great
sort of the seven eight
of us crammed into a flat going yeah actually but like the self-contained project where that's your
thing you do it and you leave i've done before a while ago was great when you it's like this is me
doing my networking for an entire year in a single month at the same time as doing all of this
blah but to circle it back round there's a a reason why the entirety of August is just dead. Just dead every year.
Yeah, and it's very hard to book people for August.
So the second thing that kind of put a spanner in our works
was someone very, very selfishly getting married at the end of September.
What? What a joke.
Yeah, absolutely.
That, of course, takes the studio out of play for weeks.
I mean, no, but that would only be the case
if whoever was getting married lived in the house with the studio.
Which would be madness, by the way,
because London real estate is fractionally like zero,
like rent is zero in London.
So there's no reason for that.
That doesn't make any sense.
Gosh, maybe I was mistaken and it was all unnecessary.
Or if like half the company weren't going to said wedding.
Absolutely, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it was quite challenging to
get everyone in the same room and in fact we didn't get everyone in the same room and i
we did it was more of a tent but everyone was in the same all right so how do you go about
organizing a cast recording of that scale geez doodle polls good start yeah actually i looked
back on my emails before coming here just because i wanted
to get some dates right and the very first i very naively just sent out emails and then like three
or four emails later oh sweet summer child yeah quite down the chain i was like okay here's a
doodle poll please just put your availability in because ah yeah i remember getting that back and
you and ben in particular alex just looking at it and be like
there is no day there is not a single day both of you can bear in mind there were like 50 options
or something because one of the benefits is having our own studio comes with a couple of advantages
and one of which is it makes the flexibility plausible this the stuff that we make would
physically not be possible if we didn't do our own studio. Like categorically, it's just completely out the window.
And we couldn't utilise a commercial studio
on the basis that we record.
Well, no, because even things like
if someone's late for a recording,
great, your recording's shot,
which is fine when you don't release the thing
until the entire thing's recorded
and you have a 16-month production window.
We don't.
We're making way too much content for that to be a thing.
So you have to have your own.
But even then
so that means
that on a doodle poll
it was like
9am to 11am
11am till 2pm
like there were
10 options per day
40 days
and you're like
yeah no
no
and of course
that makes it even worse
when you think about
the fact that
Alex has to be here
for the recording
to happen
because he runs
the studio
so
you won't be able
to get in
well yeah that for us also.
He's got Kespin.
He is a lazy cat.
Why haven't you trained him yet?
He does not understand compression
and I don't know why.
Typical.
No matter how many times
you drill it into him,
hit the kibble.
I'm like, look,
if you balance your EQs,
you get a dreamy.
He just steals the bag and runs.
Oh, he's a good cat.
To be fair, he's quite good on narrative structure now.
I've been taking him through some basic scripting lessons.
I'm looking at this draft.
I really think that we should do maybe six scenes for this.
Five.
Fine.
Three.
So is Casper going to get a co-writing credit on season five then?
I mean, maybe.
Are you ready for the real dark secret?
The cat that's in the Magnus Archives isn't Casper.
I think fans know that by now, but still, there may be new people who aren't aware.
Casper's not actually that vocal.
He's not.
He just sort of silently glides up.
And then you're like, oh, hello, Casper.
And then he's like, embrace me.
And you're like, yeah, okay.
Sure.
So aside from the scheduling, were there any other kind of difficulties that you ran into yeah honestly this was the first show of this scale that i had
produced because i'd come from gaming which because it has been running for so long and is so
regular in its recording schedule it's actually yeah it's not i mean you need a producer but it's not
it doesn't keep changing exactly as you said it's stable it's it's built to be as boring to produce
as possible yeah so then coming into magnus and you know i'd never produced something i mean gaming
is improv so i'd never had to think about the fact that i've booked this recording i have to tell
johnny to write that script you know that was that was a thing where I had, oh, no.
And then I called Johnny,
please tell me you've written this episode.
Occasionally there has been a,
okay, Laurie, I've finished up this script.
And it's been like, oh,
actually that's not the one we're recording next.
We need these two episodes.
It was a steep learning
curve okay that's it's all right to be honest i am i've said it before um i'm a bit of a deadline
writer so i'm quite happy being like okay two episodes in in two days yeah sure that's fine
leaves me the rest of the week to not do anything why would you tell me that because now i'm just
gonna constantly be like so we're recording this tomorrow i mean if you do i'll get it written i won't i mean i won't be good in the recording
because i'll be like yes so how long did it actually take to record all the different scenes
oh i don't think i'm the one to answer that i don't know so we're talking from raw audio which was four hours and four hours
eight minutes or do you mean time time time span oh like from like from the the day the first scene
was recorded to the day below the last one the last one was on the 6th of september because there
was also when did the episode drop it was edited by the 21st of September.
Yeah, well, Elizabeth has never missed a deadline.
I absolutely miss them one day late most of the time.
But I don't notice because I don't check until the day after that.
Because I assume the producer has put that into their schedule already.
Yeah, they have!
I should have looked this up before I came on mic.
So Mag 160 was 31st of October.
Well, 30th because we released a day early for the early episode.
So two weeks before that.
14th of October.
Yeah, so mid-October was the episode drop.
And we'll talk about some of the other problems on that side in a bit.
Including post.
How did we do this?
I mean, I came here prepared
to look Elizabeth in the eye
and say I'm so sorry
I couldn't get everyone
in the room at the same time
I tried so hard
I would genuinely say
from first scene
of that episode
being recorded
to last scene
more than a month
oh definitely
maybe pushing two
yeah because I think
the Gertrude and Elias scene
was recorded quite
separately to
everything else as well
no they weren't but I don't think they were recorded together right no I think Gertrude and Elias scene was recorded quite separately to everything else as well. No, they weren't.
But I don't think they were recorded together, right?
Really?
Gertrude and Elias.
Oh, no, they weren't.
No, they weren't.
Because they were the hardest of that episode.
Yeah.
Yeah, they didn't gel, did they?
Oh, did they not?
When I was trying to match it with other ones, like with Martin, Peter, Elias,
I had the overlap of the people being in the room together
who were in the room together.
And then I could work with that and that had that natural flow.
Oh, was this the only one where it was completely?
Yeah, it was two separate ones.
And I really found it hard to find whether an overlap would work or,
because when you're editing it, I sort of visualize it, right?
I've got them in a room and I might think about like,
are they going to pace? You know, I think of it almost like a visualise it, right? I've got them in a room and I might think about, like, are they going to pace?
You know, I think of it almost
like a televisional film, right?
You stop people from teleporting across the room in terms
of timing. Yeah, you've got imaginary blocking
that you're doing. I found that scene
the hardest by far. That's one that I spent
way more time on than you would expect
compared to the other scenes. And especially
I think that end bit where
Gertrude gets shot and the takes that I had.
And it was written in the script, you know,
in the words that she's shocked, but she's not.
But she didn't give any breaths with it.
Oh, no.
And having fallen, like, in my experience,
when you fall down the stairs or something happens,
which is a bit of a shock to your body,
you take very short, shallow breaths.
So I built in some of that breath works but then
afterwards when I noticed that the scripted three shots didn't occur when I listened to the episode
I was like maybe that's my fault maybe if like I was gonna say there would have been three shots
I don't know two things happened there one was that that is an element but not your fault in
so far as like the timings for three didn't work.
Like, they just didn't.
For three shots?
Yeah.
The second thing is, because we were so up against it,
I think mentally I made a mental note of,
what I'll do is I'll do one shot,
and then I'll have him say pity,
and then just do two more shots after she's on the ground,
and then I can just dodge the timing thing.
Then didn't.
That concludes the explanation for that.
I do remember listening to it back and going,
where's the other shots?
Yeah, the timing did not work.
I read the script.
I've been giving this a lot of thought.
The workaround I had was, yeah,
to do the two shots after the fact
and be like, it'll be fine.
Didn't happen, did it?
Yeah, post was a little bit stressful.
I don't know what you mean.
It was flawless.
Okay.
So moving on to some questions about the directing given all the issues with the recordings being so split up like that how smoothly would you say that the actual recordings went
intense stares at alex it's a big complicated question because the variation is huge. So once you realise that a recording session
is one scene, one version, so you can do multiple takes in a single recording session,
but you can only do one version per session. You can't do two versions in the same session,
otherwise you just have them in the same room at the same time. So what that means is like
between recording sessions is huge variation. I would say that generally speaking, things were better than they would have been if we'd
have done them earlier, because a lot of people got used to some of the shortcuts and tricks
that we use.
So for instance, early days doing any kind of combat, so like the Daisy Basira and the
running and blah, blah, blah was rough.
People didn't know what worked.
People didn't really know what you were getting at.
I'm going to make a bit of an elaborate comparison but bear with me
on this journey i'm not as pompous as this will initially sound okay any of you know about like
the director who worked on the mad max remakes george miller uh i believe so but i don't know
like fury road yeah it's not they're not remakes it's the same guy who did the original
yeah yeah he's done all of them i think i know that he like when he's done it like there's one Because they're not remakes. It's the same guy who did the original. Sorry, Reboot is what I meant. Was it? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
He's done all of them, I think.
I know that when he's done it,
there's one square that you can basically,
all the action happens in.
Yes, yeah, yeah.
So I am not comparing myself to that director.
Let's put that to bed.
What I am saying, though,
is that he was well known on record,
especially for the newer one,
as basically the cast didn't get what he was getting at.
And a couple of them openly, publicly confessed afterwards. They they were like i was a bit of an ass like did not
get what you were getting at i totally see it now it's fine combat in the early days of magnus was
a lot like that where people like don't really know what's happening here is that what i don't
know what you want yeah yeah a lot of a lot of me saying right can you grab
yourself and shake and people look at me like i'm insane like i'm completely lost the plot it's like
no trust trust me on this but as time has gone on people have learned these tricks and they've heard
the end result and gone oh okay so that makes you do this and that's the fix that da da da so that
went a lot easier that said there were a few, which was time compression was a huge problem, which is that a recording session can be compressed to a point and then no more.
And where it's just a case of this was probably the episode most where at the end of a recording session, I would just contact Lurie and go, yeah, Lurie, we were meant to do three scenes, two versions.
We have done two scenes, two versions. and it's not a case of okay can we
accelerate guys because if you accelerate you're ruining the take the scene is garbage the take
is garbage do it again so if you go quick you're doing more takes so it actually takes longer than
if you just cut it off what that means is you would book a recording for let's get three scenes
done today and you will get one scene done today and go cool we need an emergency recording to pick
it up and then you do the emergency recording and something comes up and you only do one scene
not the other two
so you need another recording
so this is the one where
within room
everyone was very professional
things were fine
I think there was
one bit towards the end
where I started to lose
my temper a little bit
which was
the recordings had broken
was this the episode
where Alistair's
dialogue vanished
yes
no that was 159
wasn't it
I forget
it might have been 158 I think we had him in because we had him we had. No, that was 159, wasn't it? I forget. It might have been 158.
I think we had him in because we had him.
We had him doing 158 and 159.
But there was one where I didn't lose my temper at performers,
but I did lay down the law in a way I don't normally do,
which is all conversation that is not recorded, stop.
Now, stop, stop, stop talking.
No, now.
If we don't record this within the next 10 minutes,
the episode will not drop.
Shush, stop.
I don't normally operate like that.
So that was a bit of a weird one.
But for the rest, mostly people started to be aware that we were up against it.
And with that comes an element of people don't mess around.
And that's not me sort of casting aspersions.
It's just that when you're up against it, people tend to put their game face on, you know?
Also, to be honest, Alex, you are a good director
and you inspire a certain degree of loyalty,
so most people are willing to really go to bat
to record an episode when they need to.
It is better to be feared than loved
and to convince everyone to say that you are loved on audio.
I didn't say loved.
You, I am a delight.
We're back into strong adjectives here.
So actually on the directing side as well,
did you learn anything from The Unknowing at the end of season three
that was useful for...
No!
I learnt a lot in The Unknowing,
mainly in what you can get away with,
none of which was applicable, which is why 158 was a headache.
So for The Unknowing,
I knew straight out the gate,
hang on,
ah, number one,
I have creepy circus music in the can.
Wasn't originally creepy circus music.
It was nice circus music that we then made creepy.
Fantastic.
But then with The Unknowing,
this is something that I genuinely have had and you can corroborate this, Johnny.
We have had sit down meetings where I've gone,
right, it's time to learn what is easy to edit and what's hard to edit what's easy to record and i was
talking about season five with you a while back and i was like oh this is going to be really tough
because there's like loads of loads of proper hellscapes in this this is a transformed world
a lot of episodes are going to have like strong unknowing vibes and you're like oh no that's fine
that's fine that's fine because 158 the difficulty was it was all in the real world so everything had to sound real and what alex has
drilled into me over and over again mainly verbally sometimes physically uh is that things that people
don't know what they should sound like because they are otherworldly are a hell of a lot easier to soundscape
than things that people...
People know what running through a corridor
in a basement should sound like.
And the error margin is tiny.
People know what it sounds like when a door gets kicked in.
Even if it's not true, it's that classic thing that a punch makes a noise.
You're weirdly trained to recognise.
We've seen enough films and stuff.
Vehicles in space make noise.
And you've also got to take into account that some things,
you don't need it to sound realistic.
You need to figure out what brand of non-realistic people
will correctly interpret.
Yeah, exactly.
It's like, no, that might not be how a door actually sounds
when it gets kicked in, but that is the nut.
But you need to figure out which of the noises
that people will be like, that's what's happening. Gunshots are a good example of that the secret with with the secret
of doing a good gunshot on audio is that you need to really really compress the tail so that the
initial bang in a real gunshot an actual waveform you just see a line it just goes bang pops every
mic and then there's no other sound so the way that you do audio gunshots as an example is they're
not real what you do is you compress the heck out of it so you hear lots of the tail but the initial bang is quite quiet
but that's exactly the kind of thing we're talking about so for the unknowing you just put a bunch of
creepy music underneath which is the only time we've done scene transitions where the music
swells and comes down because it's allowed because the unknowing is kind of theatrical
also uh one thing was it you it might have been you that told me this but apparently when in films
they're filming people being on fire,
like in an action movie or something like that,
they never direct them to act as if they're being on fire
because it is categorically too disturbing because they scream.
Oh, I didn't know that.
So what they tell them is, imagine you've got a swarm of bees on you.
Yeah, that's what they look like.
Because they're running about like this.
Yeah, because that apparently gets the level where like,
oh my goodness, they're on fire.
We can watch somebody being on fire and being like,
oof, they're on fire without being like, oh my God.
So that's why they have the stagger,
which I've known like that sort of,
oh, I didn't know that isn't me that's on fire.
Because I can imagine with someone with their arms down,
running on fire would be just horrifying.
No, that makes sense.
And actually, don't you tighten up?
You really rapidly...
I mean, I don't actually...
You're heading out, my gosh.
I don't...
I mean, I've never stuck around to watch.
I know how to treat the issue.
I don't know how to...
I like to watch.
Oh, God.
And before we get any creepier...
Yeah, so it's a circle to 158.
Although we learn a lot in The Unknowing,
the issue with 158 is they are all knowable spaces.
So season five is grand.
It's just like, oh, you know what?
I need the sound of a thousand people screaming.
It's like, trivial, come on.
Are we heading into spoiler territory here?
A good example, okay, here you go.
The anglerfish is a baby slowed down 60 times, I think,
and then with reverb and bass boost bass boost added to it it's just
a baby going easy no one knows what angle fish sounds like no one cares but the ultimate evil
which i have been hating is transitions from one space to another someone is in the archivist's
office opens a door steps out into a corridor. That's hours of work.
That is absolutely hours of work to get that right.
And C-158 is full of stuff like that.
Absolutely.
I know people love the phrase chocker.
It's chocker with stuff that sounds like, oh, cool.
And he's like, cool, that door, that's three hours of work.
Oh, no.
What happened?
Someone dropped their gun. Clock that's three hours of work. Oh, no. What happened? Someone dropped their gun.
Clock in two more hours of post.
It's just because everything's knowable,
whereas all of the finales up to then have been sufficiently weird.
It's like I was worried about the lonely.
I was like, Alex, are you going to be okay?
Lonely was easy.
And you're like, yeah, it's just going to be like a beach sound,
and then I'm going to do a bunch of audio effects on it.
It'll be fine.
Lonely was easy because I was just like, cool, it's going to be in one space.
That's the only rule.
As long as it's in one space, we can get this out real quick.
I actually have a question, and it's not 158.
So it's 159, and it's the only episode where we've got panning of audio.
Technically not true.
There's a small amount in the unknowing.
Oh, is there?
And I was like, ooh, Alex, you made a choice.
I wasn't expecting it.
The rule that I have always had, which has
been unspoken, and is a house-style rule, but I've never
had to teach anyone because I did the soundscapes.
People are going to build theories on this now
I think about it. So the tape sounds
are stereo.
All of the vocals
are mono.
So they are not so bear with me yeah there was an actual tape recorder
would record in mono is that yeah yeah yeah so an actual tape recorder recording mono so everything's
in mono meaning that it doesn't have any pat it's just flat down the level everything's centered in
if you were wearing headphones it's centered in the middle of your head yep okay the tape recorder
is in stereo deduce from that what you will all of the effects are
in mono as well so like someone dropping a gun someone going through a door whatever
anything that's full post ritual so in like the unknowing that was full ritual style
all of the music because it's semi-digetic uh meaning that so digetic and non-digetic
digetic means in scene as in like um if someone's listening to a radio in a car and it's on the TV,
it's diegetic.
If it is non-diegetic, it's like a film score
where the audience can't hear it, the characters can't hear it.
What, imposed on top of?
No, I'm trying to think of, like,
die-jeldrich?
No, I'm just kidding.
Die-jeldrich is not bad, actually.
It's pretty bad.
So, semi-diegetic is the one where it's like
a character is driving down the road listening to the radio
and then the music swells until it's the soundtrack.
So The Unknowing has semi-diegetic,
where they're hearing music, but it's actually stereo
and it's done the way that Magnus music is.
And the Magnus music has always been non-diegetic.
So that one bled there.
This is on the sort of directorial waffle thing.
For 160, because of of that i started to mess
around with making it become panned because they're in a post ritual scenario so it should
have been beginning to pan a little bit at the start of the episode and then towards the end it
all have gone full like panning and stereo right so we mentioned
in passing that ben and alistair were not in the room together to record their lines what are the
challenges that come with directing a scene like that honestly directing is not as bad as you might
think what it just consists of is having an idea for what the scene is in your head and making
extra effort to make things match that so you are
the meeting place between these two recordings if you have all the time in the world what you do is
you play that recording for the next person who comes in so they have a sense of pacing and blah
blah blah blah blah we did do that in fairness for one of the pairings but we couldn't for the
other because the turnaround was too tight i can't remember who it was i think it might have been the
gertrude ben one where they had to do it in complete isolation from one another
so in that one what you have to do is go tell one person okay this is the way the scene should be
and then get the other person to home in on that however i am gonna be honest and say that the art
isn't in the directing in that it's just not it's in the editing it's in the vocal edit specifically
the directing is just again basically could you do that better
better how better in this specific way i'll try rinse repeat sure the vocal edit is one where
it's taking something that's a little bit broken and making it not i think what you're really
hoping when you get the files is that the energy between them is the same because i think when
you've got someone beside you,
you're feeding back the same amount of energy they have.
The one scene which I've edited where I was like, oh, God,
this is completely mismatched was when Mel is – she's angry at Johnny.
Was it surgery?
This was after the surgery and she comes to him.
When he goes to see her.
And I was like, shit, because you were much lower energy and she is like, you know.
I'm going to get you.
Yeah, like she's really, really high.
And so it was difficult.
I didn't know about this one.
Did I record this first or did she?
This is end of 157, I think.
It's around that time.
It would be earlier than that.
It would be more like 130s or something.
It would be pre-therapy, Melanie.
Oh, sorry, I thought you were talking about
when he goes to see her.
When he's like, I'm sorry, and she's like,
get away from me. Oh, that post-surgery, right.
I remember because that was a thing
and I was really impressed again with you,
Elizabeth, because the energy levels were like, whoa!
And I remember looking at the script and sometimes you do it with the script.
So when I get the edit, so I'll download the script and I get some editing notes from Alex, which will have some time codes for when things happen.
Not very good notes, I'll add.
Well, it depends whether you're in a scene or not.
That's really true.
So obviously I go by the script.
I look for if there's going to be any noises that I'm not expecting
because sometimes you'll listen through and you'll...
Woo!
Thanks, Josh.
Thanks a lot, Johnny.
Just a quick demonstration.
Yeah, and the editor, thank you for that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
No problem.
It's fine, Elizabeth will take care of it.
She's great.
I can only laugh so much about that.
I know, right?
It's getting old, huh?
You know, so you're looking for maybe unexpected things that
if you're just listening to people talking
you might just not expect that they're there.
Unless there's a specific reaction
to it and you're like, oh, it's a gun!
And you're like, okay, so you've got to know what's
happened. Oh, no, those are a nightmare.
But sometimes what you do need to do is
in that case, I played with the timing of your lines.
So what you'd scripted, I moved it so that it was more spread out with hers.
So you're trying to interrupt her a bit more rather than,
and also add in a bit more like of your ums and ahs from other bits
so that you're like.
I mean, it came out sounding good.
You know, just to give you that sort of sense,
like you're trying to get to her while she's in the middle of the,
you know, I'll say a rant, but while she's in the middle of this high energy.
It came out really well.
It came out really, really well because that's what we call,
as an arbitrary phrase, it's not a real thing, like Frankenvoicing.
Yeah.
So, yeah, like Frankenvoicing is where you take something that someone said
and you're like, this doesn't work.
We'll chop it up and make it work and put it back together like a frankenstein oh yeah well a frankenstein's monster before
people complain um but yeah that was his name was adam frankenstein who's i mean you know he was the
son of victor frankenstein it works he's still frankenstein we will come back to the thing but
i've got one last question for alex on the directing side how many takes were needed for the elias laugh i don't want to admit this he got it on the first take and he did two
more just in case he didn't quite i was the second take no because because he did he did a really
good laugh but i remember quite distinctly that there wasn't any relief in the laugh it was all
amusement and so like once we explained what the laugh was because he didn't because at the time oh no yeah
the thing is he didn't actually know what was going to happen in 160 so we had to explain no
this is you've just nailed this you have this is the laugh of my plan is now actually basically
complete then it can't it's all work no like as soon as we explained to him what the laugh actually was, he just did it.
Which is really annoying, by the way.
His ego doesn't need that.
And it's also annoying because villain...
He's just won an award.
Yeah, I know, I know.
Villain laughs traditionally are terrible.
Like no one can do villain laughs.
Everyone thinks they can, that's what it is.
Everyone thinks they've got the villain laugh,
and no one does, and he happens to have it,
which is fine.
Him and Gertrude.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
In fairness, Johnny's mom has a fabulous cackle
and was still disappointed,
because the one that made it into bloopers
isn't the full cackle.
That was a little side cackle.
A teaser.
And that wasn't a 15-seconder, which I have heard.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
A 15-seconder at the end of it.
You're not bored.
You're not going to ask for that now.
I don't have it.
It's not recorded.
Oh.
There is no recording of a 15-second cackle,
which I know that your mum is capable of doing.
It's fine.
You're overselling it.
I disagree.
I mean, bring her back for season five.
I want her.
Just the cackle.
We'll see.
I'm just saying, we could record the cackle.
If we slowed it down like 50 times, put some bass in there,
that's a hellscape.
Turn it into an EDM.
I know.
So moving on to the editing, we've touched on this throughout,
but a lot of the comments from the fans have been how good the editing
and the soundscaping on this episode were,
which obviously starts with the vocal cut.
You've touched on a bit about the editing notes
that Alex has given you.
What were your thoughts when you saw those?
I remember I did have a glance back
and I remember there was a piece in red,
which is like, just ignore this bit.
It's just here for safety,
which I duly ignored in the editing notes.
And the word strap in was also.
Oh yeah, I did. i did write strap in at one
point it's because it was like wasn't there one version that was like so this is take 16
and there was one where it just went on and on and i think that was when we uh when the hunters
burst in yeah there were a lot of takes of that yeah sorry there were just there were a lot of
different and because that was one where we did have everyone in the room so there were five people in the room and like there were just a lot of
takes a lot of different energy levels a lot of trying it different ways you are welcome that
they were all there yeah no it was it was amazing like especially because that was both ian and fay
yeah uh who are two of the harder ones to coordinate with travel. I mean, that was probably more luck than anything else.
So basically, I'd just come back from a really great holiday.
Yes! Oh, yes!
I had gone to the Pacific Islands, swum with humpback whales,
gone back to New Zealand, had a great birthday, been with my family.
You good?
Yeah, I'm good.
And I was messaging you while you were away as I'm like,
would you be able to do these edits?
We gave you a treat.
Yeah, sure.
I'm feeling real chill.
That'll be good.
I was able to listen to some edits that I hadn't been involved in,
which, you know, I jealously want to do all the work,
but I can't do all the work.
So it does give me a little bit of joy to be able to also then listen to edits i don't know what's happening before for any of it right i just wait
until i get an edit oh yeah sometimes something so like it's interesting sometimes like yours is
the first audience reaction uh because the performers will generally know what's going on
alex knows and then you'll get and you'll be like oh happened, didn't it? I'm like... I remember 160, I was like,
Johnny!
No!
Dang!
I have to tell all my friends
to listen to this the moment it drops
because it's like, yeah.
My brother is still like,
why don't you just end it season four?
Because he was like,
it's the perfect ending.
This is how horrid it is.
I'll be honest, there is like,
that was something we did consider.
But at the same time,
I'm really interested in what happens afterwards.
Yeah, yeah.
No, so am I.
So, yeah, normally I just listen to it as it comes in.
Although, obviously, for a script like this, with so many scenes,
you have to read it and understand what's going on.
You can't just, like, with the statements,
you can just start playing it and editing it.
But it was pretty intense.
And I just went at it.
And then normally what I do is if there's little sections of things
where I don't know, because I'm not doing the soundscaping,
I have to assume that Alex will need some more time and spots
to allow for the soundscaping and also like pulling out little bits
that you might want to reuse because you're not happy with. Fabulous habit to habit to have the one that i've chosen so that's kind of how i approached
it but it was a it was a big edit i think overall it took me like 25 hours i think it's worth saying
since you've been doing vocal cuts or at least as long as i can remember you've been doing vocal
cuts i haven't actually had to go back to raw which is quite rare so normally in mastering
because again because of the tight turnarounds and something what will happen is that we'll have the
vocal cut and then we'll add in the soundscape and then we'll add in the music over the top
and then mastering you kind of make sure that all levels are correct and I'll be like damn it
that was a good vocal cut but I need to swap that out because of this other thing I don't actually
think I've ever had to go back to raw with the vocal cut that you've done now I think about it
which is really rare but it's because you provide those options yeah yeah that makes a massive enormous difference for me exactly so
if there's been multiple screams I will edit those ready so that he can just go okay actually I
didn't like that scream that she you know that Elizabeth picked or I need to it's not working
for some other reason because of the actual soundscaping I like your notes that come with
them so if you're like, I've included this screen
because I think the timing's right.
Frankly, I prefer Demented 3,
but apparently Demented 3 is probably not going to work with the timing.
So I'm including it just in case, but if you can fit in Demented 3
or maybe Apocalypse 5, that's a good one too.
I just like the little notes that you get.
That's like we always say, Elizabeth is the best.
Unless you're another podcast company listening to this,
in which case Elizabeth is awful. Oh, she's a nightmare to work with i mean i wouldn't even approach her just you
know just problems were there any other challenges that come with the very piecemeal nature of this
episode and so many cast being involved i think that you know as mentioned the big thing is
actually um so it will take longer to edit because you need to go through just more footage, so to speak.
And then whether or not the energy is right between the actors.
I think, yeah, to be honest, I think it's mostly covered.
It's just that energy.
It will take longer because you're having to go through more folders.
Yeah, I don't think I've got much more to add.
Unfortunately, there's not really any shortcuts you can say.
And then we did this shortcut because we already take all of the shortcuts.
We make a lot of stuff.
Like, there's not really...
There's no more shortcuts we can make without massively compromising quality.
Oh, it'd literally just be cutting scenes.
Like, at that point, you'd be like, cool, scenes three and six aren't happening.
Sorry.
There were a few ones where we were like, look, this scene, we could drop it.
It will make the story worse. it will make the story worse it will make
the episode worse but if we literally cannot do this scene it would function without it we can
drop good example basira and daisy are in three scenes in one fight eight the recording in scene
two originally had daisy saying a bunch of lines That recording was one of the ones that broke.
So as a result, we had to do an emergency rewrite
and basically redo the scene in such a way
that Daisy was listening to hear what was going on.
And we needed a shh.
So technically that counts as another appearance
by Hannah as someone else's character.
I thought we managed to get a shh from her.
It ended up being one of the Hannah shushes, I believe.
I'm 90% certain it was one of the Hannah shushes I believe I'm 90% certain it was one of the
Hannah shushes
yeah
in your notes
it was like
there's a scene
it's someone else
doing Daisy shush
yeah yeah
Daisy shush
was actually
it is all her breathing
though I believe
because we have
that big breath library
I think it's
no no
it's from there
because I don't use that
I don't particularly
use that
you don't use the breath library
I've got my own breath library oh okay it's a personal use only I don't use that. I don't particularly use that. You don't use the breath library?
I've got my own breath library. Oh, okay.
It's a personal use only.
Genuinely, the breath library is mostly for me.
It's mostly for me.
That was creepy.
We collect breaths.
Yes, okay.
I have annals on store.
There's not many of them, though.
He's not been on audio that much.
Not a big breather.
No, I'm not in studio very often.
Rarely breathes, rarely blinks.
That's our annal. And the times I've been in studio, I haven't been onher. It's not a huge breather. No, I'm not in studio very often. Rarely breathes, rarely blinks. That's all I know.
And the times I've been in studio, I haven't been on mic.
No, not really.
Actually, when you've got less characters in, you can just grab a breath, right?
If it's only one or two characters, you just grab it from earlier.
It becomes problematic when you've got like four characters and you're like, okay, I need to change this up.
But, you know, Alex has gone, everyone do a load of breaths.
And you're like, Alex, it sounds like an orgy in the scene.
Because you've gotten everyone to be like...
So they need to have too many than too few.
Which was the scene when we were all shouting so much for so long
that we all got dizzy because there wasn't enough oxygen.
And it was one of the last ones involving Mike.
Yeah.
So that probably would have been back in the unknowing.
I think it was actually.
I think that's when I remember.
Oh no, it was when everyone was freaking out because the unknowing happened and we did
like five takes.
We did too many gasps.
We did five takes or more of like the unknowing starting to happen and everyone going.
Yeah, that was it.
That was it.
Like freaking out.
And yeah, by the end we were like, we need to go outside.
There's not enough oxygen in this room anymore.
Yeah.
Coming towards the end of season three, there was a lot of breathing.
A lot.
So, Alex, you were doing most of the soundscaping for season four.
Were there any specific issues that the soundscaping for Mag 158 raised?
What happened in 158?
Let's run through this.
You talked a little bit about the corridor sounds.
Everyone else, by the way,
has done these things
where they read the questions
ahead of time,
they prepared.
Listen to the episodes
on the way over.
I just went, nah.
The Not Sasha was released.
Yeah.
Okay, Not Sasha releasing.
Let's go with that.
The Not Sasha releasing
was astonishingly easy
because Eve's just on it.
Eve's another one
who can just do villains
straight out the gate.
Eve's very much
a one-take wonder where she'll do it
and I'll be like, actually, it needs to be this.
She's like, oh, I didn't realise.
Bang, and it's that.
So Eve's lovely to work for for that.
I know the tunnels are okay because we have a lot of pre-made templates
that we can bring in for like the reverbs and so on.
So it's just like add that in, that's fine.
Is Helen in 158?
Helen's not.
No, Helen's not.
So the Helen Michael ones are annoying because you
have to manually add a bunch of extra stuff in for the laughs and so on that takes a while
so the initial scenes are fine it's basically just everyone talking about stuff we did do a
redraft because originally it was in the original somebody like i was like stumbles in going i've
started in i have been shot in my head like it head oh no it was marginally
subtler than that
but not by much
it was a bit like
I'm going in
full season finale mode
and then
I did take the opportunity
to be like
no
no corpses
stumble into the
no
because there was a lot
of that background fighting
between with Trevor
and Julia
so
yeah you had a lot of those fight scenes going on.
Because I think you meant, in your notes, you were like,
if you want to do the fight scenes, you can.
And then I thought, no.
That's a very valid response.
I would say, actually, here's an interesting challenge.
Although we try to make it very similar to Julia's
and it all holds together and feels quite realistic,
normally the violence is fine for me.
I don't get affected by horror. I don't get affected by horror
and I don't get affected by the sound of violence
because it's hard to stay like,
oh, that sounds like a hard break
when a piece of celery has just gone mushed
and you've seen the celery go mushed, you know what I mean?
Also, you kill so many people.
I kill a lot of people in my head daily,
so at some point, why do you care?
But I found it quite difficult
doing the sounds of removed
hunters and the fighting and so on and i'm happy to like publicly say what it is which is it felt
when i was editing it had a certain school shootery vibe yeah like and that's that's not
me making light of it at all i was editing it and because we were going for we haven't really done
that kind of combat you know the quite modern with the gunfights,
it's normally quite punchy and knifey, which isn't...
Much more London.
Honestly, it's not as loud as you think.
Whereas with that, it was the sound of all the disturbs
and then gunshots and then distant people running and blah, blah, blah.
It really hit that school shooter situation,
that active shooter situation.
And I found that really difficult, which is unusual for me.
I normally have that divide. It's one where like writing it i don't think i realized quite how much of that it would carry
i was like oh obviously we'll do like content warnings and things like that but for that one
that's the first one i've been like really needs this yeah i remember you briefing me before it
before it dropped on something yeah it's just it's because it was muffled and so on.
It worked in a way that I didn't like.
But I don't think that's in the script per se,
that it's like them with guns.
You know, they do have guns in the...
Because for all I'm like, oh, you know,
it's not something I wanted to elicit.
I did want it to drive home the monstrousness of the hunter mentality.
The fact that it's
like yeah no these are people who like attack civilians because they have decided that they
are arbitrarily monstrous i was just going to say though but because they had to be distant
as well i think that also would limit you to things that make loud noises right guns and bombs
if they're just like beating the crap out of people you're not going to hear that as a distance noise
right so you have to make that kind of decision.
Well, the other thing as well is that it's one of the strengths that audio has is when it's doing something that's like distant and overheard,
audio works better because people are already paying attention.
People are normally listening.
If you're in your car, 90% of this has been lost on you anyway.
If you're listening with headphones, though, you can hear those things that you're not going to hear when you watch TV or film.
And that's because not many people watch TV and film with headphones.
I recommend that you do it and try it.
It's a completely different experience
because the sound is normally done full surround
for everything that you're watching these days.
It's just that you're not getting the experience
because you're pumping it out through stereo speakers
at the other end of the room.
Or your phone.
Yeah, exactly.
Or your tablet.
So that I was finding very tricky.
The Panopticon was quite easy with one caveat.
So the Panopticon is just
it's a big echoey boom there's some fun effects in there there is whispering at the lowest end
that humans can discern via electric equipment so maybe 50 of people won't even be able to hear it
like that they can't pick it up that's nice so that's in there and it swells at certain points
blah blah the footsteps they're a nightmare they're walking along metal grating that takes ages and the reason being you can't
just take the sound of one person doing a footstep and then reuse it because what that sounds like is
hopping doesn't work so footstep that took a bit of a while it's like oh i've got to do this and
i've got to do each individual footstep it's right up there with the bloody chains in the prison on
elias i was like oh elas has got to have chains,
otherwise it's just weird.
There are at least 80 separate chain cues per tiny little scene
because I couldn't find an audio sample that was good to go,
so I had to do it all manually.
Did I write in the chains?
No, that's me.
I feel like I didn't write in the chains.
I did.
I feel like you put in the chains.
You did, that's you.
I'm probably not going to put chains in there.
It might be a bit much.
Full steps aren't difficult.
They're just time consuming.
Chains are a...
Actually, I think I did put handcuffs, I think.
Yeah, I think I put handcuffs and you made it full chains.
Well, bugger Elias.
Chains it is.
Listeners who are early access patrons will know that we have problems come
early release so much so that it was delayed by about 19 hours which is the longest delay that
we've ever had on that well on the season at least i blame you you said that i should sleep and i was
like no and then you were like no sleep that added at least five hours self-care we insist on that
but what were the challenges of bringing that all together into the cohesive whole?
Obviously, some of that we've talked about.
But was it just a perfect storm situation that we ran into?
Or so he's a perfectionist.
Perfect storm situation combined with...
The fact he's a big perfectionist.
Two things that I'm going to...
That's not a bad thing, Johnny.
Two things that I'm going to share which I haven't before, which is...
Number one, I have a personal preference, which is my secret shame that I don't to share which I haven't before which is uh number one I have a personal
preference which is my secret shame that I don't like to talk about I still master in audacity
which is the free open source editing suite it's not the best one out there but the reason I like
it is you know when people talk about like driving an old car and you can feel the engine in the in
the wheel and blah blah that's kind of how audacity feels for me because you can do anything in it but you have to go all the way down to like core
principles and build it up yourself you can't just go process this for me click a button and it's
done but what that means is it teaches you a lot but it gives you complete control so that's why i
like it it cannot handle that many layers 158 all in i had to start using certain workarounds because
it just crashes once once you pass a
measly 85 separate layers of audio it just starts to break which is nonsense so the issue that i
was running into towards the end is that in the nicest way i i had transcended beyond mundane
editing equipment channel that was the problem you see i needed to normal interface was really the
only way to get them the nuance now it just kept breaking so we had to do that i had to do a few
workarounds and also audio density is a problem in mp3 which is that you have to remember that we have
vocals okay cool we then have music okay cool technically within the music there are
subtle layers and alterations that get lost in the compression and then on top of that we have
the soundscapes then on top of that we have what we call incidental effects so that is like someone
picking something up dropping footsteps or whatever which isn't your ambience and so on
then you've got your transitions on top of that blah blah basically the equipment couldn't really
handle it i have as good a laptop as you can really get for editing.
And even if I swap across to other programs,
Magnus occasionally breaks things. But part of that is because I am not leaning into the strengths of them.
I'm not going, hey, could you please process this?
I'm going, no, I will process it myself
because I will do a better job.
Automated process.
You do, but it also takes so long yeah and time that you didn't have because of the production issues we'd had
earlier down the line as well so honestly 90 of the delay was literally the equipment started
breaking um it's that simple so we had to work around that and that was one where it broke once
and i was like no we can still hit this it broke a second time went there might be a minor delay then there was a third time
where it lost like two hours work and I save like once every 10 minutes because it didn't just lose
two hours work it's because it actively corrupted save files that I had and I lost three separate
save files that corrupted and I was just like ah kill die we had a meeting on the Wednesday evening
and by this point Magnus158 was about four hours late.
And I'd been running firefighting on social media to keep people informed.
But I was just about okay at that stage.
It's fine.
It's coming any second.
And this is something that folk won't know.
Alex told me it will be done by midnight.
And then I said, okay, can you guarantee that?
He was a bit umming and erring i believe
the exact phrase was as long as it doesn't break again we'll be fine so i sent out a message and
said okay and we'll build in a little bit of leeway it should be here by the morning yeah didn't quite
hit the morning because i did insist or we all insisted that alex actually get some rest yeah
and yeah the fans were mostly um happy to say that we were
practicing self-care it was annoying for me because we would have met despite everything
we would have met deadlines even if it had broken once but we had a bit of a catastrophic like
software collapse yeah which is why it's like it came out 11 a.m the next morning which not ideal
and we do apologise for,
but sometimes the equipment just can't quite take what Johnny has written.
In all honesty's defence, before everyone says I brought this on myself,
I did attempt to work in a different suite.
That suite collapsed faster.
Who's laughing now?
We're all very sad.
But also it's like, you know know so we're doing 40 episodes generally in
one year so that's 12 weeks off there's going to be sometimes a ball that's yeah it does it does
build up as well you know i mean yeah i mean coming up to my holiday i was like alex you
realize i'm going on holiday i'm highlighting this to you months in advance you going away
alex having his wedding, and then August.
Perfect storm of events just happened.
And also, of course, this isn't happening in isolation.
We're recording the rest of the season. Yeah, because 159 and 163.
Are there some other shows?
I want to say there are other shows.
Oh, Dave.
Okay, so let's bring this all.
Each of you, what would you say was your highlight
of actually working on Mag150 or on the finished product?
When it was finished.
I like swiftly in there.
I enjoyed the big recording where we were all shouting and going,
I don't know, there's some violence occurring.
That was fun.
I enjoyed the feeling when it was done.
Yeah, it was done is a legitimate response to that question.
I mean, actually, having everyone in the same room,
I think for that big scene with six people,
having them all, or was it five, all in the same room,
that was a nice feeling.
And re-listening to it on the way here, actually.
I don't re-listen to anything
ever that we make unless i literally have to it's weird to me no it's fair yeah yeah so um i guess
you know being involved in such a big project it's always nice when you deliver something and
it feels really good but to be honest the real highlight for me was hearing martin disappear Martin disappear? I honestly That was satisfying right?
It was
I mean
we all love Martin
No
He needed
booting into
oblivion for a while
He needed a time out
You know
for me
I have to have a villain
for why am I
doing this in my hours
I'm like
it's always Alex
so then Martin gets sad
because Martin's the
proxy for Alex
so you've Hayden Martin's the proxy for Alex, right?
So you've equipped him there. Hey, Martin's great, especially when he doesn't deserve it.
Interesting.
So from a psychological point of view,
you find that you are placing a lot of your own criticisms of yourself
onto Martin and externalising your...
Martin will always be someone that I've already progressed beyond,
so it's OK for me to think less of him. Interesting.
How does that make you feel?
Wonderful. Very satisfying. I always like
the moments when I get the audio files
and you're coming to record, particularly
maybe season two, season three, but
it's like just before you start to go into Martin, you're like
sad and pathetic, sad and pathetic,
sad and pathetic. Shrill
and we'll begin.
Well, I think we'll draw a line under that
I have an ally in Elizabeth
Anil can just hear all the work he's going to have to do on the Discord
A thousand voices cried out
It's why he doesn't really hate Martin
And before we have to spend an exorbitant amount on therapy bills,
I think we will draw this episode to a close.
Thank you very much for joining us.
Oh, no, we've got to ask you, Anil.
What was your favourite part?
What was your favourite part?
Was it midnight on the day of release?
I bet it was.
Actually, I will say that firefighting
and keeping people informed was not my favorite task um of just
having to get running updates from you on that unfortunate jobs there yeah um but in terms of
what was my favorite actually seeing the fan reaction for how much effort had gone into it
because i was getting the running update of the difficulties behind the episode, actually seeing the finished product and seeing everybody's amazing reactions
to how dense it was, how much plot there was,
how much emotion went into that episode.
And I think it came out fantastically.
And it also helped be a cap on, well, not so much a cap,
because 160 is the real cap but in terms of an
emotional high for going into the lonely on 159 and then the end of the world on 160 for everything
that had come today because we were getting a few complaints about or not complaints per se but we
were getting a few comments about how the beginning of season four was running a little slow it was a slow build
it's a weird one because actually if you look at the amount of plot that happens and the amount of
stuff that happens in season four it's actually almost like it's like twice as dense as season
three like there's loads of actual plot stuff happening all the time it's just that because
emotionally it's dealing with loneliness and isolation
and these very quite low energy but intense emotions, it feels slow.
It feels like, you know, if you actually map out the plot points,
it's just boom, boom, boom, boom, boom.
But, yeah.
How they come across.
Yeah, it comes across as very slow.
But then 150 to the end is a massive ramp up in terms of feeling.
Okay, so yeah, the fan reaction is basically my highlight.
So thank you very much for joining me.
Thank you very much for listening.
I hope you have found this somewhat enlightening.
Such tangential.
We will see.
This has been very useful for me, actually.
This is a debrief.
But here's an insight into exactly what you do
so that I can hopefully make your lives easier.
We are a coordinated company, honest.
Yeah, but we haven't had such an in-depth discussion
about one episode before.
This has been great for me.
Sorry, Alex, who is this?
A figment of your imagination.
Don't do that.
That's not funny for anyone listening or me, so just stop. Okay. Thank you, everyone. No. Don't do that. That's not funny for anyone listening
or me,
so just stop.
Okay.
Thank you, everyone.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
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