Better Together: Aleron Kong & Nick Podehl on Collaboration: Part 2

Posted on April 28, 2021 by Emily Curran

Last time on the blog, we sat down with best-selling author Aleron Kong and award-winning narrator Nick Podehl to talk collaboration, inspiration, and mutually beneficial working relationships that create top selling audiobooks. The conversation continues in part two of this interview, so catch up on part one if you missed it, or jump back in below!

Scott Jacobi:

Nick, what was it like to work with somebody who's fairly new to the process, had maybe been burned in his one time previously creating an audiobook, and just helping him through that?

Nick Podehl:

Narrator Nick Podehl

I mean, he definitely made it easy for me because he was not a complete noob—he had been through the process before, but like you said, Scott, he didn't have the greatest experience the first time. So I definitely felt like it was kind of my responsibility to try to help him understand the process. And I feel like this is the case with all the new authors that I work with, that it's like, “I've been in this rodeo before.” It's kind of my job to help them figure it out. And so we worked through the process together. Just be patient and be a decent person, and it kind of pays for itself.

Scott Jacobi:

Tell me about that: how does it pay for itself?

Nick Podehl:

It's just a better experience overall. I've gotten to know a lot of the authors that I've worked with, I’ve become friends with a lot of them. And you know, not only is that great on a human level, but it's also great on the repeat business level because they might write a series, sometimes they'll write more than one series, and if you make the experience awesome for them, they're probably going to come back to you. So it's just like any other version of customer service.

Scott Jacobi:

And that’s a great way to think about it because as a producer on ACX, you're your own entrepreneur—your own sort of independent, full-service entrepreneur—so you are your own customer service department, you are your own accounting department, you’ve got to do all of that.

Nick Podehl:

Right. And also, I mean, authors generally tend to be friends with other authors and they talk to each other. And so Aleron, you’ve told me before that you've had friends, other authors say, "Hey, who should I go with?" And you’re like, well, "You should check out Nick." And I have a feeling that wouldn't have been the case if I would have been a complete jerk and just said, "Here's your book, give me my money."

Aleron Kong:

Mmhm. Nothing like, “you should go throw eggs at Nick's house.”

Scott Jacobi:

You two touched a little bit on collaborating and the back and forth during the production earlier in the panel, but I'm curious, Aleron, how much are you bringing to the table in terms of the performance or the way the characters sound? Is it more you saying, "Okay, Nick, this character sounds like this actor," or is it more you saying, "Nick, do something with this character, I think he's kind of an older guy and maybe he's annoying a lot of the time," but where does that meet in the middle?

Author Aleron Kong

Aleron Kong:

For the first book it was very much like I had this vision, I wanted it to be like this, and there's a reason for this, and there's a sort of a connotation that I want brought across. But as time has gone on, I've been heavily influenced by hearing Nick's voice in my mind as I write the characters, so I'm almost being guided. Because they had, I don't know, 80% life­—now, now they've got 90% life because I'm hearing them differently.

Scott Jacobi:

And so, Nick, what's your end of that? Getting what Aleron brings to the table, are you happy to work all that in? Do you have a lot of your own ideas that you’re kind of pitching back to him?

Nick Podehl:

I think that for me, it's more that I enjoy that collaboration when he says, "Hey, these characters sound like this—here's this video clip."

Scott Jacobi:

And that makes it super easy, when you can reference a video or an audio clip.

Nick Podehl:

It does, it does. It gives you something to work off of, if you can emulate some of that. Now, obviously, I'm not going to be able to give a carbon copy of Nick Offerman.

Aleron Kong:

I mean, it's a sore spot.

Nick Podehl:

It is. That was one of those things that we worked through. We were able to get it to a point where you were happy with how it sounded and it was something that I could do. To be able to get these clips and be like, "Hey, why don't you give this clip a try—listen to that, see how he gets these words, see how he delivers that."

Scott Jacobi:

Does the collaborative aspect also come up, in terms of character motivations and the emotional wave of a certain scene? Is that something that you just bring to the table with your acting ability? Or has there ever been a time where it's like, "Oh, you did this scene as this sad character, but really it's more, they're just annoyed...?"

Aleron Kong:

The Chaos Seeds series on Audible

Inflection things rarely come up with these. I will say for my own books, I write comedies. I write comedies that have dragons and wizards in them, but I also touch lightly, but consistently, on societal issues that are going on right now.

There are scenes where I'm writing it because I want people to have a visceral reaction, whether it be positive or negative. I want them to react. I don't believe in preaching to people, but I do believe in exposing people to things and letting them come to their own conclusions. Some of those things get really uncomfortable. My last book touched on sexual assault because it’s something that happens all the time, and we don't like talking about it, and that's the problem. I had a conversation with Nick where I'm like, "hey man, I love you and I love what you do, but I know that this is a really difficult scene, so if you're not comfortable reading this, just let me know and we'll figure something else out."

That's the kind of thing that will come up sometimes. I try to weave that in in a way that doesn't take people to a horrible place, but at the same time, doesn't hide from it. Nick has to actually read these horrific things that are occasionally happening in the books. I imagine that's not just a nothing experience, but he's willing to. He's said, "I've talked to other authors that just put this in for some gratuitous nothing, but I see why you're doing this and that makes it okay for me."

Scott Jacobi:

I think that makes a lot of sense. So how do you deal with a scene like that and then leave it behind? Taking on that emotional weight, whether it's a sad scene or a very uncomfortable scene—how do you emote that but not take it with you?

Nick Podehl:

I don't know how to tell somebody how to do that. Although, you need to figure it out because especially if you want to get into audio books, there's a lot of it. Like Aleron said, there's a lot of content that can be really difficult to deal with and you do have to emote that. That's why when I talk to friends and they want to do what I do, and they're like, "Oh, you read books all day. That's kind of cool! It's easy, right?" I'm like, "I'm exhausted—you try emoting for eight hours every day. Tell me how you feel."

Scott Jacobi:

You touched on material that's really difficult or really challenging to deal with as a person. Have you ever had to turn down a project because the material did not line up with you personally? Not with Aleron, but how do you handle a situation like that?

Nick Podehl:

I'm finally at a point in my career where I can just be straightforward at the beginning and say, "I will not do this kind of material so if your book has this content in it, I can suggest some other narrators for you if you would like, but I will not be able to do it." Early days, when it was just any work I could get—yeah, I had to wrestle with that. I had to struggle to make my peace with it and say, "all right, I'm going to do this for a season and then put it behind me when I can."

Scott Jacobi:

Did you ever use a pseudonym for some of the more adult material you were asked to do?

Nick Podehl:

Yes. I would highly recommend that. Especially in my early career, I did a lot of young adult books, and I didn't want fans of the young adult material to say like, "Hey, Nick did a new book, let's go check it out!" and it's... I don't want eight year old kids listening to that. So yes, I came up with a pseudonym. I think that it's a really smart move for any narrator. It does give you a little bit more flexibility in the content that you can put out.

Scott Jacobi:

You talked earlier about script prep and how unbelievably important it is to read the book through first. But aside from reading the manuscript, can you tell us what your script prep actually entails? Are you highlighting voices? Are you making Excel spreadsheets? How do you do that?

Nick Podehl:

Before I did it all on an iPad, I had a 36 pack of different colored permanent markers, and I’d mark up the script with different colors for each character so that as I’m narrating and I see like, "okay, pink that's Stephanie, all right. She sounds like this, great.” I don't have to stop and look up my notes. I go through and mark the crap out of the manuscripts, highlight any word that I am not 100% certain that I know how to pronounce.

Then once that's all done, I have, as Aleron said, my spreadsheet of characters, as well as words, and I'll talk to the author about it and say, "all right, let's go through and let's hit all these words first." With any pronunciations that are real words that I just don't know how to say, we'll look them up and figure it out. Oxford English Dictionary. Then characters, we'll go through the same thing. What does this character sound like to you? How about this one? What do these groupings of people sound like? Do they all sound like they're from the same region? Things like that. Once that's all done, then I can start recording.

Scott Jacobi:

Once you're in the thick of things, Nick's already done his prep, how do you handle suggestions and feedback during recording for fine-tuning the performance? Maybe you talked about this already, but Aleron, what makes you comfortable speaking to Nick in that moment and telling him he needs to change something? Maybe not now, seven books in, but at the beginning, is it just that you're sure of what your vision is, or is it something Nick's put on the table?

Aleron Kong:

For me, I've never really followed social norms and niceties. I'm always willing to roll the dice. Like, "this could go wrong, but this is something that I care about so I hope that you can take it well, but no, I feel like it's this other thing." Also, I'm an insane movie buff so the Easter eggs that I trickle in, it won't work if you don't say it in the right way—people aren't going to pick up on it. I've been like that—"you have to put that in, otherwise that's like a waste of a laugh.” But now, I love when listeners come to me and they're like, "I can listen to this forever. How did I miss it?" And then everyone jokes around, and it's a thing that's part of my community now, and it's because we took the extra time to make it happen.

Scott Jacobi:

It sounds to me like an example of art driving the commerce, right? It was important for you to have the joke land or the Easter egg be noticed. What that ends up doing is creating a situation in which people are really strung along in the series and they want to keep coming back, they want to keep hearing your narration, they want to keep reading your books. I think that's fantastic.

So Aleron, in LitRPG, constructed languages are a part of your writing—alien languages words that don't exist in English. Did you hear them in your head or did you know what the pronunciation would be before Nick sort of forced you to put that out there?

Aleron Kong:

Yeah. I didn't go to James Cameron level, where he literally invented a new language, but for example, there's a Sprite race in my series which is heavily influenced by Japanese culture. You'll hear that in some of the voices, but also, if I want to say something in Sprite, I might just Google, "how do you say this in Japanese?" and chop off a little over here.

Nick Podehl:

One of the things that I feel is important for me to do is to not have a set "I'm the artist, I'm right" mentality. You've got to be willing to work with them. You've got to be willing to say, "okay, maybe I'm wrong. Let's try it." I think that in my experience, with working with some other narrators, they're not always very quick to say, "okay, let's try it your way,” and you really need to be willing to do that.

Aleron Kong:

As the author... I agree. That's the number one thing I would say that makes it a not-painful experience. Everyone that's an artist, gets in their feelings about what they've made. That's just the way it is. But being able to not have it be painful if somebody disagrees with you, that changes everything. It changes the entirety of it. It's just that humility, but the author should come at you with humility as well. They shouldn't just be trying to beat down your door for something. But yeah, it's so refreshing to work with someone that's like, "okay, well, let's give it another shot." Simple as that.

Scott Jacobi:

I'm just curious, is this sort of together forever? What happens when the series that you're working on now reaches its conclusion? Let's say you decide to write a different series, what are your thoughts about continuing to work with Nick, and how does that strike Nick?

Aleron Kong:

I have seven books and they're all contiguous. I always wanted him to be the voice of that series. But I'm working on other series now, and I get people that write and thank me, like, "Oh my God, I never would have found Nick if it wasn't for you," but I get way more people feeling like finding me through him. So for the rest of this series, definitely. For continuity, and because I just love what Nick brings to it. For a new series, I probably would reach out to other narrators, audio performers, that also have an established audience. Because when I'm working with somebody like Nick, I get access to everything that he has done before, and he gets access to the people that have followed me before. And if you can find other people that are not horrible people, that you can actually stand working with, it makes sense to also branch out. And then you're sharing audiences, and it's a mutually beneficial kind of thing.

Scott Jacobi:

So Nick, if Aleron wrote a new series and he'd like to expand his repertoire, is that cool with you? Are you sitting there really jealous Saturday nights, all by yourself? How do you make your peace with that?

Nick Podehl:

Very easily. Because just like you said, this is a business, and we are bringing to each other the fan base that we each have. And I think that’s good, because even if you just look at it from a perspective of, he goes to a new narrator and that narrator has a fan base, and they love what Aleron and this other guy do and think, "I want to hear more Aleron Kong. Oh, who's this Nick guy? Okay. I'll listen to him." All of a sudden, if they like what I do, I got a new fan. So it's mutually beneficial.

Aleron Kong:

I would say that I take my books and whatever very seriously, and Nick's professionalism has always blown me away with that as well. There'll be times where he's like, "Hey man, I was going to work today, but I feel a little scratch, and I feel like it might come across in what I'm making. So I'm just going to take a day off." Which is also why, again, I think it pays for itself. Because later, listeners are like, "Oh my God, I love what I'm hearing." I think that, at least on the author's side, there's way too much immediate gratification, what's right in front of my face, what can I get from you right now?

Like, we're going to be in this industry together for a very long time and your name really, really matters, so you should treat it like gold. And I have no problem with telling everyone I meet about how with Nick, there's no reservations at all because of his professionalism, because of his talent, because of everything else. If Nick had never read a book before, based on his demo, I would have waited for him.

Scott Jacobi:

Why based on his demo?

Aleron Kong:

Based on his demo, yeah. Not his Facebook profile. I just would have waited. He made me excited to hear the same thing that I've read a thousand times. Proofreading sucks. I got excited hearing it again, simple as that. I listened to 50 different people and there was some of them, like "Oh, okay." Then I heard him and I'm like, "Oh my God, this is all."

Scott Jacobi:

I think that's a great note to end on. Thank you so much, Aleron and Nick.