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The Devil and Mr. O - OTR app for iPhone and iPad


4.6 ( 9296 ratings )
Music Entertainment
Developer: Taha Maddam
0.99 USD
Current version: 4.0, last update: 6 years ago
First release : 09 Jan 2012
App size: 51.08 Mb

With its premiere on the nationwide hookup in 1935, Lights Out was billed "the ultimate in horror." Never had such sounds been heard on the air. Heads rolled, bones were crushed, people fell from great heights and splattered wetly on pavement. There were garroting, choking, heads split by cleavers, and, to a critic at Radio Guide, "the most monstrous of all sounds, human flesh being eaten." Few shows had ever combined the talents of actors and imaginative writers so well with the graphic art of the sound technician.

Wyllis Cooper, who created, wrote, and produced it, was then a 36-year-old staffer in Chicagos Studios. Cooper created his horror "by raiding the larder." For the purposed of Lights out sound effects, people were what they ate. The sound of a butcher knife rending a piece of uncooked pork was, when accompanied by shrieks and screams, the essence of murder to a listener alone at midnight. Real bones were broken - spareribs snapped with a pipe wrench. Bacon in a fry pan gave a vivid impression of a body just electrocuted. And the cannibalism effect was actually a zealous actor. Gurgling and smacking his lips as he slurped up a bowl of spaghetti. Cabbages sounded like human heads when chopped open with a cleaver, and carrots had the pleasant resonance of fingers being lopped off. Arch Obolers celebrated tale of a man turned inside-out by a demonic fog was accomplished by soaking a glove in water and stripping it off at the microphone while a berry basket was crushed at the same instant. The listener saw none of this. The listener saw carnage and death.

Cooper left the show in 1936 and Oboler was given the job. Oboler lost no time establishing himself as the new master of the macabre. Between May 1936 and July 1938, he wrote and directed more than 100 Lights Out plays. To follow Cooper was a challenge: he was "the unsung pioneer of radio dramatic techniques," but Oboler had passed the test with his first play. His own name soon became synonymous with murder and gore, though horror as a genre had always left him cold. Oboler aspired to more serious writing.

In this app ;

1- Complete available Recordings of the Show.

2- We have designed the stunning user interface from scratch to provide you with the best UX.

3- Completely redesigned two new audio players , one for streaming and other for downloading mode.

4- With Download playback mode , enjoy listening to the shows offline.

5- Introducing , All new user portal that let you add episodes to your favourite list and later listen them from any of our other apps.

6- More social now - Find people to follow and send them messages , privately.