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The Magnus Archives

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The Magnus Archives
Presentation
GenreParanormal horror
Written byJonathan Sims
Directed byAlexander J. Newall
LanguageEnglish
UpdatesWeekly
Production
ProductionLowri Ann Davies
Composed bySam Jones
Audio formatPodcast (via streaming or downloadable MP3)
No. of seasons5
No. of episodes200
Publication
Original release24 March 2016 –
25 March 2021
Ratings4.9/5 Edit this on Wikidata
ProviderRusty Quill
LicenseCreative Commons Attribution – NonCommercial – ShareAlike 4.0 International
Related
WebsiteOfficial website

The Magnus Archives is a horror fiction podcast written by Jonathan Sims, directed by Alexander J. Newall, and distributed by Rusty Quill. Sims starred as the Head Archivist for the fictional Magnus Institute, a London-based paranormal research institution, originally making audio recordings of statements for the Institute's research before being ensnared in a paranormal conspiracy traced back to the Institute itself. Five seasons were released between 2016 and 2021 on various audio streaming services.

The series has received critical acclaim for its atmosphere and horror concepts, and is the recipient of several podcast awards. A sequel podcast, The Magnus Protocol, began in 2024.

Premise

[edit]

The podcast is structured as a series of statements recorded, or written and then recorded, for internal research use within the Magnus Institute. At the beginning of each statement, the statement-taker—typically Jon, the head archivist—provides a brief description of the statement and the name of the statement-maker. Those who give or record statements in the Magnus Institute tend to lapse into a trance-like state, not unlike reliving the event as they narrate it.

Cast and characters

[edit]

Main cast

[edit]
  • Jonathan Sims as Jonathan "John" Sims, the Head Archivist of the Magnus Institute. At the beginning of the series, he is often rude, short-tempered, and skeptical of the supernatural subject material of the statements themselves; however, as the seasons progress, Jon accepts the stories relayed by statement-makers as real and becomes kinder and more sympathetic. As of "Dwelling", he is in a romantic relationship with Martin Blackwood. He is asexual.[1]
  • Alexander J. Newall as Martin Blackwood, an archival assistant at the Magnus Institute, who obtained his job by lying about holding a degree in parapsychology. He is soft-spoken and generally gravitates away from social gatherings. As of "Dwelling", he is in a romantic relationship with Jonathan Sims.
  • Lottie Broomhall as Sasha James, an archival assistant at the Magnus Institute, mainly locating records that could set the standard of proof for statements. In "Infestation", she is replaced by an entity known as 'Not-Sasha' (voiced by Evelyn Hewitt), which wears her identity with a different body.
  • Mike LeBeau as Timothy "Tim" Stoker, an archival assistant at the Magnus Institute, who assumed the role after Jon was promoted to head archivist, having worked with him previously in the research department. He has been in relationships with men and women, as revealed in "Across the Street" when he courts two file clerks. Tim begins the series as kind and cocksure, but comes to resent his position within the institute, which he is unable to leave, and becomes increasingly more cynical and angry in his interactions with his co-workers, mainly Jon.
  • Ben Meredith as Elias Bouchard/Jonah Magnus, the Head of the Magnus Institute. He is initially dismissive of the concerns surrounding active paranormal activity within the institute, but is quick to reveal some degree of knowledge, and as having intentionally withheld information when confronted.
  • Evelyn Hewitt as Not-Sasha, a paranormal entity that wears Sasha James' identity. It lives in the tunnels under the Institute when not performing the administrative tasks previously assigned to the real Sasha James, and has a significant role in drawing Jon's attention to the paranormal happenings within and below the institute.
  • Sue Sims as Gertrude Robinson, the previous Head Archivist of the Magnus Institute. She was replaced by Jonathan Sims after she went missing in March 2015. She appears in some episodes in past recordings of statements, as Jon and the other assistants work to understand her previous role at the institute. Her demeanor is brusque, and she is very serious about her work. The true nature of her work and motives is slowly revealed throughout the series, especially in seasons 3 and 4.
  • Frank Voss as Basira Hussain, a police officer sectioned to work on 'weird' cases. After responding to a case tied to a supernatural event, she signs a 'Section 31' form and becomes more and more involved in cases that eventually tie back to The Magnus Institute. She becomes involved with the Institute in an investigation surrounding a death in the Institute, in the aptly named episode "Section 31".
  • Fay Roberts as Alice "Daisy" Tonner, a detective also sectioned to work on 'weird' cases through Section 31. She is known to use force, as well as her own judgements, to resolve cases.
  • Lydia Nicholas as Melanie King, the former host of the YouTube series Ghost Hunt UK. After some strange supernatural incidents, she comes to be employed by the Magnus Institute. As of "Rotten Core" and perhaps before, she is in a romantic relationship with Georgie Barker.
  • Sasha Sienna as Georgie Barker, the fearless host of the What The Ghost? podcast. She lives with her cat, The Admiral, and dated Jonathan Sims back when they both attended university. As of "Rotten Core" and perhaps before, she is in a romantic relationship with Melanie King.
  • Alasdair Stuart as Peter Lukas, Captain of The Tundra and member of the Lukas Family. He acts as the antagonist, and temporary Institute Head, in Season 4. He is an avatar for one of the Supernatural Entities called the Lonely.

Recurring cast

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  • Jon Gracey as Gerard "Gerry" Keay, who worked alongside Gertrude Robinson after she freed him from his mother, Mary. He is described as having "poorly dyed" black hair and tattoos of eyes on all of his joints and over his heart. Upon his death in 2014, Gertrude Robinson bound him to the Catalogue of the Trapped Dead, where he remained in ghost form until Jonathan Sims burned his page.
  • Paul Sims as Jurgen Leitner, a collector of books affected by the same paranormal forces the Institute researches. He went into hiding in 1994 after his library was burned down, and resided in the tunnels underneath of the Institute until his death in "The Librarian".
  • Luke Booys as Michael, also known as The Distortion, a manifestation of one of the Supernatural Entities called the Spiral. Its appearance is flexible, but its base appearance is that of Gertrude Robinson's former assistant, Michael Shelley, a tall man with straw blonde hair and a round face. The Distortion was bound to Michael as part of a ritual disrupted by Gertrude, taking on the appearance of her former assistant, while distorting his features. It both resides in and is a realm accessible only by a door of its own conjuring. It preys on people by luring them into its door and trapping them within an inescapable labyrinth. It was killed by and subsequently became Helen in "Another Twist".
  • Hannah Brankin as Jane Prentiss, a previously ordinary woman working as a New Age shop assistant who turned into a living hive for wasp larvae after finding a wasps nest in her attic. Prentiss infected others by having the worms bury into their flesh, either killing them or turning them into hives. She was killed in the archives and cremated soon after.
  • Imogen Harris as Helen Richardson, a manifestation of the Spiral who replaced Michael, who occasionally assists and disrupts the Archive's activities.
  • Guy Kelly as Michael Crew, an avatar of a paranormal force who meets Jonathan Sims in "The Coming Storm". He has a large, branching scar in the shape of a Lichtenberg figure as the result of being struck by lightning as a child.
  • Jessica Law as Nikola Orsinov, a plastic mannequin who was originally Joseph Grimaldi. Orsinov serves one of the Supernatural Entities called the Stranger, which she attempts and fails to summon in "Stranger and Stranger".
  • Hannah Walker as Jude Perry, a member of The Cult of the Lightless Flame, a group dedicated to destruction and suffering, who encounters Jonathan Sims in "Twice as Bright".
  • Russell Smith as Oliver Banks, an avatar of one of the Supernatural Entities called the End, and able to see people's life force in the form of black tendrils.

Plot

[edit]

The podcast is initially presented as a horror anthology, following the efforts of Jonathan Sims, Head Archivist of the Magnus Institute, to record on tape a number of statements of paranormal events that have proven impossible to record through conventional, digital means. Over the course of five seasons, a more complex metaplot develops, revealing the nature of the Magnus Institute, its head, Elias Bouchard, and the nature of the paranormal events recorded in the statements.[2][3]

Season 1

[edit]

Season 1 of The Magnus Archives ran from 24 March 2016 to 13 October 2016.

Jonathan Sims is installed as the new Head Archivist of the Magnus Institute's Archives, his predecessor Gertrude Robinson having gone missing and is presumed dead. As he attempts to digitize statements about supernatural incidents, he finds that some statements can only be recorded on cassette tapes, as opposed to the preferred digital recordings. Sims maintains a skeptical view of the statements' potential authenticity. Eventually, the archival staff are directly threatened by Jane Prentiss, a woman who became host to a sentient hive of worms. Prentiss stalks the Institute for several weeks until Sims accidentally damages a wall while attempting to kill a spider, revealing millions of worms hiding behind it. In the ensuing worm attack, Sims and archival assistant Tim Stoker are partially infested while another assistant, Sasha James, is killed by another creature called the Not-Them, which assumes her identity. The attack is ended when Institute Head Elias Bouchard activates the building's carbon monoxide fire suppression system which kills Prentiss and all the worms. In the aftermath, the third archival assistant, Martin Blackwood, reveals that he has found the remains of Robinson in secret tunnels beneath the Magnus Institute.

Season 2

[edit]

Season 2 of The Magnus Archives ran from 1 December 2016, to 31 August 2017.

Following the revelation that Robinson was shot to death, Sims becomes paranoid that one of his coworkers is responsible and begins spying on them for evidence, and his failure to remain discreet prompts them to stage an intervention and give him solid alibis. In between digitizing more statements and exploring the tunnels for clues, Sims encounters a being called the Distortion which has named itself Michael. It maims him and hints that "Sasha" cannot be trusted. This notion is reinforced when Sims takes a live statement from Melanie King, a ghost hunter who had previously interacted with the real Sasha and is able to recognize that the Not-Them is not her. Sims researches the Not-Them and learns that it is bound to a mysterious table in the Institute's artefact storage. He destroys the table in the belief that doing so will kill the Not-Them, but instead it is set free and attempts to kill Sims before being entombed within the tunnels by Jurgen Leitner, a man who had kept hundreds of supernatural books in a library until its destruction by monsters in 1994. Leitner explains to Sims that monsters and supernatural occurrences are the manifestations of beings known as the entities or Dread Powers, each representing a different category of fear, and that the Magnus Institute serves one of these beings, the Eye. Leitner reveals that Bouchard had killed Robinson to prevent her from destroying the Institute. While Sims steps outside to calm down with a cigarette, Bouchard kills Leitner to stop him from revealing any more. Finding Leitner's body, Sims believes he will be held responsible and goes on the run.

Season 3

[edit]

Season 3 of The Magnus Archives ran from 23 November 2017, to 27 September 2018.

While being harbored by his ex-girlfriend Georgie Barker, Sims records the story of his first encounter with the paranormal, which he now recognizes as a manifestation of an entity called the Web. Bouchard anonymously mails statements to Sims which hint towards the Unknowing, a ritual that will allow an entity called the Stranger to fully manifest. Following leads from the statements, Sims meets with Jude Perry and Michael Crew, two individuals who serve entities called the Desolation and the Vast, respectively, who both maim him in turn after he unintentionally compels them to give their own statements. Sims is apprehended by Daisy Tonner, a former police officer and servant of the Hunt who has been blackmailed by Bouchard. Tonner's partner, Basira Hussain, convinces her to use Sims' budding abilities to compel Bouchard to confess his crimes, but Bouchard proves immune to Sims' abilities and instead commissions him to stop the Unknowing. Sims retraces Robinson's steps, traveling around the world and eventually encountering Gerard Keay, a man who died of a brain tumor while assisting Robinson and is now undead. Keay explains that the entities, rather than feeding on fear, are literally fear, and must cause supernatural phenomena to sustain themselves. Keay directs Sims to a supply of C-4 that Gertrude had intended to use to stop the Unknowing. Sims arranges for himself, Stoker, Hussain and Tonner to blow up the Unknowing while Blackwood and King, who had been hired on as Sasha's replacement, steal compromising material from Bouchard's office to get him arrested. Stoker and Tonner are killed in the explosion while Sims is sent into a coma. Shortly before his arrest, Bouchard brings in Peter Lukas, a servant of the Lonely, to act as interim head of the Magnus Institute.

Season 4

[edit]

Season 4 of The Magnus Archives ran from 10 January 2019, to 31 October 2019.

Six months after the previous events, Sims is awoken from his coma by Oliver Banks, a benevolent servant of the End. Returning to the Magnus Institute, Sims learns from Hussain that Lukas has taken Blackwood on as his personal assistant and King has become increasingly violent. Sims deduces that King is being influenced by the Slaughter as a result of her previous encounters with its manifestations and extracts a 'ghost bullet' from her leg, and she wounds him after waking up mid-surgery. A servant of the Stranger who survived the Unknowing brings a coffin to the Archives, explaining that it trapped Tonner within the coffin before the explosion. Sims resolves to save Tonner, but since the coffin is aligned with the Buried he plans to leave a part of himself outside of it to find his way back to, and has the Boneturner, a servant of the Flesh, extract one of his ribs. Following his successful retrieval of Tonner from the coffin, Sims researches the other entities' rituals along with Hussain, who has been secretly meeting with Bouchard to take advantage of his near-omniscience. Bouchard convinces them to travel to Ny-Ålesund to stop the ritual of the Dark, only to find a single servant who explains that the ritual failed three years earlier despite it having seemingly been unopposed. Sims destroys the former ritual's catalyst, an artificial dark-energy star, before they return to the Institute. Meanwhile, Lukas and Blackwood research the emergence of a new entity, the Extinction, and plan to gain all knowledge about it by using the Panopticon of Millbank Prison, which has been preserved within the tunnels and was the catalyst of the Eye's ritual centuries prior. Lukas releases the Not-Them to cause a distraction. In the Panopticon, Lukas and Blackwood are met by Bouchard guarding the remains of the Institute's founder, Jonah Magnus. Bouchard reveals that he is the fourth incarnation of Magnus, who has been body swapping as a form of life extension, but offers to allow Blackwood to kill him in order to use the Panopticon's power. Blackwood refuses, explaining that he pretended to follow Lukas' lead to keep his attention away from Sims, who he has fallen in love with. Furious, Lukas banishes Blackwood into the realm of the Lonely but is followed by Sims, who extracts a statement from Lukas before killing him. Sims rescues Blackwood and they retreat to a safe house in Scotland. Because Sims is now sustained by reading statements and cannot stop reading once he starts, he is tricked into reading a statement written by Magnus. Magnus reveals that a ritual can only succeed if it summons all of the entities simultaneously, and that to enact this ritual, he has orchestrated the events of the past three years to get Sims to directly confront and be marked by manifestations of all fourteen entities, allowing him to be the catalyst of a new ritual to summon them all into the world, with the Eye as the supreme entity. Magnus' statement ends with the ritual's incantation which Sims cannot help but to read aloud, transforming the world into a hellscape.

Season 5

[edit]

Season 5 of The Magnus Archives ran from 1 April 2020, to 25 March 2021. The season was split into three acts due to production delays caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.[4]

Although things are bleak, Sims and Blackwood decide to return to the Institute in London to try to find a way to return the world to how it was before. As they travel, they find that the entities have divided the world into 'domains', most of which are overseen by a servant of the entities. As the Eye's Archivist, Sims is compelled to record his own statements about every domain they visit, and he finds he has the power to replace, punish, and even destroy the entities' servants, though it does little to make things better. He destroys the Not-Them, Perry and the Boneturner, but chooses to spare Banks as well as Simon Fairchild and Callum Brodie, servants of the Vast and the Dark respectively. Sims and Blackwood meet Hussain and lead her to Tonner, who has fully given in to the Hunt and become a monster. Hussain reluctantly kills Tonner before splitting off from the group. Sims and Blackwood find a house left untouched by the entities, which is inhabited by Mikaele Salesa, a black market dealer who specializes in cursed items, and Annabelle Cane, a servant of the Web. Salesa reveals that he possesses a magical camera that shields the property from the entities. Sims and Blackwood push on towards London, with Sims destroying the Distortion on the way. In London, they find Barker and King leading a band of survivors in the tunnels, which are mostly safe from the entities. They enter the Panopticon and learn that Magnus has become the Eye's 'pupil' with all of the world's fear channeling through his now-unresponsive body, and Sims realizes that the Eye wants him to replace Magnus. Sims and Blackwood argue about what to do and separate, allowing Blackwood to be apprehended by Cane, who has killed Salesa and taken the camera. Cane convinces Blackwood to follow her to Hill Top Road, a house in Oxford that marks the location of the Gap in Reality which may serve as a gateway to the multiverse. Sims follows them to Hill Top road, joined by Hussain who he meets on the way. At Hill Top Road, Cane explains that the entities are doomed to perish since humans have stopped reproducing and the End will eventually kill them all. To avoid this fate for itself, the Web plans to use all the tapes recorded by Jon and his assistants to bind the entities and pull them through the Gap, allowing them access to infinite worlds with infinite victims. This would remove them entirely from this universe, but would require them to kill Magnus and blow up the Panopticon at the same time to briefly detach the entities from the world. Sims, Blackwood, Hussain, Barker and King discuss their options and decide to carry out this plan since in other worlds the entities would be returned to their initial state of only being able to manifest as monsters and supernatural phenomena. However, Sims betrays their decision and kills Magnus, taking his place as the Eye's pupil. Blackwood, having anticipated this, sends Hussain, Barker and King to blow up the Panopticon early but fails to stop Sims from killing Magnus. Regretful, Sims convinces Blackwood to stab him so the plan to release the entities can still work. Blackwood agrees but refuses to save himself, instead wishing to die with the man he loves. Following the entities' removal from the world, Hussain, Barker and King can find no trace of Sims or Blackwood in the rubble. Finding one last tape recorder running, Hussain tells whoever is listening "I'm sorry, and good luck."

Sequel

[edit]

On 24 October 2022, it was announced that a sequel was in the works and would be funded through Kickstarter.[5] On 30 October 2022, the title was revealed to be The Magnus Protocol.[6] On 14 December 2023, the release date was revealed to be 18 January 2024.[7]

The podcast revolves around Office of Incident, Assessment, and Response employees Alice Dyer, Samama "Sam" Khalid, and their coworkers.

Recurring cast[8]

  • Billie Hindle as Alice Dyer
  • Shahan Hamza as Samama "Sam" Khalid
  • Anusia Battersby as Gwendolyn "Gwen" Bouchard
  • Lowri Ann Davies as Celia Ripley
  • Sarah Lambie as Lena Kelley
  • Ryan Hopevere-Anderson as Colin Becher
  • Kazeem Tosin Amore as Teddy Vaughn
  • Jonathan Sims as Chester
  • Alexander J. Newall as Norris
  • Tim Fearon as Augustus

Reception

[edit]

In 2018, BBC Sounds listed the show as one of the largest British dramatic podcasts, with an extensive fanbase on Tumblr having driven much of its success.[9] By April 2020, The Magnus Archives had reached a download rate of over 2.5 million downloads a month,[10] growing to over 4 million downloads a month by July 2020.[11]

Emily L. Stephens wrote at The A.V. Club that the show has a "vast catalog of horrors and excellent production values."[12] Rachel Weber wrote in GamesRadar that the protagonist's "charmingly grumpy mic presence is a highlight" of the show.[13] Catriona Harvey-Jenner wrote in Cosmopolitan that "you only need to listen to one episode to become hooked."[14] Bryan Bishop wrote in The Verge that the show uses a "minimalist production, [that] lend the stories an eerie, creeping dread."[15] Natalie Zutter wrote at Tor.com that the show is a "welcome distraction from other present terrors."[16] Megan Summers wrote in Screen Rant that the "Magnus Archives is a pioneering horror podcast."[17] Mason Downey wrote in GameSpot that the show is a "perfect blend of spooky, X-Files style monster-of-the-week stories."[18]

The Sydney Morning Herald and Polygon reported that there was a rumor suggesting that the first episode of the final season caused Patreon to crash, but Patreon did not confirm the rumors.[19][20]

Multiple writers have analyzed the role queerness plays in the podcast.[21][22] The main character is asexual and several other characters are queer as well. Unlike some other horror fiction, queerness is not treated as horrific or monstrous, and is instead taken for granted as normal. Hayley McCullough writes that the podcast "can be considered a true example of progressive, inclusive horror where equality, equity, and representation can be defined in terms of the ability for characters to be terrorized by eldritch abominations independent of identity."[22]

Awards

[edit]
Award Date Category Recipient Result Ref.
Discover Pod Awards 2019 Best Audio Drama or Fiction Podcast The Magnus Archives Won [23]
This Is Horror Awards Fiction Podcast of The Year Runner-up [24]
Audio Verse Awards Audio Play Production Won [25]
Writing of an Audio Play Production Jonathan Sims Won
Performance of a Leading Role in an Audio Play Production Won
Vocal Direction of a Production Alexander J. Newall Won
Performance of a Supporting Role in an Audio Play Production Won
2020 Vocal Direction of a Production Won [26]
Performance of a Supporting Role in an Audio Play Production Won
Environment Sound Design in a Production Elizabeth Moffatt Won
Action Sound Design in a Production Won
Writing of an Audio Play Production Jonathan Sims Won
Performance of a Leading Role in an Audio Play Production Won
Performance of a Supporting Role in an Audio Play Production Alasdair Stuart Won
Cover Art for a Production Anika Khan Won
Audio Play Production The Magnus Archives Won
2021 Existing Audio Play Production Won [27]
Music Direction for an Existing Production Brock Winstead Won
Action Sound Design in an Existing Production Elizabeth Moffatt and Alexander J Newall Won
Environment Sound Design in an Existing Production Elizabeth Moffatt and Alexander J Newall Won
Writing for an Existing Production Jonathan Sims Won
Vocal Direction of an Existing Production Alexander J Newall Won
Performance of a Supporting Role in an Existing Production Sasha Sienna Won
Performance of a Supporting Role in an Existing Production Lydia Nicholas Won
Performance of a Leading Role in an Audio Play Production Jonathan Sims Won
Performance of a Leading Role in an Audio Play Production Alexander J Newell Won
Cover Art for a Production Anika Khan Won
British Fantasy Awards Best Audio The Magnus Archives Won [28]
British Podcast Awards 2022 Best Fiction Lost [29]
The People's Choice Podcast Awards Lost [30]

Other media

[edit]

The Magnus Archives Roleplaying Game

[edit]

A licensed game currently in production by Monte Cook Games. Launched on Backerkit[31] on 29 August 2023. This game is the first crowdfunded RPG project to exceed 1 million US dollars on a platform other than Kickstarter.[citation needed]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Season 4 Q+A Part 1". The Magnus Archives (Podcast). Rusty Quill. 28 November 2019. Archived from the original on 20 April 2020. Retrieved 19 April 2020.
  2. ^ Meszaros, E. L. (23 September 2020). "The Magnus Archives: A Beginner's Guide to the Popular Horror Podcast". CBR. Archived from the original on 1 November 2020. Retrieved 10 August 2022.
  3. ^ Holland, Carson (23 June 2022). "Podcast Review: The "Magnus Archives" a Must-Listen Nail Biter This Summer 200 Episodes of Spooky Goodness. Fair Warning, You Just Might Binge the Whole Podcast". The Daily Evergreen. Washington State University. OCLC 1003293690. Archived from the original on 10 August 2022. Retrieved 10 August 2022.
  4. ^ Godigamuwe, Anil (29 June 2020). "MAG Season 5 changes". Rusty Quill. Archived from the original on 20 April 2021. Retrieved 24 March 2021.
  5. ^ "The Magnus Archives on Acast". Acast. Archived from the original on 6 November 2022. Retrieved 6 November 2022.
  6. ^ "The Magnus Protocol: Kickstarter Pre-Launch" (video). youtube.com. Rusty Quill. 1 November 2022. Archived from the original on 6 November 2022. Retrieved 6 November 2022.
  7. ^ "Announcement: 2023 Holiday News from Rusty Towers" (video). youtube.com. Rusty Quill. 14 December 2023. Archived from the original on 21 December 2023. Retrieved 21 December 2023.
  8. ^ The Magnus Protocol (Horror), Rusty Quill, 18 January 2024, retrieved 15 May 2024
  9. ^ Watts, Ella (2018). Drama Podcasts: An overview of the US and UK drama podcast market (PDF). BBC Sounds. p. 12. Archived (PDF) from the original on 16 April 2019. Retrieved 25 November 2019.
  10. ^ "Award winning horror fiction podcast teases final chilling season". The Scotsman. Jpi Media. Retrieved 2 April 2020.
  11. ^ "Rusty Quill Signs with WME in Trailblazing Move". PodNews.net. Archived from the original on 15 August 2020. Retrieved 25 July 2020.
  12. ^ "5 offerings (that aren't horror films) to get you in the October spirit". AV Club. 5 October 2018. Archived from the original on 19 May 2020. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
  13. ^ Stuart, Alasdair. "The 10 best horror podcasts to give you nightmares". Games Radar. Archived from the original on 16 June 2021. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
  14. ^ Harvey-Jenner, Catriona (30 October 2017). "12 creepy podcasts to send shivers down your spine". Cosmopolitan. Archived from the original on 16 June 2020. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
  15. ^ "10 scary podcasts to listen to in the dark". The Verge. 31 October 2018. Archived from the original on 18 August 2021. Retrieved 13 May 2020.
  16. ^ Zutter, Natalie (8 May 2020). "10 Long-Running SFF/Horror Fiction Podcasts". Tor.com. Archived from the original on 26 May 2022. Retrieved 10 August 2022.
  17. ^ Summers, Megan (31 May 2020). "10 Best Podcasts For Horror Movie Fanatics". ScreenRant. Archived from the original on 10 August 2022. Retrieved 10 August 2022.
  18. ^ Downey, Mason (26 October 2020). "10 Terrifying Horror Podcasts To Binge". GameSpot. Archived from the original on 30 June 2020. Retrieved 10 August 2022.
  19. ^ Divola, Barry (13 July 2021). "Critic's pick: the best new podcasts from the last 12 months". The Sydney Morning Herald. Archived from the original on 10 August 2022. Retrieved 10 August 2022.
  20. ^ Williams, Wil (19 May 2020). "7 podcasts with enormous and entertaining back catalogs". Polygon. Archived from the original on 26 May 2020. Retrieved 12 August 2022.
  21. ^ Juko, Maria (2024), "Narrating the (Queer) Gothic in the Podcast The Magnus Archives", Rethinking Gothic Transgressions of Gender and Sexuality, Routledge, doi:10.4324/9781003375562-15/narrating-queer-gothic-podcast-magnus-archives-maria-juko, ISBN 978-1-003-37556-2, retrieved 8 May 2024
  22. ^ a b McCullough, Hayley (2 January 2024). "The Magnus Archive". American Journalism. 41 (1): 143–144. doi:10.1080/08821127.2024.2301803. ISSN 0882-1127.
  23. ^ "Announcing the winners of the 2019 Discover Pods Awards". Discover Pods Awards. 21 November 2019. Archived from the original on 21 November 2021. Retrieved 25 November 2019.
  24. ^ "This Is Horror Awards 2019". This Is Horror. 20 August 2020. Archived from the original on 23 August 2020. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  25. ^ "2019 Audio Verse Award Winners". The Audio Verse Awards. Archived from the original on 18 August 2021. Retrieved 24 January 2020.
  26. ^ 2020 Winners, Audio Verse, 2021, archived from the original on 17 May 2021, retrieved 29 March 2021
  27. ^ "2021 Audio Verse Award Winners". The Audio Verse Awards. Archived from the original on 17 April 2022. Retrieved 22 June 2022.
  28. ^ "British Fantasy Awards 2021: winners announced". www.britishfantasysociety.org. British Fantasy Society. 27 September 2021. Archived from the original on 19 June 2022. Retrieved 31 May 2022.
  29. ^ "Nominations 2022". www.britishfantasysociety.org. British Podcast Awards. 2022. Archived from the original on 20 June 2022. Retrieved 21 June 2022.
  30. ^ "Podcast Awards - The People's Choice". www.podcastawards.com. Archived from the original on 17 September 2021. Retrieved 10 August 2022.
  31. ^ "Backerkit". www.backerkit.com/c/monte-cook-games/the-magnus-archives-roleplaying-game. Archived from the original on 8 September 2023. Retrieved 15 September 2023.
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