Apartment  F  Productions

Homemade Audio Dramas

How it began

In March of 2020, COVID was spreading. Tim and Kenny, two old friends,  were stuck at home with too much time on their hands.  

Lacking any better ideas, they decided to start producing budget-free, original audio dramas for Apartment F Productions.  They would have contributed to the neighboring outfit, Apartment G, but they didn't answer the door.

Tim and Kenny have written and produced all the work you hear on Apartment F with more than a lot of help from our friends.   They say they are open to work from other authors, but they have yet to meet anyone that reckless.   With any luck, someone with influence will discover us and make us rich so we can take all our friends out to dinner.   

If you're interested in who we are, here's what we would write on a job application.

Tim Hanson holds a BFA in Acting from Webster University Conservatory of Theatre Arts in St. Louis, Missouri. After college, he taught acting at Tulane University and performed in Tulane Center Stage productions. From there he went on to New York, where he gave the finest performance of Cody that no one ever saw, in a bootleg production of Sam Shepard’s “Geography of a Horse Dreamer.” Oh , and he held numerous odd jobs along the way, ranging from Bible bookstore clerk to Big Apple Circus security guard, among many others.

After many more odd jobs and trodding stages around the country, including the Houston Shakespeare Festival, the Milwaukee Repertory Theatre, Theatre X, Stages Repertory Theatre in Houston and the Shuler Theatre in Raton, NM, Tim finally settled in the LA, where he continued performing at venues such as the notorious Al’s Bar, Sacred Fools, and Theatre of NOTE. He called NOTE home for most of the 90's, acting, directing and helping out as needed. Highlights include playing the title role in Macbeth, and directing his own play, Nobody Home. Recently, he and an english professor friend teamed up to present programs on Shakespeare, Euripedes, and Samuel Beckett at Los Angeles Public Library Branches --most frequently at the Palms-Rancho Park Branch. 

Retired after 19 years' substitute teaching at LA Unified. Tim lives in Santa Monica and writes short fiction now and then. His stories have appeared in great weather for MEDIA's 2014 anthology I Let Go of the Stars in My Hand, Coffin Bell Journal, Cease, Cows.com, Into the Void, and Funicular Magazine. 


Kenny Meyer attended the University of Texas at Austin and eventually acquired a BA in psychology. Before matriculating, he lucked into a production job at Austin’s NBC affiliate, where he ran camera, switched the news, and drank gallons of vending machine coffee. After five years of getting flush on the minimum wage, he left Austin to join the ranks of free-lance filmmakers in Dallas. A year later, he was hired as the production manager for a small production company that specialized in commercials, industrial films, and hundred-hour work weeks. Along the way, he free-lanced for several LA production companies. He eventually moved to LA to cash in on his knowledge of both TV and film.

After several curious turns of fate, Kenny ended up working for political media companies, where he produced campaign ads for state and national politicians. In the early ’80's, his short attention span took hold, and he left the film business to work as a software developer. In this capacity, he participated in several high-tech startups, including one as a founder of a company specializing in 3-D position trackers for use in virtual reality applications.

When the money ran out, Kenny scraped along in various high-tech roles, including as a journalist and game developer, until he was employed by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory as a software developer. During his 15 years at JPL, he developed flight and ground software systems for both robotic and manned missions, and served in several management roles.

After retirement, Kenny was able to backpack in the Sierras during weekdays, write a guideline for avoiding altitude illnesses, and serve on the board of a local non-profit. He started dabbling in short fictions while a student at UT, has kept at it since then.