POPULARITY
2001年よりインターネットラジオとしてスタートし、2021年にポッドキャスト化。 AM・FMレギュラー番組は『本物ラジオ』。こちらは『うそラジオ』とユーミン自らが定義。緩さと鋭さが混在し『うそラジオ』だからこそのディープな話題も多い。 インスタとともに毎週金曜日更新。 ユーミンへのメールはこちらまでuso@yuming.co.jpSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2001年よりインターネットラジオとしてスタートし、2021年にポッドキャスト化。 AM・FMレギュラー番組は『本物ラジオ』。こちらは『うそラジオ』とユーミン自らが定義。緩さと鋭さが混在し『うそラジオ』だからこそのディープな話題も多い。 インスタとともに毎週金曜日更新。 ユーミンへのメールはこちらまでuso@yuming.co.jpSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2001年よりインターネットラジオとしてスタートし、2021年にポッドキャスト化。 AM・FMレギュラー番組は『本物ラジオ』。こちらは『うそラジオ』とユーミン自らが定義。緩さと鋭さが混在し『うそラジオ』だからこそのディープな話題も多い。 インスタとともに毎週金曜日更新。 ユーミンへのメールはこちらまでuso@yuming.co.jpSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Text the Show⭐️ Affiliate item of the week: FosPower Solar Hand Crank Emergency Radio: https://amzn.to/3PLuoBf NOAA Weather Radio 19240mWh Portable Power Bank, AM/FM, USB/Solar/Hand Crank Charging, Battery Operated, SOS Alarm & Flashlight for Indoor/Outdoor Emergencies.What happens when artificial intelligence becomes the gatekeeper of truth, faith, commerce, and even human behavior? Tonight, JD Rucker joins us to explore the rise of The Algorithm and its growing influence over the Church, media, and everyday life.We dive into AI's role in information management, the future of prepping and survival in a technologically controlled world, and whether society is being guided toward a digital beast system hidden in plain sight. Is the algorithm simply a tool or is it becoming a belief system of its own? Visit JD's prepper website: The Late Prepper: https://www.lateprepper.com/ Watch the JD Rucker Show: https://jdruckershow.substack.com/JD Rucker substack: https://jdrucker.substack.com/Support the show using Buy Me A Coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/dangerousinfopodcast SMART is the acronym that was created by technocrats that have setup the "internet of things" that will eventually enslave humanity to their needs. Support the showLeave Voicemail: https://www.speakpipe.com/DangerousInfoWebsite https://www.dangerousinfopodcast.com/Discord chatroom: https://discord.gg/8feGHQQmwgEmail the show dangerousinfopodcast@protonmail.comJoin mailing list http://bit.ly/3Kku5YtWatch LiveYouTube https://www.youtube.com/@DANGEROUSINFOPODCASTRumble https://bit.ly/4q1Mg7Z Twitch https://www.twitch.tv/dangerousinfopodcastPilled.net https://pilled.net/profile/144176 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DangerousInfoPodcast/SocialsInstagram https://www.instagram.com/dangerousinfo/TwitterX https://twitter.com/jaymz_jesseYouTube https://bit.ly/436VExnFacebook https://bit.ly/4gZbjVa
Grab your custom Cannes Lions attendee announcement graphic for free here!Today in the business of podcasting:A roundup of all the top stories from The Podcast Show London last week. New data from Sounds Profitable's Advertising Landscape 2025 study shows that AM/FM radio Primes and podcast Primes have only a 1.4% overlap, challenging the idea that the two formats compete for the same audience. Tom Webster argues that sellers holding both types of inventory are offering two nearly non-duplicated engaged audiences in a single buy — a stronger combined asset than the competitive framing has allowed advertisers to see.The Alliance for Measurement in Podcasting (AMP), a 12-member industry task force organized by Oxford Road and including Spotify, SiriusXM Media, BetterHelp, DraftKings, and others, has publicly emerged after meeting since July 2025 to address podcast measurement and definition challenges. The group's three focus areas are standardizing impression metrics, developing cross-platform performance measurement, and agreeing on a universal definition of a podcast.A new Signal Hill Insights Pulse Report, conducted with FlightStory, finds that 45% of monthly podcast consumers in the U.K. have used a smart TV to listen to or watch podcasts in the past month, making smart TVs the second most-used device ahead of computers. More than half of video podcast viewers in the U.K. watch during prime time (7–11 p.m.), and the data suggests video podcasting is growing podcasting's overall audience share by replacing other video consumption rather than cannibalizing audio listening.To find links to these, and every article covered in today's episode, click here. You can also subscribe to The Download's newsletter to receive the full issue straight to your email inbox every day.
Grab your custom Cannes Lions attendee announcement graphic for free here!Today in the business of podcasting:A roundup of all the top stories from The Podcast Show London last week. New data from Sounds Profitable's Advertising Landscape 2025 study shows that AM/FM radio Primes and podcast Primes have only a 1.4% overlap, challenging the idea that the two formats compete for the same audience. Tom Webster argues that sellers holding both types of inventory are offering two nearly non-duplicated engaged audiences in a single buy — a stronger combined asset than the competitive framing has allowed advertisers to see.The Alliance for Measurement in Podcasting (AMP), a 12-member industry task force organized by Oxford Road and including Spotify, SiriusXM Media, BetterHelp, DraftKings, and others, has publicly emerged after meeting since July 2025 to address podcast measurement and definition challenges. The group's three focus areas are standardizing impression metrics, developing cross-platform performance measurement, and agreeing on a universal definition of a podcast.A new Signal Hill Insights Pulse Report, conducted with FlightStory, finds that 45% of monthly podcast consumers in the U.K. have used a smart TV to listen to or watch podcasts in the past month, making smart TVs the second most-used device ahead of computers. More than half of video podcast viewers in the U.K. watch during prime time (7–11 p.m.), and the data suggests video podcasting is growing podcasting's overall audience share by replacing other video consumption rather than cannibalizing audio listening.To find links to these, and every article covered in today's episode, click here. You can also subscribe to The Download's newsletter to receive the full issue straight to your email inbox every day.
2001年よりインターネットラジオとしてスタートし、2021年にポッドキャスト化。 AM・FMレギュラー番組は『本物ラジオ』。こちらは『うそラジオ』とユーミン自らが定義。緩さと鋭さが混在し『うそラジオ』だからこそのディープな話題も多い。 インスタとともに毎週金曜日更新。 ユーミンへのメールはこちらまでuso@yuming.co.jpSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Today in the business of podcasting:The Alliance for Measurement in Podcasting (AMP), a 12-member task force organized by Oxford Road, is working to standardize podcast ad measurement and establish a universal definition of "podcast." The group plans to present its framework at Oxford Road's CAO Summit in Los Angeles in July 2026.New data from Sounds Profitable shows that the most engaged AM/FM radio listeners and the most engaged podcast listeners have only 1.4% overlap, making them nearly distinct audiences. Tom Webster argues that buying both channels together offers advertisers a level of combined reach that neither medium can deliver alone.Magellan AI's new global analysis estimates total podcast ad spend reached $3.94 billion in 2025, with non-U.S. markets surging 79% year-over-year in Q1 2026, led by rapid growth in Germany, France, the U.K., and Ireland.YouTube is moving AI content labels to more prominent positions, appearing directly below long-form videos and as overlays on Shorts, with automatic detection rolling out for content creators who do not self-disclose.Canada's broadcast regulator, the CRTC, has expanded its digital media contribution framework, raising the required revenue contribution from foreign streaming and audio services including Netflix, Disney+, and Spotify from 5% to 15%.To find links to these, and every article covered in today's episode, click here. You can also subscribe to The Download's newsletter to receive the full issue straight to your email inbox every day.
Today in the business of podcasting:The Alliance for Measurement in Podcasting (AMP), a 12-member task force organized by Oxford Road, is working to standardize podcast ad measurement and establish a universal definition of "podcast." The group plans to present its framework at Oxford Road's CAO Summit in Los Angeles in July 2026.New data from Sounds Profitable shows that the most engaged AM/FM radio listeners and the most engaged podcast listeners have only 1.4% overlap, making them nearly distinct audiences. Tom Webster argues that buying both channels together offers advertisers a level of combined reach that neither medium can deliver alone.Magellan AI's new global analysis estimates total podcast ad spend reached $3.94 billion in 2025, with non-U.S. markets surging 79% year-over-year in Q1 2026, led by rapid growth in Germany, France, the U.K., and Ireland.YouTube is moving AI content labels to more prominent positions, appearing directly below long-form videos and as overlays on Shorts, with automatic detection rolling out for content creators who do not self-disclose.Canada's broadcast regulator, the CRTC, has expanded its digital media contribution framework, raising the required revenue contribution from foreign streaming and audio services including Netflix, Disney+, and Spotify from 5% to 15%.To find links to these, and every article covered in today's episode, click here. You can also subscribe to The Download's newsletter to receive the full issue straight to your email inbox every day.
Make your own Cannes Lions announcement graphic!Sounds Profitable Partner Tom Webster breaks down data from the 2025 Advertising Landscape study showing that AM/FM radio Primes and podcast Primes overlap by just 1.4% of U.S. adults, arguing that the two media are not competitors but complementary channels reaching almost entirely different engaged audiences, and that combined inventory is worth more than either piece alone.Written by Tom WebsterEdited and narrated by Gavin GaddisFind the full article here.
Make your own Cannes Lions announcement graphic!Sounds Profitable Partner Tom Webster breaks down data from the 2025 Advertising Landscape study showing that AM/FM radio Primes and podcast Primes overlap by just 1.4% of U.S. adults, arguing that the two media are not competitors but complementary channels reaching almost entirely different engaged audiences, and that combined inventory is worth more than either piece alone.Written by Tom WebsterEdited and narrated by Gavin GaddisFind the full article here.
2001年よりインターネットラジオとしてスタートし、2021年にポッドキャスト化。 AM・FMレギュラー番組は『本物ラジオ』。こちらは『うそラジオ』とユーミン自らが定義。緩さと鋭さが混在し『うそラジオ』だからこそのディープな話題も多い。 インスタとともに毎週金曜日更新。 ユーミンへのメールはこちらまでuso@yuming.co.jp
CONECTA CON TU ESPERANZA: El Equilibrio de la Vida Sábado 16.05 | 11:00 AM | FM 88.9 Radio Gran Rosario ¿Sabías que la SALUD es el equilibrio dinámico entre tu inmunidad y los patogenos ? ✨ Para habitar una verdadera HOMEOSTASIS, no basta con defenderse de los patogenos.virus de afuera; es vital EQUILIBRAR TU medio interno Si tu sistema inmunitario está saludable, tu cuerpo tiene la capacidad de modular respuestas precisas, pero para ello, tu PAZ es esencial. Tus emociones también modulan tu inmunidad: la coherencia entre lo que sientes, piensas y haces es la base de tu Soberanía Biológica. ESTE SÁBADO EN PROGRAMÓN: CIENCIA Y NATURALEZA: Junto a la Farmaceutica Griselda Franchini (@griseldateresafranchini) de Farmacia Vitantonio, exploraremos "La Ciencia de las Plantas que Curan". Aprenderemos a preparar nuestra inmunidad para generar respuestas naturales y eficientes. EL ARTE DE LAS LETRAS: Celebramos el legado del Día Mundial del Libro y la Feria Internacional del Libro de Bs.As. con un homenaje de profunda gratitud a la maestría de Joseph Berolo (Presidente de Uniletras y Editorial Ave Viajera). Recordamos el honor de haber presentado junto a él mi primer manuscrito de neurociencias aplicadas, honrando el arte de pensar y comunicar desde la palabra que sana. Marisa Patiño www.marisapatinoambassador.com.ar Embajadora de Paz | CEO Esperanza Argentina | Investigadora ORCID
Is traditional radio fighting for survival… or is it evolving right alongside the digital age?On this episode of The Arrington Gavin Show, we dive into the ongoing battle between AM/FM radio and the explosive rise of podcasts, streaming, TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, and social media influencers. Has streaming changed media forever? Does local radio still matter? And why are so many people turning to independent creators for news, entertainment, and conversation?Special guest Mark Hays, General Manager of KSHP 1400 AM & 107.1 FM Las Vegas, joins the show for a powerful conversation about the future of radio, the importance of community broadcasting, the challenges facing traditional media, and how stations are adapting in a rapidly changing world.
2001年よりインターネットラジオとしてスタートし、2021年にポッドキャスト化。 AM・FMレギュラー番組は『本物ラジオ』。こちらは『うそラジオ』とユーミン自らが定義。緩さと鋭さが混在し『うそラジオ』だからこそのディープな話題も多い。 インスタとともに毎週金曜日更新。 ユーミンへのメールはこちらまでuso@yuming.co.jp
Jeremy Cordeaux delivers a fiery reaction to the Federal Budget in this special GARAGE edition of The Court of Public Opinion, taking aim at Labor’s handling of negative gearing, capital gains tax, immigration, energy policy and housing affordability. Jeremy questions the government’s integrity over broken promises, warns younger Australians are being locked out of wealth creation, and criticises what he sees as socialism “by stealth”. He also discusses the future of commercial radio following the shutdown of America’s historic CBS Radio Network, and reflects on Australia’s economic direction, leadership, and cost-of-living pressures. Topics Discussed Fallout from the Federal Budget Coalition budget reply speech Pauline Hanson’s budget speech Negative gearing debate Capital gains tax concerns Family trusts and taxation Housing affordability crisis Rental shortages and rising rents Immigration levels in Australia Government spending and taxation NDIS fraud and budget blowouts Cost of living pressures Green energy and electricity prices Criticism of Anthony Albanese and Jim Chalmers Comparisons to Whitlam and Keating governments Singapore’s economic model Bracket creep and taxation Decline of AM/FM radio CBS Radio shutting down in the USA Social media, podcasts and digital media replacing radio Historical anniversaries and celebrity birthday See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2001年よりインターネットラジオとしてスタートし、2021年にポッドキャスト化。 AM・FMレギュラー番組は『本物ラジオ』。こちらは『うそラジオ』とユーミン自らが定義。緩さと鋭さが混在し『うそラジオ』だからこそのディープな話題も多い。 インスタとともに毎週金曜日更新。 ユーミンへのメールはこちらまでuso@yuming.co.jp
Utkledd som telefon, og kan avlytte telefoner! Verdens dølleste superhelt, eller ondt geni? Med komiker, podkaster, musiker og venn av podden Kristopher Schau!AM/FM-simulator: https://claude.ai/public/artifacts/f615b865-20a5-40d5-a6c2-e779d8f28f58Koding av bits i AM/FM: https://claude.ai/public/artifacts/f6fa894e-8224-4576-b2a1-920a0cc4aaadKode beskjed i AM/FM: https://claude.ai/public/artifacts/a2e4a762-13f4-4961-b252-a9780f573707Faktapresisering: Mygg kan ikke SE infrarødt lys, men de kan sanse det, og bruker dette sammen med kjemisk sansing for å finne oss og suge blodet vårt.2:21 - Hvem i all verden er Phone Ranger?14:07 - Hvordan funker telekommunikasjon?29:44 - Vårt våpen mot Phone ranger34:09 - Overvåkning i dyreverdenen1:00:39 - KAPPE-score!Lenke til superheltrangering: https://www.skogvoll.com/ukrangeringHvis du likte denne episoden, skriv gjerne en hyggelig omtale på spotify eller iTunes og anbefal den til dine venner og superskurker. På underkappa.no finner du alle episodene og en oversikt over alle poengene vi har gitt så langt. Hvis du har kommentarer til oss, spørsmål eller forslag til superhelter, så send oss en melding på instagram @underkappa.
2001年よりインターネットラジオとしてスタートし、2021年にポッドキャスト化。AM・FMレギュラー番組は『本物ラジオ』。こちらは『うそラジオ』とユーミン自らが定義。緩さと鋭さが混在し『うそラジオ』だからこそのディープな話題も多い。インスタとともに毎週金曜日に更新されます。ユーミンへのメールはこちらまでuso@yuming.co.jp
2001年よりインターネットラジオとしてスタートし、2021年にポッドキャスト化。AM・FMレギュラー番組は『本物ラジオ』。こちらは『うそラジオ』とユーミン自らが定義。緩さと鋭さが混在し『うそラジオ』だからこそのディープな話題も多い。インスタとともに毎週金曜日に更新されます。ユーミンへのメールはこちらまでuso@yuming.co.jp
2001年よりインターネットラジオとしてスタートし、2021年にポッドキャスト化。AM・FMレギュラー番組は『本物ラジオ』。こちらは『うそラジオ』とユーミン自らが定義。緩さと鋭さが混在し『うそラジオ』だからこそのディープな話題も多い。インスタとともに毎週金曜日に更新されます。ユーミンへのメールはこちらまでuso@yuming.co.jp
Give us about fifteen minutes daily, and we will give you all the local news, sports, weather, and events you can handle. SPONSORS: Many thanks to our sponsors… Annapolis Subaru, the SPCA of Anne Arundel County, Covington Alsina, MacMedics, and Hospice of the Chesapeake. Today... On the podcast today: tighter security and restricted access at the Naval Academy, Annapolis Subaru giving away trees for Earth Month, a new education grant for youth music programs, from AMFM, and Kevin Durant stepping into the future of the old Six Flags site in Prince George's County. Catch the full rundown on today's DNB! Link to daily news recap newsletter: https://forms.aweber.com/form/87/493412887.htm Trevor from Annapolis Makerspace is here with your Maker Minutes! DAILY NEWSLETTER LINK: https://forms.aweber.com/form/87/493412887.htm The Eye On Annapolis Daily News Brief is produced every Monday through Friday at 6:00 am and available wherever you get your podcasts and also on our social media platforms--All Annapolis and Eye On Annapolis (FB) and @eyeonannapolis (X) NOTE: For hearing-impaired subscribers, a full transcript is available on Eye On Annapolis.
2001年よりインターネットラジオとしてスタートし、2021年にポッドキャスト化。AM・FMレギュラー番組は『本物ラジオ』。こちらは『うそラジオ』とユーミン自らが定義。緩さと鋭さが混在し『うそラジオ』だからこそのディープな話題も多い。インスタとともに毎週金曜日に更新されます。ユーミンへのメールはこちらまでuso@yuming.co.jpSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2001年よりインターネットラジオとしてスタートし、2021年にポッドキャスト化。AM・FMレギュラー番組は『本物ラジオ』。こちらは『うそラジオ』とユーミン自らが定義。緩さと鋭さが混在し『うそラジオ』だからこそのディープな話題も多い。インスタとともに毎週金曜日に更新されます。ユーミンへのメールはこちらまでuso@yuming.co.jp
Christina Hello, everyone, I'm Christina Darnell, the managing editor of MinistryWatch. Welcome to the MinistryWatch podcast. In today's extra episode, I talk with Warren Smith about some news items that are slightly (even significantly) outside of our normal charity and philanthropy “beat.” So, Warren, what's up first? Warren Military chaplains will no longer indicate their rank on their uniforms, according to a new order from Secretary of Defense Pete Hegspeth. People I've talked with tell me they generally think that's a good thing. Enlisted personnel might be intimidated to talk with chaplains about deeply personal issues if they know that chaplain is a senior officer. Progressive groups opposing the move include Americans United for Separation of Church and State and the Military Religious Freedom Foundation. Christina Up next, a new study by Pew found that nearly 98 percent of U.S. adults live within range of at least one religious radio station. Warren And that about 25 percent of all AM/FM stations are dedicated to religious programming. The U.S. has about 4,000 religious stations and about half of American adults spend at least some time each week listening to religious audio content, including radio, podcasts, and streaming, and – this is one of the most interesting findings – about 39 percent of listeners are non-Christians. Christina I guess it's a good thing that non-Christians are listening to Christian programming. Warren It is good, but there is also another side to that coin. A lot of Christian radio stations have started programing for that non-Christian audience. You'll hear branding like “Safe for the Entire Family” rather than distinctly Christian branding and programming. Some people think this trend has watered down Christian radio. Christian writer David Murrow says “Safe for the Entire Family” has made Christian radio boring and risk-free. He advocates for edgier music on music stations, and more teaching and talk. Christina While we're on the subject of media, a new movie out now is getting a lot of buzz from Christian commentators – and it's not a Christian movie. Warren I haven't seen the new Ryan Gosling movie Project Hail Mary, but people I respect are giving it great reviews. Aaron Renn says, “In an era of male loneliness and confusing messages about manhood, Project Hail Mary models problem-solving, purpose, and fatherly strength without apology.” Brett McCracken, writing for The Gospel Coalition, says it offers the “good, clean fun moviegoers have missed.” McCracken concludes, “Project Hail Mary doesn't preach the gospel. But it makes virtue look good. It makes selflessness, sacrifice, and duty attractive. If the movie is a huge hit—and I expect it will be—perhaps Hollywood will take the hint. We're not in postmodernism anymore. Goodness, truth, and beauty are attributes we want in art again. Really, they're what we've always wanted.” Christina Is the movie a hit? Warren It is. The movie opened at number 1 in the U.S. and held that position through its second week. So far, worldwide box office is around $300 million. That's a huge hit by any reasonable standard. Christina Warren, you read an article this week that caught your attention. Warren I commend to you an article by my friends John Stonestreet and Tim Padgett of The Colson Center. I'll link to it in the show notes. They share the hard truth that neither political party has a right to the pro-life label these days. Of the Democrats they say, abortion is not merely a plank in the progressive party's platform. It is the chief commitment of the worldview that dominates America. It is, for many, a sacrament to recognize, enshrine, and honor autonomy. Abortion is not merely a legal right of a decadent society. It is a rite of worship, specifically a way to worship the idols of self, state, and sex.” Christina But they don't let the Republicans off the hook, either. Warren They write, “The GOP was once a prolife party, but now openly endorses chemical abortion and unregulated IVF, the two most common ways to kill preborn children in America.” They conclude, “There is no such thing as a Christian not called, to some degree, to oppose abortion and defend preborn lives. We need not attend every march or express every outrage. We must, however, protect every vulnerable life, support every vulnerable mother and father, and advance the Christian understanding of human dignity every chance we are given.” Christina Our final story today is about the ministry rating systems. An organization called Charity Watch wrote an article that found fault with Charity Navigator's rating system. Warren Charity Watch found fault with the 4-Star rating that Charity Navigator gave to OUR Rescue, formerly Operation Underground Railroad. I won't get into the weeds of their analysis here except to say that Charity Watch is right. OUR Rescue should not have a 4-Star rating. Christina That's why MinistryWatch gives OUR Rescue a 1-Star rating, our lowest score for financial efficiency. Warren That's right. I've written about the pros and cons of rating systems, and explained why – despite the cons – we think rating ministries is important. But how you do it matters. I'll have a link to an article explaining our rating system in today's show notes. Christina Any final notes before we go? Warren I have some travel coming up in the next couple of months, and I would love to see you. I will be in Los Angeles in April. I'll be speaking at the annual convention of the Evangelical Press Association in Nashville in June. I'll also be in Dallas and Knoxville in May. I will be speaking at Summit Ministries in Manitou Springs in June, so I'll be doing reader lunches in Denver and Colorado Springs during that trip. Let me know if you would like to join us. My email is wsmith@ministrywatch.com. Christina The producer for today's program is Jeff McIntosh. I'm Christina Darnell, along with Warren Smith. You've been listening to the MinistryWatch podcast. Until next time, may God bless you.
iPod saved Apple from chapter 11 and there would be no iPhone with it either. Oh, and Jony Ive helped, a little, too! Dave Young: Welcome to the Empire Builders Podcast, teaching business owners the not so secret techniques that took famous businesses from mom-and-pop to major brands. Steven Semple is a marketing consultant, story collector and storyteller. I’m Steven’s sidekick and business partner, Dave Young. Before we get into today’s episode, a word from our sponsor, which is, well, it’s us, but we’re highlighting ads we’ve written and produced for our clients. So here’s one of those. [Seaside Plumbing Ad] Dave Young: Welcome back to the Empire Builders Podcast. I’m Dave Young and Steve Semple’s here and we’re talking about empires. When you told me the topic for today here just a few seconds ago, it’s like, “Oh, we’re talking about an empire inside an empire. We’re talking about an empire that changed lots of things.” Stephen Semple: Yes. Dave Young: So we’re going to talk about the iPhone. Stephen Semple: Correct. Dave Young: Oh, man. Man, did it change things? Stephen Semple: Well- Dave Young: I mean, so- Stephen Semple: Yes. Dave Young: … you think people that aren’t… Gosh, I keep thinking that, gosh, there were a lot of years I didn’t have a cell phone, let alone an iPhone. Stephen Semple: Correct. Dave Young: But cell phones changed everything, and then iPhone changed it more. And gosh, what year are we talking about? Early 2000s? 2000-ish-four, ’05, ’06, somewhere in there? Stephen Semple: Yeah. Dave Young: Is that about right? I’m just trying to think of when I got one. Stephen Semple: Oh, you’re talking about when it launched? 2007 is when I- Dave Young: Seven. Okay. Stephen Semple: Yeah. 2007 is when it launched. And when you think about it, we used to have our Palmpilot for our contacts, we had our dicsman for our music, we had our cell phone for telephone calls, and we had internet cafes for our internet access. Dave Young: For our laptops and all of that. Yeah. Yeah. Stephen Semple: Right. Dave Young: All these devices. Stephen Semple: And today, it’s both the bestselling phone of all time, the best-selling camera of all time, the bestselling music player of all time, the best-selling GPS of all time, and the best-selling game console of all time. Dave Young: Crazy, isn’t it? It’s a ubiquitous product, really. Stephen Semple: Yes. It’s the most profitable product of all time. 2.3 billion have been sold. One fifth of humanity has one. Dave Young: Man. Stephen Semple: Right? Dave Young: Yeah. Stephen Semple: It created a whole brand new economy called the App Store that did not exist before. And it was not an obvious product. Steve Jobs initially hated the idea. I want to say this again. Steve Jobs initially hated the idea. He thought smartphones would never take off and they were a dumb idea. Dave Young: Okay. Stephen Semple: This is how not obvious the product was. Dave Young: Yeah. Every now and then you hear somebody saying, “Oh, I wish I could go back to a flip phone.” And you think, “Yeah, that would be nice.” But then it’s like, “Well, no. No, I don’t know if I could get by without all this stuff.” Stephen Semple: Yeah. It’s really incredible. The birth of the iPhone, to really understand the birth of the iPhone, is you actually have to go back to the iPod. It’s predated the iPhone. And Tony Fidel invented the iPod. Here’s what’s really important about the iPod, is Apple was on the verge of bankruptcy, and the iPod saved them from bankruptcy. The iPod is what saved Apple. And basically Tony Fidel, back when he was 12, he bought an Apple 2, and it was really his first true consumer product. And in 1991, he graduated. And of course, that was the early days of the internet. We forget how even new the internet is. And a couple of people had left Apple to start a company called General Magic to build handheld computers. Tony joins General Magic, and it’s amazing. There’s lots of ideas. But what he found is there was these tons of ideas and no focus, nothing ever made it to development. And that frustrated him because he actually wanted to develop things. So he goes over to Phillips, and Phillips had an MP3 player. And Napster came along, which was allowing people to download music, but it’s free, but it’s kind of illegal and maybe sketchy and all that other stuff going on. Basically he looked at it and he said he wanted to start to develop this unified digital music player in a site where people could download things legally, because he felt people wanted that. And Steve Jobs also felt people wanted that and Jobs got wind of what he was working on. This is 2000 when the dotcom bubble happens. Jobs gets wind of this idea and is back at Apple at this point and reaches out to him and says, “Come on over and help us to develop this.” Now, Jobs had a bit of a windfall. The iMac comes out and the Apple is back because iMac had some pretty good success, but the iMac was still only 3% of the marketplace. So Jobs hires Tony to come and lead up this idea of music, right? So in 2001, iTunes is launched. So iTunes predates the iPod, but here’s the thing, it was not for purchasing. It was just for ripping and organizing music. That’s what you could do with it. And then in October, the iPod is launched. So in October of 2001, the iPod is launched. Dave Young: So they have this solution that lets you rip all your CDs and organize them on your computer, but you can’t carry them around with you yet. Stephen Semple: Right. Not yet. So in January, they launched that. October, not that many months later, they launched the iPod. And people can also go over to sticky sales stories where Matthew Burns and I did the whole thing on the advertisements around the iPod because it was brilliant. Every other MP3 player out there was advertising, “Oh, this many megabytes or whatever.” Dave, you and I can remember, “A thousand songs in your pocket.” Dave Young: “A thousand songs in your pocket.” Silhouettes of people dancing, colorful silhouettes, it put you in the ad. Stephen Semple: Yes. Dave Young: And they didn’t talk about technical specs, didn’t talk about any of that stuff. It was just, “A thousand songs in your pocket.” Stephen Semple: They ran three ads, three different types of ads, “A thousand songs in your pocket.” And then when they came up with the version that would work for both Windows and Mac, Windows and Mac. But not a thousand, it would be one or the other, and then the last one would be the price. But that was it. But a thousand songs in your pocket were all like, “Oh my God, that’s incredible. A thousand songs in your pocket.” Dave Young: Mind blowing. Stephen Semple: Yeah. So April of 2003, a couple years later, the store comes out that allows people to buy music. But I remember my first iPod. Yeah, I couldn’t buy music. I just downloaded all my CDs, loaded them on my computer and put them on the iPod and that was amazing. Then you could start buying music and that was really, really cool. And very, very quickly, this whole space grew to $4 billion in sales and five years later, $20 billion in sales. And Apple ends up becoming three quarters of the entire MP3 market. Just dominated it. Now, at this point, mobile phones are starting to get smarter. The interface is still not great, but a lot of people inside the walls at Apple start feeling the writings on the wall. The writing is on the wall here because they’re going to get better and they believe that the smartphone will kill the iPod, but Jobs still hates the idea and sees phones as a niche. And he basically is famous to saying, “Apple is not a phone company.” But the internal people keep working away on him. And by 2005, Jobs green lights making a phone because others convince him of the trend. Now, when Jobs does something, he’s all in and he reaches out to the best people inside of Apple and basically asks them to join this super secret project. And here’s the crazy thing. Could you imagine this? You’re working at Apple and you get this email basically saying, “Do you want to join this super secret project? It’s going to be X number of years long. You are going to dedicate your life to it. You’re going to probably burn out. It’s going to cost you relationships.” They literally said this to people, “And we can’t tell you what it is until you sign this non-disclosure agreement.” Then when you signed the non-disclosure agreement, they told you what it was and you had to sign another non-disclosure agreement, but they got people to join the project. So they approached this as being, their first thought process on the iPhone was, this is an iPod that we’re going to attach a phone to. So what did the first iteration have? Clickwheel. Dave Young: Okay. Stephen Semple: Because the clickwheel was beautifully elegant on the iPod, but that they really quickly learned, not good on a phone. Dave Young: Not good on a phone. Yeah. Stephen Semple: It was a nightmare to text. It was a nightmare to do all these other things. You couldn’t put a keyboard. Then they looked at the Blackberry and they went, “Well, this keyboard on a phone’s not great because you lose half your real estate is lost to keyboard.” Dave Young: Just these little buttons. Yeah. Stephen Semple: Yeah. So enter Johnny Ives who had designed the iMac. And he loves buttons and he loves function, he loves design, he loves sleek tech, but he was like, “How do we get rid of all these things?” And he’s playing around with this idea on a new device. Now this device doesn’t go anywhere, but it’s where he first develops the whole idea of the pinch. Dave Young: Okay. Stephen Semple: But he starts looking and going, “I think this would work for the iPhone.” He creates this massive interface, this giant multi-touch pad that he’s working on for this other department. But he all of a sudden realizes, “Wait a minute, if we shrink this idea down and make it work on a screen, we could get rid of the keypad.” Dave Young: Altogether, yeah. Stephen Semple: Altogether. But here’s the problem, current touchscreen technology at that time couldn’t do it because it was pressure sensitive. Then they came across this new screen called compassitive, which detects electronic signals, which means that it could detect where your fingers were- Dave Young: Actually were. Yeah. Stephen Semple: And whether it’s two fingers and all of that. They also realized they had to create a new OS and all these other things. So in January of 2007, they get it pretty much good enough that Jobs can do a demo, but it’s glitchy. The demo he does in 2007, people should go to YouTube and watch this because it’s a beautiful demo. It’s a beautiful, beautiful demo. And in fact, right now we’re going to insert the little thing about how he introduces the launch of the iPhone. Steve Jobs: So three things, a wide screen iPod with touch controls, a revolutionary mobile phone, and a breakthrough internet communications device. An iPod, a phone, and an internet communicator. An iPod, a phone. Are you getting it? Stephen Semple: Okay. But you still want to go to the YouTube thing and watch this because his demo, it looks so slick. But here’s the interesting thing… Dave Young: Stay tuned. We’re going to wrap up this story and tell you how to apply this lesson to your business right after this. [Using Stories To Sell] Dave Young: Let’s pick up our story where we left off and trust me, you haven’t missed a thing. Stephen Semple: The technology was so glitchy that they literally were like, “This is the only map you can do. This is the only phone call you can make.” They literally found this one single path where they could show everything that they knew it wouldn’t glitch. Dave Young: Yeah. Stephen Semple: But Jobs being the way Jobs was, he made it seem like, “Oh, I’m just going to do this and I’m just going to do this.” It was like they had spent weeks like, “Oh no, this is the only way we can make this work.” Dave Young: We’ll work the rest out before it goes to market. Stephen Semple: Yeah. So basically they announced it in 2007 and basically what Jobs does, he goes to Maps and he calls up Starbucks and he orders 4,000 cups of coffee. But the point is, they also say, “Hey, this is going to be launched in six months.” So the team’s now got six months to actually get this sucker working, and they get it finished. But the interesting thing is, there were still a lot of people on Wall Street and things like that who didn’t think it was going to be that great because it was two times the price of everything else. It was twice as expensive as any [inaudible 00:15:03]- Dave Young: I mean, it still kind of is. Stephen Semple: Yes. Dave Young: Yeah. Stephen Semple: And AT&T, because AT&T did a development deal with them, AT&T was the only carrier it was available on for the first bunch of years. It was first four years that it was only available on AT&T, which was a brilliant move for AT&T, because AT&T- Dave Young: It really was. Stephen Semple: Yeah. Dave Young: I can tell you how I got my first iPhone. Stephen Semple: Okay, let’s hear it. Dave Young: I didn’t get iPhone 1. Well, I did. I got an iPhone one, but I got it secondhand. When the iPhone 2 came out, our partner, Michelle Miller, said, “Hey, anybody want to buy my iPhone 1 because I’m going to get a 2.” And I’m like, “Well, dang it. It doesn’t work in…” I was living in Western Nebraska. We didn’t have AT&T. And so, “Shoot, what do I do?” But then I read AT&T, you can sign up for AT&T and get a contract with them on the website. So you just sign up and I’m like, “Okay. But I’m in Nebraska.” And I found out that the weird local cell phone company that I had actually had a, I don’t know what you call it, a roaming agreement with AT&T. So there were no extra charges to be on the AT&T network on the local thing that I had. But I needed a Colorado address. I couldn’t just change my existing cell phone number to AT&T because I wasn’t in their coverage area. So I got a 303 area code and signed up for an AT&T contract and then activated this used phone on that account. And the address I gave them was Denver International Airport. Stephen Semple: Oh, fantastic. Dave Young: So I have a 303 phone number and my address is Denver International Airport. In the back of my mind, I think somewhere tucked away in a back corner of an office at AT&T is a pile of mail waiting for me. And if I ever walked in there, they’d say, “Oh yeah, we’ve been waiting for you to come get your mail.” Stephen Semple: As you know, I’m Canadian. We had to wait a couple of years because AT&T actually had the international rights and it took a little while for one of the Canadian cell phone companies did a deal with AT&T. So I think the iPhone was out a couple of years before we were able to get them here in Canada. But even with all of those hurdles, in the first week, they sold 250,000 of these phones in the first week. Dave Young: Yeah. Just creating this scarcity at first by limiting it to one carrier and a slow rollout across borders. When you saw someone with one, you went, “Oh, I want that. I want that.” Stephen Semple: Yeah. Now here’s the other part- Dave Young: I still have it somewhere. I was just looking for it in a drawer behind me. If I’d known- Stephen Semple: Yeah, but I don’t ever tell you [inaudible 00:17:50]- Dave Young: … sooner than five seconds before we start, I’d have had my iPhone out. Stephen Semple: All right. Well, you have to send a picture. Send me a picture of yourself with it. Dave Young: You know what’s amazing about it holding it? The first ones were so small. Stephen Semple: Yeah, they were actually. Dave Young: They’re so big now, but they were tiny. Stephen Semple: Remember, the whole thing was phones went from big… I find the phone evolution funny because phones went from big to teeny, tiny, to now getting back to being- Dave Young: Now bigger and bigger. Stephen Semple: … bigger and bigger. Dave Young: Screens that fold out. Stephen Semple: But here’s the other thing that changed at Apple. So when the iPhone came out, because all of a sudden now there was this people started developing apps for it. And in fact, Jobs was against initially apps being developed outside of the Apple infrastructure, but then people were just breaking the infrastructure, even though it validated the warranty. He then relented and said, “Okay, well then we do need to create the App Store,” and the App Store now is one of their most consistent products. So the thing I find that’s remarkable about all of this, one of the most consistent revenue streams for Apple is the App Store. Their most successful product is the iPhone, both of which initially Jobs was very against. And yet we think about jobs as being this amazing visionary. He was very against both these products. But here’s why I’ll give him credit as a CEO. He clearly, even though he said no to stuff, people could still bring the idea back to him because they did. And unlike a lot of other CEOs, he was open to change in his mind. Because he did on both of these things. Dave Young: And I think the standard that he said was, “Hey, okay, we’ll do it, but we’re not going to half-ass it.” Stephen Semple: Right. Because once he decided to do it… Oh no, once he decided to do it was like all the chips into the middle of the table, we’re going to do this and this is going to be fricking awesome. Like, yes. Dave Young: The ironic thing is, it ain’t going out with that wheel from the iPod. Stephen Semple: Right. Well, and that’s the other interesting thing, is when you think about the design approach, they first thought of it as adding a phone to the iPod and that locked them into the click wheel. And then they went, “Well, maybe it’s a phone with an iPod,” but then that locked them into the keyboard. Then all of a sudden realized it’s neither it’s something new. Dave Young: It’s a new thing altogether. Stephen Semple: It’s a new thing altogether. And that’s what made it magical. It was a new thing altogether. Dave Young: Ironically, you could say that it killed- Stephen Semple: And its inspiration came from the computer trackpad. That’s where the inspiration was. Sorry. Dave Young: Yeah. And you could make the case that it killed the iPod. Stephen Semple: It did. Dave Young: But I think it became the iPod. iPod just got absorbed into it. You don’t need an iPod anymore. Stephen Semple: And I’m glad you pointed that out because I meant to mention this. Because here’s the other part where I will give Steve Jobs a lot of credit, because how many businesses have we seen have failed because they were unwilling to destroy their own products? Their most successful, most profitable product was the iPod. And what was going to get killed in this? Was the iPod and they were willing to do it. Dave Young: It wouldn’t have caught on to the level that it did if it was like, “Oh, wait. Now we have to buy two devices from Apple. I have to carry two of these things around. That doesn’t make any sense.” Stephen Semple: And when you listen to Steve Jobs’ presentation of the iPhone, he lays it right out, that you don’t need the iPod anymore, that this was a killer. Now look, think about- Dave Young: And you don’t need a GPS in your pocket and you don’t need all the things. Stephen Semple: Right, right. But this willingness to destroy your own most successful product. Look, Xerox was unable to do that. Dave Young: Who? Stephen Semple: Xerox died because it was unwilling to kill its own products. How many other companies have we seen that happen, where it’s like, “Well, no, we can’t do that because that’s how we make money.” And Jobs was like… So when you say fully on board, once he was fully on board, it was like, “Yeah, yeah. Oh yeah. No, the iPods days are numbered. We know that.” Dave Young: Yeah. You want to hear my pet peeve about it? Stephen Semple: Sure. Dave Young: Being a broadcaster at the time, I guess it was after I left the radio business, but one thing that they could have easily done, and I’ve heard that the circuitry is already built into it, but they opted not to do it, was put an AM/FM radio in it so that you could actually listen to the radio on the same device. And I think they opted for selling you songs instead of letting you listen to your local radio station. Because they could have easily done that, right? Stephen Semple: Interesting. Dave Young: There were walkmans that had AM/FM built into them. Stephen Semple: It’s interesting because there’s- Dave Young: But they opted not to do that. Stephen Semple: And it’s interesting that no… From the best of my knowledge, none of the cell phone companies have opted to do that. It seems like if you’re going to listen to somebody’s radio station now, it’s through their app. Dave Young: Yeah, you have to stream it. Stephen Semple: Yeah. Dave Young: But not over the air. We could go into a whole list of things, but I think one of the biggest issues with that is safety, right? If you have a device that can pick up over the air transmissions and you don’t need an internet connection to do it, you can listen to a tornado warning without- Stephen Semple: Yeah, it’s true. Dave Young: … those kinds of things, you can tune into things that are going on. Not that radio stations anymore are doing much of that. But anyway, I always thought they could easily do this. They just didn’t. Stephen Semple: Yeah. I don’t know much about that, but the part- Dave Young: But I still have one. Stephen Semple: Yeah. But the part, again, that I found interesting about this was, he was against it. He came for it. Once he was for it, he was fully in and they were willing to destroy their most profitable product to replace it with another product. Because once he saw the writing was on the wall, it was like, “No, we’re going to do this and we’re going to do it awesome.” Dave Young: Yep. Well, it’s a great story and it’s a great product. I still have one and they keep adding things that I don’t even know how to use. Stephen Semple: That’s very true. Dave Young: Isn’t that the truth? But I can still listen to my music and answer my phone calls. Stephen Semple: And take pictures. Dave Young: Yeah, the cameras, to me, one of the best parts of it. Stephen Semple: It really is. Dave Young: I have some old grainy photos that I took with the little pocket. What did you call them? Just the little PDAs that were out just before- Stephen Semple: Oh, I never had any of those, so I don’t know. Palm pilots and things like that? Dave Young: Yeah, the Palm Pilots. Stephen Semple: Oh, did they have a camera in them? I never had one with a camera in it. Dave Young: Yeah. I have a bunch of grainy photos that I took with a Sony version of a Palm Pilot that had a grainy little camera in it. So it was about the same kind of camera you’d get in a flip phone. Stephen Semple: Okay. All right. Dave Young: I have cool pictures of… From 2004, Roy Williams took me onto the land that they had just bought that was going to become Wizard Academy. Those were taken on my little Palm Pilot phone. Stephen Semple: There you go. Dave Young: Wish I’d have had an iPhone back then. Stephen Semple: Right. Well, and that’s the thing. We have it with us all the time. All right, cool. Dave Young: Thank you, Steven. Stephen Semple: And I know it’s not our typical thing to talk about, but look, the iPhone changed the world. Dave Young: That’s true. Stephen Semple: Let’s just face it. It changed the world. Dave Young: In many ways still doing it. Stephen Semple: It sure is. Yeah. Dave Young: Thanks for bringing us the iPhone. It looks like I’ve got some notifications I got to go check, Steven, so let’s put a pin in this one. Stephen Semple: All right. Thanks, Dave. Dave Young:Thanks for listening to the podcast. Please share us. Subscribe on your favorite podcast app and leave us a big, fat, juicy five star rating and review at Apple Podcasts. And if you’d like to schedule your own 90-minute empire building session, you can do it at empirebuildingprogram.com
2001年よりインターネットラジオとしてスタートし、2021年にポッドキャスト化。AM・FMレギュラー番組は『本物ラジオ』。こちらは『うそラジオ』とユーミン自らが定義。緩さと鋭さが混在し『うそラジオ』だからこそのディープな話題も多い。インスタとともに毎週金曜日に更新されます。ユーミンへのメールはこちらまでuso@yuming.co.jp See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2001年よりインターネットラジオとしてスタートし、2021年にポッドキャスト化。AM・FMレギュラー番組は『本物ラジオ』。こちらは『うそラジオ』とユーミン自らが定義。緩さと鋭さが混在し『うそラジオ』だからこそのディープな話題も多い。インスタとともに毎週金曜日に更新されます。ユーミンへのメールはこちらまでuso@yuming.co.jpSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2001年よりインターネットラジオとしてスタートし、2021年にポッドキャスト化。AM・FMレギュラー番組は『本物ラジオ』。こちらは『うそラジオ』とユーミン自らが定義。緩さと鋭さが混在し『うそラジオ』だからこそのディープな話題も多い。インスタとともに毎週金曜日に更新されます。ユーミンへのメールはこちらまでuso@yuming.co.jpSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Today in the business of podcasting:Podcast Movement Evolutions at SXSW adds Penn Badgley and SAG-AFTRA President Sean Astin to its lineup, with Oxford Road and founding sponsor Libsyn hosting the inaugural Indie PaC Awards on Sunday, and Spotify marking its 20th birthday with keynotes and a star-studded concert hosted at Stubb's BBQ.Tom Webster argues that coverage of a new Edison Research Share of Ear data point - in which spoke-word daily consumption percentage for podcasting passes AM/FM radio for the first time since Share of Ear started - misses the caveat that Share of Ear isn't taking spoken word video podcasts primarily watched by audiences into account. Audible launches a new $8.99 Standard membership tier with a streaming-focused model, folding former Wondery+ subscriber perks into Audible Originals (such as ad-free listening, early access, and exclusive podcasts).SAG-AFTRA is expanding its podcast contract coverage to include more interview and narrative formats as video podcasting grows. Sue-Anne Morrow also addresses the notion SAG-AFTRA actors are taking a pay cut if they choose video podcasting over daytime TV. To find links to these, and every article covered in today's episode, click here. You can also subscribe to The Download's newsletter to receive the full issue straight to your email inbox every day.
Today in the business of podcasting:Podcast Movement Evolutions at SXSW adds Penn Badgley and SAG-AFTRA President Sean Astin to its lineup, with Oxford Road and founding sponsor Libsyn hosting the inaugural Indie PaC Awards on Sunday, and Spotify marking its 20th birthday with keynotes and a star-studded concert hosted at Stubb's BBQ.Tom Webster argues that coverage of a new Edison Research Share of Ear data point - in which spoke-word daily consumption percentage for podcasting passes AM/FM radio for the first time since Share of Ear started - misses the caveat that Share of Ear isn't taking spoken word video podcasts primarily watched by audiences into account. Audible launches a new $8.99 Standard membership tier with a streaming-focused model, folding former Wondery+ subscriber perks into Audible Originals (such as ad-free listening, early access, and exclusive podcasts).SAG-AFTRA is expanding its podcast contract coverage to include more interview and narrative formats as video podcasting grows. Sue-Anne Morrow also addresses the notion SAG-AFTRA actors are taking a pay cut if they choose video podcasting over daytime TV. To find links to these, and every article covered in today's episode, click here. You can also subscribe to The Download's newsletter to receive the full issue straight to your email inbox every day.
2001年よりインターネットラジオとしてスタートし、2021年にポッドキャスト化。AM・FMレギュラー番組は『本物ラジオ』。こちらは『うそラジオ』とユーミン自らが定義。緩さと鋭さが混在し『うそラジオ』だからこそのディープな話題も多い。インスタとともに毎週金曜日に更新されます。ユーミンへのメールはこちらまでuso@yuming.co.jpSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Today in the business of podcasting:Sounds Profitable's Tom Webster pushes back on the idea podcasting has "finally" caught AM/FM radio in spoken-word listening share, arguing the milestone already passed. Share of Ear's audio-focused methodology leaves out the many hours of spoke-word consumed as podcasts people primarily watch.Frequency and Flightpath announce a partnership integrating Flightpath's predictive inventory planning into Frequency's Premium Publisher Network, aiming to replace reactive ad selling with a scalable, multi-network monetization model.Radiodays North America announces its 2026 speaker lineup ahead of its May 5–6 Toronto event, featuring CRTC Broadcasting VP Scott Shortliffe, Radiolab producer Simon Adler, and Tom Webster.Audible reveals its first major podcast slate since absorbing Wondery, bringing new seasons of Dr. Death and Over My Dead Body, a new investigative series called OnlyFantasy, and the migration of former Wondery titles like Dying for Sex and Hysterical to the platform.To find links to these, and every article covered in today's episode, click here. You can also subscribe to The Download's newsletter to receive the full issue straight to your email inbox every day.
Today in the business of podcasting:Sounds Profitable's Tom Webster pushes back on the idea podcasting has "finally" caught AM/FM radio in spoken-word listening share, arguing the milestone already passed. Share of Ear's audio-focused methodology leaves out the many hours of spoke-word consumed as podcasts people primarily watch.Frequency and Flightpath announce a partnership integrating Flightpath's predictive inventory planning into Frequency's Premium Publisher Network, aiming to replace reactive ad selling with a scalable, multi-network monetization model.Radiodays North America announces its 2026 speaker lineup ahead of its May 5–6 Toronto event, featuring CRTC Broadcasting VP Scott Shortliffe, Radiolab producer Simon Adler, and Tom Webster.Audible reveals its first major podcast slate since absorbing Wondery, bringing new seasons of Dr. Death and Over My Dead Body, a new investigative series called OnlyFantasy, and the migration of former Wondery titles like Dying for Sex and Hysterical to the platform.To find links to these, and every article covered in today's episode, click here. You can also subscribe to The Download's newsletter to receive the full issue straight to your email inbox every day.
One caveat to charting spoken word podcasting against radio: spoken word isn't confined to audio. Edison Research's Share of Ear data shows podcasting tied with AM/FM radio at 40% of spoken-word listening — but Tom Webster argues podcasting already passed radio when you account for the millions watching video podcasts on YouTube that audio-only measurement can't see. The real story isn't podcasting catching radio; it's podcasting expanding the spoken-word market entirely, drawing new audiences through video discovery rather than converting talk radio listeners.Written and narrated by Tom WebsterText and audio edited by Gavin GaddisRegister for Evolutions by Podcast Movement @ SXSWFind the full article here on Sounds Profitable.
One caveat to charting spoken word podcasting against radio: spoken word isn't confined to audio. Edison Research's Share of Ear data shows podcasting tied with AM/FM radio at 40% of spoken-word listening — but Tom Webster argues podcasting already passed radio when you account for the millions watching video podcasts on YouTube that audio-only measurement can't see. The real story isn't podcasting catching radio; it's podcasting expanding the spoken-word market entirely, drawing new audiences through video discovery rather than converting talk radio listeners.Written and narrated by Tom WebsterText and audio edited by Gavin GaddisRegister for Evolutions by Podcast Movement @ SXSWFind the full article here on Sounds Profitable.
Send us feedback/questions via TextHey there, Dave Jackson here! In this episode, Jim Collison and I dove deep into some hot topics in podcasting and audio media. We kicked things off with a look at the latest Edison Research findings showing that, for the first time, more time is spent listening to podcasts than to AM/FM radio for spoken word audio. We reminisced about the evolution of radio, the challenges of finding a working radio today, the shift of talk and sports content to podcasts, and how technology keeps changing the game.We also had fun nostalgia moments: remembering AM static, Headbanger's Ball, MTV catchphrases, and what really happened to music videos.Advertising in podcasting got a thorough critique—how much is too much, what makes ads skip-worthy or valuable, and what lessons we can take from radio and even the Super Bowl.Another lively discussion came up around video podcasting. We debated YouTube versus distributing video everywhere, addressed anti-YouTube sentiments, and reminded listeners that audio is still king for a lot of people.I also shared some behind-the-scenes tech workflows, like how I use Tella, Hindenburg, and Podchapters, how to move sites to Podpage, and why no tool does it all (yet).Big philosophical questions popped up too: What would actually "kill" podcasting? Is it too many bad ads, a decline in content quality, or moving away from RSS? Or, is podcasting simply evolving, and are our definitions (or nostalgia) holding us back?Randy Black called in with a great riff on what "remarkable content" really means—it can be good or bad. We wrapped up by agreeing that, at the end of the day, success in podcasting comes from making meaningful shows for your audience and being authentic.Sponsors:PodcastBranding.co - They see you before they hear youBasedonastruestorypodcast.com - Comparing Hollywood with History?Video Version (unedited)Mentioned In This EpisodeSchool of Podcastinghttps://www.schoolofpodcasting.com/joinPodpagehttp://www.trypodpage.comHome Gadget GeeksFeatured Supporter: Shane from SpybraryWe interview spy authors, espionage historians and fans of spy books, spy movies and spy TV series! Check it out at https://spybrary.com/ Podcast Hot SeatGrow your podcast audience with Podcast Hot Seat. We help you do more of what is working, and fine tune those things that need polished. In addition to the podcast audit, you get a FREE MONTH at the School of Podcasting (including more coaching). Check it out at https://www.podcasthotseat.com/storeYour Audience Will Thank You! Leave Your QuestionGo to askthepodcastcoach.com/voicemail and leave your message to be answered on the next show.PodMatchPodMatch Automatically Matches Ideal Podcast Guests and Hosts For InterviewsSupport the showBE AWESOME!Thanks for listening to the show. Help the show continue to exist and get a shout-out on the show by becoming an awesome supporter by going to askthepodcastcoach.com/awesome
2001年よりインターネットラジオとしてスタートし、2021年にポッドキャスト化。AM・FMレギュラー番組は『本物ラジオ』。こちらは『うそラジオ』とユーミン自らが定義。緩さと鋭さが混在し『うそラジオ』だからこそのディープな話題も多い。インスタとともに毎週金曜日に更新されます。ユーミンへのメールはこちらまでuso@yuming.co.jpSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
AIWA returns to CES with a product line that blends classic design with contemporary functionality. The company's latest audio systems draw heavily from the iconic look and feel of the 1980s and 1990s, an era when AIWA boomboxes and mini systems were staples in bedrooms, dorm rooms, and living spaces. This retro‑inspired lineup reflects a renewed cultural interest in physical media and vintage aesthetics, driven in part by the resurgence of cassette tapes, CDs, and analog radio among younger listeners.The design direction embraces authenticity rather than imitation. The products feature the same tactile controls, analog tuners, and visual cues that defined the original AIWA experience. At the same time, modern conveniences such as Bluetooth streaming ensure that the systems remain compatible with today's listening habits. This combination of nostalgia and practicality positions the lineup as both a tribute to the past and a functional audio solution for the present.Compact Retro Units with Cassette PlaybackThe smaller models in the lineup focus on cassette playback, AM/FM radio, and Bluetooth connectivity. These units recreate the aesthetic of classic portable stereos, complete with physical buttons, traditional antennas, and battery operation using C or D cells. The design supports the growing interest in analog listening while maintaining the flexibility of wireless streaming. The compact size and accessible price point make these models appealing to both nostalgic adults and younger users exploring physical media for the first time.The cassette mechanism is engineered to deliver reliable performance, reflecting AIWA's long history with tape‑based audio. The inclusion of Bluetooth ensures that users can switch seamlessly between analog and digital sources, supporting a wide range of listening preferences.Full‑Size Retro System with CD, Cassette, and VU MetersThe flagship model in the retro lineup expands the feature set with CD playback, cassette functionality, AM/FM radio, and Bluetooth streaming. The system incorporates analog VU meters that respond dynamically to audio levels, reinforcing the vintage aesthetic and providing a visual element reminiscent of classic home stereos. The analog tuner allows precise manual adjustment, supporting listeners who prefer the tactile experience of fine‑tuning radio stations.The system's design emphasizes authenticity, from the physical controls to the overall form factor. It is engineered to deliver a familiar user experience while integrating modern components that enhance reliability and audio performance. The unit is available now, with pricing positioned to make it accessible to a broad audience.Availability and Market PositionThe compact cassette‑focused models are scheduled for release in early Q3, with pricing targeted below fifty dollars. The full‑size retro system is already available at a price point of two hundred seventy‑nine dollars. Additional information and product updates are provided through AIWA's website, with select models also available through major online retailers.AIWA's approach reflects a broader trend toward blending retro design with modern functionality. By reintroducing classic audio formats alongside contemporary features, the company supports both nostalgic consumers and younger listeners discovering physical media for the first time. The lineup demonstrates how legacy brands can evolve while honoring the characteristics that made them memorable.ConclusionAIWA's retro‑inspired audio systems bring the look and feel of classic 80s and 90s devices into the modern era. With cassette and CD playback, analog radio, Bluetooth streaming, and authentic design elements, the lineup offers a compelling mix of nostalgia and practicality. As interest in physical media continues to grow, AIWA's products provide a familiar yet refreshed listening experience that resonates across generations.Interview by Scott Ertz of F5 Live: Refreshing Technology.Sponsored by: Get $5 to protect your credit card information online with Privacy. Amazon Prime gives you more than just free shipping. Get free music, TV shows, movies, videogames and more. Secure your connection and unlock a faster, safer internet by signing up for PureVPN today.
AIWA returns to CES with a product line that blends classic design with contemporary functionality. The company's latest audio systems draw heavily from the iconic look and feel of the 1980s and 1990s, an era when AIWA boomboxes and mini systems were staples in bedrooms, dorm rooms, and living spaces. This retro‑inspired lineup reflects a renewed cultural interest in physical media and vintage aesthetics, driven in part by the resurgence of cassette tapes, CDs, and analog radio among younger listeners.The design direction embraces authenticity rather than imitation. The products feature the same tactile controls, analog tuners, and visual cues that defined the original AIWA experience. At the same time, modern conveniences such as Bluetooth streaming ensure that the systems remain compatible with today's listening habits. This combination of nostalgia and practicality positions the lineup as both a tribute to the past and a functional audio solution for the present.Compact Retro Units with Cassette PlaybackThe smaller models in the lineup focus on cassette playback, AM/FM radio, and Bluetooth connectivity. These units recreate the aesthetic of classic portable stereos, complete with physical buttons, traditional antennas, and battery operation using C or D cells. The design supports the growing interest in analog listening while maintaining the flexibility of wireless streaming. The compact size and accessible price point make these models appealing to both nostalgic adults and younger users exploring physical media for the first time.The cassette mechanism is engineered to deliver reliable performance, reflecting AIWA's long history with tape‑based audio. The inclusion of Bluetooth ensures that users can switch seamlessly between analog and digital sources, supporting a wide range of listening preferences.Full‑Size Retro System with CD, Cassette, and VU MetersThe flagship model in the retro lineup expands the feature set with CD playback, cassette functionality, AM/FM radio, and Bluetooth streaming. The system incorporates analog VU meters that respond dynamically to audio levels, reinforcing the vintage aesthetic and providing a visual element reminiscent of classic home stereos. The analog tuner allows precise manual adjustment, supporting listeners who prefer the tactile experience of fine‑tuning radio stations.The system's design emphasizes authenticity, from the physical controls to the overall form factor. It is engineered to deliver a familiar user experience while integrating modern components that enhance reliability and audio performance. The unit is available now, with pricing positioned to make it accessible to a broad audience.Availability and Market PositionThe compact cassette‑focused models are scheduled for release in early Q3, with pricing targeted below fifty dollars. The full‑size retro system is already available at a price point of two hundred seventy‑nine dollars. Additional information and product updates are provided through AIWA's website, with select models also available through major online retailers.AIWA's approach reflects a broader trend toward blending retro design with modern functionality. By reintroducing classic audio formats alongside contemporary features, the company supports both nostalgic consumers and younger listeners discovering physical media for the first time. The lineup demonstrates how legacy brands can evolve while honoring the characteristics that made them memorable.ConclusionAIWA's retro‑inspired audio systems bring the look and feel of classic 80s and 90s devices into the modern era. With cassette and CD playback, analog radio, Bluetooth streaming, and authentic design elements, the lineup offers a compelling mix of nostalgia and practicality. As interest in physical media continues to grow, AIWA's products provide a familiar yet refreshed listening experience that resonates across generations.Interview by Scott Ertz of F5 Live: Refreshing Technology.Sponsored by: Get $5 to protect your credit card information online with Privacy. Amazon Prime gives you more than just free shipping. Get free music, TV shows, movies, videogames and more. Secure your connection and unlock a faster, safer internet by signing up for PureVPN today.
Today in the business of podcasting: Digiday looks at how much of podcasting's audience exclusively consumes video, Ambies 2026 winners, podcasts finally overtake AM/FM radio in daily spoken word share of ear from Edison Research, and CMOs share their stressors when it comes to spend. Click here for the website version of today's newsletter with every link mentioned in the podcast.
Today in the business of podcasting: Digiday looks at how much of podcasting's audience exclusively consumes video, Ambies 2026 winners, podcasts finally overtake AM/FM radio in daily spoken word share of ear from Edison Research, and CMOs share their stressors when it comes to spend. Click here for the website version of today's newsletter with every link mentioned in the podcast.
2001年よりインターネットラジオとしてスタートし、2021年にポッドキャスト化。AM・FMレギュラー番組は『本物ラジオ』。こちらは『うそラジオ』とユーミン自らが定義。緩さと鋭さが混在し『うそラジオ』だからこそのディープな話題も多い。インスタとともに毎週金曜日に更新されます。ユーミンへのメールはこちらまでuso@yuming.co.jpSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Ochelli Effect 2 13 2026 SNAFU NEWS THIS WEEKThe trick for Morons is being a victim and a perp at the same time.Pre-Malone and all the pre-recorded Not Live From Atlanta, IT WAS SUNDAY NIGHT! Weird But TrueHospital evacuated after 8-inch WWI artillery shell discovered in patient's buttBy Ben Cost https://nypost.com/2026/02/02/lifestyle/hospital-evacuated-after-8-inch-wwi-artillery-shell-discovered-in-patients-butt/Ever get the feeling an unseen hand in the universe decided that since you won't volunteer to walk into walls they'll just beat you with them anyway?Owns the Libs and Runs The Cons. and RFK says you got the numbers wrong but the SHOTS are right according to the newest Brain Worm math.Did you know they are REAL HOUSEWIVES Shows still being made? Peacock also has BRAVE NEW WORLD into A SERIES! Alongside a stupid PC poisoned series with DEI cast for the movie the Burbs, Believe it or Not. Here I was thinking ONLY absurd modern media corporation STREAMERS GUILD mutilation of entertainment finally completely ruined Star Trek with the latest Movie then shit bag series was contained and restricted to PARAMOUNT / CBS / Whatever other platforms combined in Crypto Con Job conglomerate Friends of Trump group that created his newly minted fake Money Crypto Billions for his special needs offspring and some new Goverment Department funding, but I was wrong...Streaming piss on a toilet bowl that was art in MAGASTAN. Somebody go get PISS-CHRIST out of shame storage, Ahead of it's time damnit!This week An Elected official declared that Lindsey Graham is more gay than a closet full of Liberals and among millions of viewers no one made any noise about it?What Trump Aides Whisper About Crazed Racist Post | Inside Trump's Headhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gFUCi_mmRCYFormer inmate in Epstein cell says there's 'no way' he committed suicideA man who was once held in the same jail cell as Jeffrey Epstein once said he did not believe that the sex offender had died by suicide in 2019https://www.the-express.com/news/us-news/198384/former-inmate-epstein-cell-suicideFriday The Thirteenth! FBI concluded Jeffrey Epstein wasn't running a sex trafficking ring for powerful men, files showInternal Justice Department records indicate investigators found proof of the financier's sexual abuse of girls, but not enough evidence to charge others.https://www.inquirer.com/news/nation-world/epstein-fbi-files-investigation-giuffre-maxwell-andrew-client-list-20260208.htmlEpstein files: Ghislaine Maxwell refuses to testify, pleads fifthhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=anKJVDwmHLUFCC launching probe into ABC's 'The View' amid crackdown on equal time for candidates'Fake News is not getting a free pass anymore,' an FCC source told Fox News Digitalhttps://www.foxnews.com/media/fcc-launching-probe-abcs-the-view-amid-crackdown-equal-time-candidates1984 is only half the playbook = What That Idiot Ochelli has said for decadesBrave New World: Summary & Analysishttps://youtu.be/_4VlHP997uc?si=PHe5jMB_MsLBRzstAKA Superbowl 60NEVERMIND (Sorry Nirvana) Because FOOTBALL (and not foreign Shit-hole soccer unless white people play it)Super Bowl 2026 highlights: Seahawks capture second Lombardi with 29-13 win over Patriotsplay SANTA CLARA -- For the second time in franchise history, the Seattle Seahawks are Super Bowl champions.https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/47822193/2026-super-bowl-lx-patriots-seahawks-live-highlights-resultsTrump Defends Racist Obama Meme & MAGA Rages Over Bad Bunny's Spanish Halftime Show | The Daily Showhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vfpQbv7CmeE---An example of many signals sent to me that my work and contributions are absolutely unwanted in JFK Assassination research CliquesJefferson Morley has always looked down his nose at me even when appearing on my podcast 4 or 5 times and pulling a no-show over his Deep State battling Trump posts some years ago.He has his credits, A Clique of supporters, and a personally dedicated Psuedo-Cult of Yes Men and Women Buffs and gets accommodated for at least some events I am aware of (Not All) and fails to keep verbal agreements with people on numerous occasions appearing in my opinion to behave as though he is entitled to special status among others who have not held corporate media employment and dare to write or speak on the limited segment of American Political History WW2 to Current Events. Please Note that somewhere in my releases many years ago a 4 hour piece of audio was generated by Carmine Savastano & The Ochelli Effect show distributed through a variety of networks and released on 22 AM/FM broadcasts Independently along with actual NEWS and INFORMATION Networks (I think 3 aside from my mini-network. Titled The Assassination Guide for Dummies. It was titled as a parody of the book series labeled Something (Insert Topic or point of Interest Here), For Dummies but was designed to make some very complex documents that functionally were a real version of the ironic parody built into the title at least a handful of years before this substack post. ASSASSINATION GUIDE LINKhttps://archive.org/details/CIAAStudyOfAssassination1953Ochelli References and Corbet Displays Assassination Guide 2017 Link to Videohttps://corbettreport.com/interview-1323-chuck-ochelli-sorts-through-the-jfk-dump/State of the JFK Case in 2026To understand what we have learned from the new JFK files in the past year, start with the CIA's bible for fooling the American peoplehttps://jfkfacts.substack.com/p/inside-the-cias-manual-of-trickery?utm_source=post-email-title&publication_id=315632&post_id=181072218&utm_campaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=true&r=68fjc&triedRedirect=true&utm_medium=emailI am still willing to send the JFK MP3 Folder of over 100 shows on The JFK Case From the Ochelli Archives for new donations now as there was little interest in trading the 100_+ shows and more than 250+ Hours of JFK material for 50 bucks, or less than a rate of 2 episodes for a dollarto help me along the disaster that was LANCER 2025. Also willing to Create new topic archive Zip Folders on Topics I have covered over the years with minimum 100 MP3s per donation. In April 2026 we may finally package complete Archive packages in Bunches for the over 4,000 podcasts originating with The Ochelli Network where only 2,500 are The Ochelli Effect and 1,500 are from the many other projects we produced. Menu coming SOON.I am finding out who my friends are, and If you feel you are owed the special JFK ZIP FOLDER, or should get the first SET of what will be the final archive release for Ochelli.COM with every RELEASE of the FINAL ARCHIVE will contain secret Bonus audio in a digital Google Drive Download LINK that will give the recipient over 2 GB for each realease and if we make it to Chuck's Birthday in 2027 that will end the offer and access to a complete Unique archive of thousands of Pods, music, Raw Recordings, special Shows, and never released , and never broadcast interviews, original audio and text files, Photos and screen shots of elements previously unleased evidence etc.---BE THE EFFECThelp for Ochelli and The NetworkMrs.OLUNA ROSA CANDLEShttp://www.paypal.me/Kimberlysonn1https://www.youtube.com/user/UCYTV/search?query=OchelliBE THE EFFECTListen/Chat on the Sitehttps://ochelli.com/listen-live/TuneInhttp://tun.in/sfxkxAPPLEhttps://music.apple.com/us/station/ochelli-com/ra.1461174708Ochelli Link Treehttps://linktr.ee/chuckochelliAnything is a blessing if you have the meansWithout YOUR support we go silent
2001年よりインターネットラジオとしてスタートし、2021年にポッドキャスト化。AM・FMレギュラー番組は『本物ラジオ』。こちらは『うそラジオ』とユーミン自らが定義。緩さと鋭さが混在し『うそラジオ』だからこそのディープな話題も多い。インスタとともに毎週金曜日に更新されます。ユーミンへのメールはこちらまでuso@yuming.co.jpSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
2001年よりインターネットラジオとしてスタートし、2021年にポッドキャスト化。AM・FMレギュラー番組は『本物ラジオ』。こちらは『うそラジオ』とユーミン自らが定義。緩さと鋭さが混在し『うそラジオ』だからこそのディープな話題も多い。インスタとともに毎週金曜日に更新されます。ユーミンへのメールはこちらまでuso@yuming.co.jpSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Entérate de lo que está cambiando el podcasting y el marketing digital:-La radio AM/FM sigue dominando entre los hispanos en EE. UU.-Apple Podcasts cierra 2025 con cifras históricas pese a la presión del video.-Madrid acogerá en febrero una cumbre internacional sobre el futuro del audio.-El Reino Unido lanzará sus primeros premios de periodismo para pódcast de noticias.Inteligencia artificial-Google potencia la creación de videos con IA.Tips y herramientas para creadores-Cuando el sonido define el mensaje.PatrociniosSuscríbete a la newsletter de Vía Podcast y recibe a diario en tu bandeja de entrada las últimas noticias de inteligencia artificial, marketing digital y podcasting.Este episodio es presentado por RSS.com, la plataforma de hosting de pódcast que te permite publicar, distribuir y monetizar tu pódcast de forma sencilla. Lanza tu pódcast hoy mismo y haz crecer tu audiencia con herramientas profesionales y analíticas avanzadas.
Podcasts That Are Different: How The Law Enforcement Talk Podcast Reaches Millions for Free. Podcasting has officially entered the mainstream. What was once a niche medium for early adopters is now a dominant force across news, entertainment, and social media, reaching audiences on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, and beyond. Look for The Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast on social media like their Facebook , Instagram , LinkedIn , Medium and other social media platforms. Today, 85% of people in the United States are familiar with the term “podcast,” a figure that represents a 10% increase since 2020. Familiarity does not necessarily mean regular listening, but it does signal cultural awareness. As podcasts are referenced more frequently on radio, television, and online platforms, they continue to move out of the “podcaster bubble” and into everyday conversation. This special episode is streaming for free on the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast website, on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, and most every major Podcast platform. By 2025, well over four in five Americans recognize the term podcast, a clear indicator that the medium has become part of the national media landscape. Supporting articles about this and much more from Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast in platforms like Medium , Blogspot and Linkedin . Awareness Is One Thing, Listening Is Another Listening habits reveal just how powerful podcasting has become. In mid-2023, Edison Research reported a major shift in media consumption: on-demand audio, including podcasts and streaming music, surpassed traditional AM/FM radio in total listening time across the United States. Podcasts That Are Different: How The Law Enforcement Talk Podcast Reaches Millions for Free. Available for free on their website and streaming on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Youtube and other podcast platforms. That trend has only accelerated. According to Infinite Dial data released in early 2025, 70% of Americans have listened to a podcast at least once, up from 55% in 2020. While listening dipped briefly in 2022 as pandemic routines normalized, both monthly and weekly consumption rebounded strongly in 2023 and has continued to grow. Podcasting, it is now clear, is no longer an experiment. It is a mainstream medium. A Podcast That Breaks the Mold Among the thousands of shows competing for attention, some podcasts stand out by doing things differently. One of those is the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast, a program built around police, crime, trauma, and real-life stories, delivered without cost and without filters. The Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast episode is available for free on their website , Apple Podcasts , Spotify and most major podcast platforms. “It's 100 percent free,” the show's creator often emphasizes. “No subscriptions, no credit cards, and no paywalls. It never has been paid content, and it never will be.” That commitment to free access has helped the show grow into a nationally syndicated weekly talk radio program, now airing on 148 AM and FM commercial radio stations. Each week, the show is broadcast to an estimated 48 million people across the United States, in addition to its global podcast audience. Podcasts That Are Different: How The Law Enforcement Talk Podcast Reaches Millions for Free. Equally important is the show's tone. “This isn't a lecture, and it's never a sales pitch,” the host explains. “It's about personal experience. People telling their own stories, in their own words.” There are no scripted questions, no product promotions, and no partisan politics... ever, by design. The special episode can be found on The Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast website, on Apple podcasts, Spotify, Youtube and on LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, and across most podcast platforms where listeners will find authentic law enforcement stories. More Than a Police Podcast Despite its title, the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast is not created solely for police officers. In fact, the audience is far broader. With more than 780 free episodes available, and new episodes released every Wednesday and Sunday, the show offers an expansive library of stories that resonate well beyond one profession. Each episode is a conversation, not an interview. Guests are encouraged to speak openly, allowing their experiences to unfold naturally. Podcasts That Are Different: How The Law Enforcement Talk Podcast Reaches Millions for Free. Approximately 75% of the episodes focus on trauma-related stories, often connected to crime. Guests include law enforcement officers, firefighters, paramedics, military members, victims of violent crime, survivors, and family members. These conversations explore the impact of trauma, not only on the individual, but on families, relationships, and long-term purpose. The full podcast episode is streaming now on their website, on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Youtube and across Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn. “The trauma doesn't end when the incident does,” one guest explains during an episode. “It follows you home, into your family, into your future.” The remaining 25% of episodes focus on crime investigations, presenting the realities of police work as they truly are, far removed from Hollywood dramatizations. A Familiar Format With a Broad Audience The show's structure mirrors popular television programs, in an audio format, such as The Homicide Hunter and Murder Chose Me. Those shows are not designed exclusively for detectives; they are meant for the general public, offering real stories told by those who lived them. You can find the show on Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, X (formerly Twitter), and LinkedIn, as well as read companion articles and updates on Medium, Blogspot, YouTube, and even IMDB. The same philosophy applies here. “Many of the guests are current or former police officers,” the host notes, “but the stories aren't just for police. They're for everyone.” Proven Reach and Industry Recognition The show's impact is supported by industry rankings and listener feedback. Podcasts That Are Different: How The Law Enforcement Talk Podcast Reaches Millions for Free. The Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast is: Ranked #1 Law Enforcement Podcast in the United States by Million Podcasts Ranked Top 45 Law Enforcement Podcasts by Feedspot, currently at #3 Ranked #19 on the Top 100 Indie News Commentary (All-Time) chart by Goodpods Ranked #2 Top Law Enforcement Podcast by Goodpods Ranked #2 Indie Law Enforcement Podcast by Goodpods. What began as a podcast-only project eventually attracted the attention of traditional radio, leading to full national syndication. Today, the show is available via radio, radio satellite, radio internet feeds, and most all major podcast platforms. This Special Episode of the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast available for free on their website, also on Platforms like Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube and most major podcast platforms. His story is also being shared across their Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, and other Social Media and News outlets. Beyond Audio: Social Media and Digital Reach The show's presence extends well beyond audio. Supporting articles and features appear on Medium, Blogspot, LinkedIn, IMDb, and Google Business Profiles, alongside daily engagement across Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and other social media platforms. The official Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show Facebook page alone has more than 139,000 followers, growing by approximately 2,000 new followers each week. Page insights consistently show a social media reach that continues to expand at a remarkable pace. Why It Matters As podcasting continues to grow, listeners are increasingly drawn to content that is authentic, unscripted, and meaningful. The Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show and Podcast fills that space by offering real stories about police, crime, trauma, and resilience, without agendas and without barriers. Podcasts That Are Different: How The Law Enforcement Talk Podcast Reaches Millions for Free. For those looking for podcasts that are different, stories that entertain, inform, educate, challenge, and connect, the show offers one of the largest free libraries of its kind. The full podcast episode is streaming now on their website, on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Youtube and across Facebook, Instagram, and LinkedIn. Listeners can follow and listen for free at LETRadio.com, and connect through the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show on Facebook and other social media platforms. In an increasingly crowded podcast landscape, this show continues to stand out by doing something simple, and rare: telling the truth. Background song Hurricane is used with permission from the band Dark Horse Flyer. You can contact John J. “Jay” Wiley by email at Jay@letradio.com , or learn more about him on their website . Stay connected with updates and future episodes by following the show on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, their website and other Social Media Platforms. Find a wide variety of great podcasts online at The Podcast Zone Facebook Page , look for the one with the bright green logo. Be sure to check out our website . Be sure to follow us on X , Instagram , Facebook, Pinterest, Linkedin and other social media platforms for the latest episodes and news. Listeners can tune in on the Law Enforcement Talk Radio Show website, on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube, and most every major Podcast platform and follow updates on Facebook, Instagram, and other major News outlets. You can find the show on Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, X (formerly Twitter), and LinkedIn, as well as read companion articles and updates on Medium, Blogspot, YouTube, and even IMDB. You can help contribute money to make the Gunrunner Movie . The film that Hollywood won't touch. It is about a now Retired Police Officer that was shot 6 times while investigating Gunrunning. He died 3 times during Medical treatment and was resuscitated. You can join the fight by giving a monetary “gift” to help ensure the making of his film at agunrunnerfilm.com . Podcasts That Are Different: How The Law Enforcement Talk Podcast Reaches Millions for Free. Attributions: Edison Research Edison Research The Infinite Dial Million Podcasts Feedspot Goodpods Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
So what if it's the middle of December, we have some November birthdays to shout about! 4-Track Man is jealous of newcomer/co-announcer Emerson, the hand-held cassette recorder (with AM-FM radio).Barlow Family General Store has expanded to everyday items like Adelle's favorite socks and craft kits! Get the usual handmade crafts and music and stuff!! it's GIFT SEASON!!https://barlowfamilygeneralstore.com/https://barlowfamilygeneral.substack.com/just join it!! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Episode Synopsis:Are the effects of frequency relegated merely to AM/FM adjustments, or does understanding vibrational energy go beyond the electromagnetic spectrum and into the very essence of life itself?We talk about this and much more, including:Why is frequency a much broader topic than most people think?Is there a “right” or “wrong” way to tune music?What are some ways that frequency is weaponized against us?How has the occult influenced the music industry?Why is it important to have a biblical understanding of music and frequency?Original Air DateDecember 10th, 2025Special GuestKenny Seay from The Rock with Kenny SeayShow HostsJason Spears & Christopher DeanOur PatreonConsider joining our Patreon Squad and becoming a Tier Operator to help support the show and get access to exclusive content like:Links and ResourcesStudio NotesA monthly Zoom call with Jason and Christopher And More…ORP ApparelMerch StoreConnect With UsLetsTalk@ORPpodcast.comFacebookInstagram