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4 votes
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The Knowledge Project Ep. #94: Chamath Palihapitiya: Understanding yourself
4 votes -
Interviews → Cinedicate — The Truman Show
1 vote -
Podcast listening is hard to track, but that doesn’t mean advertisers aren’t trying
10 votes -
New podcast name
My friends and I are starting to work on a gaming focused podcast. It will cover news and provide our commentary and stories for anything related to games. It will be primarily about video games,...
My friends and I are starting to work on a gaming focused podcast. It will cover news and provide our commentary and stories for anything related to games. It will be primarily about video games, but we will also cover board games and a little D&D. We've narrowed down the list of names we like and would like to get a little feedback. What do you think of these podcast names? Any feedback is appreciated, thanks!
- DOT - Dialogue Over Time
- Our Alts Have Day Jobs
- Best in Slot
- Theory Crafting
- Data Mined
7 votes -
Thomas Frank on the podcast "Useful Idiots"
3 votes -
Which podcast is your go-to recommendation to others?
I listen to quite a few, from ones related to my industry to ones related to my hobbies, to some just related to history or storytelling. Most of my choices have been at the recommendation of...
I listen to quite a few, from ones related to my industry to ones related to my hobbies, to some just related to history or storytelling. Most of my choices have been at the recommendation of others, so I'm looking to add some to this week's lineup.
Queued up for my upcoming week:
- Citations Needed
- Darknet Diaries
- Reply All
- Rev Left Radio
If you don't know of a good recommendation, what podcasts do you have queued up for this week?
19 votes -
The refined sociopathy of The Economist
25 votes -
Spotify CEO talks Covid-19, artist incomes and podcasting
4 votes -
Discontents: "New collective effort by an amazing group of Substack writers and podcasters"
2 votes -
Best way to subscribe to podcast back-catalogs?
Every now and then I come across a limited-run podcast that wrapped up ages ago and I want to add it to my feed. I don't want to manually click through the old episodes one by one, I want to...
Every now and then I come across a limited-run podcast that wrapped up ages ago and I want to add it to my feed. I don't want to manually click through the old episodes one by one, I want to subscribe to it as if it were being published in realtime. Are there any tools that can help me with this?
I think what I'm looking for is some sort of app that republishes an existing RSS feed with a date offset based on whatever recent date you subscribe to it. Even better would be something that lets me specify my own custom drip rate so I can binge through large catalogs at my own pace.
I've been thinking about coding something like this but I don't want to reinvent the wheel if an existing solution is already out there.
10 votes -
Podcast discussions & recommendations! What are you listening to?
Tildes has had a couple of threads about podcast recommendations in the past, but most of them are over 18 months old now, and podcasts are always evolving, and we have new members who may not...
Tildes has had a couple of threads about podcast recommendations in the past, but most of them are over 18 months old now, and podcasts are always evolving, and we have new members who may not have participated in those threads before—I certainly only picked up podcasts in the last few months.
So. Three questions!
- What podcasts are you listening to?
- What podcasts have you dropped, or picked up, in that time?
- If you had to recommend a couple of podcasts to others, which shows would you pick? Why do you recommend them? Got a favourite episode?
28 votes -
Sam Harris - Can we pull back from the brink?
7 votes -
Waldy and Bendy’s adventures in art
3 votes -
SpaceX COO Gwynne Shotwell on prospects for Starship launcher
11 votes -
The Joe Rogan Experience podcast will be exclusive to Spotify later this year, with a multi-year deal
17 votes -
Is a YouTube video with a static image technically a podcast?
My brother and I have been going at it on if a YouTube channel puts out a video, based around a conversation with either a static image or a simple eye catch behind it, can it be considered a...
My brother and I have been going at it on if a YouTube channel puts out a video, based around a conversation with either a static image or a simple eye catch behind it, can it be considered a podcast? I'm of the opinion that a podcast is a podcast because it's an audio file, in an aggregator, that can be downloaded to a portable device with minimal fuss. He's of the opinion that the content makes a podcast, and if all podcast aggregators suddenly go under, any audio files with album art uploaded to YouTube would be considered indistinguishable from podcasts, so podcasts can live exclusively in the YouTube space and still be considered a podcast.
Does anyone else have a take on this? Can I use Tildes to definitively prove my brother wrong?
12 votes -
S-Town podcast producers settle lawsuit with subject’s estate: suit filed in 2018 alleged the podcast used McLemore’s identity for a commercial purpose, violating Alabama's Right of Publicity law
3 votes -
Rhodes Center Podcast: The First Globalist — Sandy Zipp Talks Wendell Willkie’s World
4 votes -
Google suspended a popular Android podcast app because it catalogs COVID-19 content
11 votes -
I made my first pseudo podcast today, really nervous about the sound of my voice and delivery. Any tips?
15 votes -
Rhodes Center Podcast: State capacity, growth models, and coronavirus in Latin America
3 votes -
Sweden's climate solution is now the Sámi people's problem – winters are becoming warmer and climate change is making conditions for the reindeer unsafe
5 votes -
Every little thing - Essential workers call in
3 votes -
Floodlines - An eight-part narrative podcast thoroughly reassessing Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath, fifteen years later
4 votes -
Joe Rogan Experience #1439 - Michael Osterholm (expert in infectious disease epidemiology)
14 votes -
Reply All #158 - The Case of the Missing Hit
7 votes -
Who killed Swedish prime minister Olof Palme? After a night at the cinema in 1986, Palme was assassinated on Stockholm's busiest street
5 votes -
Spotify is acquiring The Ringer to boost its podcast and sports content
8 votes -
Will Spotify ruin podcasting?
13 votes -
Thoughts on how to become successful and rich by the founder of AngelList
5 votes -
The History of English Podcast
6 votes -
The Big Dig jazz show, episode 7: The Spy Who Funked Me
3 votes -
Looking for a (new) odd news podcast
Some months ago, I found Weekly Weird News, a roundup of strange news from around the internet. I recently depleted their backstock, and find myself wanting. Now, I know there's no shortage of...
Some months ago, I found Weekly Weird News, a roundup of strange news from around the internet. I recently depleted their backstock, and find myself wanting. Now, I know there's no shortage of weird, odd, bizarre, and strange in our world. Just as I know there's no shortage of people willing to talk about it. But, I'm having difficulty finding "current" weirdness. Oh sure, there's podcasts to be found talking about the weirdness surrounding this murder in 1952, or that rural happening in 1991, but so far, I haven't found another that scratches that "that seriously happened recently?" itch.
Does anyone have any suggestions, or am I doomed to dripfeed?
4 votes -
Let's talk about humorous podcasts
Hey there people! Seeing how last post I could find on the topic was posted almost one year ago and how my question is a bit more specific, I thought a new one could be worthwhile. Admittedly, I...
Hey there people!
Seeing how last post I could find on the topic was posted almost one year ago and how my question is a bit more specific, I thought a new one could be worthwhile.
Admittedly, I am not an assiduous podcast listener - what I'm mostly looking for is a show to 'scratch the itch' every once in a while which features good chemistry between its hosts, exploring whatever topic with humorous tones; bonus points if said topic is interesting.
To exemplify, some of the best podcasts I can think of on the spot are How did This Get Made (I can particularly recommend the episode dedicated to Mr. Nanny), or How to Fuck Up an Airport.
The first one is a serie that analyze extremely poor or obscure movies, while the second one unveils the debacle surrounding the 20 year old (and still aging) Berlin Brandenburg Airport project; I know this last one might sounds boring, but it's a baffling and hilarious journey - surely and by far my favorite Podcast.
TL;DR
So yeah, what are your most entertaining, hilarious, and generally fun podcasts?25 votes -
"The Ego of Metrics" - Ben Grosser - Podcast - Twitter Demetricator
3 votes -
Paul Krugman on climate, robots, single-payer
5 votes -
If-Only Podcast #62: Ambien Baby (2019)
2 votes -
Raise the Dead - A six part series on the (US) 1960 election and its stunning parallels to 2016
8 votes -
Radiolab co-host Robert Krulwich announces his retirement from the show
11 votes -
Til Death do us Blart podcast
7 votes -
A bait-and-switch scam ran unchecked on Airbnb. Here’s how it worked.
11 votes -
TrueAnon podcast
2 votes -
Journey into wokeness: A conversation between Sam Harris and Caitlin Flanagan
4 votes -
How podcasts went from unlistenable to unmissable
15 votes -
How do we want to handle Podcasts?
So, when we want to link to a podcast , should we link to the webpage or preferred aggregator, or directly to the MP3? Should we have an embedded object for playing audio built into Tildes, or is...
So, when we want to link to a podcast , should we link to the webpage or preferred aggregator, or directly to the MP3? Should we have an embedded object for playing audio built into Tildes, or is that out of scope?
6 votes -
The unhappy millionaire
6 votes -
Inside the Ethics Committee
Inside the Ethics Committee is a BBC Radio 4 programme. They describe it like this: Joan Bakewell is joined by a panel of experts to wrestle with the ethics arising from a real-life medical case....
Inside the Ethics Committee is a BBC Radio 4 programme. They describe it like this:
Joan Bakewell is joined by a panel of experts to wrestle with the ethics arising from a real-life medical case.
Each episode is chaired by Bakewell, with a range of different experts (who all sit on hospital ethics committees), talking about the ethical difficulties faced by healthcare professionals (and the organisations they work for) in different real life cases.
Some of it hasn't aged very well - there's an episode about HIV testing an unconscious patient after a needle-stick injury. With advances in treatment and reductions in stigma I think would have made it a very different programme today.
But most of it is pretty good, and explains in detail how some decisions are made.
For example: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0643x61
Ashley is 14 years old when doctors discover a brain tumour. Tests reveal that it's highly treatable; there's a 95% chance of cure if he has a course of radiotherapy.
Ashley begins the treatment but he has to wear a mask which makes him very anxious and the radiotherapy itself makes him sick. He finds it increasingly difficult to bear and he starts to miss his sessions.
Despite patchy treatment Ashley's cancer goes into remission. He and his mother are thrilled but a routine follow-up scan a few months later shows that the cancer has returned.
Ashley is adamant that he will not have the chemotherapy that is recommended this time. He threatens that he will run away if treatment is forced on him. Although Ashley is only 15 he is 6'2" and restraining him would not be easy.
Should the medical team and his mother persuade him to have the chemotherapy? Or should they accept his decision, even though he is only 15?
5 votes -
Popular podcasts app Pocket Casts goes free, web and desktop app now subscription-based
22 votes -
Where dollar bills come from
6 votes