Most podcasters don’t think of themselves as political actors. They’re educators, entertainers, storytellers, analysts, hobbyists; people focused on a craft or a niche. Their goal is to inform, engage, or connect with an audience around a shared interest, not to wade into political conflict. But there are moments when the line between “political” and “non-political” stops being useful.
Why Fundamentals Still Matter More Than Tactics
Podcasting advice moves in cycles. One month it’s short-form clips. The next it’s video. Then it’s AI workflows, growth hacks, platform strategies, posting schedules, thumbnails, hooks, titles, and distribution tactics that promise a marginal edge if you just implement them correctly.
Perfectionism Sucks
A surprising number of podcasts never fail. They never even start. Not because the creator lacks ideas. Not because the topic isn’t interesting. Not because there’s no audience. They stall out before the first episode ever gets published. Because perfectionism sucks.
Video Podcasts Are Everywhere. That Doesn’t Mean You Need One.
If you spend any time in podcasting circles right now, it can feel like video has already won. Creators are building studio sets. Cameras are everywhere. Social feeds are packed with clips from podcast interviews. Platforms are encouraging creators to upload full video episodes. Even longtime audio podcasters are wondering if they’re falling behind.
How Do You Use a Podcast to Protest? Especially If It Isn’t Political?
Not every podcast is about elections, policy, or political theory. Some are about cars. Or fitness. Or books. Or creativity. Or gaming. Or entrepreneurship. So when the political climate feels unstable, or even actively harmful, it raises an uncomfortable question:
Your Podcast Isn’t Failing. You’re Just Impatient.
Your Podcast Isn’t Failing: Is your podcast failing or just growing slowly? Here’s why patience, consistency, and long-term strategy matter more than viral spikes.
Sharpen Your Interview Skills: The Mark Of A Good Conversation Is In The Listening
Interviewing guests on your podcast is one of those skills that looks simple until you actually try to do it well. Most hosts assume the solution is better prep, harder research, or a longer list of plug-and-play questions. But the mark of a good conversation is in the listening.
You Don’t Own Social Media, and This Changes Everything
Every few years, creators have to relearn the same lesson the hard way: social media is rented space. You don’t own social media. You don’t control it. And you are never more than one decision away from losing access to it entirely.
Why Most Podcasts Burn Out (And How to Build One That Doesn’t)
Podcast burnout is usually framed as a motivation problem. Creators are told they didn’t want it badly enough, weren’t disciplined enough, or lost their drive. That story is convenient. That story is wrong.
How Podcasters Can Fight Authoritarianism
Authoritarianism doesn’t arrive with a single speech or a uniform. It creeps in through repetition, exhaustion, and the steady erosion of shared reality. It thrives when people stop trusting institutions, stop trusting each other, and stop believing their participation matters. Fight authoritarianism.