The Hybrid Podcasting Era: Merging Audio and Video #613 - podcast episode cover

The Hybrid Podcasting Era: Merging Audio and Video #613

Jan 10, 20251 hr 25 minEp. 616
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Episode description

The episode starts with Todd Cochrane and Rob Greenlee discussing the complexities of keeping up with technological updates and verifications. They illustrate the rapid pace of technological advancements and their impact on their daily podcasting operations, setting the tone for a conversation on how these technologies intersect with new media. 1. **Podscribe December Ranker Analysis:** … Continue reading The Hybrid Podcasting Era: Merging Audio and Video #613 →

The post The Hybrid Podcasting Era: Merging Audio and Video #613 appeared first on New Media Show.

Transcript

Everyone, welcome to the new media show. I'm back in the studio scrambling like a, like, I don't I don't even know. I don't know what the word I wanna use, Rob, but I turned every I turned everything on last on last night and updated it, And then as soon as, 30 minutes ago, I start okay. I'm just ready to go live. And everything his brother asked for a verification, authentication, make sure who I am, sending us text, sending a phone. Here we are. And, welcome back to the studio.

Yeah. I guess it speaks to how fast things are moving these days around updates to platforms. And if you're not using it on a regular basis, I guess we just take for granted how much of this busy work that we do to keep connected and updates to APIs and OS updates and all the stuff that keeps us all scrambling all day and why everybody's so kind of burned out. You know? Trying to keep up with it.

You know, what what was funny was is I knew when I got in and I got in last 8, like, 8 last night after traveling, like, 30 hours. And you and I were kinda screwed up on when to go live, and then I said, yeah. I can do I can do 3 o'clock tomorrow. No problem. And my last meeting was at 2:15, and I got started everything ready. Actually, I had groceries delivered. That took about 10 minutes and turned everything up. And then I'm like, Rob,

I need an extra 15 minutes. I'm not I'm not gonna make it. So, yeah. Here here here we are. And, it's, this and believe it or not, everything really worked. All electronics worked. It was just Yeah. The authentications. Yeah. Right. All the authentications, you know. We're live and lit, but I'm I'm not, I didn't do a lit live stream because I didn't announce that. I didn't have time. So, yeah. Here we are, and welcome back, everyone. And I have a little a a little

tone in the ear. I think I know where that's coming from. I can't I can't hear anything. So Yeah. It's and I know exactly where it's coming from because as soon as I hit play for our intro music, it didn't play. That means a little 1 quarter inch dongle is hanging on the back, not plugged into the, to the road. So so what are we talking about today? Anyway, what's what's on our schedule?

Well, I'm open to any topics that you're willing to talk about too here, Todd, but I kind of laid out a little bit of a outline of different things that are going on that we could talk about here. And one is the Podscribe December ranker that was pointed out in a in a in a discussion group, a podcast group that I'm involved in. And, and it shows some interesting trends. I'm sure that you don't probably have it open there. I haven't. No. I haven't read

it. So go ahead and give me the give me the the, the breakdown. Well, there's a a ranker of the top ten kind of like, platforms that are out there, and their distribution of content that's on them that is being consumed by RSS, versus YouTube. Oh. So it's kinda breaking out, what these big platforms. And I'm I'm talking about, like, Spotify, Wondery, Acast, NPR, Lipson Ads, Iheartmedia, AudioBoom, SiriusXM, and then I guess Studio 21 and Q Code. So they've they're part of this Podscribe

kind of podcast rankings Mhmm. For December 2024. And what was pointed out to me, and I I think just to kind of preface this is that I've also heard others online mention that maybe the Podscribe numbers are not entirely, reliable Mhmm. On this, aspect. But what is very interesting that a a person noticed in here is the huge difference in, I guess, plays, that are on RSS via YouTube for those platforms. And I guess there's some confusion about, well,

what's actually being tracked here? Is it is all of the episodes that are published, on, like, the YouTube channel all being counted here? Where on the on the RSS side, is it only counting what was what was delivered just in December? Well, when you submit via YouTube via RSS, you have to go on YouTube numbers. There's no data that comes back to the podcaster. Well, no. I think that there's a clear line of separation between RSS in YouTube and what is what's being consumed in YouTube. Right?

So it's not necessarily the same thing. Right? So, and it's not clear about that here. But what what it does show is it just show 5 out of the 10 networks that are listed in this Podscribe ranker as having dramatically more plays on YouTube than they do via RSS. But isn't the play in YouTube anytime you just click play and it lasts for 5 seconds? Yeah. That's always the question that follows this ranker. Right? Is, you know, what's the detail on this? Right? And what is it including?

Is it including just episodes that were published in December, or is the YouTube count here, counting all the plays that happened on a particular channel in December? Right? Which could include a bunch of archives too. Right? So it may not be content that was just published in December. Right? So I don't know apples and oranges. The numbers are comp I don't know how you can even do a comparison. Well, you can based on when a a

piece of content is published. Right? Well, again, if it gets a 1,000 downloads in an RSS feed and it gets a 1,000 plays in in YouTube, it's totally 2 separate numbers and 2 have totally 2 different conceptions on, I guess, I'm confused. Entirely. It's not entirely different. It's it's content was published via RSS. Was that same content in a video format published in YouTube during the month of December? And what, I mean, that's that's the assumptions that I have. So what what is the debate?

Well, the debate is is that the numbers for those 5 channels are dramatically higher on YouTube than they are via RSS. So but there's other ones in here that are that are much lower on YouTube compared to RSS. Well, I think that would make sense. Some shows are gonna do good over there. Some are not. Okay. But if you can accept one, you you know, we have to talk about the inverse of

that. Right? So and that's what we're seeing here is 5 out of the 10 have dramatically higher YouTube plays on their content than they do RSS. And then the other 5 have larger RSS based consumption than they do on YouTube. So there's a lot of factors that come into this. So what's the debate? Well, the debate is what's going on here.

Is is it possible that that lips and ads, primarily an audio platform, right, is is showing, 397,000,000 plays on YouTube from content that's published into YouTube via Ellipse and Ads, and it's only showing 45,000,000 plays on RSS. So they did they monetize those 790,000,000 ads on YouTube? Well, Ellipse and Ads has been bundling YouTube plays with RSS plays. But they don't get paid the same. They never have. Well but they are bundling them together in AdVise. It is what I'm trying to say.

So if you have a host read that you're doing in your audio Yeah. That that host read is also done in the the video side that's published to YouTube. And and YouTube does have an API metrics, a API going back into Lipson. So they could compare those around plays during a particular window of time. Now I agree with you that that the way that audio is counted is different than the way YouTube is counted. Right? So but it's just an interesting contrast to look at real data.

I just don't know what the data really is including in here to really draw any very So hard conclusions here. They need to list the shows that got the 790,000,000 downloads. That's the ranker. So, yeah, I do believe that they do list them in here. So, like, just to use the lips and ads as an example, it's listing 857 shows. Oh, 857 shows. They got 790 I don't believe that at all. No. No. 390,000,000 plays on YouTube, 45,800,000 plays on RSS. Across 800 some shows? Across

853 shows. Let's let's let's let's do some transparency then, Libsyn. Let's list those Well, no. 800 shows. No. This is Podscribe. This isn't just Oh, Podscribe. There's yeah. There's 10 companies. You know, like, I I just listed all the companies that are in here. The other one How does Podscribe know this number?

Well, that's what I'm that's kind of the bigger takeaway here is that these numbers are being put out there, and it's drawing people's kind of questioning of what's going on here and and why are we seeing such a big discrepancy between plays on YouTube versus RSS plays from platforms that are predominantly audio. Right? So so that's, you know, where's the the the reality here? So that's the that's the big question. Right? Is why are we seeing this kind of data?

You know, if you look at I mean, this isn't just a bash on audio here. If you look at No. I well, I'm just I'm just wondering how spot PodScribe is getting these numbers. I don't know. I can't I can't really Because they're not running a pixel on YouTube. Not allowed. You know, none of how do they get this data? Well, it's coming from what they know from, I don't know, these platforms. I guess there's reporting going on between Podscribe and these platforms

somehow. Right? So also, we wouldn't be putting out a ranker. Right? So so on the audio side so if you look at the audio side, the the month of of December for all these platforms, like Spotify, Wondery, Acast, lip lips and ads had big increases in their audio consumption. Right? So Spotify is, at 15%. Wondery is at 8%. Acast is at 6%. Lips and ads is at 21%. Audio boom is 34%. Iheart's 13%. And that's on the audio consumption side. In relation in relation to what? As a group?

Yeah. Well, it it's month over month growth. Right? So is my understanding of Month over month growth, 21% growth in 1 month? That's that's what I'm I'm gathering here, and then it it ranks out the the video side of this, as well. And it shows less growth on that side. It actually shows q code at 15%, Spotify at 15%, and Studio 71 is not showing any growth. So so but it says the summary of the growth trends, audio is up 16.17 average growth. And in the video side is up 10%

on average across all of these. Here's here's here's what you know, they can put all these reports out, but here's what I wanna hear. I wanna hear from the podcasters. I wanna hear for the podcasters that are that are doing well. I wanna hear from them folks should tell me that my audio podcast putting put on YouTube via an RSS feed is doing better than my audio podcast being delivered via podcast apps on YouTube. That's I wanna hear the podcasters

say that. And I wanna hear that this is because this is RSS. I don't think that's what's being talked about here. I think you're talking about apples and oranges here. But you said it was RSS? They were being ingested by YouTube via RSS? No. No. No. I didn't say that. You said that. So I said this content that's being published into RSS versus content being published into YouTube. Okay. I'm not saying that That's fair. What we're talking about here is RSS

delivered to you. Okay. So never say that. So what I wanna hear from those 800 some podcasters is that I am making 10 times amount of money I'm making on podcasts as I'm making on YouTube. I'm yeah. I don't know. 10 times the money on YouTube. I'm I that's what I wanna hear from them. I want these folks to start saying start being very transparent. This this whole conversation is all advertising driven, all of it. Everything that's been talked about.

The whole point of PodScribe and their record. Right? Against. But I I wanna hear from the podcasters that are doing well. And it okay. Let's let's start That's not gonna answer this question. No. It answer it this. It will start answering the question that my podcast that did x million downloads on Apple Podcasts and Spotify, my audio podcast earn this much. My video podcast on YouTube earn this much. And when they start talking about real numbers, then I'll start to listen.

I I again, advertising to us. Okay. Well, k. Well, why don't you wanna listen to what numbers are are are showing and, you know, we can we can prove them or disprove them. Well, again, I question them and I don't those kind of things, but this is this is this is what the industry is. This is what Podscribe is saying. I know, but people are seeing what's happening here. Okay. They're seeing, but is there proof?

Well, that that takes into account kind of a perspective on what whether or not Podscribe is a credible data gathering platform. I don't know nothing about them. Or or the same thing with Triton's ranker. The same thing with, PodTrak's ranker. I'm not lumping them in here. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. This is I'm not saying their numbers are wrong, but it'd be nice for them to explain the methodology on how they're getting this data. Maybe people just know that Podscribe is doing this.

But Well, I mean, even if this stuff is correct, it's not really a threat. Oh, I'm not worried about that from that perspective. I mean, it's I mean, I mean, it's clear that the YouTube platform has a huge it's the number 2 search engine in the world. It's it's it's where billions of people are going to consume content. So just the fact that things are big over there doesn't take away from the success of RSS

via audio. Because just clearly, these numbers that I just shared with you show that the audio consumption side is actually growing, faster. So, you know, it's, you know, it's okay for the both of these things to be potentially true. It's probably a strength for the medium that we've kind of diversified and the audience, and we're reaching audience at a scale like we've never reached before.

If these numbers are true, I don't think it's a it's it could be a negative for the industry because of the business models involved. Well, I I That's that's a different problem than what's going on with the I don't think there's an issue with the business model. The business, podcasting is I mean, it's been expressed by James Cridland and others that there is a threat to the audio business model. What's going on with YouTube and Spotify?

I think what will happen here is this this next coming year, we're gonna find out. And if all these I hope so. I hope we find out what the what the truth is. And this may be a little bit of a glimpse of what actually that truth is. So the discussion then in the group, were they incredulous to these numbers or what were they what was

there? Yeah. I think a lot of I think a lot of people were questioning the credibility of the of the the analysis, based on, you know, what the criteria was to actually come up with this. So I think that's the bigger question is that if we're gonna see this kind of trend line, it needs to go under the microscope of of interpretation and clear understanding about what's being ranked and talked about. And that's that's one thing this show has been

all about over the years. And oftentimes, we get it wrong here on this show. And but but the audience and people involved in it will set us straight, right, and help us understand what's going on here. And that's that's the only reason I I raised this is because people in the industry are seeing this, and they're probably having the same question in their mind. Well, is this really

accurate? And what's wrong with the data? Or what could be wrong with with the data that's giving us this when it could be could be incorrect? It's the thing is when people start focusing on plays and downloads, this is where I mean, I've said this for years. Yeah. But In in video, a play doesn't mean you got paid. Well, it's not implying here. It's just talking about It's just talking about pure plays. Plays. Plays. A download that's qualified with advertising in it, you are.

So if you have advertising running in an audio podcast I thought I wouldn't assume that all these big companies are using hosting audio hosting platforms that are not IAB compliant. So Well, I think the majority of them are. Yeah. I mean, that was that was what I meant. So yeah. So so we're all analyzing the the data correctly. I'm going to The question gets back to is what is YouTube doing? I I'm going to assume, let's say, a show that is in this reporting or whatever Libsyn even reports.

On the audio side, every one of those downloads that had advertising in it was paid. That that they they got because it wasn't because it got quality. It doesn't say downloads anywhere in But it plays downloads. People have stopped using the word downloads for years. So they use the word plays. It's the same thing. Well, it's because that that's what the advertiser Right. So they're still getting paid for that play because it's been qualified as a download that they call a play.

Just leave it that. In YouTube, and I don't know enough about YouTube. I'm not I'm not a YouTube genius. I don't have a YouTube channel that's monetized. In YouTube, you probably only get paid for an ad that was actually played. Yeah. Right. But that I mean, I have a yeah. I have a monetized YouTube channel. But you may have gotten a 1,000 plays, but only got paid for 50 ad deliveries. Yeah. I mean, it's a big black box. Right.

And YouTube with that. YouTube decides what amount you're gonna get paid based. Well, yeah. I mean, it's it's it's based on what you would expect. You know, like, I I can see the average CPM on a on on a video that I have, and I I can see it's you know, I can see who's listening to it, what the demographics are, what the play patterns are, what the time spent listening or watching. But again see all that data. But again, you're only gonna get paid if that video or ad was delivered on YouTube?

What actually, I think it's more it's paid if if an ad was if an ad was delivered. If an ad was delivered. Right. And then for those of us that don't have ads, you may get a percentage of money based upon share or whatever. But so the question then becomes is when you see your plays but do they again, I I'm not monetizing YouTube, so I don't know. You just see the average CPM.

If you had 10,000 plays and your CPM was $4, then you you know, whatever the CPM end up being because there has to be a difference between plays. You if you got a 1,000,000 plays, you didn't get paid on a 1,000,000 plays because there wasn't a 1,000,000 ads delivered. See what I'm saying? Do they even tell you that? Yeah. I I don't really know on the back end how they're actually doing that. They just tell you what it they tell you what a CPM you're making from that show.

Right. And it it tells you, you know, what your revenue is based on that. I mean, I suppose you could back into a number if you had your your play count and then were able to back into it. But also keep in mind too that the that the advertising models on, like, YouTube are very complex. Right? There's all sorts of different Yeah. Types of ads. You know, if if the user's on a on a paid premium plan with no ads, then Mhmm. Then you get a cut of the revenue from that subscription.

Right? So so which can be, you know, pennies or something like that. So if you just look at lips and ads in here, this this ranker does break out some other data points, which are kind of kind of interesting too. The the percentage of ads that are in that ranker, for RSS based audio as well as YouTube, shows that 61% are host read, which means that the the the ad is being host read into the content and being passed to YouTube as

well as the audio part. Then I wonder how they're backing that out and paying on that. Right. And then it's it's got another category, which I can't really determine what it is. It has, like, 81% or something, but I'm not I I can't determine That would be a total scam if they're able to charge total YouTube plays on host threads and just charge the normal CPM for it. Well, I know that's what like a like a Lipson Ads does is they bundle the But again,

the place. Right? Again, are they they're they're not paying a $25 CPM on a YouTube host read on a play on YouTube. I would I would be utterly shocked if they were. I don't know what the CPM could be. Somebody out there knows. Somebody knows. Who knows? Tell us. Well, I think if you looked at the the past numbers back when Lipson Ads was announcing their CPMs, which they've stopped, which is a little bit of a red flag about something. But, I I believe was in the $19.20 $21

range is the average. So the way to be transparent about this, which they don't want to be anymore, is tell us what the CPM is on podcast true podcast deliveries and what is the CPM on YouTube deliveries. That's where we need to see what the CPM is. And they may not wanna tell you because it varies from from show to show. So, so it's just it's always gonna be just an average.

So and then the the other number that's fascinating in here too, that you can break out each of these networks of sorts is what the ad load percentages is. Oh, and I've seen lots of articles recently about people complaining more and more people, especially Joe Rogan show people who have gone off on people that are paying for Spotify. And still getting still getting ads. Well, they got screwed, didn't they? Well, so lips and ads shows in here an 8% ad load. So and the but if you hop down to

let's see. You go down to audio boom, which also has a similar kind of, but less kind of breakout difference, around YouTube and RSS based audio, their ad load is 7%. Okay. 7% of what? The total show length? So that means in an Exactly. That means in 60 minutes, you're gonna get Lipson was 8%. No. No. It'd be less than that. What's Yeah. To do the high school math here. Right. 60 minutes. It's probably, like, 6:6 minutes or so probably.

But I'm I'm just guessing I'd have to break out my calculator. Yeah. So let's see here. But, you know, audio boom and lips and ads are doing between 8 7% ad load. But if you look at let's see if I pull up another network Wondery, Wondery is in here as well and is showing 94,000,000 audio plays on RSS and only 8,900,000, plays on YouTube. So it's inverse of what we were just talking about about Lipson. So

Wondery is predominantly audio. I mean, dominating on the audio side, but they have an ad load of 12%. So is this math right? 60 minutes, you multiply 0.8%. 0.8. 0.08, probably. Right? Times point 08. Right? Yeah. Point 08. Yeah. I think it's, like, 4 minutes or something like that of Yeah. It's probably 4 4 or 5 minute range would be my

guess. Yeah. And then Spotify, which I think is interesting on their side, is that they show 90 about 93,000,000 plays on YouTube and a 150,000,000 plays on audio via RSS. So with an ad load of 5%. Yeah. And I did do the math right. 4 minutes and 48 seconds of ads in a 60 minute program. That's that's a lot. And then Iheartmedia is is showing, 15,000,000 plays on YouTube and only 1 oh, wait. Is that 1,100,000 plays via Audio RSS. That's horrible. They say they're number 1?

No. They're they're 6th on the list. One point well, they only had oh, this is from Podscribe, not from. That's their estimation. Yeah. I said it wrong. That the it was 51,000,000 on the audio side. Oh, yeah. Yeah. I was gonna say something's really wrong there. Yeah. Yeah. So the audio side for Iheartmedia, is 51,000,000. The the video side on YouTube is 15,000,000. So it's a dominant audio platform, and of which looks like 34% of those ads are host reads. So ESPN's not in that list anywhere?

And, well, let me give you the last number that's gonna blow your mind. On the Iheart number, 16% ad load. Wow. Nine points. Twice. Nine. Twice as much. Right. My god. How much percent? 16% ad load. That that that's that's crazy. Well, they're a very strong kind of programmatic ad platform. Right? So only 34% of their, shows or 34% of whatever it is, their their overall distribution, is with host reads. So they're they're playing 9 minutes and 36 seconds of ads for

every 60 minutes of content. That's radio. Yeah. Yeah. Exactly. Wow. That's nuts. The only other one that's up in that range is, looks like is Wondery. That I'm not surprised because I've listened to some of their shows, and it's just insane. Yes. 30 2nd break. 30 2nd break. 30 2nd break. Yeah. Yeah. So so this this is why I'm sharing this is because this is a maybe a I don't know how accurate it is, but it's a little glimpse into what's going on in the

industry with the really big players. Right? What they're doing in the market and why we're seeing kind of like a pushback. And and Libsyn says their ad load was 8%. Yep. Oh, my God. Unbelievable. And and it looks like that's kinda like I think, Spotify is the one that has the the lowest percentage of ad load. It's because they can charge more. Of everyone on the list. It's because they can charge more for the ads. Right. Because they got guaranteed plays. Right. But it's a glimpse of data.

And this this data hasn't really been visible in any way any place that I've seen until now. So, and it and it really shows you who who the players are in the medium that are very focused on, heavy commercialization. And it's and it's the players that you would assume would be. Right? Mhmm. You know, Sirius XM is also in the ranker too. That's a that's a satellite radio kind of platform in its origins, and it has a 9% ad load. So it's it's not too bad. It's still dramatically lower than Iheart.

Yeah. So but that's another one. Well, those I mean, it's lips and ads. It is audio boom, SiriusXM Media, Studio 71, and q code are are the platforms that are over indexing with YouTube versus their audio side. So half of the list and half of the other list is is indexing higher around audio. So Because I don't know. But if you well, it depends on the it goes back to focus. Right. Of course. Totally. Iheart does not want to they're they're propping up their business with podcast.

They don't wanna give that to YouTube. Yeah. I I agree. Iheart doesn't benefit from driving a lot of attention to to YouTube. No. They don't want them to go to YouTube. And it's the same, but yet we see SiriusXM, which is also an audio distribution platform, putting a lot of weight. I mean, their numbers are huge. I mean so the SiriusXM platform had 23,800,000 on the audio side, and they're showing a 175,000,000 on the YouTube side. Well, if you think about SiriusXM, I canceled my

SiriusXM that I had in my car. Matter of fact, because it was so they they wanted insane money, like, $300 a year or something like that. Yeah. You know? And then they came back to me a couple 3, 4 weeks later and offered some deal. It was, like, $50 or something like that. And, and I like a dummy, I renewed it and I haven't even, you know, I I've been out of my car 5 months this year.

So, you know, value I got there, you know, because I only listen to one show on there and it's just for matter of fact, I can't listen to anymore because he's gotten so so political. Yes. So, Todd, in the document, I shared a link to that Podscribe ranker. So, you know, all the people are listening to this. They probably wanna look at the document themselves and and kinda see the the numbers because we're not showing it on the screen. Yeah. All I got from you was an email. So let me

Yeah. It's an outline. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So, there's a screenshot in there, but there's also a link to the actual ranker for December from Podscribe that that the listeners or viewers of this could probably get in the show notes after the Mhmm. Well, there has been some changes. I saw it come through, and I was kinda surprised, but Jared has stepped away from podcast movement. Yeah. I was I was surprised that. I think that happened maybe just before Christmas,

I think. And it sounded to me like there was enough revenue to support his involvement. Is that how I read that? I think that's a speculation that's going on about a reason for him leaving, but I'm it certainly hasn't been confirmed by anybody. So that's not a good sign for podcast movement. Yeah. And that was that was part of a bigger topic that I wanted to talk about,

on the show. I think we've alluded to it a little bit in the past, but the the kind of podcast conference struggle right now of who's who's the dominant platform. Right? I mean, who's the dominant event right now? And and that's a little bit of a sign that maybe podcast movement is maybe struggling, or it could be just, you know, Jared is wanting to do something else. Well, I don't I haven't talked to Jared to to to

interpret what's going on here. But I think it is a little bit of a of a of a worrying sign that Jared would leave the the team. Yeah. To me, it's very worrying. Yeah. But I don't you know, I've left things myself for other reasons other than Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. The company is having problems. So Yeah. That's true. Though it's it's, it's, you know, it's it's what it is. But I do ask the question at this point based on what we saw at the last podcast movement.

You know, who's got the biggest podcast show in the world now? Yeah. Because it you you know, it used to be podcast movement, and and we used to assume that. But I'm increasingly feeling that the podcast show may be taking a bite from them. You know, from a you know, it's hard to compare because that venue is a little is a little weird, you know, and I paid big for the location I wanted to be in this year. So I I, you know, I Yeah. I I dug a little deeper than probably I should have. Oh, yeah.

But, you know, if if I don't get the bang for the buck, then I'll be back in the cheap seats next year, or the following year. But Podfest. I feel that there's there's more meant more momentum with Podfest now than I I'm seeing. And actually, I I was wondering about this because I'm really not hearing much of anything about podcast movement for their spring event. I paid to go. So I don't I and I vowed this year if the numbers weren't good for the spring event, we would only go to the summer

event for podcast movement. Right. So I'm not going to commit. I'm not gonna be there. I'm sending other team members. Oh, you're not gonna go to the Yeah. Chicago event? The Chicago event. So I'll be down in Orlando, obviously, for podcast next week. But Yeah. I haven't I haven't made any decision one way or the other if I'm gonna be involved in the in the Chicago event. Yeah. So then we've got a couple other shows outside of podcasting that we're doing,

that we're not gonna advertise. We're just gonna go. Mhmm. So Phil, there's an opportunity and we don't want because every time I talk about and show that we're gonna go to then all of a sudden 2 or 3 competitors show up. You know, so Well, can't have that now. No. And they may be there already, but they wouldn't heard it from me. Right. Yeah. That's true. So, we'll see. Yeah. So I'm just posing posing the question. The Evolutions event in Chicago is March 31.

And I'm really not seeing any kind of external marketing about that event going on. It's a little little early, maybe. I don't know. Well, I mean, contrast that with Podfest Podfest. Oh, my God. They're in my inbox. Unbelievable. Tour events. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Constantly year round now. I mean, I think Chris Kremitzos was like traveling for the last 6 months going to different cities all over

the country and even heading to Asia. So I and I was just asking my contact, that I was part of Podfest Asia and I said there is that on again? Are we still we're gonna be back in the Philippines or or what? So and I'd like to hear an announcement on that. If they're gonna do it, then I could plan my my return around that date Because it's kind of weird. Go ahead.

Yeah. Yeah, I've been hearing the, you know, it might make more sense for podcast movement to become kind of like a, like a business summit event of some for podcasting or something. It's kind of turning into that anyway. Right? It's not a it's not a an event that a lot of podcasters go to. Well, we downsize our booth. So, you know, you know, it's not a it's not a event that's really positioned itself to go after the the full spectrum of this new creator medium.

Whereas the podcast show, I went bigger. Right. It's still focused on the business side, but it's focused on the full spectrum. There's a full full bevy of creators there. Right. And it's and and what's interesting is pod fast is focused on really more of the creator. So It's not so much focused on trying to, you know, be a be an event for Spotify to take a private room somewhere and have a bunch of meetings. Right? Yeah. So

Well, they still have private meetings. They still have private means a podcast show, but it's out in the open. They're on the edges. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. That's that that's the contrast. Yeah. Yeah. But, you know, I've heard many people in the industry talk about podcast movement. Well, you know, why go to podcast movement? Because they're not really a public event anymore. Really. It's a it's a it's an event for business people in the podcast. It's very expensive.

Yeah. And it's expensive and it's during the work weeks. It's positioned for people to go the this is their full time job. Yeah. This is this is what they do full time. So and that's that's different. There has been a little bit of talk that that may be changing with podcast movement, where they might move it into a half in a weekend or something like that. I would be I would be shocked. Well, I think it would be a smart move

for them to do that. If they were to kind of shift the event, kind of split it up between Saturday Sunday and then a Thursday Friday, so those business people can just come in for Thursday Friday at home, and then they can attract those creators again, that can come in on the weekend. There was a interesting topic on Engadget today. It says Google can automatically make a podcast based on your discover feed.

Was that through that a notebook l m It says it says Google knows a lot about you and your interest, and it uses that information to try and get more of your time attention. New search lab experiment called daily listens can turn your discover feed, and I don't know what that is, into a professional podcast. Google discovers a creative feed on mobile devices filled with articles and videos that the company Alago or must be that's what's on the sidebar of my Android.

Yeah. I know. I've been playing around with some AI agents lately. There's a there's a agent plug in that you can get for Chrome. It's called do browser. What it's called, basically integrates AI into being able to manage all your all your Google Apps.

So so you can prompt it to, let's say, batch up a bunch of emails, go out and do a bunch of research, find an email address of of a certain type of individual and and put it all into to a bunch of emails and then write a individual email to each one of them with your, like, whatever message that you wanna batch send out to a bunch of people, and the AI will just pull all the data from your your Google Docs, generate all the emails, and it it optionally will allow you to approve each one of them

or it'll just automatically send them all out. Oh, wow. So it's this automation that we're kind of moving into now, which is gonna require all of us to have a lot of trust. Well, if you trust, you're gonna get screwed. I think you have to trust and verify. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, at this point, I would

agree with that. But being able to automate the the the research, I mean, I was thinking about this because all of us use chat GPT with our podcast to do, like scripts, outline summaries, that kind of stuff. Rob, you're not using the blueberry pie. Well, it doesn't matter what AI that you're using. It's it's it's basically that's what most people are using.

Okay. That for right. I mean, I think the next evolution is that the AI will do more deeper research for you, and will actually be almost like a representative of you out there. And I think that's the next stage for AI is agents. My discussion at podcast is going to be around AI in the production of your podcast. So so is this this tool that you're talking about with on on Blueberry, does it kinda do what I'm talking about here? Yeah. But

it doesn't record for you. It just does prep and show ideas and show somebody do that kind of automatically based on a prompt you give it? Is that what it does? Yeah. You tell it what topic you wanna cover and who your guest is gonna be or if there is gonna be a guest. And you give it some cue links. How much prompting do you have to do?

Because I found this kind of this balance is I'm playing around with these agents is that oftentimes I have to give it so much information about what it needs to do that I might as well just can do it. Well, yeah. That's the challenge. You give it the topic of your podcast and what your goal is with the show. And, and if you're gonna have a guest, you give the guest name and hopefully, you'll have a bio that you can link to or a LinkedIn page, or Wikipedia,

whatever. And then, all we do with the show prep tool is help you with questions and topics. So we suggest 10 topics, suggest 10 questions for a guest, allow you to edit those, delete them, ask for more. And then once it's all done, then we produce a a show flow for you comes up with a full show flow based on data that you've already preset into the system once. And and from that show flow, you can print that out or use it in a PDF.

And it's, you know, I don't use the show prep tool myself because my prep is different. I'm doing I have to go through websites and find yeah. I gotta find my links. My, you know, my guy is out in CES today, so I'm doing show prep for my show tonight. And, I'm was just about done mid afternoon with that. But, again, it's not something AI can help me with yet. At some point, it probably will.

Well, I guess that's kind of the bigger thing that I'm trying to mention here is that, you know, prompting is is going going to be an art. Right? That that all of us have to develop. And since I've started using this AI agent platform, this this new browser plugin, it's caused me to think quite differently about how I prompt AI. Right? I mean, it's it's asking for, like, links to resources, like a link to to let's say a Google Sheet, right, that has data that it can it can know where that is.

It can go into that. It can grab all that data that is relevant to what you want it to do, and it'll go in or it can go into your Gmail and find things in your Gmail and use that to formulate a document or formulate a batch of emails or things like that. So, you know, how do you prompt the AI to do what you want it to do? Is it is I think where the challenges are gonna be? How much work do you have to put into the prompting? And as a trade off for what it's actually gonna do for you? Right.

I think for some folks, we tried to make the prep tool something you could do in 5 minutes, you know, and get an output. And then you can but most podcasters do them more than 5 minutes prep. So, again, this is just kind of a Yeah. A preliminary, but I think the the true value as an example, if if I was going to be interviewing you for the first time and didn't know you, but I knew of 5 podcasts that you had been on, Yeah. Or linked to your website.

I bet I could come up with some seriously good interview questions for you in under 10 minutes. And not have them be duplicated. Right. Well, they might be they might be duplicated, but unless you listen to every interview that you've done in the past 2 years, then, you know, are you, you know, is that information relevant? So, you know, we're looking at the AI stuff for stats, and what we can pull out of all the statistics data that we have. And

we've been really thinking hard on that. And quarter 2, we're gonna kinda tackle it, because I've got data. So it's more about it's not even AI really anymore. It's more machine learning. Yeah, I think that's the key really here is that that AI that's working for you needs to index you, it needs to train on you. Yeah. In it in the content that you're making so it can make better decisions for you based on what you've done and what your

expertise is. I took all of my blog posts that I've ever written for blueberry for Geek and Essential. And I had that all brought into a database. I had all that all that information. I had personal folders, proposals, correspondence, you name it. And I built my own doppelganger. Yeah. So I have a doppelganger. I have a GPT profile that is got my information that I wanted to share. And if I wanted to write and I don't use it that much, but once in a while it comes in really really handy.

But, yeah, a digital doppelganger is pretty awesome. Well, that's an AI agent right there. Yeah. If you think about where this is going, that's it needs that AI agent that says yours, right? It's in, it's probably going to be loaded on your local machine. That's the direction of this well, you can, LLMs are going to be distributed platforms. Right? They're gonna be in each of our computers. Right?

I'm sure you saw the NVIDIA announcement at CES about their new, they are already have already have x. Already have 1. 50? The little unit. Yep. It's in a box here. I haven't opened it up yet. Oh oh, did they send it to you to No. I bought 1. Oh, you bought 1 already? Yeah. It was $249 or something like that. A 3.49 or something like that. But you you need you need to know Linux. This is their little their little itty mini one. Okay. Yeah. I'm talking about their graphics card

that they just did. Oh, no. Not I I bought their little kind of like raspberry pie type of thing that you can run llama or something like that on it. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. You also announced that little gray box that basically is running like a it's like a tiny PC, that you can put on your desktop and things like that. I think that's like $2,000 Yeah. The one I bought was 2.49 or 3.49 or something like that. It's not the cheapest graphics card of that GTX 50 series.

They announced on the keynote was $549. Yeah. It's not a graphics card. This is a it's a standalone. It looks like a raspberry pi. Okay. Well, that's something different than what they announced on stage at CES. Let's see here. This one has already been out. I was I was I was blown away by the specs that this graphics card had. It was just incomprehensible well, they didn't the AMD one here. Let's see here. Can I find where is it? History.

I'm trying to find the So, Todd, the capability of this graphics card at $549 is almost like putting a supercomputer in your in your PC or your Mac or whatever. I mean, it'll it has, from what I can tell from this the specs on this thing, it's a it's a complete AI computer in of itself that's has pentaflops of processing power inside of this thing. It's it's gonna transform all of our PCs if we want to. I mean, he's even putting it in laptops now. Wow. That are selling for $1200.

So what I bought was the Nvidia Jensen. That's not the the thing that was announced at CES 2 days ago. Let me hang on. Let me show you this thing if I can find it here. NVIDIA Jensen's Orion Nano. This is this is nothing as let's see here. Now can I find it? Find the product here. Oh, yes. So let me see if I can get a screen up. Alright. Hang on here. Let me go to I'm not used to pushing these buttons, Rob. 3 year I'm on 6. Let's go to 6. This is what I bought. Okay. And,

it's it's for low level stuff. This is not for nothing heavy. This is just for you know, you can run security systems, security detection. It's it's not that fancy, but that's what I bought. And I know they made a bunch of announcements, but this is relatively new too. And it it kinda it it's a little more powerful than a than a Raspberry Pi. So Yeah. It's a it's called the Blackwell. An NVIDIA Blackwell? Yeah. That's that's the one that was just announced.

And this is for a Windows machine that you can Well, he didn't specify. I think it's for any any PC that a manufacturer wants to use it in, I think, or it'd be a Mac, I suppose. It probably wouldn't be in a Mac, it probably would be more in a PC or a Linux machine. But just the just the processing power of this thing is off of the charts. I mean, it's it's gonna change. It's gonna change everything, Todd. I think this this graphics card takes things to a whole Well, they've released

a whole bunch of stuff at CES. So I don't know. But this is But you're gonna be a need to be a super nerd to run a run one of these in your house. No. It's gonna come built into all the new compute. Oh, yeah. Or they're gonna have their own computer. Right. So this is this is this is a revolutionary moment. This is like going from, you know, a core I9 to a core I50. So I mean, it's got capability to process data.

I think he set up on stage that this processor has the ability to process as much data as the entire Internet traffic per per second. What's up fastest running in your desktop? Yep. So you're gonna you're gonna be able to run, these AI models, right locally on your computer. Well, Elon Musk says that all human indexable content has been assumed already been indexed by AI. Nothing more is left to index. So, k. This this this g force g t u, it's the RTX 5090.

RTX 1590. Because I was looking at what I was looking at was looks like hugest amounts of money. No. It's only it's only $540. RTX 1590. And it, it features 92,000,000,000 transistors. That's impressive. Plus, it provides over 3.3 trillion AI operations per second. $2,000 That's I think that's that's for the high end model of it. Right. Says starting at 1999. He announced it 549 on the stage. Must have been a different model. Yeah. Yeah. I think there's 4 different models. This is the 5090.

But again, you're gonna need to have a machine that can run this thing do. It's not gonna go in it's not going into a this is not going into a Mac. Probably not. No. Yeah. I've got a a a core I 9 Dell computer here. Mhmm. And I've been trying to research if I can trade up because I currently have a a g force CPU in this thing right now. But it's certainly not at the capability that this has. Ferdinand asked me, and this is in Facebook chat.

I'm having a problem bringing up YouTube chat, and I'll look at that here in a second. Well, this is what's going on. My phone is I wondered what was bleeping at me. Ferdinand says, are podcast episode transcripts embedded in a post helpful to SEO or our traditional show notes optimal? Well, both. Optimal show notes are best with the the episode transcript is in RSS feed as an XML file. So,

hopefully that answers your question. What is I have x is going crazy and I have let me turn off my it keeps going. Alright. There we go. Silent the stupid thing. Part of what the big impacts of this new platform, this new GPU is its ability to process media. Yeah. I mean, even still today, if I want to create a 4 k video, and I've got a very modern fast computer here, it still takes it can take me 20 minutes to to encode a, you know, a

15 minute 4 k video file. Yeah. That's where you probably need to switch to a Mac, Rob. I'm not gonna switch to a Mac. This this 90 this 90 minute show on my MacBook Pro takes a whopping 6 minutes to encode. Yeah, but my my comment really gets back to these new kind of GPUs that are coming out and available. You're going to be able to process very soon 6 and 8 k videos. But why? Why? Because that's that's what these platforms are evolving into. But why would anyone want us?

You don't have the bandwidth. Most of us don't have the bandwidth to watch 6 k videos. Yeah. Yeah. You do. I don't. I've got probably close to 200 megabytes per second. Yeah. Well, I again, you're the exception, not the rule. I not No. I think there's there's there's millions of people that have access on on cable like that. Well, there's there's as many that don't. My neighborhood, if I didn't have Starlink, I would have nothing. Yeah. But I'd have 15 megs down.

Okay. But, Todd, how many people live within a 2 mile radius of you? 4 or 500. Okay. That's not that many people. But but again, still none of us have high speed Internet. None of us? No. Unless you have Starlink. In my area, unless you have Starlink, you don't have high speed. You have 15 megs down. Yeah. You're probably talking about 10% of the population doesn't have access to high speed Internet. How much of the US? K. But that's not the argument that I'm

trying to argue about here, Tom. Well, again, talking about what the vast, vast majority of people that live in the urban centers of this country have access to at least a 100 megabytes per second downloads, likely today. So, you know, this evolution to 8, 6 k 8 ks, I mean, I already have cameras that can record in in 6 ks right now. It's just it's just I'm not using it. I'm I'm doing pretty much everything and 10 80 and 4 ks now. So and I can't do anything streaming with 4

ks in the United States. 48,000,000 people lacked access to high speed internet. Yeah. There's what, 304 The issue is most prevalent in rural areas in tribal lands. Right. 48,000,000. That's a number, Rob. I'm not saying it isn't. I'm just saying that it's it's a it's a fraction of the opportunity. How many people are United States? 300 and some. Yeah. So okay. So 10, 15%. Yeah. So 8% of the people now 16% of the people don't have high speed and 14%

don't have high speed Internet. That's that's a big number. Right. So we should hold back the progress on No. I'm just saying, but why do you wanna watch 6 k video? You can see every wrinkle in your eye. Well, okay. If you're younger, you don't care. Is that right, Todd? Well, again. So Right. Most people don't even have a 4 k TV yet. And increasingly these platforms are building in abilities to, you know, polish your face a little bit. Well, good luck on that. Well, I mean, it's part of part of

Stream Yard. It's part of many, many of these live streaming platforms to touch up your, your face. I'll keep my wrinkles. Thank you very much. I'm not saying you got to get rid of your wrinkles. I'm just saying what what is recorded on the video. It doesn't have to Yeah. Be like that. And if you're gonna be at 4 k, it's probably a good thing. Oh, here's the comment on YouTube. Peter Ribian, founding engineer Podscribe as a focus in AI. They could be arriving at the numbers through an equation,

meaning a forecast equation. Yeah. Interesting. Though it's not portrayed that way. So Yeah. I'm a little bit of a grumpy curmudgeon today. So Well, you've been you've been struggling with technology here to some degree. Yeah. Exactly. That always leaves a bad taste in your mouth. Again, I think, you know, we'll see we'll see what happens.

I don't you know, Cridland is also in agreement that he thinks the video stuff has been I don't know if you've been listening to any of his content over the last month. But Oh, no. I know how how James thinks about this. There's comments going on on Facebook and all sorts of stuff constantly. Yeah. He he thinks it's a little overrated. Yeah. I mean, I think you can take

that take that position. But as we just saw in those rankings, it's a little bit of a mixed bag right now around what's what's actually happening. So and and it just needs to be confirmed. Right? Is it is it a bunch of smoke, or is there something really changing going on here? I think change is happening all the time. But, you know, what happens is this stuff is like a roller coaster. And we've we've we've heard podcast audio is dead

at least a dozen times. Now Rob, you've you've joined the bandwagon here on audio Audio podcasting. That audio podcasting is dead. No. I've never said that. Oh, you've been looking if the way you talk if you like you've taken that position. So I'm including video. I'm not excluding video or or excluding audio. I'm including everything into

the pie now. Yeah. And that's why I talked about that ranker is because it, it looks at both sides of the pie and it portrays half of these networks are finding success with video. They still have growing success on the audio side. It's not taking away from the audio side. It's just maybe those platforms are strategically positioning themselves to go after video and audio. And there's nothing wrong with that. No. I don't think. No. I don't think so either.

Yeah. So that's increasingly my position on this is that if you're a content creator, you know, life is kind of tough right now because you have a lot of choices to make And you have a lot of complex platforms that you have to figure out what you're going to do or not. And we are and we are 10, 9 or 10 days away from the doom of TikTok. I I don't know that that's gonna go down. I would be surprised, but you never know. Well, there's there's news that someone is trying to buy it.

I'm sure that's probably true. Yeah. But without the algorithm, and anything without a logarithm is just another platform. Yeah. Well, I'm sure there's plenty of algorithms that are out there. Well, you know, if you think about YouTube, YouTube is nothing without an algorithm. They have an algorithm. I believe same with Facebook. I believe same with x. Oh, speaking of Facebook. Interesting development there. Oh, with Mark Zuckerberg? Yeah. With his big announcement

that he's he's anti censorship now. And it happened a day after he met with the incoming president. Interesting how that worked out, Well, the everybody wants to be with a winner, don't they? Yep. And all these companies that we're bashing seems to also be contributing to a inauguration fund. So, it's it's just it's just to me, it just cracks me up on how how the tide swing. You know. Yeah. I mean, it but you have to ask yourself how much has really swung? Well, that's the question.

Or is it a perception of a big swing? Well, there's you know, I can just tell you from tech support tickets, you know, censorship is still happening. And the platforming is still happening. And saying happening in a significant way, Elon x. You know, Elon's out there saying that he's a free speech platform. But in practical data terms, I don't believe that that's a 100% true. So I think it's less than it was, but it's definitely

Yeah. Yeah. I'm finding to x be a hell of a lot more entertaining than anything. Oh, it is. Right now. Definitely. Oh, unbelievable. Well, and and I think on the last episode, you talked about the the entertainment value of TikTok. Right. Well, the you know, the the you know, the news gathering ability of TikTok and being able Yeah. Yeah. You know, you wanna see what's happening with these LA fires. Come on, TikTok. That's where it's all at.

So all the action is you can you can sadly, you can see it in living color as the whole city is being burnt down. Yeah. Well, that's that's a whole nother show on that front. But Yeah, I'm increasingly seeing these big platforms, you know, all of them really, start to think about

siloing their creators. Right? Well, they want people to publish directly to them only link to them only post content to to to their platforms and this concept of syndicating across, you know, other, you know, like creating a YouTube, video and then linking to it from your x account or from Facebook is now being suppressed. Long live podcasting. Right? So you have this kind of move towards all these platforms wanting to upload directly

to them. And I've been saying this for probably a couple years now, but that's the direction that everything is going right now. Long live podcasting. Right? And your ability to publish once and have all your content go everywhere, is really only living in the world of RSS with audio last passion of free speech. Yeah, swell. True free speech. Well, there absolutely is. But if you publish it into one of these big platforms, that may not necessarily be the case. Not at all.

So even if it's in RSS doesn't necessarily make it a full free speech. Well, if you publish in if you publish an RSS and you publish it into a well, most people they're having success on YouTube are not publishing via RSS. Right. Well, that's true. Yeah. I would say that that that's kind of us, you know, let's let's start. What is YouTube accomplishing by ingesting RSS? What's your comment on that? They're getting data.

Well, they're getting data, but they're getting those, the attentionals content creators to get them to create a YouTube channel. Right? So because that's the only way you're gonna manage your content in there. If you ingested in RSS, that's all you're gonna get from it. That's all you're going to get. You're not gonna get no views doing it that way. And those those podcasters that are primarily just doing audio that enable their their RSS to go into YouTube, will go

in and start probably creating videos. And that plays into well, I think it's increasingly happening. Yeah. And you see the same strategy with Spotify. You know, create your RSS feed into Spotify. And then if you want to upload video that replaces your, your audio feed and takes all your money away and takes all your control away. Right? So it sounds a lot similar to the YouTube. So Well, I think podcasting is safe for the time being. Yeah. I think we're okay on that side.

It doesn't appear that the from what I've seen in the numbers, it doesn't appear that they the audience for audio, it doesn't appear that it's declining. That I can see. Yeah. Time will tell. Well, I hope it doesn't. And every every indication that I've seen so far is that audio is still strong. Yeah. Just, you know, this, this nagging video thing keeps coming up. Well, you know, you're obsessed with it. I'm not so obsessed

with it. Well, I'm obsessed with it because I wanna know the full spectrum of this because I think creators are increasingly challenged with this question. Right? And I wanna be able to give them a smart answer. So that's what it comes down to for me. I think those that are really wondering about video or just doing video and they they don't need to answer any questions. They're just going for it. They have been for a long time.

Yeah. I think I've said that it's easier to start on the video side and then go over to audio than it is to go from audio over to video. I think it's you've done a lot of the heavy lifting if you're doing video. I think that will potentially it's an easy adjustment to go over to making that as an audio program. It's easier that way. I'm not saying that it's ideal or best or anything to take that approach. But that's kind of what I've

done. And I've I've tried it and played out that that particular scenario. And it's an interesting approach to the market. You know, but fundamentally, being a digital creator means that you're creating content and all these various ways that you can slice and dice and distribute and take various versions of it and put it out in various platforms gets to the heart of what podcasting really started out as being as a syndication strategy.

So and what's interesting in some research I've been doing is that there are certain podcast hosting companies that are really doing a lot of video, but they don't support video. Yeah. Well, yeah. And it's the It's a challenge of the age. It's a very interesting, very interesting strategy. You know, doing it. They're doing a lot of video, but they don't support video on their platform. Who are you You know, but it's it's very interesting to see the strategy.

Well, there's one one podcast platform that's been doing that for many years. And actually was leading in it. I I believe. Are you thinking of the same one I am? Mhmm. Mhmm. Thou thou name shall not be said. Is that what you're saying? I don't know if that rule applies with them. But anyway No. It's not a big secret. No. But it's it's awful. Of a buspirone? Yeah. You're thinking? Yeah. Yeah.

Yeah. Yeah. They've always had, you know, Alban over there has always had this this video prioritization that he's, but they don't support video on their platform. That's the part. Well, it's just a marketing thing. Yeah. Marketing guy, right? So it's a marketing strategy to reach new potential podcasters to educate them. And so it's the same thing really in a lot of ways what you're doing with your your podcast shows. Yeah. But we don't do what we

don't do. We don't we've never had a a YouTube strategy ever, you know, so that's, you know, blueberries got something put on YouTube, but it probably to our detriment. Maybe it's time, Todd. Well, like I said, I've been doing some study. Yeah. I'm sure you have. Yeah. But it's, you know, it's just it's just ironic to me, you know. So one of the few platforms that actually sports video, you know. I think that's another check mark for you. Yeah. I think so. On that path. So anyway,

we can have fun about that. Yeah. Yeah. We can have fun. It doesn't always have to be an argument. So who is who is gonna be joining us next week at podcast? John Miles, the the MC of the Podcast Hall of Fame and host of, Passionstruck podcast, very popular podcast, and he's a book author and things like that as well as, Rocky Thomas from Oh, okay. And, yeah, you told me about Rocky. Alright. Yeah. From SoundStack. And what are we gonna be talking about? I haven't figured that one out yet. Oh.

Oh, okay. That's that's good. You could only do so much each day. I heard a lot of the sessions are being streamed. Streamed live or just Yeah. Streamed. And but I haven't heard anything like that. I heard that they were all being recorded. Well, they're not recording the slides, which is interesting. They're only recording the speaker, And I thought that's a mistake. Slides are important as part of, you know, it's a tie tie into the presentation, but makes you go I wasn't planning

on for my my particular presentation. I wasn't planning on using any slot. Yeah. Yeah. We never do talk. Oh, yeah. No. But I'm I'm I'm not talking about our Oh, you've got another session. I'm talking about I've got another session that I'm doing, and then I'm also doing a panel session, with some podcast Hall of Famers. Oh, okay. That's cool. Yep. So I'm doing 3 sessions plus the Hall of Fame, and we're going to get a get a get a recording of this show,

that we can put out from podcast. Oh, awesome. Hopefully, some good audio this time. Yeah. Well, I'm gonna capture it with my Nomano either way. So we'll have a recording either way. Okay. Then the did the Nomano recording last time work out okay? Or Yeah. Oh, okay. Are they still in business? Yeah. Oh, okay. Yeah. It's it's on the shelf back here. Haven't heard from them lately. Yeah. Well, they do have a US representative now. Mhmm. So he's based up here in New York.

Well, after 30 hours of travel and I got did get some sleep, but a full day at the office, I had meetings running. I mean, right up until we started 30 like I said, 45 minutes before the show when I was scrambling to make sure the hardware would come online. I've had a full day. I'm gonna collapse. I I got a I got my regular show to do tonight too. So What? I usually do my podcast tip show on Thursday nights. So you got another one as well.

At, 7. Alright. Well, I'll try to get all these put out today. And, we're we're a little long, but we went a little short in the beginning. And, yeah, but all the recordings late. All the recordings are working. My background here, though, it's kind of funny. I I can't Apple update changed where my wallpaper setting was. So luckily, you don't see my screen because you'd seen a blueberry ad if you did. So I don't have the new media I don't have the new media show banner up. So just stupid little

things. I've got it behind us. Yeah. You've got it behind us. So that's good. And, I didn't have time to white balance the cameras. They're a little bright, but, yeah. After being it looks good. Yeah. Well, it should should work out. But, anyway, we'll get out of here. I'm Todd at blueberry.com@geeknewsonx@[email protected]. Alright. I'm at my name Rob Greenlee, on all the social platforms. Rob Greenlee.com and x.

I'm on there as well. I post links to this to the to the new media show, X account as well. So we try and keep that up to that's NMS audio podcast. NMS podcast. Yeah. Yeah. And so if you want to go there and subscribe to that, but you can certainly send an email to me robgreenleygmail.com. I'd love to hear from you. And if you have any like secret tips on things that are going on with the Podscribe stuff, we'd love to hear it. Yeah, absolutely.

And join us for our live session at Podfest if you're there. Yeah. It's on the 16th January at 3:30 PM. Okay. So how long do we have? An hour or Hour and a half. Oh, we got a full full lineup. Alright. Perfect. 5. Yep. Come by the booth. We've got some, some secrets that we've kind of already talked about. But, if you come by the booth at podcast, you can get access to guest match, our new guest match pro service. What? I'd like to sign up for that, Todd.

Yeah. So, it's it's still being built that we're gonna be ready in about probably 30 days or so. And, we're probably gonna make some people unhappy that we're competing with them and the guest matching service. But it's not just for podcasters. It's for all creators across all platforms. That's Those are gonna be any AI relationship here? In the beginning, no. Well In the beginning, no. I like that. Well, there's there's there is some

in the but it's more machine learning. It's not necessarily AI in the beginning. The the matching algorithms are gonna be more machine versus the AI stuff. Yeah. So And then it's easier to transition into Yeah. Algorithmic matching. But we're going to need guests and we're gonna need to have creators. So Yeah. Sure. Interesting that you're using that term, Todd. What's that term? Creators. Creators versus podcasters. Because it is a platform for everyone.

It's not just a podcast specific platform. I I would have called it podcast match or something like that or something similar. But no. It's I think that's Probably someone already has that. Yeah. I think someone has that. So, yeah, so that's why we you know, it's Guestmatch Pro. Yes. Okay. That was a good choice. Yeah. So alright, everyone. Thanks for being here. We'll see you at Podfest. And if not, I guess we'll have a video to put up afterwards. Knock on wood. And get it on 15th. So are you

in on 15th? 15th in the afternoon. Yep. Yeah. Same with me. Okay. Alright. We'll see if you're going to Podfest, it's it's at Podfest expo.com. Yeah. You, wanna jump on a last minute flight. It's it's still, what, a week and a half away. But And our one of our new partners is gonna be their code ADX. So if you're heard about that, Todd. Yeah. So if you're a Blueberry customer, you can, we've partnered up with them for another way to monetize your podcast. So

Not that everybody wants to do that. Right? But this is using a unique affiliate code methodology. Very you get to pick who you want to promote. And there's special exclusive deals that can't be found anywhere else. That's the Delta on for the period of time. Be like honey, It's not gonna be like the honey plug in. Yeah. Yeah. Honey can go pack sand. Okay. That's good. Yeah. Exactly. Alright, everyone. We'll see you next time. Okay. Alright. Alright. Bye.

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