Gimlet staff want a union; Spotify files complaint against Apple
This article is at least a year old
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The staff at Gimlet Media, bought by Spotify last month, are looking to launch a worker’s union. With the Writer’s Guild of America East, the Gimlet Union posted their reasons why on a tweet. Gimlet’s management have acknowledged the request for union recognition, but otherwise have yet to respond. It would be a first for the podcast industry.
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Gimlet’s parent company Spotify has filed a complaint against Apple with the European Commission for unfair competitive practice, and has launched a website with their side of the story. Their complaint focuses on difficulties that Spotify has with app approvals and contractural agreements, but contains this interesting nugget at the bottom of their timeline:
So we announce two podcast acquisitions we are super excited about, and all of a sudden Apple arbitrarily decides to prohibit use of its API to recommend podcasts to users
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The Wall Street Journal isn’t a fan of corporate podcasts.
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The iHeart Podcast Channel on AM 1470 in Allentown-Bethlehem PA, USA, is the first station owned by iHeartRadio that will just air “the most creative stories from over 25,000 podcasts available on our free iHeartRadio app”, according to iHeart-owned InsideRadio, which also reproduces a program schedule. The station, WSAN, had a 0.3 share (12+) with its previous format of spanish-language sport from ESPN; it covers 728,100 people.
This link is no longer available, as at Aug 11 2023- This isn’t the first all-podcast station: back in 2005, KYOU in San Francisco tried this. Who had a listen? Why, Edison Research’s Tom Webster did.
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My Favorite Murder now has its own beer. It’s called Stay Out Of The Forest, it’s an IPA with lactose and blood orange, and the brewery should know that our mailing address is in our about page.
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iMessage, the instant messaging service for Apple devices, is about to sound an awful lot better. Here’s a comparison using the new iMessage in the beta of iOS 12.2.
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Dan Misener from Pacific Content looks into the possibility of getting a total subscriber number for your podcast. tl;dr: no chance.
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The classic podcast revenue model is broken, claims Ronan Leonard.
Podcasts
Companies mentioned above:
Apple