Podcast Alarm allows you to wake up to something different
This article is at least a year old
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A new podcast app with a difference: Podcast Alarm claims it’s “the only podcast alarm app on iOS”. “With Podcast Alarm you can select whatever kind of podcast you’re into as your morning alarm. Instead of hitting snooze, dozing off again and feeling worse, you can actually listen to something interesting.” It’s $1.99, iOS only. (You could wake up to our podcast maybe.)
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Deezer is coming after Spotify, and has substantially strengthened its podcast offering, partnering with Libsyn, Ausha, Podomatic, Blubrry and Simplecast in addition to Audioboom and Spreaker. Podcasters on those platforms will find automated submission tools; though you can add a podcast to Deezer from any platform. It reports a 250% increase in podcast usage on its platform over the last two years.
This link is no longer available, as at Aug 17 2023 -
One Voice, One Mic is a new short documentary about podcasting from Ben Gummery, and was released yesterday. It’s available on Amazon Prime Video - USA, UK, global - and coming soon to Vimeo. “It takes an upbeat yet honest look at the rise of podcasting as well as examining the state of the medium; considering whether podcasts are becoming over-saturated and demystifying how the monetisation of podcasts actually works in practice; with a particular focus on the UK podcasting scene.”
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iHeartRadio have announced the return of the iHeart Podcast Awards. They’ll take place on January 17th in Los Angeles CA, USA. The official website says “this year’s nominees and your opportunity to vote are coming soon” - we look forward to the “podcast industry news short form” category.
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Yesterday, we linked to Spotify’s advertising on Twitter and Facebook. Today, here’s Luminary, advertising in Taboola across many different websites. (via Oliver W)
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Bridge Ratings have posted “an overview of the types of podcast publishers”. Which are you?
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I’m Micaela Heck, Lifehacker Podcast Producer, and This Is How I Work - includes a ProTools view of The Upgrade, and a desperately lonely-looking cubicle.
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Finally, we return to The Daily Star, a British newspaper that steals stories from podcasts. This time, White Wine Question Time, a podcast by Yahoo! UK, interviewed Eamonn Holmes in an episode from July 25th. It took Alex Brown, a journalist from the newspaper, over a month to steal the story, entirely uncredited, which appeared on page 17 and online on September 5th. Any more?
Podcasts
Companies mentioned above:
Amazon