Since the number of podcasts is very large and growing (more than 325,000 podcasts are available in iTunes according to 2016 statistics),1 it’s easy to feel overwhelmed. In this section, I’ll recommend a selection of well-reviewed podcasts in different categories and discuss how to find podcasts by topic.
There are so many excellent podcasts that it’s not easy to create a list of the best general ones. I won’t aim to do that; instead, here’s a list of a few well-known podcasts that get good reviews and are popular.
If you want to recommend a few podcasts for people who are new to podcast listening, you can use this list. The upcoming section (podcasts for teens) may also be of interest to adults.
www.npr.org/podcasts/452538045/freakonomics-radio
A show based on the bestselling book Freakonomics by journalist Stephen J. Dubner and economist Steven D. Levitt. Dubner has conversations that explore the riddles of everyday life and the wrinkles of human nature. He talks with his coauthor Levitt and also with Nobel laureates, social scientists, and entrepreneurs.
www.npr.org/podcasts/510307/invisibilia
Invisibilia, which is Latin for “invisible things,” covers the thoughts, beliefs, assumptions, and feelings that shape human behavior. Cohosted by Lulu Miller, Hanna Rosin, and Alix Spiegel, this podcast uses narrative storytelling and scientific research to tell fascinating stories.
This podcast is about new technologies and their implications for everyday life. It’s aimed at those who want to “preserve their humanity in the digital age.” 2 It’s hosted by Manoush Zomorodi, who encourages listeners to question everything.
This is a weekly show that explores and analyzes the process of making news media. It aims to uncover the media-making process and looks at challenges relating to freedom of information and expression in the United States and abroad.
www.radiolab.org/series/podcasts
Radiolab calls itself a show about curiosity. It blurs the lines between science, philosophy, and the human experience. It’s a popular radio program produced by WNYC and broadcasted by public radio stations in the United States.
This popular podcast features the author Malcolm Gladwell, author of Tipping Point, Blink, and several other books. Each week it reexamines events, people, or ideas from the past, selecting topics that often have been ignored, disregarded, or misunderstood.
www.pri.org/programs/science-friday
This podcast covers news about science and technology in fun, interesting ways. Hosted by Ira Flatow, it features experts and people who want to be experts. In addition, the program often includes a segment where listeners call in with interesting questions for those experts.
http://www.wnyc.org/shows/whiteguys
This is a podcast by comedian Phoebe Robinson, where she interviews performers, musicians, authors, and artists who are doing outstanding work in various fields. None of them are white men. She turns the tables by including only one episode per season where she interviews a “token white guy.” This is a relatively new podcast, launched in July of 2016, and is already very popular.
www.npr.org/podcasts/510200/storycorps
StoryCorps journeys across the United States gathering narratives of everyday folk who get the chance to interview each other about their experiences and lives. These interesting interviews aren’t scripted and are shared weekly on StoryCorps.
http://startalkradio.co/category/podcasts
This podcast about space is hosted by renowned astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson. Topics include space travel, extraterrestrial life, the future of planet Earth, and more. It’s a lively show, where he is joined weekly by comedians, celebrities, and other special guests.
Studio 360 is a weekly public radio program about arts and culture, hosted by novelist and journalist Kurt Andersen. It covers topics such as creativity, pop culture, and the arts.
www.npr.org/podcasts/510298/ted-radio-hour
TED Radio Hour is a one-hour show that brings together excerpts and interviews from TED Talks on particular topics. It’s hosted by Guy Raz and coproduced by NPR and TED. TED Talks covers new solutions and new processes to old problems, new inventions, and new means to conceive ideas and create.
www.thisamericanlife.org/podcast
This American Life is one of the most popular podcasts in the United States. It’s a recording of the radio show of the same name, sometimes with extra material that the radio didn’t have time to include. There’s a theme to each episode, and most of the stories are journalism with an occasional comedy routine. Topics are wide ranging. To get an idea of the content, take a look at the archive of old episodes: www.thisamericanlife.org/radio-archives.
As you can see, most of these podcasts are produced by well-known media outlets, and often they are recordings of existing radio shows. In future sections, we’ll look at podcasts by small, independent creators—many of which exist only in podcast form.
In this section, I’ll recommend a few podcasts for higher education students, faculty, and administrators. There are many podcasts created by specific universities, professors, students, and higher education professionals, so this is just a small sampling.
http://collegeinfogeek.com/cast
Study tips and interviews with professionals who have interesting jobs.
www.thegreatcourses.com/podcast?ICMP=102636
Host Ed Leon interviews expert professors about interesting research from their specialties.
http://studentcaring.com/podcast-for-professors
Podcast hosts de Roulet and Pecoraro, authors of the book The Caring Professor: A Guide to Effective, Rewarding, and Rigorous Teaching, discuss how to be an effective professor.
http://trendsandissues.com/category/trends-issues-podcast
Professors Abbie Brown and Tim Green are experts in educational technologies. Each week they discuss several trends in instructional design.
http://higheredlive.com/podcasts
This podcast is for higher education professionals and covers admissions, advancement, marketing, student affairs, and communications.
www.npr.org/podcasts/417236598/higher-ed
From KUT, the public radio station at University of Texas, Austin, Jennifer Stanton and Southwestern University President Dr. Ed Burger explore topics of higher education and lifelong learning.
http://chronicle.com/specialreport/Re-Learning-Podcast/34
A podcast from the Chronicle of Higher Education about teachers, ed-tech entrepreneurs, long-time educators, and other people who are framing the future of higher education.
http://lawschooltoolbox.com/podcast
This is a show for law students that offers useful recommendations and covers topics about law school, the bar exam, careers in law, and more.
www.economicrockstar.com/podcasts
Frank Conway, lecturer in economics, finance, and statistics, produces this weekly podcast where he interviews experts in the field about various aspects of economics and finance.
From students at the University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine, this podcast is about the demanding environment of medical school.
To find more podcasts on this topic, try browsing the higher education category of Podcast Chart: www.podcastchart.com/categories/higher-education-podcasts, a useful aggregator of podcasts.
Many podcasts aimed at adults are also enjoyed by teens (and vice versa). So if you are recommending podcasts to teenagers, start with the list of podcasts for a general audience in a previous section of this chapter.
Here’s a sampling of podcasts that are enjoyed by teen audiences. Of course, every teen is different, so this list includes a variety of topics to choose from, such as music, foreign language learning, science fiction, math, history, science, philosophy, and life stories by both famous and ordinary people.
http://radiolingua.com/2009/08/introducing-coffee-break-spanish-step-by-step
A series of fun Spanish lessons for beginners, offered in short chunks for learning during short breaks. Listen to teacher Marc teach student Kara in a fun and charming way, with silent moments for you to speak the answers as well. Radio Lingua also offers podcasts for beginners in French and German.
www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p02nq0lx/episodes/downloads
Listen to some of the best BBC World Service audio documentaries, with titles such as “Graffiti: Paint and Protest in Brazil,” “Women with the Right Stuff” (women astronauts), and “Batman and Ethan,” (a 10-year-old blind boy and gifted musician who is learning echolocation).
A science fiction audio drama about two doctors and their medical team aboard a space aircraft within an intergalactic world. Includes comic elements and excellent voice acting. Listen to the episodes in order with each season, as you would a show on Netflix.
This podcast follows a diverse group of high-school seniors from a New York City school as they apply to college. Hosted by a former dean of freshmen at Stanford University.
This fun weekly podcast is comprised of trivia quizzes and unique facts and news.
http://thehistorychicks.com/about
This is a show about female characters in history, both fictional and real. Hosts Beckett Graham and Susan Vollenweider chat about the challenges, failures and successes, and interesting facts about each person. Includes shows about Helen Keller, Queen Victoria, Frida Kahlo, Amelia Earhart, Joan of Arc, Beatrix Potter, and many more.
An award-winning podcast of true, mysterious stories from history in the style of scary stories told around the campfire. Explores the true origins of myths, such as zombies, werewolves, vampires, and ghosts. It is soon to be made into a TV show.
http://mathmutation.blogspot.com
Math Mutation explores intriguing, entertaining, or curious aspects of mathematics. Each episode explores an interesting concept of math that doesn’t require looking at equations, such as geometry, infinity, paradoxes, and more.
This podcast describes itself as a show “by a media-savvy group of physicians and researchers from Cambridge University [who] strip science down to its bare essentials and promote it to the general public.”3 The hosts interview top scientists, answer science questions, and keep you up to date on the latest science news.
This award-winning podcast, hosted by Krista Tippett, explores question such as “What does it mean to be human?” and “How do we want to live?” Tippett interviews guests such as the fourteenth Dalai Lama, Desmond Tutu, Thich Nhat Hanh, Yo-Yo Ma, Brian Greene, and Elie Wiesel.
www.podcasthistoryofourworld.com
An award-winning podcast on world history, covering periods “from the Big Bang to the Modern Age.”4 (Currently, it’s only up to ancient Rome). Done with enthusiasm and humor, it’s never boring. Created by enthusiastic history teacher Rob Monaco.
http://feed.radiodiaries.org/radio-diaries
Radio Diaries is made up of first-person diaries of individual people, from teenagers to people in their eighties, from all walks of life. It weaves together home recordings, archival news audio, and first-person accounts. Several episodes are interviews with teens from around the world, and of course teens may be interested in interviews with people of all ages.
www.wnyc.org/articles/radio-rookies-podcasts
This podcast about the challenges of teen life is a Peabody Award–winning WNYC journalism initiative, with episodes produced by teens, about teens. This initiative works using a mentorship model, helping teens master interviewing, writing, editing, and voice skills. This podcast ended in February of 2016, and all the past episodes are available and worth listening to. There are rumors it will start up again in the near future. Its how-to toolkit is available online: www.wnyc.org/story/diy-radio-rookies-toolkit.
This award-winning podcast from the creators of This American Life and hosted by Sarah Koenig is a true story, told in episodes over the course of a season. Season One is about a high-school senior who was murdered in 1999. Her classmate and ex-boyfriend, Annan Syed, was arrested and sentenced to life in prison. To this day, he maintains his innocence. The story is about various discrepancies in the trial and aims to ask, “How can you know a person’s character? How can you tell what they’re capable of?” Season Two is the story of US Army Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl, an American soldier who was held for five years by the Taliban and then charged with desertion.
www.maximumfun.org/shows/still-buffering
Three real-life young sisters discuss topics of interest to teens yesterday and today. They discuss topics that separate and unite their generations and have a lot of fun doing it. Topics include body image, likes and dislikes about going back to school each year, slumber parties, favorite foods, and the world of high-school theater. It’s lighthearted and funny.
www.stufftoblowyourmind.com/podcasts
This podcast explores science, philosophy, and history by looking at neurological quandaries, evolutionary marvels, and cosmic mysteries. Episodes include topics like mosquito-breeding programs, Saturn’s rings and moons, empathy in elephants, and the future of tattoos. It won the 2015 Academy of Podcasts Award for Best Science and Medicine podcast.
www.stuffyoushouldknow.com/podcasts
This podcast is an award-winning series of shows published by How Stuff Works and hosted by writers Josh Clark and Charles W. “Chuck” Bryant. They aim to educate the public about “common things and how they work.” 5 Some topics include “How Night Terrors Work,” “How Triage Works,” “How Witness Protection Works,” “How Radiation Sickness Works,” and “What’s with This Internet of Things?” Browse its archive of hundreds of episodes for topics you might be interested in: www.stuffyoushouldknow.com/podcasts/archive.
http://thisibelieve.org/podcasts
This podcast is based on the popular 1950s radio series of the same name hosted by Edward R. Murrow. Every week, different people read essays that they have written about their personal philosophies. This is followed by an interview by the host. People interviewed include both everyday citizens and well-known people, such as Gloria Steinem, Yo-Yo Ma, and Muhammad Ali. You can listen to some of the recordings from the early 1950s on this page: http://thisibelieve.org/essays/fifties, which includes people such as Jackie Robinson, Martha Graham, Ralph J. Bunche, Robert Heinlein, and Oscar Hammerstein II.
This podcast is a radio drama about a fictional desert town. It’s done in the style of a local news program. It’s hypnotic and darkly funny, telling the story of a place where every conspiracy theory is real, but it’s not really a big deal. It has received positive reviews from many sources.6
www.podcastchart.com/podcasts/what-it-takes
This podcast is about passion, vision, and perseverance from the Academy of Achievement. It includes conversations with famous people in many fields: science, music, politics, sports, literature, and technology. The interviews have been recorded over the past twenty-five years and include interesting life lessons. The hosts have interviewed Elie Wiesel, Carole King, Steven Spielberg, Quincy Jones, Steve Jobs, Coretta Scott King, and many more well-known people.
Some commentators have written about the lack of podcasts for kids,7 and several groups are beginning to organize and produce more podcasts aimed at them. An example is Kids Listen, a new grassroots organization of advocates for high-quality audio content for children. To learn more, see www.kidslisten.org.
In spite of that lack, there are some high-quality podcasts for kids. The list below gives you a sampling, on topics including classic and modern stories, stories written by kids, book reviews, science, technology, comics, music, and world cultures.
www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p02tkm27/episodes/downloads
These fictional stories are written by kids who are finalists in a 500-word story competition. They range from very funny to serious and are read by the judges and celebrities. It’s a BBC podcast, and the kids who enter the competition need to be residents of the United Kingdom and between five and thirteen years old.
Listen to the time-traveling adventures of a boy and his computer in the prehistoric world. Start from the beginning of the first season to experience the larger story arc. The first season is about dinosaurs, and the next few seasons cover mammals, ocean creatures, and more. Aaron and his dad started producing the show when he was six and ended when he was ten. It’s well produced with fun sound effects.
www.bookclubforkids.org/new-blog
This is a podcast where middle-school kids meet to talk about books. Each episode also includes a celebrity reader and an interview with the author. The host is award-winning public radio journalist Kitty Felde.
This is a very popular science podcast for kids, with a loyal audience of six-to-twelve-year-olds. Each episode seeks to answer a question posed at the start by interviewing adult science experts. (How is glass made? How do airplanes fly? Mosquitos: What are they good for?) A different child cohosts each episode with adult hosts from public radio—Sanden Totten, Marc Sanchez, and Molly Bloom.
http://andrewandpolly.com/earsnacks
Hosts Andrew and Polly (a married couple with a child) host this fun podcast featuring kids ages two to seven. They have worked with over sixty children and their parents to cover topics like fruit, disguises, rain, and shadows. They talk with each other, play audio clips of kids talking about the topic, talk with adult experts, and they play their original music—indie pop music for kids.8
This popular video podcast can be enjoyed as audio without a problem. It’s hosted by sixteen-year-old Hannah, thirteen-year-old Zoe, and their dad Dave—and sometimes includes Winston, their poodle. They discuss apps, websites, gadgets, and current events.
A school-aged boy and his dad get together once a week and talk about comic books. Each episode focuses on one title. The dad asks interesting questions of his son, getting at his reaction to the comic they are discussing.
Jenna, age seven, and her dad discuss topics of interest to kids from a kid’s perspective. Topics include friends, changing schools, being bossy, dreams, boredom, mean girls, and more. Jenna has been podcasting with her dad since she was three years old. They have great conversational chemistry with lots of laughs and funny voices.
This unique science podcast for kids ages eight to thirteen is wrapped in a fictional story, so it’s best to start with episode one. The story is about three kids separated from their parents during a zombie apocalypse. Each episode focuses on a different topic, like pathogens, epidemics, digital communication, and our reliance on electricity. Each episode is about thirty minutes long and includes entertaining sound effects and music.
https://soundcloud.com/short-curly
This is an entertaining and thoughtful podcast for kids and families about ethics, produced by the Australian Broadcasting Company. The hosts, actress/writer Molly Daniels and reporter Carl Smith, post interesting ethical questions, and they ask kids to say what they think. Then they bring in experts on the same topic and ask their opinions. At some point during the episode they tell listeners to pause the podcast and think or discuss certain questions. Some topics include “Should you move to Mars?” “Is it ever OK to lie?” “Should chimps have the same rights as kids?” and “Can you trust a robot?”
https://soundcloud.com/the-show-about-science
Six-year-old Nate is the host of this science podcast. His questions are answered in interviews with physicists, chemists, and other scientists and researchers. This is an interesting show for all ages—adults, too. It’s great to hear scientists explain things at a level that young kids can understand. Some of the topics covered include invisibility cloaks, vultures, radiation, alligators, bat biology, and recycling. This podcast is part of the Kids Listen organization.9
https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/story-pirates-podcast/id719585944?mt=2
This podcast takes stories written by kids and turns them into audio drama performed by first-rate actors and comedians. First the host reads the story exactly as written, then the troupe performs the story, and then the hosts interview the child authors. The actors tell these stories in a funny, creative way, with great sound effects. They also perform these dramas live in schools around the country. See www.storypirates.org.
This podcast is made up of stories for kids beautifully read by professional actors from the United Kingdom. It includes classic fairy tales, myths, adventure, and new original stories for kids. See this list of some of its most popular stories, grouped by topic or theme: www.storynory.com/2014/07/28/start. It even hosts a writing competition for kids, where winners get their story read on the podcast.10
This science podcast for kids ages eight to twelve is created for family listening. Hosted by science journalist Lindsay Patterson and teacher Marshall Escamilla, it has an interesting manifesto, consisting of two beliefs: (1) “If kids understand how science works, the future will be a better place,” and (2) “Let’s make more podcasts for kids.”11 Some topics include the hunt for black holes, the voyage of the ocean trash, the quest for the edge of the universe, and the cave of the upside-down bat.
https://soundcloud.com/world-of-wonder
Young hosts Helen and Ethan and their dad Joe interview guests from many different countries. Guests share stories about their own cultures and what we can learn from them. Meet guests from Pakistan, Sri Lanka, South Africa, and more.
According to the ALA Policy Manual’s section on diversity, “Care must be taken to acquire and provide materials that meet the educational, informational, and recreational needs of diverse communities.”12
Specifically, the policy mentions the importance of serving “those who may experience language or literacy-related barriers; economic distress; cultural or social isolation; physical or attitudinal barriers; racism; discrimination on the basis of appearance, ethnicity, immigrant status, religious background, sexual orientation, gender identity, gender expression; or barriers to equal education, employment, and housing.”13
Keeping this in mind, let’s look at some data. Are there podcasts by and for diverse audiences? According to Nielsen data, “Listeners still largely fit the profile of early adopters. As Jesse Holcomb, associate director of research at the Pew Center, explains, ‘They’re more likely to be male, young, have higher incomes, be college graduates, live in an urban area.’”14
As of late 2016, there is some good news. According to Edison Research, a group that has been tracking demographics of podcast listeners for over a decade, “In the early days of the medium, Podcasting was disproportionally a medium for white males, ages 25–44. Much of that ‘skew’ was down to the available content options, but today, the content universe for Podcasts has exploded, and the diversity of programming available rivals any other form of audio.”15
Those statistics are about ethnic diversity only and don’t cover gender, economic class, or other categories of diverse populations. But there is some good news for other categories of diversity. A podcast collective based in Chicago is aiming to create a community of shows by women, people of color, and queer-identified hosts. Its goal is to bring more diversity to podcasting and help underrepresented voices create their own shows.16
In order to assist librarians with recommending podcasts for diverse audiences, I’ve complied lists of podcasts in the following categories:
These lists can serve as a starting point for finding podcasts for diverse audiences on diverse topics.
This podcast is about women writers and gender non-conforming writers. They tackle questions related to being successful as a writer, such as balancing your art with your day job. It’s a production from a non-profit called Out of the Binders, which is committed to expanding the diversity of voices found in media.
Its tagline is “for long-distance besties everywhere.” The two hosts discuss pop culture and politics from a feminist perspective.
http://www.girlboss.com/podcast/
In this podcast, you’ll hear interviews with women who have made an impact in business or creative fields. It includes plenty of advice and plenty of humor.
This podcast, hosted by comedians Sofie Hagen and Deborah Frances-White, is recorded in front of a live audience. In it, they interview and discuss topics with their guests that feminists usually agree on, while also confessing their insecurities and fears.
http://international-realness.tumblr.com
International Realness hosts Ejolee Mitchell, May Steinberg, and Radford Lathan explain international events, global politics, and issues that cross borders. All three hosts have degrees in international relations.
https://www.wbez.org/shows/nerdette/b2c2c10b-1e7f-43ca-b3ad-55d6fd33722c
This podcast is made up of interviews with popular authors, artists, astronauts, and more. “Because everybody is a little nerdy about something.” 17 From WBEZ Chicago, Nerdette is cohosted by Greta Johnsen and Tricia Bobeda.
http://sandikleinshow.com/podcasts
Interviews with creative women in a wide variety of professions—like performers, writers, directors, musicians, composers, painters, fashion designers, scientists, educators, investors, and more.
This podcast is about creative women who work in media. Each episode includes an interview with the creator and then goes deeper into their process and philosophy. It’s hosted and created by Elaine Sheldon and Sarah Ginsburg.
www.slate.com/articles/podcasts/doublex_gabfest.html
This audio programming is from Double X, Slate’s blog founded by women. Each week it discusses sexism in current events and female empowerment.
www.stuffmomnevertoldyou.com/podcasts
Hosted by Cristen Conger and Caroline Ervin, this audio podcast from How Stuff Works (www.howstuffworks.com) covers a wide range of social topics, such as food, film, body image, athletics, mental health, and civil rights.
A podcast about unlearning harmful stereotypes that are often taught about blackness, femininity, sexuality, and religion. It’s hosted by two women from Chicago, Katherine Best and Mesha Arant.
https://soundcloud.com/womenofthehour
This is Lena Dunham’s podcast about friendship, love, work, bodies, and more. Episodes are from 2015, when it was released as a miniseries.
www.npr.org/sections/codeswitch
NPR’s Code Switch podcast is by a team of journalists who look into the themes of race, ethnicity, and culture and explore how people experience those themes in their everyday lives.
www.mashupamericans.com/listen
Hosts Amy S. Choi and Rebecca Lehrer talk culture, identity, and what makes us who we are. Amy, cofounder and editorial director, is a Korean American married to a Colombian Mexican American. Rebecca, cofounder and chief executive, is a Salvadoran Jewish American married to an American American. Together they discuss issues facing “mash-up Americans.” Their slogan is “Get to know yourself, America.” 18
Three authors, Baratunde Thurston (How to Be Black), Raquel Cepeda (Bird of Paradise: How I Became Latina), and Tanner Colby (Some of My Best Friends Are Black), are the hosts of this conversational show about the ways we talk about culture, identity, politics, power, and privilege in America.
https://soundcloud.com/geedee215
PostBourgie is a blog about race, gender, class, politics, and media. This is the podcast version of that blog.
https://www.buzzfeed.com/anotherround
Hosts Heben Nigatu (editor, writer) and Tracy Clayton (writer, humorist) talk about race, feminism, and pop culture. Here’s a fun episode to begin with—Episode 55: “16 Books We Fell in Love with as Young Black Girls”: https://www.buzzfeed.com/anotherround/16-books-we-loved-as-young-black-girls?utm_term=.siAEjVpZ2#.afowQzKJD.
www.rebeccamthompson.com/podcast
This podcast is devoted to encouraging and supporting black women in running for elected office. Host Rebecca Thompson interviews an appointed official or candidate in each episode of this weekly podcast.
http://kut.org/term/black-america
In Black America is a long-running radio program that discusses all aspects of the African American experience. John Hanson speaks with a diverse range of both current and historical people. Guests on the program include artists, civil rights leaders, educators, authors, and athletes.
http://thisistheread.com/current-shows
Each week, Kid Fury and Crissle host a podcast discussing icons from hip-hop and pop culture.
http://snapjudgment.org/podcast
A storytelling show hosted by Glynn Washington. It’s well-produced, with excellent sound design. Listen to this if you love a good story or if you’re a fan of shows like This American Life or The Moth and you’d like to hear a more diverse mix of voices.
http://explainthingstome.libsyn.com/podcast
In this podcast, hosts Anna Akana and Brad Gage get qualified experts to explain things to them. They engage in conservations with interesting people, such as an investigative journalist, an online entrepreneur, a film critic, a costume designer, an astrophysicist, and other experts.
http://www.goodmuslimbadmuslim.com
The idea for the podcast began with a hashtag conversation between Tanzila “Taz” Ahmed and Zahra Noorbakhsh using #GoodMuslimBadMuslim. According to their webpage, “To the Muslim community, we are ‘bad’ Muslims—we listen to music, we don’t pray regularly, we date or get married to white men (Zahra), identify as punks and radicals (Taz), we perform and share our lives with comedy and writing. . . . To non-Muslims, we are ‘good’—we don’t drink, we don’t do drugs, we are not criminals, we are social justice activists and community leaders. We are successful, published, accomplished.”19 They banter and joke with both sides and work to produce their own narrative, full of satire and humor.
http://angryasianman.libsyn.com
This is the official podcast of the Angry Asian Man blog. Host Phil Yu (Angry Asian Man) interviews members of the Asian Pacific American community. Guests have included Samantha Futerman from the documentary Twinsters, actor Randall Park who stars in the TV sitcom Fresh Off the Boat, and writer and comedian Jenny Yang.
http://whatjustpodcast.libsyn.com
Host David Chang discusses relevant, recent, and often controversial topics. He researches everything about each topic, and the result is a very informative podcast that leaves listeners better informed.
www.npr.org/sections/altlatino
Alt.Latino is about Latin alternative music and rock in Spanish, with interesting commentary. It’s a great way to discover new music. This is one of several music podcasts from NPR in different genres (rock, pop, jazz, classical, and more). Choose the genres you like from the list on this page: www.npr.org/music.
www.blogtalkradio.com/latinorebels
Humor, commentary, and an examination of the US Latino experience are the topics found in this podcast. Some episode titles are “What Does Hispanic Look Like?” and “A Taco Truck on Every Corner.” Latino Rebels also has in informative news website: http://latinorebels.com.
Latino USA is produced by Futuro Media, which was founded in 2010 by award-winning journalist Maria Hinojosa. It focuses on making content about the new American mainstream with the aim of encouraging individuals to navigate the intricacies of a world that is more and more diverse. This podcast features stories that are usually overlooked by primary media outlets.
www.ivoox.com/podcast-nomadas_sq_f1925_1.html
This podcast is produced by Radio Nacional de España (RNE). Hosted by Álvaro Soto in Spanish, Nómadas (which translates to nomads in English) presents conversations with guests about a different location around the globe every week—including street sounds and insights into the culture, food, music, and history.
This podcast focuses on stories in Spanish from all over Latin America and the United States. Some refer to it as a Spanish version of This American Life. The host and founder is Daniel Alarcón, a Peruvian-born author who grew up in Alabama.
https://soundcloud.com/native-america-calling
This is a live program that allows guests and listeners to call in during the episode. Hosted by Tara Gatewood (Isleta), this program engages guests and listeners in captivating conversations from a Native American perspective.
Hosted by Michael Kickingbear, of the Mashantucket Pequot Tribal Nation, and David GreyOwl, a member of the Echota Cherokee Tribe of Alabama, this podcast offers an indigenous perspective on current issues in American history, politics, and culture.
www.blogtalkradio.com/nativetrailblazers
This show features successful indigenous experts in many fields. Native people interviewed include a comic book artist, indie music award winners, hip-hop artists, a film actor, comedians, and more. It’s hosted by St. Regis Mohawk photojournalist and author Vincent Schilling, St. Regis Mohawk photojournalist and author, and Delores Schilling, CEO of Schilling Media.
https://soundcloud.com/nationalnativenews
This is a five-minute weekday program devoted to Native news and issues. It gathers news reports from around the United States and is hosted by news anchor Antonia Gonzales (Navajo). It’s from the Native Voice One network: www.nv1.org. See its other radio shows here: www.nv1.org/programs.
www.blogtalkradio.com/redtownradio
This podcast examines current events as they relate to the treatment of and discrimination against indigenous people.
This podcast is from a multi-platform bisexual media group offering news, information, and opinion stories for the bisexual community.
http://mylesbianradio.podbean.com
The Lesbian Lounge is hosted by an American lesbian in London named Denise. It covers international LGBT news, events, and pop culture.
https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/one-from-the-vaults/id1071270085?mt=2
This is a trans history podcast by Morgan M Page (http://odofemi.com). She is a multiple award-winning performance and video artist, writer, and activist in Canada. She has written for several magazines about trans, sex work, and HIV issues. Her nonfiction also appears in Cleis Press’s Best Sex Writing of the Year.
Outsports is an LGBT sports publication talking about gay athletes and homophobia.
http://radioqueerminded.com/qsom
Queer State of Mind is a podcast from New York City where LGBTQ people of color come together to discuss local issues, news, and entertainment. It’s hosted by Orie Givens with a panel of rotating guest cohosts. It also airs live on Radio Free Brooklyn (http://radiofreebrooklyn.com).
http://wfpl.org/category/programs/strange-fruit
This podcast produced by WFPL in Louisville, Kentucky, is hosted by Jaison Gardner, a community activist, and Dr. Kaila Story, University of Louisville professor. On the show, they discuss politics and pop culture from a black gay perspective.
This podcast gets rave reviews.20 Hosts Erin Gibson and Bryan Safi cover gay rights, women’s issues, pop culture, and politics with a comic style.
https://soundcloud.com/transwaves
This podcast is produced by the Trans Youth Equality Foundation. It features interviews with trans youth, allies, activists, and families in order to convey the perspectives of the trans child movement and expose a wider audience to the movement. The podcast offers varied perspectives from all people of all ages and backgrounds on what it means to be a transgender youth today. It also answers anonymous questions on the air.
http://qtpocart.libsyn.com/podcast
According to her website, “Nia King is a multimedia journalist whose work focuses on political art by women, queer people, and people of color.”21 In her podcast, she discusses tips and advice on how to make a living as an artist while staying true to yourself. She interviews like-minded artists who are doing that successfully. Transcripts are available on Scribd: https://www.scribd.com/user/223838842/Nia-King.
This is a storytelling show about growing older, designed for “boomers and beyond” and is a good show for all ages.
https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/elder-justice-podcast-series/id590043766?mt=2&ls=1
This podcast is no longer offering new episodes, but it is worth listening to for past ones. It was produced by the NYC Elder Abuse Center (NYCEAC) and covers topics that help people effectively assist victims.
http://bloomerboomer.com/podcast
Bloomer Boomer calls itself the “Huffington Post for Boomers.” Each of its podcasts is thirty minutes or less and focuses on actionable items for listeners. Some topics include entrepreneurship, travel advice, fitness, downsizing, dating, and “un-retirement.”
This podcast (mentioned earlier in this chapter) is well-tagged, so you can find all of the episodes on the topic of aging using this link: http://sandikleinshow.com/category/aging.
Ageism usually describes prejudicial attitudes towards older people, but it can also to refer to discrimination against adolescents and children—ignoring their ideas because they are too young or assuming they should behave in certain ways because of their age.22
For that reason, I also include a couple of podcasts about children’s rights.
https://oxfordchildrensrights.org/category/podcasts
The Oxford Children’s Rights Network is a group of students, researchers, and practitioners based in Oxford, England, working on a broad range of issues related to children’s rights. Their podcasts are recordings of seminars on this topic.
www.unicef.org/videoaudio/video_allpodcasts.html
UNICEF has an interesting podcast series on topics with titles like “Peace-Building through Early Childhood Education,” “Girls Who Code Can Change the World towards Gender Parity in Computing Fields,” and “Mariam Khalique, a Teacher of Malala Yousafzai’s, Is Building Futures under Extreme Circumstances.”
http://crossroads.newsworks.org/keystonecrossroads/grapple
Grapple is a podcast made up of personal narratives by people who live and work in distressed communities, both small towns and large urban areas. This podcast discusses how economically challenged communities have changed over time and the current issues that they are facing.
www.npr.org/series/485129365/the-new-middle
This series explores different aspects of being middle class in America with episode titles like “Modern Television Portrays Complex View of the Middle Class,” “Dispelling the Myth of a Classless Society in ‘White Trash,’” “Middle Class Earners Struggle to Pay Rent in New York City,” and more.
www.irp.wisc.edu/publications/media/podcasts.htm
This podcast is from the Institute for Research on Poverty at the University of Wisconsin. It includes interviews with researchers and episodes with titles such as “Do the Labels We Use for Public Benefit Programs Matter?” and “The Suburbanization of US Poverty.”
https://talkpoverty.org/podcast
Through interviews with journalists, advocates, and people struggling to make ends meet, Talk Poverty Radio discusses what can be done to make our economy work for all economic classes and not just the rich.
https://www.aclu.org/search/%20?f[0]=type%3Apodcast&f[1]=field_issues%3A62
The American Civil Liberties Union has podcasts on several topics. The link above will filter the list to just those about mass incarceration. Hear from former prisoners, experts on prison reform, and more.
https://michaelsantos.com/podcast
Former prisoner Michael Santos shares stories of himself and others who have successfully made the transition to life after prison.
www.radiodiaries.org/tag/prison-diaries
These are the episodes tagged “prison diaries” from the more general podcast Radio Diaries. It’s made up of audio journals by inmates, correctional officers, and a judge who recorded the sounds of typical days behind bars, including roll call, meals, family visits, and shakedowns.
http://statesofincarceration.org/podcast
This podcast features stories of the incarcerated from seventeen states around the United States. Episodes are made by a team of students who interview witnesses (people who live near prisons, who work in prisons, and formerly incarcerated people) about how the prison boom is affecting their communities. A useful teaching resource page is available on the show’s website for those teaching about mass incarceration: http://statesofincarceration.org/teaching-resources.
http://wwno.org/programs/unprisoned-stories-system
Independent producer Eve Abrams offers this podcast from New Orleans. In these episodes, you hear from people serving time, both inside and outside the criminal justice system. They share stories in order to spark conversation about how mass incarceration can change families and communities, with an emphasis on how children are affected.
This podcast consists of interviews with literacy researchers discussing the significance of their research. Teachers, parents, and policymakers are encouraged to listen to the podcast and discuss methods to enhance literacy instruction.
This podcast is made for autism parents and educators. Leading autism advocates, authors, educators, and organizations are interviewed and share resources and advice for the autism community.
http://thebipolarfamily.podbean.com
Listen to the stories of a family who have been diagnosed with bipolar disorder. Covers topics like suicidal thoughts, manic episodes, and depression.
www.elishevaschwartz.com/series/episode-archieve
This podcast is hosted by Elisheva Schwartz—a dyslexia researcher. Her aim is to decode the dyslexic mind and help everyone identify and comprehend both the strengths and the difficulties of this processing style. She interviews cognitive scientists, geneticists, and other experts.
http://muleandmuseproductions.com/loud-mute-radio
This podcast is hosted by writer/advocate Barb Rentenbach and educational psychologist Lois Prislovsky, PhD. Rentenbach is mute. “She communicates by typing one letter at a time and considers herself a contemplative—she spends most of her time thinking about things that are not present and observing that which is.” 23 She and her cohost cover many interesting and funny topics related to neurodiversity and autism spectrum disorder.
This podcast covers topics of interest to blind and low-vision users of Apple devices. Featured topics include walkthroughs and demonstrations of apps, tips on using iOS and Mac OS, and accessory reviews. It also invites listeners to upload their own audio comments for inclusion in future podcasts: www.applevis.com/upload-audio-inclusion-podcast.
https://soundcloud.com/blindhour
The Blind Hour is hosted by two visually impaired individuals, Max and John. This show is designed to empower and entertain people, both sighted and with impairment.
Host Harley Thomas, along with special guests, talk about life in the blind community. They discuss everything from experiences with having a guide dog to advances in assistive technology.
Host Mike Lloyd is from Auckland, New Zealand, is blind, and enjoys running, cycling, and keeping active. His podcast is for those who are fully blind, individuals with limited vision, and their friends and family. His goal is to assist others in enhancing their sport. Episodes include interviews, tips, and personal opinions.
This podcast is produced by Terptree, a business that works to produce social change in order to teach and inspire deaf and hearing people. Some episodes include “Deaf Jobseeker and Employee Experience Survey,” “Come Fly With Me—Deaf Access at Airports,” and “5 Year Old Learns Sign Language to Communicate with Deaf Mum.” Listen to this podcast to learn more about Deaf culture.
https://coolblindtech.com/category/podcasts/
The slogan of this podcast is “podcasts for the blind, by the blind.” Its mission is to maximize the independence and participation of the blind and low-vision community with technology.
http://www.lyndondunbar.com/a11ymadesimple/
This podcast, hosted by Lyndon Dunbar, has a mission “to help bridge the gap between technology and digital accessibility so that persons with disabilities can engage in fulfilling work and lead a life of independence with confidence.”24 Some episodes include “Developing Accessible WordPress Plugins,” “Read Faster with BeeLine Reader,” and “Everything Apple Accessibility.”
https://www.voiceamerica.com/show/1315/disability-matters
This podcast emphasizes career opportunities and empowerment for people with disabilities. It’s broadcasted live and provides captioning in real time for those who are deaf and hard of hearing. The program focuses on how people with disabilities can find employment and how we all can help to empower people with disabilities.
http://disabilitythinking.podbean.com
This podcast is about how people with disabilities are depicted on television. It discusses shows such as The West Wing, Game of Thrones, Bones, and more. Transcripts are available for each episode.
www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p02r6yqw/episodes/downloads
This BBC show includes interviews and conversations with people who have various kinds of disabilities with a humorous flair. They use guest presenters, along with host Kate Monaghan and the Ouch blog team.
http://whoamitostopit.com/category/podcasts/
Cheryl Green from the documentary film Who Am I to Stop It interviews people with brain injuries and other disabilities. This program challenges and tackles stereotypes and highlights the stories and experiences of those with brain injuries and other disabilities. Screen-readable transcripts are available: http://whoamitostopit.com/stories-from-the-brainreels-show-transcripts.
Many librarians have come up with interesting and creative ideas for podcasts. Here is a sampling of some of their podcasts. They cover a range of topics, such as the future of libraries, technology on a budget, book reviews, historical documents, user experience, coding, and more.25 For a long list of even more podcasts create by libraries, see the Library Success wiki page on podcasting: www.libsuccess.org/Podcasting.
This podcast explores interesting and different career paths for librarians. Librarians interviewed include a researcher for a newspaper, someone who works at Tumblr researching the history of memes and viral content, someone who works for Creative Commons, and many more people with interesting positions.
Steve Thomas has interviewed over 100 librarians and library supporters, talking with them about the great work that librarians are doing to keep libraries relevant in the twenty-first century.
Daniel Messer, the Cyberpunk Librarian, discusses technology trends in this podcast for librarians who are “high tech and low budget.”
http://bookriot.com/category/dear-book-nerd
In this podcast, Rita Meade, a public librarian in Brooklyn, along with a guest co-host answer advice questions related to books. Questions range from how to increase your reading to how to deal with depression through books.
https://ischool.uw.edu/documents-that-changed-world
University of Washington Information School Professor Joe Janes discusses stories of an assortment of historical documents throughout time. His objective is to tell stories with a background that people don’t usually consider. Some of the documents discussed include the Palm Beach County ‘Butterfly’ Ballot of 2000, a stock market ticker tape from 1929, the FDR Thanksgiving Proclamation of 1939, and a deleted passage from the Declaration of Independence, 1776.
Hosts Michael Schofield and Amanda L. Goodman of the LibUX website interview special guests on this podcast. They discuss design and user experience in libraries and higher education.
This is a podcast focused on libraries, librarians, and coding. It’s designed for both beginning and expert coders. They discuss how the code they write benefits library users.