Yeah, I’ll be the first to admit it – I’m a podcast addict.
There’s always that one person you know that owns an mp3 or other such media player that, when you see what they have stored on there, makes your eyes bug out more than a cartoon character seeing the sexy for the first time. Usually it’s the person who makes their media player groan under the weight of near triple digits worth of GB of music, or someone who worships at the fictional altar of one particular artist (I’m looking at you, dude who has the entire Backstreet Boys collection and associated remixes). I’m that person, except I’m like that with podcasts. It’s a little comical, really – my music collection, or at least the collection I care to carry around with me, is in the single digits for gigs. But my podcast collection is a bit scary, taking up over 85% of my iPod space.
Why is it that I need my podcast fix so bad I’ve copied them to my phone to listen to? Well, there are a couple of legitimate reasons that I can get away with the behavior. One is most certainly work-related. When you work in Community, you tend to want to keep tabs on what the community is doing in terms of fan-created content – and depending on the community (the current one I deal with has at least 15 different podcasts), you get to hear a lot of unique takes on what they feel a podcast should embody. The other is that a talk radio aficionado like myself prefers the soothing sounds of a podcast when on the road, commuting, running errands, and buzzing away at busywork, If anything, podcasts provide material on pretty much any subject you want to hear about but are too lazy to read.
Mostly though, I’m just hooked. A lot of that has to do with the everyman feel of having podcasts. In a world when a lot of people seem like they are only limited to certain media outlets if they want to hear about something, podcasts, along with blogs, have claimed a sphere that contains individuals that mostly have no formal training or aren’t versed in the ways of media generation. You’d think this was a negative, but it actually produces a lot of creative and transparent content that people can identify with. Lots of people probably wouldn’t be able to deal with a news personality like they do their next door neighbor. Podcasters have an opportunity to become that familiar with an audience, and that’s cool. The lack of restraints on the way things are communicated, talked about, and featured means that podcasters can choose to follow a traditional media route to legitimize themselves or decide to use grassroots appeal to make themselves appealing – mostly for free. That’s awesome and interesting to hear about.
Really, though, the reason why I’m a podcast freak is because of the community vibe and feel. You can get so much out of a podcast that you might not expect if you know where to look, and even better, it’s inspiring and enables you to think about creating your own. Does this mean that every podcast makes it? Some are less popular than others – but that shouldn’t and doesn’t stop many aspiring geeky folk from trying their hand at it and putting themselves out there – which, I think, is a great reason why I try to listen to as many as I can cram into my player.


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