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Podcasters Ditch Short Episodes in Favor of Four-Hour Conversations (bloomberg.com) 48

In a newsletter for Bloomberg, Ashley Carman discusses the rising trend of long podcasts and their surprising popularity among listeners. "By today's standards of interminable podcast discussions, a nearly three-hour recording isn't even particularly notable," she writes, highlighting recent episodes from Joe Rogan (2 hours; 16 minutes with Adam Sandler), Lex Fridman (8 hours; 37 minutes with Elon Musk), and the Acquired podcast (3 hours; 38 minutes with Lockheed Martin). "Increasingly, podcasters are pushing the outer limits of episode length while stress testing the endurance of their audiences. Popular podcast gabfests can now run on for half a workday or longer." From the report: One might assume such marathon episodes must be the result of a hands-off approach to editing. But this is not the case, said Ben Gilbert, co-host of the Acquired podcast. Every month, he and his co-host David Rosenthal release a three- to four-hour podcast, detailing the story of a specific company. The in-depth histories, he said, are the result of nine-hour recording sessions and a month of research.

"It's not important to ship every good minute," Gilbert said. "It's important to ship only great minutes. If you're actually intellectually honest with yourself, that's how to release a really good product." Even with the longer runtimes, he said, their audience listens to the vast majority of each episode. Consider their deep dive on Lockheed Martin, which runs for three hours and 38 minutes. On Apple Podcasts, the average listener consumed 70% of the show, he said. An episode on Nike, which clocks in at upwards of four hours, had an average consumption rate of 68%. "Every time we made something longer... people only seemed to love it more," he said. On the show's website, the hosts describe the episodes as "conversational audiobooks." [...]

[Jack Sylvester, executive director at Flight Studio, the Bartlett-founded podcast company behind Diary of a CEO] said the team can view data around how much of the audience consumes episodes on YouTube's TV app versus on a phone, tablet or computer. TV usage, he said, is ticking up. To give viewers a reason to keep the show on as their primary viewing experience, they're now making sure the videos have a top-quality polish. Still, in a world in which people scoff at the prospect of a three-hour movie -- and short-form video is the dominant consumption trend in entertainment -- these podcasters are eagerly meandering in the opposite direction. "The short-form obsession ended up creating white space for us," said Gilbert of Acquired. "Whenever you have a trend, that means there's people who feel left behind and want to flock to something new. This sets us apart."

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Podcasters Ditch Short Episodes in Favor of Four-Hour Conversations

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  • Dang (Score:5, Interesting)

    by cascadingstylesheet ( 140919 ) on Friday September 06, 2024 @06:28PM (#64769462) Journal
    That's not for me ... I'll spend extra time searching for what I want to take in, as text ... can't stand that everything has to be videos or podcasts.
    • Re:Dang (Score:4, Insightful)

      by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Friday September 06, 2024 @06:40PM (#64769492)

      For me, it depends. If it is entertainment, video is fine. But if I want information, give me text every time.

      • by ls671 ( 1122017 )

        Damn yes! Isn't boring and a nuisance when all you can resort to for documentation are videos and screenshots? Heck, I still use Alpine (pine) to read 99% of my emails, only forwarding it to roundcube (bounce in alpine) if I need to see silly images.

    • Re:Dang (Score:5, Insightful)

      by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Friday September 06, 2024 @07:09PM (#64769530) Journal
      Podcasts are basically for people who are in the car a lot (or even regularly in 15 minute increments). That's where they really shine.
      • Don't forget those return to office mandates, plenty out there with headphones on all day.

      • Podcasts are basically for people who are in the car a lot (or even regularly in 15 minute increments). That's where they really shine.

        Or running, or doing chores with your hands. There's a lot of cases where they work well.

        The ones I don't get are the video podcasts because you can't really do much else while that's going on. The only advantage I see is if you want to share a short clip the video is the better medium, so that might be the reason they share.

        Otherwise, I don't think the length is a problem as long as it fits the episode. It's not like radio where you might have to start and finish in one go. A longer podcast gets digested i

        • The ones I don't get are the video podcasts because you can't really do much else while that's going on.

          Sure you can, I sometimes watch video podcasts while doing household chores. I might have to look away briefly to make sure that for example, a dish is actually clean, but most things don't actually require looking at it much. I can't do it while vacuuming, but most other chores work (and I can't listen to an audio podcast while vacuuming either, because I can't hear it over the vacuum...). I also watch

          • The ones I don't get are the video podcasts because you can't really do much else while that's going on.

            Sure you can, I sometimes watch video podcasts while doing household chores. I might have to look away briefly to make sure that for example, a dish is actually clean, but most things don't actually require looking at it much. I can't do it while vacuuming, but most other chores work (and I can't listen to an audio podcast while vacuuming either, because I can't hear it over the vacuum...). I also watch while knitting and crocheting (has to be audio while sewing though), and I use to watch while walking on a treadmill (but I tend to walk outside now).

            Ok, though for something like that I think I'd just watch a show or something. Though I guess a podcast is a lot less visually demanding so you can afford to look away/be distracted more often.

    • That's not for me ... I'll spend extra time searching for what I want to take in, as text ... can't stand that everything has to be videos or podcasts.

      The issue is "found time", such as time commuting to work. If you can make productive use of that time you can get ahead more easily, and maybe not mind the commute as much.

      Brian Tracey points out it takes 8 to 12 hours to listen to an audio book, and if you can do 30 minutes each way to/from work (a 40 minute commute, say) that's 1 book every 2 weeks, or 25 books in a year. If you happen to listen to books relevant to your job, or your home situation (how to raise your kids, how to keep your marriage stabl

    • Each to their own. The great benefit of podcasts is the ability to multitask. Not everyone can do it, but there are plenty of people who can "take information in" while gardening, cooking, driving, etc.

      That said, multi-hour podcasts... fuck that noise. I come for small targeted information on specific subjects. If your content isn't described in the headline and you can't get the point across in under 30 minutes I won't be listening.

      • The issue for me isn't really multitasking, but mind wandering. Any sufficiently interesting topic will trigger my mind to go on a tangent of thinking about something orthogonally related to the subject.

        When reading, this manifests as getting half down a page and realizing I haven't been ingesting the content properly, so I back up and re-read.

        With audio, backing up is a nightmare. Most platforms use this interaction as a trigger for ads. And no platform I've found has a decent rewind. So, often I just don'

  • Not a fan (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Jarik C-Bol ( 894741 ) on Friday September 06, 2024 @06:37PM (#64769484)
    Honestly, this is what put me off podcasts in the end. I don’t have a job that is conducive to listening to things like podcasts at work; and everyone I was listening to slowly went from thirty minutes up to an hour, then two hours, then even longer. They stopped being something I could listen to during lunch, or on a break, and became something that had to either be listened to in pieces, often with backtracking to remember what the conversation was even about, or block out an entire evening to listen to a whole episode. Finally I just stopped caring, the hassle was not worth the content to me.
    Honestly, I liked the shorter, 30 minute ‘radio program style’ model, as that limitation tended to force the hosts/guests to stay on topic and be articulate and concise. If you are allowed to ramble on for hours, you *will* ramble for hours, and I think, often, that is to the detriment of the listeners.
    Obviously I’m in a minority opinion group with this, as the long format podcast has sadly reined supreme, but I think we lost something by going this route.
    • Exactly. Quality > Quantity.

      One of the YouTubers I subscribe slowly bloated their reviews from 20 minutes to 3 or even 4 hours where they just let their special "guest" hosts people ramble on for hours on end. I don't have time to listen to 4 hours; I want the "Coles" Notes version.

      • Bloat is bad in shorter videos too. I've seen videos where 30 seconds of content got stretched to 10 minutes.

        • Yeah, sadly most of YT has turned into that. :-/

          • Hey guys, please like and subscribe! I'm going to explain to you now how to like and subscribe because I'm going to treat you like an alien using YouTube for the first time. Also, be sure to check out my Patreon, because the algorithm keeps demonetizing me due to me being a dangerous subversive trying to bring you the truth. And be sure to check out my side projects linked below.

            Without further ado, I will begin showing you other people's videos while my head is shrunk in the corner. ... ...

            Now that's over,

  • With Lex you gotta hit 2x

  • too long; didn't listen
     
    If it runs beyond 45-60 min, forget it. The information density is too low. I have a finite amount of time in which I want to listen to multiple podcasts. I won't dedicate ALL my listening time to only one.

  • Dan Carlin has been doing long-format history podcasts for years. And they are very good. I listen to them maybe an hour at a time.

    • by cfa22 ( 1594513 )
      Agreed -- It's one of the best podcasts out there. Always a nice surprise when a new episode drops. Once or twice a year!
  • Interesting trend - I can't imagine paying close attention to a multi hour podcast on a regular basis - there's just not enough time.
    Also I mainly listen while driving or doing chores. These time slots are usually less than one hour. I also do not have a podcast player
    that supports resume consistently, so I can pause and resume more than one audio file. (Maybe there's a better player on iOS that does this)

    Long podcasts may work as background noise, though, where you sometimes pay attention. It's probably a

  • by Faux_Pseudo ( 141152 ) <Faux.Pseudo@gmail.FREEBSDcom minus bsd> on Saturday September 07, 2024 @02:22AM (#64769906)

    I don't blink when a three or four hour pod comes through my feed. I listen to about 200 podcasts. My average listening speed is 2.5x. So that turns a 4 hour podcast into a 1.6 hour podcast. Very doable. Then if I decide I've had enough of an episode for now but still want to listen to the rest I can simply start another pod episode. And here is the thing that is different from other media: I can go right back to where I paused without having to hunt for it. My queue isn't bloated with platform recommendations. I don't have to type in anything to find the paused episode. It's just sitting there in my queue waiting for me. When I do hit play it won't make me listen to an ad before it restarts.

    But other than Dan Carlin or Dan Cummings I don't see a lot of pods going past the two hour mark. And they totally make it worth it because they are covering one topic in depth. Most pods break things up into different aspects of a topic for digestability, I'm thinking of Planet Money making a T-shirt). But Dan is a captivating story teller. And Dan is fractalizing the current story and the background of how we got here. So it makes sense that it's all in one package.

  • I can't imagine many things worse than sitting and chatting with Elon Musk for 8 hours and 37 minutes. I can imagine a few things sure, but this is really up there.

  • I'm sure that those who've been presenting religious radio & podcast programmes for the past few decades might have a few comments on how this isn't so unusual. Alleluia! Praise be! Blessed be the fruit!
  • by RobinH ( 124750 ) on Saturday September 07, 2024 @05:56AM (#64770068) Homepage
    I've really grown to appreciate long form content. Instead of a few minutes with a personality that's trying hard to get out some message out about their new book, or a political talking point they've been coached to make, they actually have the time to get into a deeper more interesting discussion that's far more nuanced. Plus there's often a bit of back and forth, but it feels more natural and less confrontational.
    • I couldn't possibly care what any "personality" has to say about anything, and you shouldn't either. They're just people. Stop elevating people. People are terrible.
      • Interviews with intellectuals and journalists promoting their books are the best place to find good books, in my experience. This is how I was introduced to people like Michael Lewis, John McWhorter, Pekka Hanalainen, Francesca Stavrakapoulou, and many others.

  • I have dropped several podcasts that consistently got too long."

    How long is too long? I prefer no longer than 30 minutes but am unlikely to choose much longer than 15. I listen to podcasts for fun and don't need them as long as a badly run business meeting!

    Of the next items in my queue, one is 1 hour and 15 minutes and the next longest is 28 minutes

    Multi-hour podcasts? No thanks!

  • Four hours droning on about nothing.
  • Podcasts are a long form content but anything more than say 80 minutes is just way too long. Especially for these 5-7 day a week shows. I deally should be able to burn a podcast to a CD and then tune in next week.

    Podcasts are part of my media diet they don't need to be my entire diet. If your podcast is 2+ hours long and done 5 days a week when I do I have time to listen to other shows. I just don't see the appeal. I remember when getting a 2 hour pod cast was a special episode in my feed but having that

  • You get much beyond 90 minutes, and I'm not interested. Give me a book to read. Audiobooks, for the most part, put me straight to sleep, and I expect these would be the same for me. When I'm driving long-distance, I want variety in what I'm listening to. 30-60 minute podcasts, or shuffled music.
  • Has the long podcast if nearly 2 hours anit been the norm in sports analysis - for exams most MMA podcasts
  • The only people who have time for this kind of thing, are the grown-up kids living in their parents' basements. My own son has gotten into some of these long-form podcasts when he was in the throes of depression. It required medical intervention to pull him away.

    Sure, I can understand a one-time thing, or once in a while. But when it's every day, that's not healthy.

"Mach was the greatest intellectual fraud in the last ten years." "What about X?" "I said `intellectual'." ;login, 9/1990

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