Merlin’s weekly podcast with Dan Benjamin. We talk about creativity, independence, and making things you love.
Merlin’s weekly podcast with Dan Benjamin. We talk about creativity, independence, and making things you love.
”What’s 43 Folders?”
43Folders.com is Merlin Mann’s website about finding the time and attention to do your best creative work.
Flash: "Podfading" ravages the landscape of logorrheic bloggers
Merlin Mann | Feb 7 2006
Wired News: Podfading Takes Its Toll
I don't doubt that people give up doing podcasts everyday, but I suspect it's not simply because they're a huge pain to make (which they certainly are, compared to typical text blogging). I think the problem is the expectations podcasters may have created for themselves and for their audience -- being cleft to this 1st Generation notion of podcasting as "regularly-scheduled MP3 Radio Show." There's nothing wrong with this, of course, and a lot of folks have done yeoman's work churning out (sometimes really long) shows on a (sometimes nauseatingly) regular basis. But it's also daunting and backward to decide first that you're "doing an hour-long podcast" and second that it will be about....uh...what? Yeah, exactly. That's a lot of air to fill each (day | week | month). If you can pull it off with elan, more power to you. Me? I like the idea that a podcast is simply another way to post. Nothing more. Same way that Flickr and del.icio.us -- to name just a couple -- let me share something in a way that isn't a traditional blog post, recording audio lets me (try to) make a certain point in my own way and with tone (and, one hopes, personality) that are a contrast with typically dry blog writing. But maybe that's just me. I understand it's useful to look back toward what new technologies remind us of, but you won't tease out the more novel uses of something until you let it just be what it is, allowing it to evolve without all the herding and expectations. In the fifties, the future always looked like TVs, and in the sixties it all looked like rocket ships. And so, today, podcasts look like relatively easy-to-produce (usually long-ass) radio shows, and that's cool, I suppose. But if we are to be stuck with this radio mindset for now, I do wish more of the many talented podcasters out there would aspire toward making a series of brilliant poppy '45s -- rather than manufacturing these hour. long. news. casts. Seriously. Just do 3 fun minutes every couple weeks, and then stop for a while. I want "Love Me Do," not "The Ring Cycle." Raise your bar for quality and way lower your bar for frequency, and I promise you the whole thing will be much more fun for everyone. 45 Comments
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The fact that I've downloaded...Submitted by Michael Moncur (not verified) on February 7, 2006 - 9:29pm.
The fact that I've downloaded nearly 3 GB of podcasts from various sources over the past year but Merlin's are the only ones I've actually listened to tells me he's right on the money. Here's to more short podcasts. Every time I try to listen to one (except Merlin's) I get frustrated at the rambling. Podcasts with two or more people are even worse - half the time it's like listening in on a conversation on the bus. They're just chatting with each other with no regard for the audience. Things like IT Conversations are the exception: they're recordings of "real" events in front of live audiences, and that has its own built-in limits (even though longer than a 3-minute quickie.) Also, anyone who does a 1-hour speech at a conference comes there with pages of notes and has a definite idea what to say. Don't make a 1-hour podcast unless you can say the same. » POSTED IN:
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