Arghus wrote: » Listened to a few Episodes of Ear Hustle, tales from prison from those inside prison, San Quentin in this case. Really good. Well made. Well told. It gets pretty real.
duffer247 wrote: » This morning I listened to Snap Judgement. It's produced I think by the same public radio that Freakonomics is on. Not sure what the general gist of the pod is but it appears to relay stories on a given theme. Today's them was 'Forgiven'. The first story was about a woman from New York whose husband was killed by a bomb planted by a terrorist couple in the 1970s. He was NYPD bomb squad. The couple were caught and sent to prison. Many years after, having re married and had another child, the female member of the couple got in touch from prison. And so started a 3 year friendship but there's a bit of a twist...
TJ Mackie wrote: » Off topic, but I wish Pocketcasts would allow me to create folders or groups on my subscribed podcasts page, i.e. I could have a "True Crime" folder, or a "Sports" folder.
The Black Oil wrote: » Drop them a note. http://support.pocketcasts.com/feedback/
JohnnyFlash wrote: » It’s a great idea for a podcast, but I find Fry insufferable.
steve_r wrote: » British Podcast awards top 20 -https://twitter.com/britpodawards/status/992386613333450752 Anyone any recomends on that list?
optogirl wrote: » I love Adam Buxton - have loved him since the Adam & Joe show and their BBC 6 Music Show. His podcasts are great - lovely chatty style of interviewing & great guests
glasso wrote: » Business Warshttps://wondery.com/shows/business-wars/ They have done Netflix vs Blockbuster, IBM, Adidas vs Nike. The style is sort of dramatization in a way - entertaining stuff if you are interested in business. some annoying ad placement mid-podcast. would still recommend.
bonzodog2 wrote: » Yes, the ads are annoying, but I am enjoying this.
shannonman81 wrote: » I'm with you on that. Song wars! I still go back and listen to them. I do love his interview style, it's just a chat where he manages to get the subject to open up more than they maybe would in a more formal setting. He has found his niche.