jaykay74 wrote: » Stone roses, love spreads.
steve_r wrote: » Is it actually from a song? Just tried to Shazam it and no result
Still Ill wrote: » Aren't you thinking of his Last Word intro? Or is his pod intro a different bit of the song I forget?
humberklog wrote: » No he's thinking of TLW. The pod intro isn't The Stone Roses. Dunno who it is.
Still Ill wrote: Aren't you thinking of his Last Word intro? Or is his pod intro a different bit of the song I forget?
humberklog wrote: » Whatever it is it's bloody loud! Always catches me out when I'm going from one pod cast to that one and the intro music comes on.
Tork wrote: » It's a horrible theme tune, whatever it is. Loud guitar intros must be Eamon's thing. At a guess, it's probably some sort of generic copyright free thing that he doesn't have to pay royalties for.
Tork wrote: » I doubt he gets anywhere near €200k a year. If sponsors were throwing money at podcasts, would they really be full of adverts and bonus Patreon material? I think Eamo is benefitting from getting into the podcast game early, building up an audience and being a fairly simple operation.
Deleted User wrote: » He does have great brand recognition at this stage when it comes to who his sponsor is. I don't shop there, but I do associate the store with his podcast. I get the feeling he would do the podcast anyway, as it's the ideal format for a lad who always wants to be part of the wider discussion about current affairs in Ireland. I say that as someone who listens to most of the shows, and really likes Dunphy in general. Can't help but think there's a bit of a bubble in the podcast scene at the moment. Maybe Patreon are going to offer a subscription service in the hope they, and the podcasters, get a pay out when they get bought by Spotify or Microsoft. I do think the era of free-to-air podcasting is going to come to an end unless there's a way of monetising it. A licence fee for example!
Tork wrote: » Do those rates apply to Ireland? I've noticed that every man and his dog has started a podcast since Covid kicked in. If they were that lucrative before this, why weren't they doing them then?
bamayang wrote: » Can’t speak to the other figures, but 25k seems very low for production costs. He puts out nearly a podcast a day, which I presume means he must nearly have a full time production/sound person. If they’re any good at all, I imagine they’re going to be closer to double that cost.
Akesh wrote: » Pity he keeps giving Tomas Ryan a platform to spout his fear and hysteria.
Tork wrote: If podcasts are that lucrative, why have many of them added Patreon to their options? I find it very hard to believe Dunphy is pulling in €200k a year from this