Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The History Chicks podcast launched on January 20, 2011, and their first episode, on Queen Marie Antoinette dropped on January 31 of the same year. [3] The show hit iTunes New and Notable section. [4] While an independent production, the podcast joined the Panoply Media in 2016, and moved to Wondery in 2019.
Castbox is an app that distributes free podcasts. By 2019, one million podcasts had been made available through Castbox, [4] including about fifty million podcast episodes. [1] Castbox also has a premium platform. [5] In June 2019, Castbox integrated with Waze, allowing playback controls to pause, skip, or restart episodes. [6]
The tone of the podcast has evolved over the years as the hosts have become more educated on Intersectional feminist issues and episodes have taken on more serious films about or by marginalized people, with earlier episodes having been more flippant in their comedic style. [24]
Those podcast episodes follow the chronological release order of the show. They re-watch the show off camera and then discuss its content on the pod, they share their thoughts about the storylines and some behind the scenes insight. Each of those episodes feature a title with a pop-culture reference and or an allusion to the episode itself ...
For a good bit of the past six years, if Wally and Susan Kooiman wanted to give a hug to their daughter — Anna Kooiman, who famously left a primo Fox News anchor job to move to Australia — it ...
Rabbits is a mystery pseudo-documentary podcast.Published by Pacific Northwest Stories, it is part of their series of podcasts set in the same fictional universe (such as The Black Tapes and Tanis) which, despite being works of fiction, are presented as legitimate true stories both within the podcast and outside of it; the podcast has no credited writers or performers, as the events and ...
The podcast features interviews with a variety of people involved with YouTube and the "rabbit hole effect". [6] For instance, in episode four Roose interviews Susan Wojcicki—the CEO of YouTube. [2] The podcast was created after multiple shootings that were tied to online radicalization such as the Christchurch mosque shootings. [7]
AntennaPod was originally released on July 22, 2012, as Version 0.8 [3] and is licensed under the MIT license.The app is a free and open-source software that aggregates podcasts.