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This Week in Podcasting

This Week in Podcasting

By: YesOui
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This Week in Podcasting delivers sharp, timely analysis of the podcasting industry — covering charts, trends, awards, rankings, and the business of audio every week. Whether you're a podcast creator, producer, network executive, or dedicated listener hungry for insider perspective, this show cuts through the noise to tell you what's actually moving the needle in the world of podcasting. From quarterly chart breakdowns and genre discovery gaps to miniseries strategy and platform dynamics, This Week in Podcasting gives you the data-driven insights and cultural context you need to stay ahead. Each episode unpacks the stories shaping how podcasts are made, marketed, discovered, and consumed — on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and beyond. If you've ever wondered why certain shows climb the rankings while others stall, or how award cycles influence listener behavior, this is the show that connects those dots. Informed, opinionated, and always current, This Week in Podcasting is essential listening© 2026 YesOui.ai Politics & Government
Episodes
  • Amazon Buys a Funnel: The Oprah-Wondery Deal and What It Signals
    May 2 2026
    Amazon didn't buy a podcast. It bought a funnel — and understanding that distinction is the key to reading the most significant podcast industry deal of 2025.

    Starting July 2026, Oprah Winfrey's podcast moves exclusively to Wondery, distributing via Prime Video and Amazon Music at double its current frequency. But the deal extends far beyond the show itself, bundling the Oprah Winfrey Show library, Book Club rights, and Favorite Things retail integrations into a single commercial relationship. Amazon now owns the distribution pathway to one of the most loyal and commercially attractive audiences in media, across audio, video, and retail simultaneously — a competitive moat no pure-audio platform can structurally replicate.

    This episode examines why the Oprah arrangement is architecturally different from earlier exclusivity plays, how Wondery's growing slate — now including New Heights with the Kelce brothers and Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard — is starting to resemble a genuine content library, and what the Spotify exclusivity era teaches us about where this strategy leads.

    Three live uncertainties get careful attention: listener fragmentation as marquee content concentrates on major platforms, the sustainability of a doubled production cadence, and the unresolved question of cross-platform cannibalization through Prime Video.

    The episode also covers a quieter but telling parallel story: the expansion of B2B podcast networks producing investor- and executive-facing content. From Amazon's nine-figure ecosystem play to programmatic corporate audio, both ends of the market are signalling the same thing — audio is no longer a secondary medium. The capital is following.

    This episode includes AI-generated content. A YesOui.ai Production.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    7 mins
  • Edison Q1 2026: Awards Drive Discovery, Miniseries Vanish & the Guest Economy Boom
    Apr 25 2026
    The Edison Research Q1 2026 rankings landed this week, and the most consequential number in the report isn't at the top of the chart — it's twenty-five. That's how many positions Good Hang climbed in a single quarter after winning the inaugural Golden Globe for Best Podcast. One award. One quarter. A twenty-five-spot surge that raises a pointed question: are podcast audiences now using awards as discovery signals?

    This episode works through the full picture. The top of the chart — Rogan, Crime Junkie, The Daily — remains structurally immovable, a gravity problem rather than a momentum story. The action is in positions ten through fifty, where award winners this quarter collectively outperformed the rest of the mid-chart field by a visible margin. Giggly Squad broke into the top fifty after an iHeart win. Mel Robbins surged. Armchair Expert climbed twelve spots. The critical unknown is whether these gains hold into Q2 or collapse as one-quarter traffic spikes.

    The second major story runs underneath the rankings entirely: what happens to a podcast after it ends? Limited-run investigative and documentary series are earning critical recognition, then functionally disappearing from platform surfaces weeks after their finale. Apple has introduced a Series Essentials section; Spotify has no dedicated miniseries tagging at all. The gap between editorial value and commercial sustainability for finished limited runs is wide — and weakening the incentive to produce them.

    Finally, the podcast guest economy puts a hard number on its own expansion: Podcastguest.io generated $300,000 in forty days from guest booking services alone. The business layer of podcasting is growing in ways that don't show up in download counts but do show up in total industry value.

    This episode includes AI-generated content. A YesOui.ai Production.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    7 mins
  • Awards, Rankings & the Miniseries Discovery Gap: Q1 2026 Podcast Charts
    Apr 25 2026
    Edison Research's Q1 2026 US podcast rankings dropped this week, and the top of the chart is familiar — Joe Rogan, Crime Junkie, and The Daily hold the top three positions. But the movement in the middle tells a more important story about how audiences are actually discovering podcasts in 2026.

    Good Hang jumped 25 positions in a single quarter — from 38th to 13th — after winning Best Podcast at the inaugural Golden Globe ceremony in January. That's not a bounce; it's listener migration triggered by an external credibility signal. The Golden Globe finalists also moved: Mel Robbins, Up First, and Armchair Expert all gained ground. The iHeart Podcast Awards produced a similar effect, with Giggly Squad entering the top 50 for the first time following its March win.

    The sequencing is what matters. The award came first, then the listeners followed. Awards are functioning as discovery infrastructure in a medium that has historically struggled to surface quality content to new audiences.

    But the infrastructure isn't keeping up. Award-winning limited-run podcast series consistently disappear from platform discovery after their initial run. Apple's new Series Essentials curation feature is a partial fix; Spotify has no equivalent — no dedicated miniseries genre, no consistent tagging, no unified system. The gap between Apple and Spotify on archival discoverability is widening.

    Elsewhere in the data: Dan Bongino re-enters the top 50 after his return from the FBI deputy director role, confirming durable host loyalty. Colin Cowherd's The Herd hits a ranking high despite vocal backlash over his AI host experiment — raising real questions about whether listeners and critics are simply different populations.

    The Q2 retention data for Good Hang will be the industry's most important number to watch.

    This episode includes AI-generated content. A YesOui.ai Production.

    This episode includes AI-generated content.
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    6 mins
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