The Scotsman

Podcasts are a window into the weird and wonderful

The esoteric, niche world of podcasting has displaced live radio in my household, writes Martyn Mclaughlin

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Ihave long considered myself an avid radio listener. It is a habit ingrained by weekend afternoons in my grandfathe­r’s kitchen, where after a daunder back from the bookies, we would gather round the wireless and listen intently to proceeding­s from Ascot or Newmarket, where the rising pitch of the commentato­rs vied for attention with the rush of hooves and the desperate, hopeful shouts of the crowd.

I should probably count myself lucky that I never developed an affinity for the gee-gees as a consequenc­e, but I will always be grateful for that early introducti­on to a medium that felt more immediate than television ever could.

Growing up with one foot in the analogue age, I kept the flame burning, and with the advent of the internet and the proliferat­ion of digital radio stations, my habit became hopelessly and permanentl­y entrenched. I have lost count of sleepless hours given over to Ira Glass and John Hockenberr­y on National Public Radio’s Talk of the Nation, discussing obscure issues in a distant country in a way that felt relevant and intimate.

Glass, of course, went on to create This American Life, a radio show which morphed into one of the world’s most popular podcasts. Even today, each episode is downloaded by around 2.5 million people. If that particular show’s success is well establishe­d, it would appear the popularity of its medium has yet to peak.

The latest analysis by Rajar, the official body in charge of measuring radio audiences in the UK, shows that as of this spring, some six million adults across Britain listened to at least one podcast a week.

That number might appear relatively small – just 11 per cent of the population – but when you assess it the proper context, its scale and growth is really quite something. Only last year, the number stood at just 4.7 million, and the number of people now downloadin­g podcasts now outstrips the reach of BBC Radio Five Live.

Such statistics have led to 2018 being hailed by the BBC as the year of the “podcast boom”. Such a bold prophecy may be intended as self-fulfilling, at least on the BBC’S part. In March, the corporatio­n announced the appointmen­t of its first-ever podcast commission­er, Jason Phipps, and it clearly believes it can build on the 240 million annual downloads of its programmes.

It, along with other broadcaste­rs and media companies, faces a stern challenge in attracting a younger demographi­c who do not consume their media via linear channels, and podcasting is one the most obvious areas to focus on.

Recent research by Acast, one of the main competitor­s to itunes as the world’s leading podcast platform, found that two thirds of listeners are aged between 16 and 34. What is more, nearly a fifth of them have only started listening in the past six months.

The success of the BBC’S evolving podcasting operation alone will not solve that problem, but it is a start.

It is hard, however, to see the projected “boom” coming to pass. Podcasting is hardly a new, emerging medium. In one form or another, it has been a staple of our media diet for well over a decade. itunes first started collating a directory of podcasts as far back as 2005, when the term was named as the Merriam Webster Dictionary’s word of the year. Within the space of 12 months, the comedian, Ricky Gervais, helped propel the medium into the public consciousn­ess, with mil-

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