Miami Herald

High school students across US seeking ‘teenager therapy’

- BY TAYLOR LORENZ New York Times

As the pandemic has upended school, summer plans and daily life for millions of teenagers, many are turning to a podcast to cope. “Teenager Therapy,” hosted by five rising seniors at Loara High School in Anaheim, California, has become a lifeline for kids and a breakout hit.

The show features teens (self-described on their website as “sleep deprived, yet energetic”) having loose, candid conversati­ons about mental health, school and family, friendship­s and sexuality, and more. Sometimes they interview big names; influencer Loren Gray and singer Maggie Lindemann have been on the show. But usually, the format is more of a freeform discussion.

On a recent episode, they chatted about their daily routines and finding some semblance of normalcy during lockdown.

“There are episodes where we offer genuine advice, there are episodes where we simply talk about our experience­s, and there are episodes where we just talk about anything in order to keep our audience company,” said Gael Aitor, 17, who got the idea for “Teenager Therapy” in 2018 after hearing “Couples Therapy,” a podcast by YouTuber Casey Neistat and his wife, Candice.

But Aitor wanted something more specific the problems he was dealing with then as a 15-year-old.

“I was like, what if I do this, but with teenagers?” he said.

So he rounded up four friends to record the first episode of “Teenager Therapy” while sitting around a mic on a bed.

“The first try was terrible, so we deleted it and did it two more times,” Aitor said. “The third time we were happy with it, so we posted it online, and that’s how it all started.”

Now Aitor and Mark Hugo, 16; Thomas Pham, 16; Kayla Suarez, 17; and Isaac Hurtado, 17, record once a week, though the pandemic means they do so remotely from their homes.

Building a podcast audience from scratch is no easy feat, especially since the group of high schoolers had no marketing budget. To attract listeners, Aitor repurposed an old Instagram account he had used as a fan page for the band 21 Pilots, which had

20,000 followers. Aitor also reached out to meme pages that are popular among teenagers and asked them to post about the show.

Within a few months of releasing their first episode, “Teenager Therapy” surpassed 100,000 downloads. From there, the show kept growing.

Teen listenersh­ip for podcasts is increasing, and more influencer­s have sought to cash in.

But part of the success of “Teenager Therapy” is that it’s made for teenagers by teenagers. “We never really scripted anything or planned it out. We wanted the podcast to be raw and authentic,” Aitor said.

Maya Gabay, 16, a high school junior, said she discovered the podcast in September while scrolling through Spotify. It’s now her favorite show.

“I like that the podcast is so low-key; they never hold back on anything,” Gabay said.

The podcast has helped her process things going on in her own life, including issues with friends. “It’s really inspiring to see kids my age doing something like this,” she said.

Nicholas Quah, founder of Hot Pod, a trade newsletter about the podcast industry, said, “One thing that podcasts can be really good at is creating a space for people to feel vulnerable and to talk things through, to really process.”

He added: “Everybody needs those kinds of spaces. The real breakthrou­gh with something like ‘Teenager Therapy’ is the fact that these teens are using the tools and natural advantages of the medium to build this space for teen listeners to have their issues reflected out, grappled with, and taken seriously.”

This coming academic year, all five “Teenager Therapy” hosts will be high school seniors. The group plans to continue the podcast, even potenfor tially into college. But they won’t be teenagers forever, so they’ve discussed eventually handing the reins to a new co-hort.

They also hope to build a bigger brand – they have expanded to YouTube and are in the process of securing a studio space in Los Angeles to film more video content. The group is active on Instagram, TikTok and Twitter, which are the platforms they use to field hundreds of messages from teens across the country seeking to talk.

“People often start their message with ‘I don’t know who to tell but you guys,’” Aitor said. “Every time I see those messages, it helps me remember how much this podcast actually means to people. We want our listeners to feel like they are part of our friend group.”

 ?? ELIZABETH WEINBERG NYT ?? From left: Gael Aitor, Thomas Pham, Kayla Suarez and Mark Hugo are four of the five students who started the “Teenager Therapy” podcast in 2018.
ELIZABETH WEINBERG NYT From left: Gael Aitor, Thomas Pham, Kayla Suarez and Mark Hugo are four of the five students who started the “Teenager Therapy” podcast in 2018.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States