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What podcasts are you listening to?

44 points by thomk a month ago · 73 comments · 1 min read


Looking for recommendations for anything well done and engaging.

mdrachuk a month ago

I find sort of escape in listening to non-technical podcast giving more of a insight into how broad, curios and overall marvelous and different the world is.

Search Engine https://www.searchengine.show

99% invisible https://99percentinvisible.org

gtk40 a month ago

Granted, there are good podcasts, but I've switched my listening time (mostly commute for in office once a week) to audiobooks. I find books to be much more consistently high quality content, regardless of the source. There are bad books, but the quality tends to be higher than podcasts. I mostly get audiobooks through my library, but I also sometimes listen through Spotify.

Sytten a month ago

Security Cryptography Whatever: Discusses in depth cryptography and papers on that topic

Oxide and friends: From oxide conputers, great tech interviews and various tech topics

Geopolitical cousins: weekly take on geopolitics that doesn't feel dreadful

The red line: If you want deep analysis of conflicts and militaries from experts

pastorhudson a month ago

Advisory Opinions Legal analysis of Supreme Court that is really fun and talks about systems tradeoffs in how court systems make decisions.

Python Bytes Just fun thing I can put on and listen to while coding or doing other work. I always learn something and the show runners are great.

Left Right and Center Pretty good level headed political discussion where differing perspectives have real cordial conversation while disagreeing.

The Non Anxious Leader Podcast Jack Shitama does a great job of explaining family systems theory and how our own emotional reactance can be managed effectively. If you want soft emotional intelligence skills listen to this.

The Russel More Show Russel interviews a variety of people and talks about how to be a Christian in our weird political climate. It’s not Christian nationalist and I find it thoughtful and refreshing. He also interviews lots of people from different perspectives.

recurrence a month ago

I'm Biased since I'm a cohost, but ADI Pod (Artificial Developer Intelligence) at https://www.adipod.ai/

My cohosts Dan, Rahul and I do weekly coverage of AI news for developers, our pet projects, work wins and new technique / tools.

What I think sets us apart from the usual AI podcast space, other than our decade long friendship, 'good vibes', and crippling HN addiction, is the fact that it's a passion project by developers and for developers. You'll hear us break down a paper on diffusion-autoregression hybrid architectures and then immediately talk about wasting 40 minutes having Claude fix test coverage when the real fix was a one-line change.

Recent episodes covered cognitive debt from AI-generated code, my experience convincing AI that the Earth is flat, and the Thoughtworks retreat and its 'agentic manifesto'. Episodes are weekly and about an hour each. The idea came to me when I wanted to listen to a more casual AI podcast during weekend long runs (so no heavy math and no startup pitches), hope it serves that purpose well.

chris_st a month ago

Good nerd stories, alas it was cancelled, so no new ones:

- Uncharted with Hannah Fry

Some great fiction:

- Achewillow - horror, but not excessively horrible.

- Desert Skies - humor, about folks who work in the first sphere of the afterlife, folks who are recently dead and arrive in Buick Skylarks are equipped with microwaveable burritos and information about the spheres to come.

Fantastic poetry:

- Poetry Unbound

Really fantastic interviews, alas, it's no longer updated:

- Partners by Hriskikesh Hirway

Linguistics and language:

- The Allusionist

Tabletop RPG:

- My First Dungeon

xd1936 a month ago

My podcast would be a good fit for this audience. Three engineer friends and a rotating guest each pitch a tech product or startup idea that we wished existed, but don't have time to build ourselves. Bicycle Lasertag, Cabinets that _are_ Dishwashers, Planetarium Swimming Pools, etc.

https://spitball.show

braza a month ago

Maybe marginally related, I used to listen to a lot of podcasts, especially when I had a severe issue in my eye and I couldn't read. I used to listen to nonfiction, lifestyle, health, tech and history (I do not follow politics in podcasting).

At least after the pandemic (ca. 2023) one thing that I noticed is that a lot of podcasts now has some rotation of the same guests, they are more tied with the world events (e.g., a "stoic" podcast talking about the POTUS that has 0% influence in my life and interest) and prominent figures that are specialized in... podcasting, or podcasts that, without any pushback, bringing outlandish guests for clicks (e.g. any of the Weinstein brothers, moon landing, etc).

I used to listen 20+ hours of podcasting per day and my feed was great, but now I cannot even listen 1 hour or even 99% of the guests are the same figures or super polarizing.

Someone have been in the same stage also?

  • TheAceOfHearts a month ago

    Yeah, many podcasts are either: (1) an advertising platform for a guest's new book, (2) a platform for the guest to play their "greatest hits" without engaging critically or exploring new ideas, or (3) a platform for the host to tell you their half-baked opinion about $CURRENT_EVENT in order to keep the slop machine running.

skittleson a month ago

https://thespaceabove.us/ extremely good listen with a lot of details in the early years of the space program. I found renewed interest in the area. Even started replicating some of the missions in KSP

christkv a month ago

The Adventure Zone, Hardcore History, The Rest is History, Fall of Civilisations, The All in Pod, Planet Money, Conan O'Brien Needs a Friend, Noclip Crewcast, The Retro Hour, The WAN Show and a bunch of podcasts in Spanish and Norwegian that I doubt anymore would care about.

  • emil-lp a month ago

    Are there many podcasts in Spanish and Norwegian?

    • christkv a month ago

      In Spanish tons and tons pick your country and flavor. In Norwegian many more than I expected. Some very good retro game ones that I enjoy.

mouselett a month ago

I listen to an assortment of NPR podcasts, namely NPR's Book of the Day, Pop Culture Happy Hour, Wild Card with Rachel Martin, and the TED Radio Hour. I sometimes listen to Up First as well when I'm not in the mood to spend two hours listening to Morning Edition.

atlasunshrugged a month ago

Here's my usual playlist (tilted towards policy stuff):

The Realignment AI Summer w/Dean Ball (he has a good substack too) Dwarkesh Podcast American Diplomat Marginal Revolution (also has a good blog) Statecraft with Santi Ruiz The Dynamist Derisky Business from Center for a New American Security School of War The Sunday Show by Tech Policy Press (also has a newsletter) Econtalk Natsec Tech by SCSP Politico Tech (also a range of newsletters) ChinaTalk CQ Rollcall Goodfellows by the Hoover Institution Hudson Institute Events Podcast Conversations With Tyler .think atlantic Building for the Future by CSIS Into Africa by CSIS War on the Rocks Rational Security The Vergecast A16z podcast

_wire_ a month ago

History of rock music in 500 songs

comrade1234 a month ago

Got tired of npr and now get my news from monocle radio podcasts even though I'm not an "ultra-high-net-worth individual". I find it more international-focused and since I live in Europe more relevant to me.

miloignis a month ago

I'm big into DnD podcasts, so Dragon Friends (Australian comedians doing DnD), The Adventure Zone (McElroy boys & dad doing DnD), Not Another DnD Podcast, etc.

Matt Levine's Money Stuff has a podcast with his friend and reporter Katie Greifeld, which is a lot of fun chatting about Money Stuff in an informative way.

I go through cycles of being obsessed with Blank Check (which goes through director's filmographies), and often more specifically, The Phantom Podcast (and sequels) where they watched The Phantom Menace over and over again under the guise of it being the only Star Wars movie.

pjmlp a month ago

Plenty, I can hardly keep up, but then get plenty of stuff to listen to during vacation traveling.

A few ones,

- .NET Rocks!

- Advent of Computing

- ADSP: Algorithms + Data Structures = Programs

- CppCast (just came back)

- CoRecursive: Coding Stories

- Developer Voices

- Foojay.io, the Friends Of OpenJDK!

- Hanselminutes with Scott Hanselman

- Inside Java

- Game Dev Field Guide

- Oxide and Friends

- Signals and Threads

- Retro Asylum

- The Retro Hour

- The Fourth Curtain

- The AIAS Game Maker's Notebook

- The Haskell Interlude

treetalker a month ago

I'm an appellate attorney. I listen to the Oyez project's "podcast" of the SCOTUS oral arguments. (It's just a feed of the original audio of the OAs.) I don't stress listening to every one; I'll catch the major cases and any other that might be relevant to cases I'm working on. It keeps me apprised of the way the Court is thinking; apprised of doctrinal developments; and gives me an opportunity both to critique generally high-quality advocacy and to pick up patterns and tricks to up my own game.

normalaccess a month ago

Security Now with Steve Gibson. Great podcast about the latest goings on in the tech world and often diverts into neat deep dives into technical topics. https://twit.tv/shows/security-now

Side note: Check out this ultra secure offline paper password generator he came up with based off of Latin squares https://www.grc.com/offthegrid.htm

vinhnx a month ago

I listen to a lots of podcast.

Currently here is my pinned favorites ones:

Practical AI

Grit

Wenbin Fang's Podcast Playlist (Founder of https://www.listennotes.com/)

The Gradient: Perspectives on AI

Latent Space: The AI Engineer Podcast

The Empty Bow

Hacker News Recap

Dwarkesh Podcast

Machine Learning Street Talk (MLST)

Interconnects

Talk Python To Me

Training Data

---

My podcast collection (opml file format). Exported from Overcast.

Feel free to import to your podcast app of choice. https://github.com/vinhnx/podcasts

digikazi a month ago

Currently working my way through Melvyn Bragg's back catalogue of In Our Time. https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006qykl/episodes/player

Also from the BBC, the 13 Minutes series (?): https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/brand/w13xttx2

...and The Fall of Civilisations: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/fall-of-civilizations-...

...ocasionally a smattering of Dan Carlin's Hardcore History.

Really curious to see what other people are listening to.

I'm trying to be a bit more "intentional" with my podcasts, especially as its easy to amass a huge list of stuff and then not listen to 95% of them.

Edit: grammar

adamgordonbell a month ago

Revisionist History - The recent Alabama Murders story was a super interesting look into the death penalty.

The Colin & Samir show - interviews with Youtube creators. Recent John Johnson interview about doing stand up comedy for youtube was hilarious.

Lsat 12 months I listened to lots of Peter Attia, for health and aging information but not listening to him anymore because I found the Epstein emails problematic.

Latent Space gets a lot of play from me.

Darknet diaries is always great.

Corecursive, because I'm making it. Working on new episode about social media algorithms.

  • TheAceOfHearts a month ago

    Colin and Samir have some really in-depth videos with MrBeast which help document and explain his rise in fame, influence, and prominence. He's one of the most dedicated optimizers of our time, and he's been responsible for shaping the YouTube meta for years at this point. At this point a significant portion of his brain is probably fully allocated towards optimizing for the most engaging YouTube videos possible. The "24 hours with MrBeast" video helped contextualize his fame to me, it's really rock-star level. It's a shame that not many people engage with him on a more technical level, I think he would have a lot of interesting insights over which to nerd out about.

    • adamgordonbell a month ago

      I agree, even more generally, in that if you think about any medium from a creator perspective there is so much more depth to it.

      Pop music is not my thing, but I read a book about it, and the max martins and production function of these giant hits, and its endlessly fascinating optimization problems.

  • petercooper a month ago

    Seconding Latent Space. Very high signal. I listen to the audio version but it's on YouTube here as well: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLWEAb1SXhjlfkEF_PxzYH...

  • emil-lp a month ago

    > Corecursive, because I'm making it.

    That's very cool.

    > Working on new episode about social media algorithms.

    Will it not just be mainly recommender algorithms? I.e., machine learning?

    Or do you have other specific algorithms in mind?

    • adamgordonbell a month ago

      It will touch on EdgeRank, Youtube's next video selection and TikTok's innovations on that. And also on HNs post gravity.

      But the big thing its about is how simple recommenders can lead to compelling and addictive consumption.

lucius_verus a month ago

Culture:

- The Slate Culture Gabfest - probably the most consistently fun podcast on my list. It's like sitting down at a table with your smartest friends from grad school to talk about movies, books, and music. The endorsements at the end are always good

- Switched on Pop

- If Books Could Kill

News/Current Events:

- Slate Political Gabfest

- Slate Money

- CBC World Report

- NPR Up First

History:

- Well, There's Your Problem - "a podcast about engineering disasters... with slides"

- The History of Rome

- Revolutions

- We're Not So Different

- The Fall of Civilizations

ikidd a month ago

Just a note to people that like podcasts without insane amounts of ads (iHeartRadio, I'm looking at you): often they're on Youtube as well. Using Pinchflat with Sponsorblock, you can make yourself an RSS feed of just the audio as long as someone has uploaded intervals to Sponsorblock for that video.

manojee a month ago

Here is a list of podcasts I’ve listened to along with Tl:drs, key insights, sound bites and frameworks https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1cBK3nWIyzMWAepBTQSNn...

jvm___ a month ago

Darknet diaries

bilekas a month ago

Not particularly 'educational' at all, but "My dad wrote a Porno". Was recommended it by a friend and have been wetting myself laughing on the work commute.

Also "Stuff you should know" is a super popular one that always gets a listen.

TheChaplain a month ago

"The Beekeeper's Corner", excellent if you are interested in beekeeping.

eddyg a month ago

Still enjoy the TechBrew Ride Home on my way home each day:

https://www.ridehome.info/show/techmeme-ride-home/

unsungNovelty a month ago

- North Star Podcast by David Perell (He stopped this, but I am finishing all the episodes. My favourite podcast.)

- How I write by David Perell

- Darknet diaries

- Syntax FM

- CoRecursive

- Under the radar

- Ladybug podcast (catching up on their old episodes. Glad to see they are back but haven't listened to their latest episodes.)

wgm a month ago

Surprised not to see anyone recommending Acquired, which I love. They have a huge catalog of great old episodes, too.

https://www.acquired.fm/

oidar a month ago

To piggyback on this question, I've been looking for a replacement for - The Dinner Party Download - there's not been a podcast like it since they've moved on. Any suggestions?

DataDaoDe a month ago

Tengo un Plan - deep discussions with experts on various topics

Lifters (Ivan Llamarazares) - short weight lifting and training tips

Sozusagen - interesting stories and etymologies of words

The Reinsurance Podcast - name sums itself up pretty good

ragebol a month ago

- 99% invisible - RoidRage (by AstroForge) - Energy transition Show - Off-Nominal & Main Engine Cut Off - The Pragmatic Engineer

Dutch podcast: - De Technoloog - Space Cowboys - De Groene Nerds

dtauzell a month ago

Ethan Teaches You Music is one of my favorite music podcasts. It tends to focus on pop and jazz music as get the years with lots of music played during the podcast.

trcarney a month ago

Some of these are political so take that into account but these are the ones i listen to:

- Joe Rogan Experience ( a bit of everything) - Matt & Shane's Secret Podcast (Comedy) - Called to Communion (Catholic) - Tucker Carlson (Political) - Part of the Problem (Political) - Tom Wood's Show (Political/Cultural) - Your Welcome with Michael Malice (Political/Cultural) - The Game with Alex Hormozi (Business) - History Hyenas (Comedy)

If I am going on a long drive, I will also listen to Hardcore History or Martyr Made. The long episodes help me lose track of time.

gumboshoes a month ago

A Way with Words, language and linguistics https://waywordradio.org/

stop50 a month ago

The Urbanists Agenda

baseh a month ago

Tangentially Speaking with Christopher Ryan; Think from KERA ; It Could Happen Here ; Stuff You Should Know ; Planet Money ; Fresh Air

type0 a month ago

Advent of Computing

bhag2066 a month ago

Doomberg whenever they're a guest on anything

TheAceOfHearts a month ago

Conversations With Tyler: he tends to ask some of the most creative and interesting questions. For a specific episode recommendation, I really enjoyed "Donald S. Lopez Jr. on Buddhism". He also has an older interview with Paul Graham (pg), but I don't think the questions were as deep or challenging.

Dwarkesh Patel: he gets extremely high quality guests and he doesn't just roll over completely when the guest makes a claim, at least he's willing to ask follow-up questions. His guest lectures with Sarah Paine are outstanding for helping to contextualize your understanding of the world order of the past 100 years from an American perspective.

Wookash Podcast: very technical and focused on more advanced programming topics. For specific episode suggestions I suggest the recent ones with Anton Mikhailov where they talk about ~~ECS~~ arrays of things.

Two's Complement: a podcast by the guy who made the Godbolt Compiler Explorer. It doesn't release very frequently but it provides interesting perspectives. Just

Ezra Klein Show: this is one of the guys that wrote the Abundance book, which I think was a much-needed message. Most recently he had an interview with Clark from Anthropic, but it's from a fairly normie / non-AI-obsessed perspective.

I have to rant about podcasts:

My biggest issue with most podcasts is that it often feels like there's very little effort put into preparing for the discussion and there's not many interesting follow-up questions. I think you can challenge people's claims in good faith to make for more interesting discussions. At least ask some reasonable follow-up questions when the guest makes outrageous claims! A lot of podcasts are just an advertising platform for people to talk about their new book; if you can listen to a guest give the same conversation with a different host then that's probably a sign that the questions are bad and shallow, so you shouldn't keep listening to that podcast.

One of the issues with asking deeper questions is that anything truly interesting or new will probably require having thought about the topic a lot ahead of time. Otherwise you just end up getting a very shallow answer because people can't usually think through complex topics on the fly so the best you can hope for is to get a pre-cached or partially computed answer. It would be great to have a podcast dedicated to exploring more challenging and underexplored questions which are shared with guests ahead of time so both parties can have time to think and explore. Most famous people just go on podcasts to play their "greatest hits" without saying anything substantially different or new.

josefritzishere a month ago

Literally none. But I am legitamately very curious when and where all you droogs find time for so much listening.

  • RegW a month ago

    Right now as I eat my lunch, I'm listening to The Rest is Classified.

SanjayMehta a month ago

Book Club with Jeffrey Sachs

Hackaday Podcast

EconTalk w/Russ Roberts

The Jay Martin Show

Unherd with Freddie Sayers

The Winston Marshall Show

The Chris Hedges Report

And a couple of watch nerd shows on YouTube:

Teddy Baldassare

This Watch, That Watch

epiccoleman a month ago

The ones that feel the most like they "get me" are probably Weird Studies and Very Bad Wizards. I'm a fan of Sam Harris's Making Sense podcast too.

When I want to dip into political news, I trust the Fifth Column guys to have fairly measured and reasonable takes with a vaguely libertarian bent. I have a handful of other political shows too from various perspectives of the aisle that I'll sometimes tune into when something big seems to be happening, but I generally don't consume much politics.

Also, I'd be remiss not to mention the excellent Knifepoint Horror, whose creator has been delivering exemplary horror short fiction of a very particular style for over a decade now. I always listen to those basically immediately after they come out.

niam a month ago

Complex Systems by Patrick McKenzie (patio11). Casual interview format with guests from myriad industries, who try to distill human/technical bits of respective systems. Often it's about tech/finance/govt, or relates to them.

I found it independently of his other work (e.g Bits About Money, or VaccinateCA), which is fitting. The amount of stuff I've read from that guy (including on hn) but did not attribute to a single person seems anomalously high for me. https://www.kalzumeus.com/greatest-hits/

That, and "The Optimal Amount of Fraud is Non-Zero", which is an idiom I paraphrase frequently by this point.

mattbsheets a month ago

Digg Nation, StarTalk, One We Where Spacemen. TWiT.

malicka a month ago

Boonta Vista: Small news for small minds!

aristofun a month ago

Podcasts are mostly a time waste by design. Id rather focus on what Im doing or get high quality content like books if I have time.

whydontyoushare a month ago

if you want fiction and you're a geek like me, i recommend The Program audio series by IMS

emil-lp a month ago

Data skeptics

Darknet diaries

The Cine-Files

60 songs that explain the 90s: the 2000s

VMG a month ago

Skeptics Guide to the Universe

agcat a month ago

Dialectic Podcast by Notion

krapp a month ago

Behind the Bastards

philippta a month ago

Wookash Podcast

Ectiseethe a month ago

Conan O'Brien Needs a Friend, primarily for the segments with the staff that often descend into madness and then sometimes for the celebrity interviews. And a bunch of podcasts in French that I doubt anymore would care about.

nkzednan a month ago

Hidden Brain

Freakonomics

Throughline

NY Times The Daily

The War on Cars

Gay Men Going Deeper

The Happiness Lab

You Might Be Right

What Could Go Right

Memory Palace

Soft skills engineering

javier_e06 a month ago

TwIT

Freakonomics Radio

This American Life

Radiolab

Hidden Brain

99% Invisible

drunkdora a month ago

just cumtown reruns tbh

CodeBit26 a month ago

I’ve been rotating between a few distinct vibes lately: Latent Space: Absolutely essential for keeping up with the breakneck speed of LLMs and the actual engineering behind them. Hard Fork: Good for a high-level weekly pulse on tech policy and Silicon Valley shifts without being too dry. The Changelog: Still the gold standard for open-source deep dives. Also, if you’re into the 'local-first' movement we were discussing earlier, some of the older episodes of Software Engineering Daily regarding distributed systems are still incredibly relevant for today's edge-computing challenges.

monster_truck a month ago

I don't listen to podcasts. Can't stand em, I'd rather read.

  • bilekas a month ago

    Thank you for that insight and for sharing your opinion on a topic which is not for you.

    • glenstein a month ago

      One of the clearest instances of Bean Soup theory I've seen.

    • ThalesX a month ago

      Maybe that's the name of the podcast. Wouldn't be a bad name for a podcast about books.

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