
Insights from recent episode analysis
Audience Interest
Podcast Focus
Publishing Consistency
Platform Reach
Insights are generated by CastFox AI using publicly available data, episode content, and proprietary models.
Total monthly reach
Estimated from 1 chart position in 1 market.
By chart position
- 🇳🇿NZ · History#140500 to 3K
- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
350 to 2.1K🎙 Biweekly cadence·20 episodes·Long inactive - Monthly Reach
Unique listeners across all episodes (30 days)
500 to 3K🇳🇿100% - Active Followers
Loyal subscribers who consistently listen
150 to 900
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Reach across major podcast platforms, updated hourly
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* Data sourced directly from platform APIs and aggregated hourly across all major podcast directories.
On the show
Recent episodes
Ex Urbe Ad Astra #13 - The Florentine Renaissance with Larry Rothfield
Feb 13, 2024
Unknown duration
Ex Urbe Ad Astra #12 - Pacing with Ken Liu
Jan 9, 2024
Unknown duration
Ex Urbe Ad Astra #11 - The Problem of Evil in Narrative with Alexis Shotwell
Dec 5, 2023
Unknown duration
Ex Urbe Ad Astra #10 - Setups and Payoffs with Jon Evans
Oct 17, 2023
Unknown duration
Ex Urbe Ad Astra #9 - Stopping Reading
Aug 29, 2023
Unknown duration
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| Date | Episode | Description | Length | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2/13/24 | ![]() Ex Urbe Ad Astra #13 - The Florentine Renaissance with Larry Rothfield | In this episode, Ada and Jo speak with historian Larry Rothfield about the political nuances of 15th century Florence, and the shifting perspectives of the Renaissance to come since then. | — | ||||||
| 1/9/24 | ![]() Ex Urbe Ad Astra #12 - Pacing with Ken Liu | In this episode, Ada and Jo discuss the merits of good pacing across a range of story lengths with Hugo and Nebula award-winning author, Ken Liu. | — | ||||||
| 12/5/23 | ![]() Ex Urbe Ad Astra #11 - The Problem of Evil in Narrative with Alexis Shotwell | In this episode, Ada and Jo speak with Alexis Shotwell about the issues that arise from ill-intentioned characters, and the moral questions they present to readers. | — | ||||||
| 10/17/23 | ![]() Ex Urbe Ad Astra #10 - Setups and Payoffs with Jon Evans | In this episode, Ada and Jo speak with Jon Evans about the remote research versus travel, short stories, beleivability, and setting up shocking twists for striking payoffs. | — | ||||||
| 8/29/23 | ![]() Ex Urbe Ad Astra #9 - Stopping Reading | In this episode, Jo and Ada discuss a number of reasons to put a book down without finishing. | — | ||||||
| 7/31/23 | ![]() Politics in Disability and Fiction with William Alexander | Award winning children's author William Alexander joins Jo and Ada to talk about using politics and disability in fiction for children and adults. | — | ||||||
| 11/9/22 | ![]() Ex Urbe Ad Astra Ep. 7: Shakespeare And Language, With Writer Greer Gilman | Greer Gilman has been writing stories set in Cloud, her Northern mythscape, for a quarter of a century. Her books are written for the ear, as much as for the understanding. Like the earliest stories, they are meant to be sung. Greer Gilman website | — | ||||||
| 8/3/22 | ![]() How Writing Is Like Fencing, With Writer Max Gladstone - Part 2 | Note to Patreon backers: You received this episode on January 12, 2022, but due to an oversight, it was never posted here. Normally you hear episodes a week in advance, but this one you received seven months in advance! Thank you to everyone for your patience. This is conclusion of the interview. Anything you can call "writing" (science fiction, fantasy, screenwriting, comics, games) Max Gladstone does. He's also a fencer and martial artist. This episode explores connections between these two types of things. This interview ran long, so this is part one of two. Numerous topics covered include: the similarities shared by the crafts of writing and fencing; struggles when writing descriptions of physical spaces; why we don't see cluttered spaceships in science fiction movies; when to include potatoes in your medieval fantasy setting; designing the layout of museum exhibits, video game spaces, and Walt Disney World; and more! Max Gladstone website Substack newsletter Twitter | — | ||||||
| 7/13/22 | ![]() Ex Urbe Ad Astra Ep. 5: Writing The Near Future, With SF Writer Naomi Kritzer | Note to Patreon backers: You received this episode on November 10, 2021, but due to an oversight, it was never posted here. Normally you hear episodes a week in advance, but this one you received eight months in advance! Thank you to everyone for your patience. This episode is brought to you by Perhaps The Stars, the fourth and final novel in the Terra Ignota series, available now from (referrer links) Amazon, Barnes And Noble, Books-A-Million, Apple Books, and Indiebound. Naomi Kritzer has been publishing her science fiction and fantasy for the last twenty years. She lives in Saint Paul, Minnesota, US, and likes to think about ways to describe the future both near and far. Her new book is Chaos on CatNet, the sequel to Catfishing on CatNet published by Tor Teen. Naomi Kritzer's homepage Naomi Kritzer's Twitter | — | ||||||
| 6/1/22 | ![]() Ex Urbe Ad Astra Bonus Ep. 4, Part 2: Chapters | This is the second half of a conversation between Ada Palmer and Jo Walton, about writing chapters. This was a two-hour conversation, so our previous episode had the first hour, and this episode has the second hour. | — | ||||||
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| 5/21/22 | ![]() Ex Urbe Ad Astra Bonus Ep. 4, Part 1: Chapters | This is the first half of a conversation between Ada Palmer and Jo Walton, about writing chapters. This was a two-hour conversation, so this episode has the first hour, and the next episode will have the second hour. | — | ||||||
| 3/2/22 | ![]() Bonus Ep. 3, Part 2: The Author-Reader Contract | This is the final half of a conversation between Ada Palmer and Jo Walton, about how an author can craft the early part of a novel to set up the reader's expectations about what kind of a book to expect. This was a two-hour conversation, so our previous episode had the first hour, and this episode has the second hour. | — | ||||||
| 2/9/22 | ![]() Ex Urbe Ad Astra Bonus Ep. 3, Part 1: The Author-Reader Contract | This is part one of a conversation between Ada Palmer and Jo Walton, about how an author can craft the early part of a novel to set up the reader's expectations about what kind of a book to expect. This was a two-hour conversation, so this episode has the first hour, and the next episode will be part two. | — | ||||||
| 1/3/22 | ![]() How Writing Is Like Fencing, With Writer Max Gladstone - Part 1 | This episode is brought to you by Perhaps The Stars, the fourth and final novel in the Terra Ignota series, available now from (referrer links) Amazon, Barnes And Noble, Books-A-Million, Apple Books, and Indiebound. Anything you can call "writing" (science fiction, fantasy, screenwriting, comics, games) Max Gladstone does. He's also a fencer and martial artist. This episode explores connections between these two types of things. This interview ran long, so this is part one of two. Numerous topics covered include: the similarities shared by the crafts of writing and fencing; struggles when writing descriptions of physical spaces; why we don't see cluttered spaceships in science fiction movies; when to include potatoes in your medieval fantasy setting; designing the layout of museum exhibits, video game spaces, and Walt Disney World; and more! Max Gladstone website Substack newsletter Twitter | — | ||||||
| 10/27/21 | ![]() Ex Urbe Ad Astra Ep. 4: Bright and Dark Ages with historian and journalist David Perry | David Perry is a freelance journalist covering politics, history, education, and disability rights. He was a professor of Medieval History at Dominican University from 2006-2017, and now works as an academic advisor in the history department of the University of Minnesota. His scholarly work focuses on Venice, the Crusades, and the Mediterranean World. Numerous topics covered include: Reasons to study history; how historical figures and institutions claimed legitimacy; calling an Age "Dark" or "Golden" in order to get legitimacy; patronage of the arts to prop up legitimacy; fake innovation and fake continuity; bastardy; parrots and coconuts in medieval Europe; and more! David Perry website David Perry Patreon "The Bright Ages: A New History of Medieval Europe" by Matthew Gabriele and David M. Perry | — | ||||||
| 10/13/21 | ![]() Ex Urbe Ad Astra Ep. 3: Hopepunk and positive futures with writer Ruthanna Emrys | Ruthanna Emrys is an author of science fiction and fantasy such as The Innsmouth Legacy series and Deep Roots, which are hopeful Lovecraftian fantasy, and the forthcoming A Half-Built Garden, a hopeful science fiction novel of first contact. Ruthanna Emrys Patreon "Reading The Weird" column on Tor.com Ruthanna Emrys homepage | — | ||||||
| 9/15/21 | ![]() Ex Urbe Ad Astra Bonus Ep. 2: Manga for non-manga readers | This will probably become a series of occasional bonus episodes in which Ada Palmer and Jo Walton discuss manga and anime with an eye to its innovations, cultural norms, and wider implications for the media landscape. - Gender and age marketing categories in manga. - Translation of Japanese onomatopoeia (sound-effect words). - The influence of organized communities of fandom on a medium. - A story-formula and set of character archetypes called "moe" (MO-ay). - Moe's reliable merchandising profit, resulting in more moe. - Availability of manga on devices both broadening and narrowing market categories. And more! | — | ||||||
| 8/26/21 | ![]() Ex Urbe Ad Astra Ep. 2: Mars & How To Help Science Fiction Writers With Science, With Astrogeologist Jonathan Sneed | Jonathan Sneed is an astrogeologist and expert in Mars wind and erosional science. He also consults with science fiction authors, and has the skill of giving the sort of answers to science questions that are useful when writing fiction. Numerous topics covered include - open questions in Mars science; panspermia; wind tunnels; and how entertainment technology is often ahead of technology made for any other industry. Also weird ideas for novels such as: an alien animal species that incorporates knowledge from brains through digestion; why a savannah planet can't work and how to make it work anyway; and a ninja in Florence! All this and much more. As mentioned in the episode, he has a guest post on Ex Urbe, "What Color Is Pluto?" | — | ||||||
| 8/19/21 | ![]() Ex Urbe Ad Astra Bonus Episode 1: Complicity | In this bonus episode, Ada Palmer and Jo Walton have a craft of writing discussion of complicity, i.e. when and how the author gets the reader or audience on the side of characters they would not expect to root for, and how that can be used in fiction. | — | ||||||
| 8/5/21 | ![]() Ex Urbe Ad Astra Ep. 1: Speculative Resistance With Writer Malka Older | Novelist and political scientist Malka Older, author of Infomocracy and its sequels, shares an interest with Ada Palmer in the development of political systems. With Jo Walton providing examples from her broad knowledge of the history of F&SF, they discuss speculative political systems, historical disaster response, and forms of organization with which populations can respond to their needs. Malka Older on Twitter: @m_older https://malkaolder.wordpress.com Read the first five chapters of Infomocracy: https://www.tor.com/2016/02/22/excerpts-malka-older-infomocracy-chapter-1/ | — | ||||||
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Chart Positions
1 placement across 1 market.
Chart Positions
1 placement across 1 market.





