
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.
Most discussed topics
Brands & references
Total monthly reach
Estimated from 7 chart positions in 7 markets.
By chart position
- 🇮🇳IN · Personal Journals#4730K to 100K
- 🇷🇴RO · Personal Journals#3310K to 30K
- 🇬🇷GR · Personal Journals#4610K to 30K
- 🇦🇷AR · Personal Journals#119500 to 3K
- 🇭🇺HU · Personal Journals#124500 to 3K
- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
16K to 52K🎙 Daily cadence·380 episodes·Last published 4d ago - Monthly Reach
Unique listeners across all episodes (30 days)
52K to 172K🇮🇳58%🇷🇴17%🇬🇷17%+4 more - Active Followers
Loyal subscribers who consistently listen
21K to 69K
Market Insights
Platform Distribution
Reach across major podcast platforms, updated hourly
Total Followers
—
Total Plays
—
Total Reviews
—
* Data sourced directly from platform APIs and aggregated hourly across all major podcast directories.
On the show
From 17 epsHosts
Recent guests
Recent episodes
The Immigrant Vote Nobody Is Using
Jun 23, 2026
12m 59s
Too Foreign for Home, Too Foreign for Here (March 2025)
Jun 16, 2026
44m 22s
The One NYC Race That Could Change How $300 Billion Gets Spent
Jun 9, 2026
51m 00s
The Dude Who's Winning Men Over to the Left
Jun 2, 2026
50m 29s
The Hate America Allowed
May 26, 2026
15m 57s
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/23/26 | ![]() The Immigrant Vote Nobody Is Using | There's a voting bloc large enough to decide 126 congressional races and most of it isn't showing up. In this episode, Saadia Khan breaks down data on naturalized citizens, immigrant voter turnout, and civic participation in America, and makes the case that the ballot is one of the most powerful tools immigrants have but aren't using. From New York's 2026 primary to the $383 billion immigrants pay in taxes every year, this is an unfiltered look at belonging, power, and why "be grateful you were let in" was never the deal. You can connect with Saadia on IG @itssaadiak Email:saadia@immigrantlypod.com Host & Producer: Saadia Khan I Content Writer: Saadia Khan I Editorial review: Shei Yu I Sound Designer & Editor: Lou Raskin I Immigrantly Theme Music: Simon Hutchinson | Other Music: Epidemic Sound Immigrantly Podcast is an Immigrantly Media Production. For advertising inquiries, contact us at info@immigrantlypod.com BOYOT (Belong On Your Own Terms) is the next step. It’s our new app, designed to help you think through identity, culture, ambition, relationships, and the stories we carry with guided reflections, prompts, and frameworks developed over years of conversations on this show. It’s thoughtful. It’s challenging. And honestly, it’s the kind of space many of us wish existed earlier in our lives. If you’re ready to go deeper than the podcast, subscribe to BOYOT and start the journey. Don't forget to subscribe to Immigrantly Uninterrupted for insightful podcasts. Follow us on social media for updates and behind-the-scenes content. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | 12m 59s | ||||||
| 6/16/26 | ![]() Too Foreign for Home, Too Foreign for Here (March 2025) | What does it really mean to belong, and what happens when belonging feels like betrayal? Beatriz Nour has lived this question. Born in France, raised between Brazil and Egypt, and based in Dubai for nearly a decade, she's the creator of the podcast InBetweenish and someone who knows firsthand what it costs to reject your heritage, and what it takes to slowly find your way back to it. In this conversation, Beatriz and Saadia Khan go deep on the kind of identity work that doesn't show up on a visa application: the grief of cultural rejection, the negotiation of belonging across languages and life stages, and why staying "in betweenish" isn't indecision, it might be the most honest thing you can do. "I'm most comfortable being inbetweenish, not choosing sides, not owing anyone a full allegiance to one identity." This episode is a rerun brought back because it's exactly the kind of conversation Immigrant Heritage Month was made for. If it's your first time, welcome. If you've heard it before, you'll catch something new. You can connect with Saadia on IG @itssaadiak Email:saadia@immigrantlypod.com Host & Producer: Saadia Khan I Content Writer: Saadia Khan I Editorial review: Shei Yu I Sound Designer & Editor: Lou Raskin I Immigrantly Theme Music: Simon Hutchinson | Other Music: Epidemic Sound Immigrantly Podcast is an Immigrantly Media Production. For advertising inquiries, contact us at info@immigrantlypod.com BOYOT (Belong On Your Own Terms) is the next step. It’s our new app, designed to help you think through identity, culture, ambition, relationships, and the stories we carry with guided reflections, prompts, and frameworks developed over years of conversations on this show. It’s thoughtful. It’s challenging. And honestly, it’s the kind of space many of us wish existed earlier in our lives. If you’re ready to go deeper than the podcast, subscribe to BOYOT and start the journey. Don't forget to subscribe to Immigrantly Uninterrupted for insightful podcasts. Follow us on social media for updates and behind-the-scenes content. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | 44m 22s | ||||||
| 6/9/26 | ![]() The One NYC Race That Could Change How $300 Billion Gets Spent✨ | politicscivil rights+3 | Raj Goyle | ACLUPalantir | IndiaWichita+2 | State Comptrollercivil rights+3 | — | 51m 00s | |
| 6/2/26 | ![]() The Dude Who's Winning Men Over to the Left✨ | politicsidentity+4 | Charlie Goldensohn | Planned Parenthood | San Francisco | politicsprogressive+7 | — | 50m 29s | |
| 5/26/26 | ![]() The Hate America Allowed✨ | anti-Muslim rhetoricviolence+3 | — | — | San Diego | San Diego mosque shootinganti-Muslim violence+3 | — | 15m 57s | |
| 5/19/26 | ![]() Who Really Owns This Art? A Smithsonian Insider Gets Honest✨ | colonialismart repatriation+4 | Nicole Dowd | SmithsonianNational Museum of Asian Art+2 | Korea | SmithsonianNational Museum of Asian Art+5 | — | 45m 13s | |
| 5/12/26 | ![]() The Promise of Queens✨ | politicsgrassroots campaigns+4 | Chuck Park | The Washington PostWorking Families Party | QueensNew York's 6th District+1 | Chuck Parkgrassroots campaign+7 | — | 43m 25s | |
| 5/5/26 | ![]() Once You Leave, You're Never the Same✨ | immigrant lifeidentity shift+4 | Laura Peruchi | TransplantsThe Tiny Apple | New York CityEast Harlem+2 | immigrationNew York+7 | — | 55m 04s | |
| 4/28/26 | ![]() Hip Hop Into Your Raw Self with Zainab Hasnain FKA ZEEMUFFIN (Dec 2022)✨ | DJ cultureimmigrant identity+4 | Zainab Hasnain | Vilcek FoundationNew York Times+1 | LahoreLong Island | Zainab HasnainDJ+7 | — | 45m 42s | |
| 4/21/26 | ![]() Praying in Secret: What It Really Costs to Be Muslim in America✨ | Muslim identityfaith and culture+3 | Salman Khan | Vilcek FoundationMore Muslim | PakistanQatar+1 | Muslimidentity+5 | — | 1h 01m 39s | |
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| 4/14/26 | ![]() The Stories We Don't Tell About Motherhood✨ | motherhoodgrief+3 | Helena de Groot | Vilcek FoundationCBC+4 | Tribeca FestivalApple Podcasts+1 | motherhoodgrief+3 | — | 1h 14m 12s | |
| 4/7/26 | ![]() Giving With Strings Attached✨ | humanitarianismIslamic charities+4 | Dr. Rhea Rahman | Islamic ReliefRacializing the Umma: Muslim Humanitarians Beyond Black, Brown, and White | Brooklyn CollegeCUNY | humanitarianismIslamic Relief+5 | — | 54m 43s | |
| 3/31/26 | ![]() Food Is Never Just Food (June 2025)✨ | food politicsrace and class+4 | Jenny Dorsey | Studio ATAOImmigrantly Media | — | food activismcultural narratives+4 | — | 54m 47s | |
| 3/24/26 | ![]() Thoughts On Celebrating Eid When the World Is on Fire✨ | Eid celebrationjoy and grief+3 | — | Immigrantly Media | — | Eidcelebration+5 | — | 15m 08s | |
| 3/17/26 | ![]() Can Art Rewire Your Brain?✨ | art and literaturepsychedelic therapy+5 | Ramzi Fawaz | University of Wisconsin-MadisonHow to Think Like a Multiverse | Orange County | artpsychedelics+7 | — | 1h 05m 59s | |
| 3/10/26 | ![]() Jonnie Park: The Asian Kid Hip Hop Wasn't Ready For✨ | undocumented immigrationKorean American identity+5 | Jonnie Park | Spit: A Life in BattlesRun DMC+2 | ArgentinaKoreatown, Los Angeles | Jonnie Parkbattle rap+5 | — | 52m 33s | |
| 3/3/26 | ![]() Feed Drop: Central American Art and Resistance in 1980s LA (ReCurrent)✨ | Central American art1980s Los Angeles+3 | Rubén Martínez | ReCurrentGetty | Los AngelesEl Salvador+3 | Central Americaart+8 | — | 29m 59s | |
| 2/24/26 | ![]() Messy Is the New Perfect: Social Media, Iran, and Reinventing Yourself✨ | social mediaimmigrant identity+4 | Sheila Kazan | Immigrantly MediaSmall Talk with Sheila | Iran | perfectiongrit+5 | — | 49m 54s | |
| 2/17/26 | ![]() Bad Bunny and the Politics of Saying “I’m Puerto Rican”✨ | Puerto Rican identitycolonialism+4 | Becca Ramos | Welcome to El Barrio | Puerto RicoTexas+1 | Bad BunnyPuerto Rican+6 | — | 53m 00s | |
| 2/10/26 | ![]() On Carrying a Migrant Heart | What does migration do to the heart, not just the body? In this deeply intimate conversation, award-winning writer Reyna Grande joins host Saadia Khan to discuss her latest book, Migrant Heart, her undocumented childhood, language loss, family trauma, and the emotional inheritance of migration. Reyna reflects on shame, resilience, motherhood, and how writing became a way to release what she once carried silently. The episode explores the hidden emotional costs of immigration, love, identity, belonging, and healing beyond borders, paperwork, and politics. Join us in creating new intellectual engagement for our audience. You can find more information at http://immigrantlypod.com. Please share the love and leave us a review on Apple Podcasts & Spotify to help more people find us! You can connect with Saadia on IG @itssaadiak Email:saadia@immigrantlypod.com Host & Producer: Saadia Khan I Content Writer: Saadia Khan I Editorial review: Shei Yu I Sound Designer & Editor: Lou Raskin I Immigrantly Theme Music: Simon Hutchinson | Other Music: Epidemic Sound Immigrantly Podcast is an Immigrantly Media Production. For advertising inquiries, contact us at info@immigrantlypod.com Want to go deeper into your own identity? Download Belong on Your Own Terms, the app helping first-gen, second-gen, and third-culture kids reclaim belonging on their own terms. link below http://studio.com/saadia Don't forget to subscribe to Immigrantly Uninterrupted for insightful podcasts. Follow us on social media for updates and behind-the-scenes content. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | 53m 56s | ||||||
| 2/3/26 | ![]() Borderly Reflections: About the Line | This coverage was made possible by a grant from URL Collective, a non-profit supporting local diverse media In this reflection episode of Borderly, host and journalist Mario Carrillo returns to the U.S.–Mexico border that shaped his life to ask what the border really is and what it has asked of those who live with it. Through deeply personal stories, Mario reflects on proposing to his wife while overlooking Ciudad Juárez, navigating a nearly seven-year immigration process, and crossing the border together for her final visa interview after decades of separation from her country of birth. He recounts the fear, uncertainty, and cruelty of the immigration system, alongside the hope and belonging that continue to exist at the border every day. This episode is an invitation to slow down, resist flattening the border into myth or argument, and listen more carefully to the people and places we think we already understand. Borderly is a project of Immigrantly. New episodes follow weekly in January. Join us in creating new intellectual engagement for our audience. You can find more information at http://immigrantlypod.com. Please share the love and leave us a review on Apple Podcasts & Spotify to help more people find us! You can connect with Saadia on IG @itssaadiak Email:saadia@immigrantlypod.com Host: Mario Carrillo I Producer: Saadia Khan I Editorial review: Shei Yu I Sound Designer & Editor and Borderly Theme Music: Lou Raskin I Other Music: Epidemic Sound Immigrantly Podcast is an Immigrantly Media Production. For advertising inquiries, contact us at info@immigrantlypod.com Want to go deeper into your own identity? Download Belong on Your Own Terms, the app helping first-gen, second-gen, and third-culture kids reclaim belonging on their own terms. link below http://studio.com/saadia Don't forget to subscribe to Immigrantly Uninterrupted for insightful podcasts. Follow us on social media for updates and behind-the-scenes content. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | 19m 05s | ||||||
| 1/27/26 | ![]() Borderly Part Four: Carrying the Line | This coverage was made possible by a grant from URL Collective, a non-profit supporting local diverse media In the final episode of Borderly, host Mario Carrillo turns to the people who carry the border’s weight long after headlines fade. From immigration law to community care, this conversation centers on what it means to show up with dignity when systems fail, and lives hang in the balance. Mario sits down with Melissa M. López, Executive Director of Estrella del Paso, to explore what welcoming people with dignity looks like in practice, not as policy, but as daily work. They reflect on growing up in El Paso, the emotional toll of immigration advocacy, the lasting impact of family separation, and why border communities are so often asked to absorb the consequences of decisions made far away. As Borderly comes to a close, this episode brings the series full circle, returning to El Paso not as a symbol, but as a real place shaped by care, resilience, and responsibility. Wherever borders exist, people quietly hold communities together. This is their story. Borderly is a project of Immigrantly. New episodes follow weekly in January. Join us in creating new intellectual engagement for our audience. You can find more information at http://immigrantlypod.com. Please share the love and leave us a review on Apple Podcasts & Spotify to help more people find us! You can connect with Saadia on IG @itssaadiak Email:saadia@immigrantlypod.com Host: Mario Carrillo I Producer: Saadia Khan I Editorial review: Shei Yu I Sound Designer & Editor and Borderly Theme Music: Lou Raskin I Other Music: Epidemic Sound Immigrantly Podcast is an Immigrantly Media Production. For advertising inquiries, contact us at info@immigrantlypod.com Want to go deeper into your own identity? Download Belong on Your Own Terms, the app helping first-gen, second-gen, and third-culture kids reclaim belonging on their own terms. link below http://studio.com/saadia Don't forget to subscribe to Immigrantly Uninterrupted for insightful podcasts. Follow us on social media for updates and behind-the-scenes content. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | 1h 04m 21s | ||||||
| 1/20/26 | ![]() Borderly Part Three: Living the Line | This coverage was made possible by a grant from URL Collective, a non-profit supporting local diverse media In the first two episodes of Borderly, we explored the history, journalism, and lived realities of El Paso and Ciudad Juárez. In Episode 3, we turn to art as memory, resistance, and belonging. Host Mario Carrillo sits down with Patrick Gabaldon, an El Paso–born artist and public defender whose vibrant work reshapes how the border is seen, felt, and remembered. From cactus portraits and desert color palettes to murals at the El Paso airport, Patrick’s art challenges the flat, fear-driven narratives often attached to border cities. They talk about growing up on the border, leaving and finding their way back, and why El Paso’s art scene is one of the most powerful and underrated cultural forces in the country. Patrick shares family stories that blur history and folklore, reflects on how law and art intersect in his life, and explains why blooming brightly in a desert landscape is a political act. This episode is about place, pride, and the creative pulse of a city that refuses to be reduced to headlines. It’s an invitation to look closer at El Paso, at the border, and at the art that records its truth. Borderly is a project of Immigrantly. New episodes follow weekly in January. Join us in creating new intellectual engagement for our audience. You can find more information at http://immigrantlypod.com. Please share the love and leave us a review on Apple Podcasts & Spotify to help more people find us! You can connect with Saadia on IG @itssaadiak Email:saadia@immigrantlypod.com Host: Mario Carrillo I Producer: Saadia Khan I Editorial review: Shei Yu I Sound Designer & Editor and Borderly Theme Music: Lou Raskin I Other Music: Epidemic Sound Immigrantly Podcast is an Immigrantly Media Production. For advertising inquiries, contact us at info@immigrantlypod.com Want to go deeper into your own identity? Download Belong on Your Own Terms, the app helping first-gen, second-gen, and third-culture kids reclaim belonging on their own terms. link below http://studio.com/saadia Don't forget to subscribe to Immigrantly Uninterrupted for insightful podcasts. Follow us on social media for updates and behind-the-scenes content. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | 57m 01s | ||||||
| 1/13/26 | ![]() Borderly Part Two: After the Line | This coverage was made possible by a grant from URL Collective, a non-profit supporting local diverse media This episode is about how a place learns to remember itself. Journalist Bob Moore has spent nearly four decades reporting from El Paso, witnessing the border's evolution through policy shifts, political cycles, tragedy, and resilience. In conversation with host Mario Carrillo, he reflects on what it means to tell the story of a border city over time, not as a headline, but as a lived reality. The discussion moves from El Paso in the 1980s, when crossing was fluid and routine, through the rise of border enforcement, post-9/11 security, family separation, and the ways national immigration debates have repeatedly landed on local communities. Moore speaks candidly about the role of local journalism, the responsibility of reporting on your own neighbors, carrying grief, and staying after the cameras leave. August 3, 2019, is part of this story. The conversation places that day within a longer arc, one shaped by language, fear, political power, and the quiet work of people who insist on documenting what really happened and why it matters. This episode examines El Paso not as a symbol but as a city: complex, welcoming, strained, resilient. A place that refuses to be reduced. Caution: This episode includes discussion of mass violence, hate crimes, and immigration-related trauma. No graphic details are described. New episodes follow weekly in January. Join us in creating new intellectual engagement for our audience. You can find more information at http://immigrantlypod.com. Please share the love and leave us a review on Apple Podcasts & Spotify to help more people find us! You can connect with Saadia on IG @itssaadiak Email:saadia@immigrantlypod.com Host: Mario Carrillo I Producer: Saadia Khan I Editorial review: Shei Yu I Sound Designer & Editor and Borderly Theme Music: Lou Raskin I Other Music: Epidemic Sound Immigrantly Podcast is an Immigrantly Media Production. For advertising inquiries, contact us at info@immigrantlypod.com Want to go deeper into your own identity? Download Belong on Your Own Terms, the app helping first-gen, second-gen, and third-culture kids reclaim belonging on their own terms. link below http://studio.com/saadia Don't forget to subscribe to Immigrantly Uninterrupted for insightful podcasts. Follow us on social media for updates and behind-the-scenes content. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | 1h 01m 53s | ||||||
| 1/6/26 | ![]() Borderly Part One: Before the Line | This coverage was made possible by a grant from URL Collective, a non-profit supporting local diverse media This is Part One of Borderly, a limited series by Immigrantly exploring life on the U.S.–Mexico border through history, memory, and lived experience. Before walls, patrols, or policy debates, there was a river. In this opening episode, host Mario Carrillo returns to El Paso to examine how the border came into existence and what was lost when a line was drawn through land, families, and identity. The episode traces the border’s origins from the Rio Grande as a shared lifeline for Indigenous communities, through colonization, war, and the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. Mario reflects on growing up crossing the border freely, leaving El Paso, and what it meant to come back. The episode also features historian Yolanda Chávez Leyva, who shares her border story and decades of research on the El Paso–Juárez region. Her work reveals how revolution, migration, labor, and racial hierarchies shaped the area, and how cruelty and generosity have coexisted here for generations. This episode lays the foundation for the series: the border not as a country's edge, but as a place with its own center, history, and meaning. New episodes follow weekly in January. Join us in creating new intellectual engagement for our audience. You can find more information at http://immigrantlypod.com. Please share the love and leave us a review on Apple Podcasts & Spotify to help more people find us! You can connect with Saadia on IG @itssaadiak Email:saadia@immigrantlypod.com Host: Mario Carrillo I Producer: Saadia Khan I Editorial review: Shei Yu I Sound Designer & Editor and Borderly Theme Music: Lou Raskin I Other Music: Epidemic Sound Immigrantly Podcast is an Immigrantly Media Production. For advertising inquiries, contact us at info@immigrantlypod.com Want to go deeper into your own identity? Download Belong on Your Own Terms, the app helping first-gen, second-gen, and third-culture kids reclaim belonging on their own terms. link below http://studio.com/saadia Don't forget to subscribe to Immigrantly Uninterrupted for insightful podcasts. Follow us on social media for updates and behind-the-scenes content. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | 55m 22s | ||||||
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Chart Positions
7 placements across 7 markets.
Chart Positions
7 placements across 7 markets.







