
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 9 chart positions in 9 markets.
By chart position
- 🇩🇪DE · Nature#19300K to 1M
- 🇨🇦CA · Nature#9730K to 100K
- 🇺🇸US · Nature#1055K to 30K
- 🇦🇺AU · Nature#1195K to 30K
- 🇧🇷BR · Nature#5030K to 100K
- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
188K to 643K🎙 Weekly cadence·20 episodes·Long inactive - Monthly Reach
Unique listeners across all episodes (30 days)
375K to 1.3M🇩🇪78%🇨🇦8%🇧🇷8%+6 more - Active Followers
Loyal subscribers who consistently listen
113K to 386K
Market Insights
Platform Distribution
Reach across major podcast platforms, updated hourly
Total Followers
—
Total Plays
—
Total Reviews
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* Data sourced directly from platform APIs and aggregated hourly across all major podcast directories.
On the show
Recent episodes
16. A Rockfish Baby Boom, with Adam Obaza and Olivia Carmack
Sep 30, 2024
Unknown duration
9. Climate fatalism vs. climate hope, w/ Elin Kelsey (PART TWO)
Aug 2, 2022
Unknown duration
Trailer: Pod of Orcas Season Two
May 19, 2022
Unknown duration
7. Our Shared Home, with Lynda Mapes & Joe Gaydos (Season One Finale)
May 13, 2021
Unknown duration
6. Toxic blubber, with Peter Ross
May 6, 2021
Unknown duration
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| Date | Episode | Description | Length | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 9/30/24 | ![]() 16. A Rockfish Baby Boom, with Adam Obaza and Olivia Carmack | Rockfish are very vulnerable to overfishing and don't have babies every year. Very rarely a "jackpot recruitment" happens and tons of rockfish babies are born (they give birth to live young, meaning no eggs!). The last time it happened in the San Juan Islands was decades ago. Our guest today are Adam Obaza and Olivia Carmack of Paua Marine Research Group. We work with Paua to collect data on young rockfish to aid in the recovery plan for the species. Check it out! -- www.pauamarineresearch.com www.seadocsociety.org | — | ||||||
| 8/2/22 | ![]() 9. Climate fatalism vs. climate hope, w/ Elin Kelsey (PART TWO) | Welcome to Part 2 of our episode about Hope with Elin Kelsey. In this episode we talk about Southern Resident Killer Whales, why we shouldn't put our climate responsibility on young children, environmental fatalism, and individuals vs. corporations as it relates to a healthy planet and Salish Sea. Register for our virtual event at seadocsociety.org/event. Elin Kelsey is the author of Hope Matters: Why Changing the Way We Think is Critical to Solving the Environmental Crisis. The whole SeaDoc staff has read the book, and to say it has inspired us would be a huge understatement. Kelsey, PhD, is a leading spokesperson, scholar and educator in the area of evidence-based hope. Support our work: seadocsociety.org/donate Rate, review and share the podcast to spread the word. Get our free monthly newsletter at seadocsociety.org/newsletter. Facebook: facebook.com/seadocsociety Instagram: Instagram.com/seadocsociety Twitter: twitter.com/seadocsociety | — | ||||||
| 5/19/22 | ![]() Trailer: Pod of Orcas Season Two | Welcome to Pod of Orcas! Last season, we dove deep with an endangered population of killer whales, and we met some brilliant scientists and storytellers along the way. This season, we’re zooming out. We’re gonna look at the place they call home, which is also the place we call home. And by that I do mean the Salish Sea and its 8 million people and two large cities with bustling ports and shipping routes, but I also mean the Pacific Ocean, the planet, all of it. We’ll look at everything from dire stories of near extinction to inspirational stories of recovery to stories that are just cool or downright weird. How do we maintain hope amid so much grim climate news? Could Chinook salmon go extinct in our lifetime? What makes poop so crucial to marine mammal research? And why do human feet keep washing up on Salish Sea shores? Subscribe to Pod of Orcas wherever you listen to podcasts! | — | ||||||
| 5/13/21 | ![]() 7. Our Shared Home, with Lynda Mapes & Joe Gaydos (Season One Finale) | In our finale episode, we look at Southern Resident Killer Whales through the eyes of the Seattle Times environment reporter, Lynda Mapes. Lynda has been locked into their story since Tahlequah carried her dead calf for 17 days and more than a thousand miles in the summer of 2018. That story captured the world and Mapes’ articles for the Times are some of the most popular in the paper’s online history. Tahlequah’s story is also how she introduces her beautiful new book, Orca: Shared Waters, Shared Home, which comes out June 1, but you can preorder now: mountaineers.org/books/books/orca-shared-waters-shared-home Rate, review and share the podcast to spread the word. You can email me at justin@seadocsociety.org. Get our free monthly newsletter at seadocsociety.org/newsletter. Facebook: facebook.com/seadocsociety Instagram: Instagram.com/seadocsociety Twitter: twitter.com/seadocsociety Thanks to our sponsors: Shearwater Kayak Tours Rainshadow Solar Two Beers Brewing Company Deer Harbor Charters and The Averna Family Betsy Wareham and West Sound Marina The San Juan County Marine Resources Committee Apple State Vinegar Logo: FLOAT.org Music: Podington Bear Whale sound: The Whale Museum | — | ||||||
| 5/6/21 | ![]() 6. Toxic blubber, with Peter Ross | In Ep. 6, we look at how human-made contaminants in the ocean are compromising killer whales and compounding the other problems they face. Fat soluble toxins move up the foot chain and accumulate in killer whales, who metabolize it in their blubber. Mothers also pass those contaminants down to their babies when nursing. Our guest is the excellent Peter Ross, who takes this complex subject and artfully breaks it down. Next week is the finale and it's a good one. See you then! Rate, review and share the podcast to spread the word. You can email me at justin@seadocsociety.org. Get our free monthly newsletter at seadocsociety.org/newsletter Facebook: facebook.com/seadocsociety Instagram: instagram.com/seadocsociety Twitter: twitter.com/seadocsociety Thanks to our sponsors: Shearwater Kayak Tours Rainshadow Solar Two Beers Brewing Company Deer Harbor Charters and The Averna Family Betsy Wareham and West Sound Marina The San Juan County Marine Resources Committee Apple State Vinegar Logo: FLOAT.org Music: Podington Bear Whale sound: The Whale Museum | — | ||||||
| 4/29/21 | ![]() 5. Looking to gorillas to save killer whales, with Kirsten Gilardi | In Ep. 5, we look at a conservation success story that could help map out the future for Southern Resident Killer Whales. The similarities between mountain gorillas and Southern Residents are plenty: Both can be individually identified and monitored by researchers. Both are massive tourist attractions--which on one hand comes with threats, but also brings enthusiasm, support, and the potential for funding to ensure protection. Both also regularly cross the imaginary borders humans have drawn to carve up our countries, meaning international collaboration is crucial. Our guest is Dr. Kirsten Gilardi, Director of Gorilla Doctors and Executive Director of the Karen C. Drayer Wildlife Health Center at UC Davis School of Veterinary Medicine. Rate, review and share the podcast to spread the word. You can email me at justin@seadocsociety.org. Support our work through GiveBIG this week! Get our free monthly newsletter at seadocsociety.org/newsletter Facebook: facebook.com/seadocsociety Instagram: Instagram.com/seadocsociety Twitter: twitter.com/seadocsociety Thanks to our sponsors: Shearwater Kayak Tours Rainshadow Solar Two Beers Brewing Company Deer Harbor Charters and The Averna Family Betsy Wareham and West Sound Marina The San Juan County Marine Resources Committee Apple State Vinegar Logo: FLOAT.org Music: Podington Bear | — | ||||||
| 4/22/21 | ![]() 4. Orca sound & human noise, with Rob Williams | In Ep. 4, we enter the acoustic world of killer whales, and what that means for how they talk with their families, hunt for salmon, navigate the sounds of boats, and so much more. Our guest is Rob Williams, who is Chief Scientist and Co-Founder of Oceans Initiative with Erin Asche. Acoustic communication is fundamental to the survival of killer whales and their uniqe culture, so don’t miss this one. Rate, review and share the podcast to spread the word. You can email our host at justin@seadocsociety.org. Support our work through GiveBIG this week! Get our free monthly newsletter at seadocsociety.org/newsletter Facebook: facebook.com/seadocsociety Instagram: instagram.com/seadocsociety Twitter: twitter.com/seadocsociety Thanks to our sponsors: Shearwater Kayak Tours Rainshadow Solar Two Beers Brewing Company Deer Harbor Charters and The Averna Family Betsy Wareham and West Sound Marina The San Juan County Marine Resources Committee Apple State Vinegar Logo: FLOAT.org Music: Podington Bear Whale sound: The Whale Museum | — | ||||||
| 4/15/21 | ![]() 3. How captivity changed everything, with Jason M. Colby | In Ep. 3, we look at how humans have viewed and treated killer whales throughout history, especially in the Salish Sea. It starts with slaughter by fishermen, followed by captivity for entertainment, all the way up to our present moment, in which wild Southern Resident Killer Whales are endangered, but beloved. We look at portrayal in media (Free Willy, Blackfish and more) and get into how captivity shifted scientific study and shaped perception of orcas in ways that would ultimately lead to a ban on their capture in the Salish Sea. Our guest is Jason Colby, author of the book Orca: How We Came to Know and Love the Ocean’s Greatest Predator. This is a moving and at times sad conversation that explores hard truths. But it ultimately offers hope. Rate, review and share the podcast to help spread the word. Get our free monthly newsletter at seadocsociety.org/newsletter Facebook: facebook.com/seadocsociety Instagram: Instagram.com/seadocsociety Twitter: twitter.com/seadocsociety Thanks to our sponsors: Shearwater Kayak Tours Rainshadow Solar Two Beers Brewing Company Deer Harbor Charters and The Averna Family Betsy Wareham and West Sound Marina The San Juan County Marine Resources Committee Apple State Vinegar Logo: FLOAT.org Music: Podington Bear | — | ||||||
| 4/8/21 | ![]() 2. Could we lose salmon in our lifetime?, with Cecilia Gobin | In Ep. 2, we talk about salmon—the sole food source for Southern Resident Killer Whales. Our guest is Cecilia Gobin—a Tulalip tribal member who is on staff at the Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission. She's incredibly thoughtful and and exactly the kind of voice you want speaking on this topic. How did we create such a bleak situation for this amazing species of fish? Could we lose salmon in our lifetime? What happens if the status-quo continues? Listen to find out. Subscribe to follow along. Get our free monthly newsletter at seadocsociety.org/newsletter • Facebook: facebook.com/seadocsociety • Instagram: Instagram.com/seadocsociety • Twitter: twitter.com/seadocsociety Thanks to our sponsors: • Shearwater Kayak Tours • Rainshadow Solar • Two Beers Brewing Company • Deer Harbor Charters and The Averna Family • Betsy Wareham and West Sound Marina • The San Juan County Marine Resources Committee • Apple State Vinegar • Logo: FLOAT.org • Music: Podington Bear | — | ||||||
| 4/1/21 | ![]() 1. Killer whales and culture, with Dr. John Ford | In Ep. 1, we bring you up to speed on the critically endangered Southern Resident Killer Whales and discuss orca culture with Dr. John Ford, who has studied the species since the 1970s, when killer whale research truly began. How did things become so dire? What’s the difference between the three distinct ecotypes of killer whales? What are scientists and conservationists doing to solve the problem? Click listen and subscribe to find out. Rate, review and share the podcast to help spread the word. Get our free monthly newsletter at seadocsociety.org/newsletter Facebook: facebook.com/seadocsociety Instagram: Instagram.com/seadocsocity Twitter: twitter.com/seadocsocity Thanks to our sponsors: Shearwater Kayak Tours Rainshadow Solar Two Beers Brewing Company Deer Harbor Charters and The Averna Family Betsy Wareham and West Sound Marina The San Juan County Marine Resources Committee Apple State Vinegar Logo: FLOAT.org Music: Podington Bear Whale sound: The Whale Museum | — | ||||||
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| 3/4/21 | ![]() Introducing 'Pod of Orcas: Saving Southern Resident Killer Whales' | There are only about 70 Southern Resident Killer Whales remaining in the wild and they’re looking directly at extinction if things don’t change. Southern Resident Orcas are emotionally intelligent animals with complex family dynamics. They also have a deep spiritual connection to the tribes and first nations who’ve been in the Salish Sea since time immemorial. Over the next six weeks, we’ll dive into those issues and more, with some brilliant guests joining us along the way. Subscribe to the podcast and spread the word! | — | ||||||
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Chart Positions
10 placements across 9 markets.
Chart Positions
10 placements across 9 markets.



