
Insights from recent episode analysis
Audience Interest
- mathematics concepts and theories
- interviews with mathematicians
Podcast Focus
- exploration of mathematical ideas
- conversations about math beauty
Publishing Consistency
- 75 episodes produced
- active for 5 years
Platform Reach
- no platforms detected yet
- unknown follower count
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 30 chart positions in 30 markets.
By chart position
- 🇺🇸US · Mathematics#6300K to 1M
- 🇦🇺AU · Mathematics#18300K to 1M
- 🇬🇧GB · Mathematics#35100K to 300K
- 🇩🇪DE · Mathematics#42100K to 300K
- 🇨🇦CA · Mathematics#43100K to 300K
- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
1.1M to 3.5M🎙 Weekly cadence·75 episodes·Last published 2w ago - Monthly Reach
Unique listeners across all episodes (30 days)
2.3M to 7.1M🇺🇸14%🇦🇺14%🇰🇷11%+27 more - Active Followers
Loyal subscribers who consistently listen
912K to 2.8M244 real followers tracked across platforms
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
From 1 epsHost
Recent guests
Recent episodes
Math as it Should Be
May 27, 2026
Unknown duration
Crocheting Mathematics
Apr 22, 2026
12m 46s
Pythagorean Triples and Some New Conjectures
Mar 25, 2026
Unknown duration
Proofs and Buckets of Fish
Feb 25, 2026
Unknown duration
Fractals: Simple rules, complex shapes
Jan 28, 2026
Unknown duration
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5/27/26 | ![]() Math as it Should Be | Aris Winger, Math Professor and Executive Director of the National Association of Mathematicians, has experienced first hand how math can save students' lives by uplifting them. Our education system can move beyond workbooks and help students, all students, think crisper and understand what's happening in the world. | — | ||||||
| 4/22/26 | ![]() Crocheting Mathematics✨ | crochetinghyperbolic geometry+3 | Beyza Aslan | University of North Florida | — | crochetinghyperbolic geometry+3 | — | 12m 46s | |
| 3/25/26 | ![]() Pythagorean Triples and Some New Conjectures | Ben Cornish, host of The Mathematicians Podcast, discusses Pythagorean triples, integers that can be the sides of a right triangle. There are infinitely many primitive triples, as he proves. This concept has been around even before Pythagoras and across cultures. Yet, there are always new questions to ask. Answering one involves, surprisingly, complex numbers. We leave you with an open conjecture. | — | ||||||
| 2/25/26 | ![]() Proofs and Buckets of Fish | Joel David Hamkins, author of Proof and the Art of Mathematics, presents the game Buckets of Fish, which seemingly will go on forever. Yet he presents a proof that it will always come to an end. In fact, he proves it using contradiction, mathematical induction, and even transfinite ordinals. Why do mathematicians like to do multiple proofs of a single statement? He also gives a winning strategy for the game and proves it works. | — | ||||||
| 1/28/26 | ![]() Fractals: Simple rules, complex shapes | Krystal Taylor, Associate Professor of Mathematics at Ohio State University, discussed the surprising characteristics of fractals, "infinity in a box." They may have fractional dimension, which varies depending on how it's measured. An infinite perimeter may enclose a finite area. Yet they are not just mathematical oddities--they appear in nature and have practical applications. | — | ||||||
| 4/23/25 | ![]() The Many Facets of Math | Alon Amit addresses the various facets of mathematics. Is it an art or a science? Both? Neither? Is it invented or discovered? Why is math that's developed for purely aesthetic reasons so often a useful tool for the real world? He likes that there are not simple, one-way answers. He challenges the listeners to post questions to Quora that surprise and delight him. | — | ||||||
| 3/26/25 | ![]() Will AI Replace Mathematicians? | Alon Amit, prolific Quora math answerer, discusses how Artificial Intelligence might change the role of the mathematician. AI will make mathematics more efficient but it can't do math in a deep sense at present. It can't perform logical reasoning or even know if it's wrong. However, there are recent advances in proof verifiers. They may eventually be able to check complex proofs like the recent alleged proof of the ABC Conjecture. | — | ||||||
| 2/26/25 | ![]() The National Museum of Mathematics | Cindy Lawrence is the Director and CEO of the National Museum of Mathematics in New York City. She and a former math professor built it up from a grass-roots museum started by math teachers. The Museum, soon to move into a 30,000 square foot space, appeals to both those who love and hate math. Attendees learn that math is beautiful, fun, and surprising--"That's so cool!" | — | ||||||
| 1/22/25 | ![]() Contemporary Math Research for Artistic Undergrads | Veselin Jungic, teaching professor of mathematics at Simon Fraser University, introduces undergraduate math minors to contemporary math research. The focus is Ramsey theory, an area of current research activity that brings together multiple areas of math, deals with big ideas, proves complete chaos is impossible, and is built on human stories. Some students extended or corrected ongoing research. Others used their artistic talents to express the patterns of mathematics through, for example, a graphic novel or a poem. | — | ||||||
| 12/25/24 | ![]() Where do Math Concepts Come From? | Joseph Bennish discusses math as a "concept factory." The concept of prime numbers came from a desire to break numbers down to their simplest atoms. This simple concept led to simple questions like the twin prime conjecture that no one has been able to answer. Those questions in turn led to deep research. The concepts of new geometries grew out of failed attempts to prove that Euclid's geometry was the only geometry. Gauss' "most wonderful theorem" of surfaces led to Riemann's higher dimensional manifolds. This, combined with Minkowski's space-time geometry, led to Einstein's relativity, "the most beautiful theory of physics." | — | ||||||
Want analysis for the episodes below?Free for Pro Submit a request, we'll have your selected episodes analyzed within an hour. Free, at no cost to you, for Pro users. | |||||||||
| 11/27/24 | ![]() A Clockmaker, an Egg, and a Cathedral | Jeanne Lazzarini tells us how a clockmaker used an egg to win the competition to build the dome of the Florence Cathedral. The Cathedral had had a huge gaping hole for a hundred years since no one knew how to build such a large dome. His solution involved the equation for a hanging chain and parallel lines that meet. | — | ||||||
| 10/23/24 | ![]() What is a Pattern? | Math is in a sense the science of patterns. Alon Amit explores the question of what exactly is a pattern. A common example is the decimal digits of pi. The statement that they have no pattern seems to be either obvious or completely untrue. We explore the spectrum of pattern-ness from simple repetition to total randomness and finally answer the question about pi. We also discuss analogy, which powers mathematical exploration. | — | ||||||
| 9/25/24 | ![]() What's the Big Deal about Pi? | Alon Amit joins us on the antipode of Pi Day to counter the myths and mysteries of this most famous irrational number. There's nothing magical about a non-repeating string of digits. The real and profound mystery is the ubiquity of pi. It shows up in places that have nothing to do with circles, such as the sum of the reciprocals of the squares of the integers and the normal bell-shaped curve. | — | ||||||
| 8/28/24 | ![]() Turning Math-Hating Prisoners into Mathematicians | Kate Pearce, a post-doc researcher at UT Austin, talks about her experience teaching math in a women's prison. Her remedial college algebra students came in with negative experience in math, so she devised ways to make the topics new. The elective class called, coincidentally, The Art of Mathematics, explored parallels between math and art, infinity, algorithms, formalism, randomness and more. The students learned to think like mathematicians and gained confidence in their abilities in abstract problem solving. | — | ||||||
| 7/24/24 | ![]() Stop Overselling Mathematics | Alon Amit, prolific Quora math answerer, argues that an honest representation of mathematical ideas is enough to spark interest in math. It's not necessary to exaggerate the role of math; the golden ratio does not drive the stock market, the solution of the Riemann hypothesis will not kill cryptography, and Grothendieck did not advance robotics. History and seeing the thought process and the struggle behind the tight finished proof are ways to make math compelling. | — | ||||||
| 6/26/24 | ![]() Math for Kids: It's not a Spectator Sport | Dave Cole, the author of the Math Kids series of books, talks about introducing kids to math as a fun challenge and puzzle beyond the rote memorization they've come to expect. Kids who like to read are enticed by puzzles and mysteries. Möbius strips, Pascal's triangle, and other concepts that are new to them, make them marvel, "Is this math?" They see patterns and learn to make and even prove conjectures. | — | ||||||
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Chart Positions
30 placements across 30 markets.
Chart Positions
30 placements across 30 markets.

