
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 37 chart positions in 37 markets.
By chart position
- 🇬🇧GB · News Commentary#22100K to 300K
- 🇦🇺AU · News Commentary#23100K to 300K
- 🇩🇪DE · News Commentary#8530K to 100K
- 🇯🇵JP · News Commentary#4630K to 100K
- 🇮🇹IT · News Commentary#6410K to 30K
- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
117K to 372K🎙 Daily cadence·273 episodes·Last published today - Monthly Reach
Unique listeners across all episodes (30 days)
389K to 1.2M🇬🇧24%🇦🇺24%🇩🇪8%+34 more - Active Followers
Loyal subscribers who consistently listen
155K to 496K
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
Cockroach party hits nerve with angry young Indians
Jun 25, 2026
Unknown duration
Teens are still on social media, but does that mean Australia's ban has failed?
Jun 18, 2026
Unknown duration
How the US finally fell in love with soccer
Jun 11, 2026
25m 39s
Two scientists on their race to make a new Ebola vaccine
Jun 4, 2026
21m 45s
The salt caverns used to stockpile oil
May 28, 2026
23m 49s
Social Links & Contact
Official channels & resources
Official Website
Login
RSS Feed
Login
| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/25/26 | ![]() Cockroach party hits nerve with angry young Indians | A new youth protest movement in India that started as online satire is now staging an ongoing sit-in in New Delhi calling for the resignation of India’s education minister.The Cockroach Janta Party (CJP) was launched in late May by Abhijeet Dipke, a graduate of Boston University, in response to alleged comments by India's chief justice, Surya Kant, comparing unemployed young Indians to cockroaches. Dipke launched a parody political party, calling on all cockroaches to unite, which led to street protests in cities including Delhi, Pune, Jaipur and Bengaluru.The CJP latched onto mounting anger in India at a series of issues affecting exams, including the secondary school leaving exam, which has affected thousands of people and been linked to suicides. But the movement has also tapped into the anger of a generation of graduates who’ve done everything right but still can’t find work that matches their aspirations.In this episode economist Rosa Abraham at Azim Premji University, explains how India’s jobs crisis is fuelling this new youth protest movement. This episode was written and produced by Gemma Ware and Mend Mariwany. Mixing by Michelle Macklem and theme music by Neeta Sarl. Read the full credits for this episode and sign up here for a free daily newsletter from The Conversation.If you like the show, please consider donating to The Conversation, an independent, not-for-profit news organisation. | — | ||||||
| 6/18/26 | ![]() Teens are still on social media, but does that mean Australia's ban has failed? | When Australia banned under 16-year-olds from using social media in December 2025, it became a test case for a policy now being pursued by governments around the world. This week, the UK announced a similar social media ban from 2027.So how’s it going in Australia? Have the teenagers emerged from a phone-lit glow to reengage in the real world? And what kind of difference is it having on their mental health?In this episode, we speak to Susan Sawyer, a professor of adolescent mental health at the University of Melbourne, who is running a number of ongoing studies examining the way young people and their parents are reacting to Australia’s ban.This episode was written and produced by Gemma Ware, Katie Flood and Mend Mariwany. Mixing by Michelle Macklem and theme music by Neeta Sarl. Read the full credits for this episode and sign up here for a free daily newsletter from The Conversation.If you like the show, please consider donating to The Conversation, an independent, not-for-profit news organisation. | — | ||||||
| 6/11/26 | ![]() How the US finally fell in love with soccer✨ | soccerUS sports culture+3 | John Sloop | The Conversation | Pasadena, CaliforniaNorth America+2 | soccerUS sports+6 | — | 25m 39s | |
| 6/4/26 | ![]() Two scientists on their race to make a new Ebola vaccine✨ | Ebola vaccinescientific research+3 | Teresa LambeRebecca Makinson | Oxford Vaccine GroupUniversity of Oxford+3 | Democratic Republic of CongoUganda | Ebolavaccine+6 | — | 21m 45s | |
| 5/28/26 | ![]() The salt caverns used to stockpile oil✨ | oil stockpilesStrategic Petroleum Reserve+3 | Scott Montgomery | The Conversation | Gulf coastUS | Strategic Petroleum Reservecrude oil+3 | — | 23m 49s | |
| 5/21/26 | ![]() Argentina’s inflation ‘miracle’ is more of a mirage✨ | inflationeconomic policy+4 | Can Cinar | City St George's, University of London | Argentina | inflationJavier Milei+5 | — | 25m 06s | |
| 5/14/26 | ![]() The conspiracy theorists who feel vindicated by the Epstein files✨ | conspiracy theoriesJeffrey Epstein+4 | Art Jipson | University of DaytonThe Conversation+1 | Ohio | Epsteinconspiracy theorists+5 | — | 28m 39s | |
| 5/7/26 | ![]() China’s long game on Trump’s tariffs✨ | trade tensionsChina+4 | Jiao Wang | University of SussexThe Conversation | — | ChinaTrump+5 | — | 29m 44s | |
| 4/30/26 | ![]() Trump v Leo: the war of words over a just war✨ | just war theoryCatholic church+3 | Gerard Powers | University of Notre DameU.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops | — | Donald TrumpPope Leo+5 | — | 25m 58s | |
| 4/23/26 | ![]() Israel’s history shapes how it wages war✨ | Israelmilitary aggression+5 | Yaron Peleg | University of CambridgeThe Conversation | IsraelLebanon+2 | Israelwar+7 | — | 26m 24s | |
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. | |||||||||
| 4/16/26 | ![]() How former insider Péter Magyar ousted Hungary’s Viktor Orbán✨ | Hungary politicsViktor Orbán+4 | Péter MagyarZsolt Enyedi | FideszCentral European University+1 | — | HungaryViktor Orbán+7 | — | 29m 06s | |
| 4/9/26 | ![]() The pseudoscientific scale looksmaxxers use to rate each other✨ | PSL scalelooksmaxxing+5 | Jordan Foster | MacEwan UniversityThe Conversation | — | PSL scalelooksmaxxing+8 | — | 29m 43s | |
| 4/2/26 | ![]() The Making of One Nation: the unlikely rise of Australia’s Pauline Hanson✨ | Australian politicsPauline Hanson+4 | Anna Broinowski | One NationThe Conversation | AustraliaQueensland | Pauline HansonOne Nation+6 | — | 26m 05s | |
| 3/26/26 | ![]() Artemis II: NASA’s long road back to the Moon✨ | NASAArtemis II+4 | Scott Pace | NASAGeorge Washington University+5 | — | Artemis IINASA+5 | — | 27m 21s | |
| 3/19/26 | ![]() How the US cloned Iran's drones✨ | military technologydrones+4 | Arun Dawson | LucasShahed+2 | IranUkraine | dronesIran+7 | — | 28m 28s | |
| 3/12/26 | ![]() Mystery covid methane spike solved✨ | COVID-19methane emissions+3 | Philippe Ciais | Laboratory for Environmental and Climate ScienceUniversité Paris-Saclay+2 | — | methaneCOVID-19+4 | — | 23m 52s | |
| 3/5/26 | ![]() Was the Gulf blindsided on Iran?✨ | IranSaudi Arabia+4 | Simon Mabon | The ConversationLancaster University | Saudi ArabiaIran+3 | IranSaudi Arabia+6 | — | 28m 40s | |
| 2/26/26 | ![]() South Korea's birth rate is rising, but the population is still shrinking✨ | birth ratepopulation decline+4 | Stuart Gietel-Basten | Hong Kong University of Science and TechnologyThe Conversation | — | South Koreabirth rate+5 | — | 28m 29s | |
| 2/19/26 | ![]() The 'national humiliation' behind Russia's war on Ukraine✨ | RussiaUkraine+5 | James Rodgers | City St George's, University of London | — | RussiaUkraine+5 | — | 24m 17s | |
| 2/12/26 | ![]() How Minneapolis is organising against ICE | Whenever federal immigration agents pull up to a location in Minneapolis, people take their whistles out, start blowing them and start filming.In December, US government sent more than 2,000 Immigration and Customs and Enforcement (ICE) agents into Minnesota in December as part of Operation Metro Surge. The residents of the metropolitan area known as the Twin Cities – Minneapolis and St. Paul – quickly came together to protect and support their neighbours at risk of being caught up in ICE raids.In this episode, we speak to Daniel Cueto-Villalobos, a doctoral candidate at the University of Minnesota, who lives in southern Minneapolis and studies race, religion and social movements. He tracks the neighbourhood groups that have sprung into action in response to the ICE presence back to mutual networks set up during the 2020 Covid pandemic and in the wake of the murder of George Floyd by a Minneapolis policeman.This episode was written and produced by Katie Flood with editing help from Mend Mariwany. The executive producer is Gemma Ware. Mixing by Michelle Macklem and theme music by Neeta Sarl. Read the full credits for this episode and sign up here for a free daily newsletter from The Conversation.If you like the show, please consider donating to The Conversation, an independent, not-for-profit news organisation.I’m a former FBI agent who studies policing, and here’s how federal agents in Minneapolis are undermining basic law enforcement principlesFrom Colonial rebels to Minneapolis protesters, technology has long powered American social movementsMinnesota raises unprecedented constitutional issues in its lawsuit against Trump administration anti-immigrant deploymentThe contradictions of ‘Minnesota nice’Mentioned in this episode:The Making of an AutocratSearch "The Conversation Weekly" for our new series: The Making of an Autocrat. Is America watching its democracy unravel in real time? In The Making of an Autocrat from The Conversation, six of the world’s pre-eminant scholars reveal the recipe for authoritarian rule. From capturing a party, to controlling the military, Donald Trump is borrowing from the playbook of strongmen thoughout history. This is the story of how democracies falter — and what might happen next. | — | ||||||
| 2/5/26 | ![]() The Super Bowl that kickstarted prop betting in America | Super Bowl Sunday is the biggest night in American sports. A popular destination to watch – and bet – on the Super Bowl is Las Vegas, Nevada.And it was in Las Vegas, ahead of the 1986 Super Bowl between the Chicago Bears and the New England Patriots, that one enterprising casino would kickstart a new direction in American sports gambling: prop betting. It offered odds not just on the result of the game, but on the outcome of an individual event within it – whether one defensive player called William Perry, nicknamed The Refrigerator, would score a touchdown.Today, as American sports face multiple gambling scandals, we speak to John Affleck, Knight Chair in sports journalism and society at Penn State, about that 1986 Super Bowl, the history of prop betting, and why he believes its explosion is threatening the integrity of professional sports in the US.This episode was written and produced by Katie Flood with editing help from Mend Mariwany. The executive producer is Gemma Ware. Mixing by Michelle Macklem and theme music by Neeta Sarl. Read the full credits for this episode and sign up here for a free daily newsletter from The Conversation.If you like the show, please consider donating to The Conversation, an independent, not-for-profit news organisation.Watch the Super Bowl Shuffle by the Chicago BearsSupreme Court delivers a home run for sports bettors – and now states need to scrambleBad Bunny’s Super Bowl show is part of long play drawn up by NFL to score with Latin AmericaHow the explosion of prop betting threatens the integrity of pro sports | — | ||||||
| 1/29/26 | ![]() How Iran shut down the internet | On January 8, as thousands of Iranians took to the streets in nationwide protests, the government cut off the internet. Under cover of digital darkness, the Iranian regime launched a brutal and deadly crackdown against anti-government protesters.After three weeks of internet blackout, reports from web traffic monitor Netblocks suggest that the internet is slowly coming back online but predominantly for government-approved users.Yet for most of the shutdown, banks and some local government websites and apps still worked. And that’s because Iran is developing its own, national internet, cut off from the rest of the world.In this episode, we speak to Amin Naeni, a PhD candidate researching digital authoritarianism at Deakin University in Australia, about how Iran built one of the world’s most sophisticated systems of digital control.This episode was written and produced by Mend Mariwany and Gemma Ware with editing help from Katie Flood. Mixing by Michelle Macklem and theme music by Neeta Sarl. Read the full credits for this episode and sign up here for a free daily newsletter from The Conversation.If you like the show, please consider donating to The Conversation, an independent, not-for-profit news organisation.Iran’s universities have long been a battleground, where protests happen and students fight for the futureIran’s biggest centres of protest are also experiencing extreme pollution and water shortagesThis is the playbook the Iranian regime uses to crack down on protests – but will it work this time?Why Iran can’t afford to shut down the internet forever – even if the world doesn’t actIran’s latest internet blackout extends to phones and StarlinkMentioned in this episode:The Making of an AutocratSearch "The Conversation Weekly" for our new series: The Making of an Autocrat. Is America watching its democracy unravel in real time? In The Making of an Autocrat from The Conversation, six of the world’s pre-eminant scholars reveal the recipe for authoritarian rule. From capturing a party, to controlling the military, Donald Trump is borrowing from the playbook of strongmen thoughout history. This is the story of how democracies falter — and what might happen next. | — | ||||||
| 1/22/26 | ![]() A lost US military base under Greenland's ice sheet | In the summer of 1959, a group of American soldiers began carving trenches in the Greenland ice sheet. Those trenches would become the snow covered tunnels of Camp Century, a secret Arctic research base powered by a nuclear reactor.Camp Century operated for six years, during which time the scientists based there managed to drilling a mile down to collect a unique set of ice cores. But by 1966, it had been abandoned, deemed too expensive and difficult to maintain.Today, Donald Trump’s territorial ambitions for Greenland continue to cause concern and confusion in Europe, particularly for Denmark and Greenlanders themselves who insist their island is not for sale.One of the attractions of Greenland is the gleam of its rich mineral wealth, particularly rare earth minerals. Now that Greenland’s ice sheet is melting due to global warming, will this make the mineral riches easier to get at?In this episode, we talk to Paul Bierman, a geologist and expert on Greenland’s ice at the University of Vermont in US. He explains why the history of what happened to Camp Century – and the secrets of its ice cores, misplaced for decades, but now back under the microscope – help us to understand why it’s not that simple.This episode was written and produced by Mend Mariwany and Gemma Ware with editing help from Katie Flood. Mixing by Michelle Macklem and theme music by Neeta Sarl. Read the full credits for this episode and sign up here for a free daily newsletter from The Conversation.If you like the show, please consider donating to The Conversation, an independent, not-for-profit news organisation.Why Greenland is indispensable to global climate scienceGreenland is rich in natural resources – a geologist explains whyGreenland: Staying with the Polar Inuit. How a secret military base helped trigger the silent collapse of an Arctic worldThe US military has cared about climate change since the dawn of the Cold War – for good reasonMentioned in this episode:The Making of an AutocratSearch "The Conversation Weekly" for our new series: The Making of an Autocrat. Is America watching its democracy unravel in real time? In The Making of an Autocrat from The Conversation, six of the world’s pre-eminant scholars reveal the recipe for authoritarian rule. From capturing a party, to controlling the military, Donald Trump is borrowing from the playbook of strongmen thoughout history. This is the story of how democracies falter — and what might happen next. | — | ||||||
| 1/15/26 | ![]() A new treaty to protect our oceans | In a moment being celebrated by global marine conservationists, a new UN high seas treaty comes into force on January 17 providing a new way to govern the world's oceans.The UN high seas treaty will allow for the creation of protected areas in international waters, like national parks. But the treaty has some grey areas – notably its powers to regulating fishing in international waters, and mining of the seabed.In this episode we speak to Callum Roberts, professor of marine conservation at the University of Exeter in the UK, about how the treaty came to be and the challenges now facing its implementation.This episode was written and produced by Mend Mariwany and Gemma Ware. Mixing by Michelle Macklem and theme music by Neeta Sarl. Read the full credits for this episode and sign up here for a free daily newsletter from The Conversation.If you like the show, please consider donating to The Conversation, an independent, not-for-profit news organisation.Global power struggles over the ocean’s finite resources call for creative diplomacyTargets to save 30% of the ocean by 2030 aren’t being met, new report revealsThe historic High Seas Treaty is almost reality. Here’s what it would mean for ocean conservationA landmark treaty could protect the high seas – and spark new conflicts | — | ||||||
| 1/4/26 | ![]() The Making of an Autocrat: co-opt the military | In November, six Democratic lawmakers recorded a video directed at members of the US military and intelligence agencies. In it, they issued a blunt reminder:"The laws are clear: you can refuse illegal orders. […] You must refuse illegal orders."The lawmakers were issuing the warning against the backdrop of US airstrikes on boats off the coast of Latin America the Trump administration claims are suspected drug runners. Many Democrats and legal experts, however, argue these strikes are illegal.Since returning to office, Trump has successfully expanded his power over his own party, the courts and the American people. Now, like many autocrats around the world, he’s trying to exert control over the military.In the final episode of The Making of an Autocrat, Joe Wright, a political science professor at Penn State University, says:"I am very concerned that getting the military to do illegal things will not only put US soldiers at more risk when they do engage in international missions in the future […] it’s a first step to using the military to target domestic political opponents. That’s what really worries me."This episode was written by Justin Bergman and produced and edited by Isabella Podwinski and Ashlynne McGhee. Sound design by Michelle Macklem. | — | ||||||
Showing 25 of 283
Pitch Fit is a Pro feature
See how bookable this show is for guests, which brands already advertise, the per-episode ad value, and the best-fit guest and sponsor profile. The numbers are blurred on the free plan.
How readily this show books outside guests like you.
How proven this show is for host-read sponsorships.
For Guests
ProFor Advertisers
ProUpgrade to Pro to unlock guest cadence, sponsor categories, fit scores, and per-episode ad value for this show.
Chart Positions
38 placements across 37 markets.
Chart Positions
38 placements across 37 markets.

