yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Earwolf: The Making of a Podcast Network | Scott Aukerman | Big Think


3m read
·Nov 3, 2024

I think a lot of the comedians, when they are working on what they're doing, a lot of them don't want to be businessmen as well. They just want to go up and be funny. They want to come to the club, they want the mic already to be there, and they just want to talk into it—and then they want to leave and they want to get their check and they want to go.

When I was starting out, I was in a situation where there weren't theaters in town that I could perform at, so I would have to literally rent theaters that I was at. And I remember I did a show for two nights, and we spent $1500 on the show. I had to do every aspect of like buying all the props and figuring out where the mics were going to go. A lot of people don't want to do that. So when I first started podcasting, there were very few comedians who wanted to do it because the first obstacle that's right there is like the equipment.

How do I record it? Most comedians don't have a portable recording setup on their own, so right there it disqualifies people. And they're not interested in buying it. And then the other part of it is, when you podcast it's like, “Well, okay I recorded it, how does it get onto the Internet?” Most people don't want to take the time to figure that out.

When I first started podcasting, I was also a producer as well, so I was used to wrangling talent and figuring out equipment and just kind of involved in all aspects of it. So when I first started my podcast, I would get really interested in how it would get onto the Internet, and I didn't really know what it was. I didn't know that you had to put it up on a hosting site; then that hosting site feeds it to the rest of the world, including iTunes and all that.

I just thought like, “How do I put this on iTunes? Do I call iTunes? How do I do this?!” And someone said, “No, no, no, you find yourself a hosting site, it feeds it. Everyone else, once you ping it in iTunes, they'll start automatically refreshing it anytime you put up an episode.” So I got very into that, and I started looking at the numbers. I started looking at the cities that were the most popular cities to listen to the show in, and I started seeing the trajectory of the numbers. All that stuff is honestly very fascinating to me.

A person who ended up being my business partner in Earwolf, the podcasting network that we created, when he came to me originally, he was just asking me about managing the show. Maybe he was a business manager. When we had that meeting, I was kind of not interested because I had a manager. On my way out the door, he said, "You know what would be really interesting—but it's probably too much work for you—is doing like a podcast network where we get a bunch of shows and we all gang up and we try to take on the industry together."

And I said, "Yes! That's the idea I like." Because I like doing really complicated things that are ambitious. I love doing the ambitious thing. So the problem at the time though is, to try to get a comedian to do a podcast, how do you get them to do it? And what we found was, well, we're a network, we'll buy all of the equipment, we'll rent the studio. The comedian can just show up, record it, leave, and then we'll upload it to the Internet.

We'll track all the numbers, we'll sell all the merch. We had a garage that all the merch was in, that we would mail it all out to people on the weekends. If you start to take care of that for everyone, then that can be a business. The comedians who we had shows with, most of them are just interested in the side of the business where they can increase their popularity through the podcast, which helps their touring, which helps their merch sales, which makes them money.

I was always interested as well in the other side of “How do we help people make money?” So to me, that always made sense—to be the person behind the scenes working with people rather than just kind of being the comedian who's like, “All right, someone record me, I’m going to be brilliant.” It made more sense for me to be the guy who was pushing other people up as well.

More Articles

View All
The Emotional Journey of Photos | National Geographic
There have been moments when I’ve been out shooting landscapes where I’ve cried because there’s things in front of me that I just can’t believe are even real. So this competition stands out for me because I think it’s just so important to love what you do…
2001 Berkshire Hathaway Annual Meeting (Full Version)
Right, and, uh, Andy, if you’re here, you can stand up. I think the crowd would like to say thanks. [Applause] We have one other special guest who, uh, after, uh, doing an incredible job for, uh, all Berkshire shareholders, and particularly for Charlie an…
Modern Lives, Ancient Caves | Podcast | Overheard at National Geographic
[Music] They had wanted to move out of the caves into more permanent English-built structures. The caves were only a temporary place where the first settlers arrived in. It’s the year 1681. Followers of William Penn have arrived in the New World from Engl…
The Land of Pure Silence | Continent 7: Antarctica
We’ve got a waypoint for the position of the ship. We’ll probably go out of visual range, but we’ll stay in radio contact and just kind of check in wherever we see anything or as we pass by landmarks. You need to have a reference point to be able to say w…
They Shut Down My Coffee Company
What’s up guys, it’s Graham here. So, I think it’s about time that we have an open talk about what happened with my coffee company because I read all the comments asking what’s going on. Well, trying to get any update from me on the status of when it’s go…
The only way to stop being broke
There’s a very good chance that if you’re watching this video and you are a person who lives in the year 2023, you don’t have as much money as you probably want to have. It’s difficult times right now. I’ve always been pretty good at making money. I’ve al…