PODCAST · business
The Signal Room
by The Signal Awards
Podcasts don’t respond to chaos in media and culture—they catch the tremors before anyone else feels them. The Signal Room sits you down at the table where the sharpest minds in the industry are writing the new media game plan and answering the biggest questions in podcasting today. These conversations are happening in silos and behind closed doors. Now we're inviting you hear them. I’m Jemma Brown and welcome to The Signal Room, made in partnership with Wistia. Launching March 31st wherever you get your podcasts.
-
7
An Audience Listens. A Community Belongs.
There's a big difference between maintaining an audience and building a community. An audience listens — a community belongs. In the season finale of The Signal Room, Jemma sits down with Patrick Hinds (True Crime Obsessed), Deante' Kyle (Grits & Eggs), and Sarah Stewart Holland and Beth Silvers (Pantsuit Politics) to get into the real mechanics of community-building: what it takes, what it costs, and what it gives back. Patrick Hinds has been making True Crime Obsessed for over nine years and now oversees a 60,000-member Facebook group with a full-time moderator on salary — because safe, well-tended community spaces don't run themselves. Deante' Kyle calls his listeners his cousins, stays in the lobby after every live show hanging out with the crowd, and has built an intergenerational, radically inclusive space that people travel to alone because they know they won't leave that way. And Sarah Stewart Holland and Beth Silvers have been in genuine, two-way conversation with their Pantsuit Politics listeners for a decade — to the point where many of those listeners are now close personal friends, and the community recently came together to mourn one of their own.What emerges in this episode is both a tactical playbook and a philosophy: that community is built one listener at a time, that consistency is a promise, that the creator's job is to generate the connective tissue and then get out of the way, and that the podcasters who build the most devoted communities are almost always the ones who love what they do so much they can't imagine stopping. This is the conversation about what podcasting is really for. The Signal Room is made in partnership with Wistia.
-
6
Why Your Podcast and Your Social Can't Be the Same Thing
Podcasting's superpower is intimacy — the slow, deep trust built over long-form listening. Social media's superpower is intimacy too, but a different kind: quick hits, snackable moments, the scroll-stopping hook. So what happens when you try to translate one into the other? In this episode, Jemma sits down with brand strategist Elosi Ikharo (Jade Media), social media strategist Carmen Vicente (Slate), and podcast host and comedian Akilah Hughes (How is This Better, Rebel Spirit) to dig into the real tension between algorithm and authenticity. From personal brand anxiety to social as career insurance, this is the conversation podcasters are having in private — now in public. The Signal Room is made in partnership with Wistia.
-
5
A Conversation with the CEO of Wistia, Chris Savage
A primer for any podcaster trying to get more out of every episode they make. Clips are the podcast industry's best discovery tool. But making them well (finding the right moment, cutting it correctly, adapting it for the right platform) takes time that most podcasters don't have.In this bonus minisode of The Signal Room, host Jemma Brown sits down with Chris Savage, CEO of Wistia, to break down what actually goes into a great clip and to demo the tools Wistia has built to make the process faster, smarter, and a lot less painful.Chris breaks down the anatomy of a scroll-stopping hook, explains why the same clip can go viral on TikTok and completely tank on YouTube Shorts, and makes the case that every social channel is essentially a different sport — requiring different instincts, different formats, and different strategies. He also walks through Wistia's new agentic editor, Remix, which uses AI to go through long-form video, identify the strongest moments, and build clips with narrative arcs, captions, and narration — automatically.The result: a conversation that's equal parts tactical and visionary, and a genuinely useful primer for any podcaster trying to get more out of every episode they make. Get started at Wistia.com/signalroom.
-
4
The Clip Economy: What Podcasters Are Getting Right (and Wrong) with Toby Howell, Ashley Carman and Nishat Kurwa
Clips are everywhere — but are they actually working? In this episode, Jemma sits down with Ashley Carman (Bloomberg), Nishat Kurwa (Vox Media), and Toby Howell (Morning Brew Daily) to ask the question the podcast industry is quietly obsessing over: do clips bring in new listeners, or are they just feeding the algorithm while cannibalizing your core audience? The Signal Room is made in partnership with Wistia.wistia.com/signalroomsignalaward.comTopics Covered:- The cannibalization debate: are short-form clips replacing full episode listens?- The difference between clipping for super fans vs. clipping for new audiences- What podcasting can learn from Twitch clip armies and the #BookTok model- Why topic selection, not production quality, is the real holy grail of clipping- The ethics of scripting "organic" moments for social
-
3
Authenticity vs. Growth. Anna Sale, Calum Johnson and Anna Martin on Staying Real
Authenticity is podcasting's most overused word — and its most essential ingredient. In this episode, Jemma sits down with Anna Sale (Host, Death, Sex & Money), Anna Martin (Host, Modern Love), and Calum Johnson (Host, The Calum Johnson Show) to ask: can a host stay true to themselves as their show as their personal brand grows? The Signal Room is made in partnership with Wistia.
-
2
Video Podcasts Took Over the Internet. What's Next? FlightStory’s CEO, Pablo Torre and Patreon Weigh In
Video podcasts didn't just change how we consume media — they rewrote the rules of journalism, audience-building, and what it means to be a creator. In this episode, Jemma sits down with Georgie Holt (CEO, FlightStory), Pablo Torre (Host, Pablo Torre Finds Out), and Stephanie Smellie (Head of Business Development, Patreon) to unpack the seismic shift video has caused across the industry. From data-driven guest booking to the art of "unboxing journalism," these are the people rebuilding media in real time. The Signal Room is made in partnership with Wistia.
-
1
The Signal Room Trailer
Podcasts don’t respond to chaos in media and culture—they catch the tremors before anyone else feels them. The Signal Room sits you down at the table where the sharpest minds in the industry are writing the new media game plan and answering the biggest questions in podcasting today.These conversations are happening in silos and behind closed doors. Now we're inviting you hear them. I’m Jemma Brown and welcome to The Signal Room, made in partnership with Wistia. Launching March 31st wherever you get your podcasts.
We're indexing this podcast's transcripts for the first time — this can take a minute or two. We'll show results as soon as they're ready.
No matches for "" in this podcast's transcripts.
No topics indexed yet for this podcast.
Loading reviews...
ABOUT THIS SHOW
Podcasts don’t respond to chaos in media and culture—they catch the tremors before anyone else feels them. The Signal Room sits you down at the table where the sharpest minds in the industry are writing the new media game plan and answering the biggest questions in podcasting today. These conversations are happening in silos and behind closed doors. Now we're inviting you hear them. I’m Jemma Brown and welcome to The Signal Room, made in partnership with Wistia. Launching March 31st wherever you get your podcasts.
HOSTED BY
The Signal Awards
CATEGORIES
Loading similar podcasts...