Podcast holdouts aren’t missing content. They’re missing a signal strong enough to cut through the platforms they already use—and moderate voices can’t generate that signal.

Why do politically moderate and center-right Americans make up a disproportionate share of podcast holdouts, even as right-leaning shows dominate the charts? Data from The Last Quarter reveals that the gap isn't about ideology or content, but about discovery architecture: the platforms conservative audiences rely on surface content algorithmically, while podcasting demands initiative. The real problem isn't a content gap but a distribution problem that leaves center-right listeners with no clear on-ramp to the medium.Written by Tom WebsterEdited and narrated by Gavin GaddisText and audio edited by Gavin Gaddis


Click here to register for the Audio Primes webinar.

Find the full article here on Sounds Profitable.

Sounds Profitable

Bryan Barletta

The Center Cannot Hold

APR 1, 202610 MIN
Sounds Profitable

The Center Cannot Hold

APR 1, 202610 MIN

Description

Podcast holdouts aren’t missing content. They’re missing a signal strong enough to cut through the platforms they already use—and moderate voices can’t generate that signal.Why do politically moderate and center-right Americans make up a disproportionate share of podcast holdouts, even as right-leaning shows dominate the charts? Data from The Last Quarter reveals that the gap isn't about ideology or content, but about discovery architecture: the platforms conservative audiences rely on surface content algorithmically, while podcasting demands initiative. The real problem isn't a content gap but a distribution problem that leaves center-right listeners with no clear on-ramp to the medium.Written by Tom WebsterEdited and narrated by Gavin GaddisText and audio edited by Gavin GaddisClick here to register for the Audio Primes webinar.Find the full article here on Sounds Profitable.