
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this Sidebar 32 episode Garth and Eric discuss what it means to reach the milestone of 250 episodes of the flagship series for PsychSessions. We reflect on choosing the podcast name and tagline, the value of longevity in building a brand, and the podcast's graphic identity, crediting designer Cale Livingston for the original pink figure-ground logo and newer circular logo used across our additional series. They discuss how the show enables more personal "n' stuff" conversations with colleagues than typical conference chats, recalling memorable moments that are preserved in audio. They introduce a "Re-release" series to reshare early episodes for new listeners and note their near-perfect every-other-Tuesday release schedule with one accidental blip. They highlight partnerships yielding 15–20 series and over 600 total episodes, their minimal editing approach (with occasional removal of "ums"), and the podcast's accidental role as historian for teachers of psychology.
[Note. Portions of these show notes were generated by Descript AI.]
By Garth Neufeld, Eric Landrum4.9
5252 ratings
In this Sidebar 32 episode Garth and Eric discuss what it means to reach the milestone of 250 episodes of the flagship series for PsychSessions. We reflect on choosing the podcast name and tagline, the value of longevity in building a brand, and the podcast's graphic identity, crediting designer Cale Livingston for the original pink figure-ground logo and newer circular logo used across our additional series. They discuss how the show enables more personal "n' stuff" conversations with colleagues than typical conference chats, recalling memorable moments that are preserved in audio. They introduce a "Re-release" series to reshare early episodes for new listeners and note their near-perfect every-other-Tuesday release schedule with one accidental blip. They highlight partnerships yielding 15–20 series and over 600 total episodes, their minimal editing approach (with occasional removal of "ums"), and the podcast's accidental role as historian for teachers of psychology.
[Note. Portions of these show notes were generated by Descript AI.]

91,131 Listeners

43,964 Listeners

32,079 Listeners

43,677 Listeners

48 Listeners

12,231 Listeners

112,347 Listeners

21,940 Listeners

16,327 Listeners

9,414 Listeners

6,229 Listeners