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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.
Click here to register for the Audio Primes webinar.
Find the full article here on Sounds Profitable.
By Bryan BarlettaPodcast 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.
Click here to register for the Audio Primes webinar.
Find the full article here on Sounds Profitable.