Does AI Need Regulation in Podcasting?
Let's explore the moral aspect of AI and the importance of maintaining human connection and authenticity in content creation.
Takeaways
- Maintaining human connection and authenticity is crucial in content creation, and AI should be used as a tool to enhance and streamline the process.
- Voice impersonation and the security of personal voices are valid concerns in an AI-driven world, and measures should be taken to protect creators and their content.
- Creators should be intentional in their content creation, focusing on their unique stories and expertise, and using AI to enhance their message rather than replace it.
- Platforms have a responsibility to ensure ethical use of AI and protect creators, but creators also have a role in understanding and mitigating the risks associated with AI. AI regulation is necessary to protect individuals and society from potential harm.
- Private companies, such as Apple and Spotify, should collaborate to address AI regulation collectively.
- Individuals face challenges in protecting themselves from AI, and government intervention is needed.
- AI tools, such as transcription services, can enhance accessibility and improve podcasting workflows.
- Video is not essential for podcasting success; audio-only podcasts can thrive.
Chapters
- 00:00 Sing along intro
- 00:13 Guest introductions
- 03:12 "Does AI Need Regulation in Podcasting?"
- 28:14 The Wave File
- 45:37 Stupid Stuff in Podcasting
- 48:12 The Flattering Ram
- 50:00 Wrapping up
Links to interesting things from this episode
- Capsho Next Gen
- Sounds Like Impact | Unofficial Social Chair
- Alex Sanfilippo (@AJSanfi) / X
- What Is Your Podcaster Personality Type? Take The Quiz Now! - PodScore
- Could hackers steal our voices? - by Kattie Laur
- YouTube: How we're helping creators disclose altered or synthetic content
- Content guidelines - Apple Podcasts for Creators
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Mentioned in this episode:
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Transcript
Hello and welcome to In and Around Podcasting, the inclusive podcast
Danny:industry podcast where we highlight powerful podcasting perspectives.
Danny:I'm Danny Brown, Head of Podcaster Support on Captivate.
Danny:And today I'm running solo while my erstwhile co host Mark is off gallivanting
Danny:at Podcast Movement Evolutions in LA.
Danny:Not to worry though, we've got two awesome guest co hosts today.
Danny:And today we'll be talking about AI in podcasting.
Danny:The pros, cons, future, etc.
Danny:And as mentioned, I'm joined by two amazing guest co hosts, First is Deidre
Danny:Tshien, CEO and co founder of Capsho.
Danny:Welcome Deidre.
Deirdre:Thanks for having me, Danny.
Deirdre:I'm so excited for this chat.
Danny:I'm looking forward to it.
Danny:It's going to be awesome.
Danny:And we're also joined by Canadian podcaster and producer
Danny:extraordinaire, Kattie Laur.
Danny:Kattie, welcome.
Kattie:Thank you, Danny.
Kattie:I'm excited to be here.
Danny:So I'm really looking forward to this because I know we've got some really
Danny:good topics to talk about, and we'll get into that shortly, obviously, with an
Danny:announcement that both Apple and YouTube made, and we'll cover that very soon.
Danny:But because no one listens to the end of podcast and the skip and the jump
Danny:off and somebody stopped talking.
Danny:I want you guys to introduce yourself and tell.
Danny:Our listeners and viewers who you are and what you do.
Danny:So let's start with you.
Danny:Deirdre, I mentioned you're at Capsho, who are you and what is Capsho?
Deirdre:Yes.
Deirdre:So Capsho is AI powered software that helps entrepreneurs.
Deirdre:So coaches, consultants, and service providers get clients on their content.
Deirdre:So we can go into a little bit more about what that means later on, but I
Deirdre:just want to debunk the myth of like repurposing your podcast is the way to go.
Deirdre:It's not to say that repurposing isn't good.
Deirdre:It's more like what outcome are you looking for?
Deirdre:And that's what we are so passionate about is how do we actually help
Deirdre:people get an outcome from the content that they're creating.
Danny:And I think that's important to, as you say, important to, to differentiate
Danny:because a lot of times it's all about how can I repurpose and get stuff out
Danny:the door so I'm still shipping while I'm recording and doing all that stuff.
Danny:And it's so important to get that differentiation.
Danny:So I'm glad you mentioned that for sure Deirdre.
Danny:As I mentioned, Canadian, if anybody in the Canadian podcast scene will
Danny:know Kattie, but for anybody that is not in the Canadian podcast scene,
Danny:who are you and what do you do?
Kattie:Yeah, so I'm Kattie Laur.
Kattie:I'm a freelance podcast producer, and I also write a newsletter called Pod
Kattie:the North, which is a newsletter on Substack for the Canadian podcasting
Kattie:ecosystem, everyone from indie podcasters to network producers and studios.
Kattie:So yeah, I release a bi weekly issue.
Kattie:Talking about things that are happening here and, and spotlighting different
Kattie:people that are within the space.
Kattie:So that's what I do.
Kattie:And now it's kind of led me on this really fun journey of talking about
Kattie:Canadian podcasting and being a Canadian podcast representative, I guess.
Kattie:I don't know.
Danny:Yeah.
Danny:I feel you should have like a Canadian flag behind you and
Danny:some music on your intro, etc.
Danny:when you're, when we have you on.
Danny:I know we spoke last week or the week before for one of your newsletters,
Danny:so I'm looking forward to that.
Danny:So yeah.
Danny:so much.
Danny:If you don't know Kattie, she's very much involved in the Canadian
Danny:podcasting scene for sure.
Danny:So as I mentioned, we are going to be talking about AI in podcasting.
Danny:It's still a fairly new concept.
Danny:I know Deidre Capsho has been around for a little bit.
Danny:But it's still fairly new for a lot of people.
Danny:And what brought this episode up was both Apple and YouTube.
Danny:So no small, you know, no small deal there.
Danny:Have updated their content guidelines to include specific requirements around AI.
Danny:Now they're both taking it a little bit of a different approach.
Danny:Apple is mentioning that you need any creators using AI to generate a
Danny:material portion of the audio must disclose this in the audio metadata.
Danny:And there's also misleading use of AI.
Danny:For YouTube, it's more about using the likeness of a realistic person
Danny:as well as altering footage and news and, you know, create an
Danny:alternative versions, I guess, solve.
Danny:Real life incidents like a fire or new stories, etc.
Danny:So this is quite a big announcement because obviously apple is Arguably
Danny:the biggest name in podcasting.
Danny:I'm sure Spotify would disagree and YouTube is definitely the biggest name
Danny:when it comes to video creation and content so i'm curious from Deidre,
Danny:I'd like to start with you, actually, because you're in the, you're the
Danny:CEO of an AI, AI Platform, obviously.
Danny:What did you make of the Apple and YouTube announcements when they were made?
Deirdre:I was actually not surprised, to be honest.
Deirdre:I, you know, I think we could all see this, you know, happening at some stage.
Deirdre:I think Google actually announced it from a text based perspective, you know, to
Deirdre:that they're going to really penalize.
Deirdre:They didn't really say AI but, you know, they were, it was very
Deirdre:much targeting AI created content.
Deirdre:And, you know, from the very beginning when we launched,
Deirdre:which was in July of 2022, we.
Deirdre:And especially when ChatGPT particularly, you know, it really became this like AI
Deirdre:hype that AI hype cycle really took off.
Deirdre:We knew that all of this was going to come down the pipe.
Deirdre:And so we have always the way that we build and talk about Capsho and talk
Deirdre:about what it is, how it is that we help.
Deirdre:Entrepreneurs, especially those podcasts is all about leaning into the humanness.
Deirdre:And so again, we can go into what that means and looks like, but I am
Deirdre:so, so passionate about the fact that AI cannot and should not, and will
Deirdre:not take away what actually matters to us as humans, which is creating
Deirdre:a connection with other humans.
Deirdre:And so I think if we kind of just.
Deirdre:really lean into the moral ness of what it means to create content,
Deirdre:then we kind of can't go wrong with all of these guidelines and, and
Deirdre:penalty, potential penalties that might come up in content creation.
Danny:And I really like the, the moralness wording or phrasing that you
Danny:used there, because I feel maybe that's a, an area that is up for discussion a
Danny:lot, whether that's from a creator side or professionals in the space and, and
Danny:makers of AI tools and platforms is the moral side of, does it replace human?
Danny:Does it replace creativity?
Danny:Does it X, Y, Z?
Danny:Yeah.
Danny:And, and often, as you mentioned, that's not the case.
Danny:It may be misunderstanding.
Danny:Kattie, from a creator point of view and also a producer point of view as well,
Danny:to what Deirdre was mentioning, are you finding these kinds of conversations?
Danny:come up from the creators you work with and what did you or anybody
Danny:you've worked with or what you see on the line, what have they made about
Danny:the announcements from Apple and YouTube, anything from their side?
Kattie:I honestly haven't had this conversation about the announcements much
Kattie:recently, but the announcements like, like Deirdre, it didn't surprise me at all.
Kattie:And I think they're, they were inevitable and a good thing to happen.
Kattie:I think it hopefully keeps the podcasting space.
Kattie:credible in some way.
Kattie:I mean, that's a lot to say about podcasting since there
Kattie:are a lot of different types of podcasters within this industry.
Kattie:But like Deirdre was saying, like, we know podcasts to be human in nature and
Kattie:we know them to be authentic in nature.
Kattie:And once you start to introduce AI in whatever way that might be, then I think
Kattie:people start to question how authentic a podcast might be at the end of the day.
Kattie:So having those notifications that there's AI involved in the audio, I think is
Kattie:going to be really helpful for people to know what exactly they're listening to.
Kattie:I think transparency is definitely key, but when I'm talking to other podcasters
Kattie:and podcast producers, the most of the time they're talking about AI, when it
Kattie:comes to using it in, in the form of like tools that will help them publish
Kattie:their podcast and creating show notes and things like that, that are the little,
Kattie:like, Dinky little things that you don't really want to do and I get how that can
Kattie:be super helpful and it really helps a lot of people make show notes and pages
Kattie:for their websites and that kind of thing.
Kattie:That's usually where I hear a lot of people talking about AI and podcasting.
Danny:And one of the things that interested me about the, the Apple
Danny:and the YouTube announcements is an article you published, I think it was
Danny:last year, maybe late last year, Kattie where there was a bit of concern about
Danny:potentially AI or sorry, about hackers.
Danny:impersonating our voices and content, et cetera using tools like maybe Overdub
Danny:that Descript has or similar tools.
Danny:I know I watch a YouTube channel called Presidents Play and it's basically AI
Danny:representations of Trump, Obama one of the W, one of the Bushes and Clinton,
Danny:and they're playing Wii games, Nintendo Wii, and they're all, you know, got
Danny:the characters and that, and it's fun.
Danny:But they sound exactly like them.
Danny:And I'm curious, I mean, obviously Deirdre, you mentioned the moral part.
Danny:You know, where does that take shape when it comes to AI and replication
Danny:and, and making stuff easier?
Danny:And obviously there's a lot of voice actors sharing concerns
Danny:about this kind of thing.
Danny:Deirdre, I know obviously Capsho is a bit different because you're not into the
Danny:The voice replacement and maybe something you're doing down the line, who knows?
Danny:But at the moment it's more about the marketing and the content marketing and
Danny:helping entrepreneurs and podcasters creators on that side so i'm curious.
Danny:Is that a valid concern?
Danny:Is that a danger that we could see, you know creativity not stifled but
Danny:replaced because we've got so much likeness that you can get to the point
Danny:where show notes are replaced you know, blog posts are replaced and you don't
Danny:need the human side of it to create.
Deirdre:I okay.
Deirdre:So if, again, if we go back to the bonus and why we're creating content,
Deirdre:like I, you know, I keep saying like, we, we cannot be creating
Deirdre:content just for content sake.
Deirdre:I think that's the thing.
Deirdre:It's like, I call it the content vomit where this is what I saw with, you
Deirdre:know, the AI, it's like, now we can all create content and so much of it.
Deirdre:And why, like, why, why, why do we want to be creating this
Deirdre:much content just for the.
Deirdre:For the sake of it, you know, like, and that's why I always
Deirdre:go back to intentionality.
Deirdre:So if we are really intentional about, okay, I want to create content because
Deirdre:I have a message, a story, I have experiences that I want to share.
Deirdre:I have expertise that I want to share.
Deirdre:That's the human part.
Deirdre:Like that can never be, replaced by AI, because AI, yes, can make up stories,
Deirdre:but they're not your, your story.
Deirdre:Like, and this comes back, you know, there's going to be bad actors,
Deirdre:any, like any kind of new technology that comes about, there's always
Deirdre:gonna be people who will take advantage of it in a negative way.
Deirdre:But there's, I think a lot of people who will look at and be like, no, I
Deirdre:still You know, I'm a really, really cool part of this, and I'm just
Deirdre:going to use technology to, you know, enhance or make myself more efficient.
Deirdre:So what that looks like for me is if we stay true to.
Deirdre:What makes us human, which is our stories and our experience, et cetera.
Deirdre:Like that is what creates our anchor content.
Deirdre:So that's why a lot of us podcasts, right?
Deirdre:We have something that we want to share and the things, you know, definitely
Deirdre:where Capsho plays a part around, you know, amplifying that through
Deirdre:content marketing is it's anchored in that content that came from a human.
Deirdre:You know, you, so if you can start it from.
Deirdre:Your humanness.
Deirdre:And then, by the way, we still say AI is always not, is not going to be perfect.
Deirdre:So you also need to be part of that editing process to make sure that
Deirdre:it is accurately trans, you know translating what it is that you want
Deirdre:to have out there, then the human is involved through the whole process.
Deirdre:When we talk about video, you know, overdubbing and voice, et cetera, like
Deirdre:again, I, when I look at, I, I don't.
Deirdre:Personally see a need for that, unless it's like for really, and I think the
Deirdre:reason why Overdub, like why Descript created something like Overdub to begin
Deirdre:with was really because it's like, Hey, there might be some things that maybe
Deirdre:the, the audio cut off a little bit, or, you know, it's just like small tweaks
Deirdre:that you can then use, you know, your recorded voice to just like smooth over.
Deirdre:That I think is a great use of voice.
Deirdre:AI, but if we're going to do it to like, try to impersonate someone else, or if
Deirdre:we're trying to lean into it because we're afraid that we can't listen to
Deirdre:our voices and our voices sound weird.
Deirdre:So we're just going to like, I don't know, make up another voice or another
Deirdre:video or create, you know, an AI actor.
Deirdre:Like these are things that I'm like.
Deirdre:Again, you go back to what it means to be human and what it means
Deirdre:to be human is being courageous and conquering these fears.
Deirdre:Like that's just a part of any journey that we have.
Deirdre:And so it would be a shame if people look at AI as a way to kind of like
Deirdre:not have to front up to some of their fears and just hit record, you know,
Deirdre:whether it's camera or microphone and just talk about You know, what it is
Deirdre:that they know and, and like, and the message that they want to get out there.
Deirdre:And so I think that's what it, you know, if we just take it back to like,
Deirdre:why is it that we're creating content?
Deirdre:It's all of that stuff, right?
Deirdre:Like we're creating content because we have something that we want to share.
Deirdre:We have an audience that wants to hear that and we want to connect with them.
Deirdre:Why would we use AI to actually try to put those barriers in place to.
Deirdre:Not achieve that outcome.
Deirdre:Yeah, that's that's how I think about it.
Danny:Well, it's interesting.
Danny:You mentioned the the voice changing.
Danny:I know it's weird.
Danny:I see some posts on Reddit now and again where it's not weird.
Danny:I understand why they're doing it.
Danny:Where people want to disguise voice because they want to
Danny:be anonymous with a podcast.
Danny:They don't want employers to know.
Danny:That they're making this podcast or they don't want family members.
Danny:It might be an erotic podcast and they don't want family
Danny:members to know about, et cetera.
Danny:But the part about wanting to change your voice most podcasters don't
Danny:like the sound of their own voice.
Danny:The first thing you put on a pair of headphones, you think,
Danny:do I really sound like that?
Danny:Or are you listening back?
Danny:So I think there's an opportunity there for fun stuff as well.
Danny:You know, where you can really have fun.
Danny:I use a road caster pro too.
Danny:There's a little toys on their little pads in there.
Danny:I can make myself sound like a chipmunk.
Danny:So it's, it's, it's fun.
Danny:It's it'd be cool stuff to hear someone like that.
Danny:Yes.
Danny:And then I'll create Kattie, you mentioned something interesting where obviously
Danny:you mentioned that a lot of podcast AI at the moment is for the kind of
Danny:features that Capsho offers, where it's helping create the kind of marketing,
Danny:the content marketing tools and, and.
Danny:Stuff that you need.
Danny:And I'm wondering, do podcasters almost want a lazy way out?
Danny:And that's why sometimes obviously AI is used to help create the content,
Danny:but then if a podcaster blames the content because of their So need to push
Danny:more content out in the first place.
Danny:So then that's a weird catch 22 situation where they're trying
Danny:to keep up with other podcasters.
Danny:So they need to push out more and more is what are you finding as a, an
Danny:indie creator yourself and a producer?
Kattie:Yeah, I mean, I definitely wouldn't use the
Kattie:word lazy, that's for sure.
Kattie:But I would say a lot of indie podcasters have full time jobs, like they are
Kattie:making podcasts on the side when they also maybe have kids to raise, kids
Kattie:to bring to soccer practice, dinner to be made, households to maintain.
Kattie:So I think of AI in the podcasting space as a tool and exactly just that.
Kattie:And I do think that sometimes there is a need to make content
Kattie:just for content's sake.
Kattie:Where specifically if you're thinking around SEO and making sure that your
Kattie:website is like search engine optimized.
Kattie:if you've created one for your podcast, which is often said
Kattie:is a best practice nowadays.
Kattie:If you've created that and you wanted to make like a blog post that was
Kattie:in partnership with an episode that you've released, maybe you'd use AI to
Kattie:be like, okay, ChatGPT, like create a summary of this podcast episode for me.
Kattie:And then they could sit down and read through it all and maybe
Kattie:use it as sort of a foundation to build something more off of.
Kattie:That's something that I would think about doing and using AI for.
Kattie:So I wouldn't release what AI generates as is.
Kattie:I would definitely like read through it and add my own like pizzazz
Kattie:to it and whatever that might be.
Kattie:But at least it gives you sort of a foundation and makes things
Kattie:just that much quicker to get to.
Kattie:And I think eventually.
Kattie:If people are releasing the AI just as is, like, it'll be obvious it'll
Kattie:fail, but it might still give you SEO purposes and hit those keywords,
Kattie:like bring people to your website.
Kattie:So I think like there is still a need to create content for content
Kattie:purposes, like content sake.
Kattie:Sadly.
Kattie:I don't love that idea, but it's just sort of the nature of the game at this point
Kattie:where you're thinking about websites.
Kattie:And that's mainly the tool that I see it used for.
Kattie:Okay.
Kattie:Yeah, I think that answers your question.
Danny:Well, and I think that ties back to what you were mentioning
Danny:yourself, Deidre, where obviously the human aspect still needs to be there.
Danny:So whether that's from the, the original input or the ideation and then the
Danny:tidy up and the, the, The making it back to your voice afterwards, and
Danny:I know Capsho does that really well.
Danny:And we'll talk about that very soon for sure one thing i'm real interested in is
Danny:because you mentioned it yourself, the moral factor and the responsibilities
Danny:With the announcement that obviously Apple and YouTube made and you'd mentioned
Danny:yourself that from day one with Capsho You've been very keen on making sure
Danny:things are done properly and responsibly, etc So, What responsibilities, if
Danny:you like do platforms like Capsho and Descript and other AI tools that
Danny:offer different features for users?
Danny:What responsibilities do you feel that, that A, based on the announcements
Danny:from Apple and YouTube, that Capsho and more has to ensure these are met?
Danny:And how do you get that across?
Danny:To your, your, your users.
Deirdre:Yeah.
Deirdre:So we I can only talk about Capsho.
Deirdre:I don't know about how I, you know, other, I, and there are some platforms
Deirdre:that I don't agree with and, you know, I have friends, for example, who have
Deirdre:created platforms that are in, you know, the spaces of, you know, AI actors and
Deirdre:creating videos from like an AI generated script and you basically don't have to do.
Deirdre:And.
Deirdre:We're great friends, but I just, I don't agree with that approach.
Deirdre:So unfortunately, you know, it's even things like I do a lot of collaborations
Deirdre:and that's just unfortunately not someone not a product that I can collaborate
Deirdre:with in good conscious because I actually don't agree with that strategy.
Deirdre:So I think that a lot of it is.
Deirdre:Cause we know we're, we're, we have a really great community of Capshovians
Deirdre:and so a lot of it is introducing them to the strategies that we really lean
Deirdre:into that actually gets them results.
Deirdre:So, you know, an example is Katy Brinkley, who is a social media guru.
Deirdre:She talks about her four post social media strategy and why.
Deirdre:I love the four post social media strategy is because again, it's
Deirdre:not content for content's sake.
Deirdre:I mean, yes, you're still creating content, but you're creating content
Deirdre:in order to drive a particular like action, whether that's engagement on
Deirdre:social media or whether that's opt into a lead magnet or into a workshop, right?
Deirdre:Cause we're talking to entrepreneurs here.
Deirdre:And so like, so for me, if I could share these strategies that are very human
Deirdre:led and Hey, AI can, yes, help you.
Deirdre:You know, shortcut and make it way more efficient to.
Deirdre:Give you the base of, for example, these four posts, but one of them, for
Deirdre:example, one of the posts is actually what she calls a community post,
Deirdre:which is all about your story, like, Hey, I cannot actually generate that.
Deirdre:Like it just cannot because it can't, you know, until we have chips
Deirdre:in our brains or whatever, like it actually doesn't know your memories.
Deirdre:It doesn't know your story.
Deirdre:So you actually have to be part of that process to like, Help create that post.
Deirdre:I mean, yes, AI can give you inspiration, which Capsho does do, which is like, Hey,
Deirdre:maybe based on the topic of your podcast, this is the story that you can bring to
Deirdre:life or, you know, it'll give you some ideas, but at the end of the day, it's
Deirdre:still you it still has to be you because.
Deirdre:You're the only one who has that humanness.
Deirdre:And so I've totally gone off topic.
Deirdre:So I'm trying to remember what the original question was, but it was, was
Deirdre:it really around the, the, the moral, like going back to the moralness?
Danny:Yeah.
Danny:It's really about, as you mentioned the, the users that you have and educating them
Danny:about, you know, how to do things properly and what, what Capsho can and can't do.
Danny:That's right.
Deirdre:Yeah.
Deirdre:Yeah.
Deirdre:So it's all in the So for example, even the blog posts that we create
Deirdre:it's it's, it's really anchored in.
Deirdre:So, you know, the way that we created is like, Hey, the story that was told
Deirdre:on that podcast episode, let's really bring that out, bring that to life.
Deirdre:And then it goes into here, the tips based on that podcast episode, when we
Deirdre:just use like a chat GPT or something to create a blog post, it's kind of going
Deirdre:out to the internet to like, what are all the, what's all the other content
Deirdre:that's out there on this particular topic?
Deirdre:And it brings that in and it's very, It, it gets pretty obvious that it's AI.
Deirdre:And that's what, you know, the likes of Google is starting to crack down on,
Deirdre:which is like, if you're just going to talk about things in generalities, it's
Deirdre:most likely generated by AI, but when you can anchor it in, you know, you
Deirdre:create your anchor content, which is your podcast episode or your YouTube video.
Deirdre:And, you know, then AI, like the way that Capsho does it is it actually
Deirdre:pulls from that to actually create then the base of your blog post,
Deirdre:then that's when it's like, okay.
Deirdre:AI made it more efficient, but it actually still actually leans into humanness
Deirdre:because again, it comes back to, it's your stories and it's your expertise and
Deirdre:it's your step one, step two, step three that wasn't pulled from the internet.
Deirdre:It was actually pulled from your content.
Deirdre:And so for, for me, from a Capsho perspective, it's very much in the
Deirdre:strategies and how we create the content.
Deirdre:It's very much in how we bring the experts into help teach some of these
Deirdre:strategies and help people understand why.
Deirdre:This is important.
Deirdre:Like you're not just creating content just to have content out there.
Deirdre:It's you're creating content for an outcome and you're, and it all
Deirdre:anchors in your starting content.
Deirdre:And that's so important because it's kind of like the whole
Deirdre:rubbish in rubbish out thing.
Deirdre:Like you put actually, yeah.
Deirdre:You're British.
Deirdre:So rubbish is a thing I'm like, I'm just, I'm trying to think
Deirdre:about the, it's like, you know, Americans love to eat like trash.
Deirdre:It's
Kattie:like, I've
Deirdre:watched,
Kattie:I've watched American or UK shows.
Kattie:I've heard the word rubbish.
Deirdre:I'm so used to saying rubbish in rubbish out and
Deirdre:people are like, Oh, rubbish.
Deirdre:You're trash in, trash out, you know?
Deirdre:And so I think, you know, again, if we can really spend our time as humans on the
Deirdre:The anchor content, like everything from a content marketing perspective, the content
Deirdre:that we do create, like what Kattie said, you know, it's still important to do blog
Deirdre:posts, you know, that is still content.
Deirdre:Yes.
Deirdre:But if you can anchor it in your still, you know, I just, is that making sense?
Deirdre:Like the human part of what you're doing?
Deirdre:Yeah.
Deirdre:Then that is actually, you're not just creating content for content sake.
Kattie:Danny, if I can jump into, I totally forgot to even mention one,
Kattie:like, massive way that I've been using AI and a ton of fellow producers are is
Kattie:through creating paper edits for podcasts.
Kattie:I totally blanked because I didn't even, it occurred to me that it
Kattie:was AI generated, but it didn't.
Kattie:Definitely, obviously is but a massive part of production and podcast production
Kattie:for some of these more like narrative style podcasts that people create is
Kattie:running your audio through something like Descript and getting the transcript
Kattie:from that audio and then being able to work from what I call a paper edit.
Kattie:So you can just work from the, you know, Script rather than from just the waveforms
Kattie:and piece things together, move things around, build a narrative that way.
Kattie:So that's like a massive, massive part that a lot of professional
Kattie:podcast producers are doing to create stuff for their clients.
Kattie:And then that, I don't know how much you want to dig into it, Danny, but
Kattie:that's what then leads me to how much AI is capturing and learning our voices.
Kattie:And that's the part of the AI side that really freaks me out is the security
Kattie:around that, because as more and more platforms and more and more AI, like,
Kattie:whatever they are, robots are learning our voices, how much, how secure is
Kattie:that information, really, like, we have two factor authentication to get into
Kattie:everything these days, but it really hasn't come down to using our voices
Kattie:yet and protecting our voices, and as podcasters, that's something that I
Kattie:worry about a lot is how much our voices are out there for people to, for robots
Kattie:to learn and then, you know, call up our parents, tell them that they're
Kattie:holding us ransom for 50, you know, 500, 000 and asking our parents for that.
Kattie:And I don't know about you guys, but I've already talked to my parents and
Kattie:established a safe word so that if they ever hear a mysterious phone call from
Kattie:me, that doesn't sound quite right.
Kattie:They can ask me what the safe word is.
Kattie:And if I don't know it, then it's not me.
Kattie:So, you know, that's it.
Kattie:That's the, that's the part of the AI side that's really starting to freak
Kattie:me out specifically for podcasters.
Kattie:I don't know how much you want to get into that, Danny, but it just
Kattie:running from the transcription side of things now into the security is
Kattie:where my head is at with this stuff.
Danny:Well, I think as well, it's a, it's a really good point.
Danny:I'm sure if my parents got a call asking for 500, 000,
Danny:they'd know, nah, you keep them.
Danny:You know, maybe worth 5, 000.
Danny:You know, UK, British pounds, but after that, you're on your own.
Kattie:You're not an only child like me, I guess.
Kattie:No, well, that's true.
Danny:That is true.
Danny:They'd probably pay more for my sister anyway.
Danny:But I know it's a good point.
Danny:And part of me is curious about I'm going to use YouTube and Apple here again,
Danny:because obviously they were the two companies that made the announcement.
Danny:But part of me is curious how much involvement they will have
Danny:in the protection side as well.
Danny:I know they put the guidelines out and the requirements now, et cetera, that
Danny:creators especially have to adhere to, and which would tie back to companies
Danny:like Capshure, and from the creator side whatever platform they're using.
Danny:But there needs to, for me anyway, I feel there needs to be some, some form of, you
Danny:know, protection on the end platform side.
Danny:I know, like, YouTube and Spotify has the content copyright or
Danny:copyright infringement call outs, so you've got strikes, etc.
Danny:on YouTube, if you're found to use.
Danny:You know, audio that doesn't belong to your video, etc.
Danny:But there's so many creators don't care because it's far and far, few
Danny:and far between that you actually see people getting copyright strikes.
Danny:Spotify does seem to do a lot better.
Danny:They're very, obviously I'm at Captivate.
Danny:So we do see some copyright strikes coming in and I'm
Danny:speaking to people at other hosts.
Danny:We know that Spotify are very on the ball when it comes to protecting copyright.
Danny:But I wonder if that's something that the end platforms can
Danny:also adhere to and protect.
Danny:Is there a way that, you know, creators can upload samples that
Danny:are specific or, as you mentioned, you know, safe words, etc.
Danny:Deirdre, from a platform point of view, how do you feel on the end
Danny:platform, like the destination?
Danny:What do you feel their responses, their responsibilities might be
Danny:to protect creators, which in turn would, you know, help protect?
Danny:You know, platforms like yourself.
Deirdre:Yeah, that's a tough one to answer, if I'm going to be honest,
Deirdre:because I think we all know that as creators, unfortunately we do take a risk.
Deirdre:Like we, it's kind of like, you know, when singers or actors become famous and then
Deirdre:they resent fame, it's kind of like, well.
Deirdre:You can't, you can't really comes with it, right?
Deirdre:Like it's, it's kind of, it's, it's a little bit of the same thing
Deirdre:where, you know, as creators, I think we have to acknowledge that there
Deirdre:is going to be a risk that comes with what it is that we're doing.
Deirdre:It's just part of it.
Deirdre:Any job, right?
Deirdre:There's always going to be a risk in some way.
Deirdre:But I think what Kattie's saying and doing is, is really smart.
Deirdre:It's like, how do we, as again, like, how do we think about what
Deirdre:those risks could be and how do we mitigate them in the best way possible?
Deirdre:So to answer your question, I'm like, I do think that the platforms
Deirdre:will have a responsibility.
Deirdre:But I don't know whether we can say it's all on their shoulders
Deirdre:because that's also probably A, not realistic, but also probably, you
Deirdre:know, not, not, not fair as well.
Deirdre:Given that we've chosen to create, we've chosen to put our images out there.
Deirdre:We've chosen to put our.
Deirdre:Voices out there.
Deirdre:It's a risk that we have to take.
Danny:I think that's a fair comment.
Danny:It's there's three sides, isn't there?
Danny:Well, there's not three sides.
Danny:There's two sides, but there's three sides in this equation.
Danny:There's obviously the, the platforms like Capsho that help with the creation.
Danny:There's a creator that then creates, and then there's the end platform
Danny:that then distributes and publishes.
Danny:I think we probably all need to have our own slice of responsibility.
Danny:And mitigate as much as we can for our side.
Danny:And that is a great point that you brought up, Kattie, about, you know,
Danny:where does our responsibility start and, and, and where does, where does
Danny:the, the viable sense of like worry, you know, the understandable sense of
Danny:worry start and where can we maybe Not cut it off, but maybe be understanding,
Danny:okay, I can only do so much and then I know they can only do so much as well.
Kattie:I think, like, also, like, let's just compare this to climate change.
Kattie:Why don't we?
Kattie:Because AI regulation is going to be something that's massive over the
Kattie:next couple of years that the entire world is going to be dealing with.
Kattie:So, you know, us as content creators, we can do our best
Kattie:to recycle, use our green bins.
Kattie:And, try and protect ourselves and be green at home, let's say, or try and
Kattie:protect ourselves from AI completely ruining our lives personally.
Kattie:But then we also have like public companies, like, you know, Spotify, Apple
Kattie:Podcasts, they are public companies, they can do, or private companies,
Kattie:sorry, they can do whatever they want, they don't necessarily have to.
Kattie:to regulate this.
Kattie:They don't necessarily have to have these flags that tell people they
Kattie:just, you know, it's best practice that they do so that things don't go
Kattie:chaotic and haywire on their platforms.
Kattie:But they don't have to do any of this stuff.
Kattie:So then where does that leave us, right?
Kattie:We are all existing within the internet and that basically is like a country
Kattie:in a universe on its own that the internet isn't really regulated.
Kattie:It's regulated in some capacities in Canada.
Kattie:It's regulated differently around the world.
Kattie:Like Danny and I are in Canada.
Kattie:Deidre, I don't know if you're in Canada.
Kattie:I don't think you are, but it's a wild, wild west out
Deirdre:here.
Kattie:Yeah.
Kattie:So like things are going to get pretty chaotic and I think it is probably a
Kattie:good idea for, these private companies like Apple and Spotify and Google to
Kattie:come together and start talking about how they're going to deal with AI regulation
Kattie:as a collective rather than separately.
Kattie:And that's going to take, you know, governments to kind of crack down on that.
Kattie:And, you know, nobody likes government crackdowns.
Kattie:That's just always something people are always complaining about,
Kattie:regardless of what country you live in.
Kattie:So it's a big, big deal.
Kattie:big conversation where, you know, maybe there aren't two sides, there
Kattie:are like three sides, four sides, five sides to this that is really
Kattie:going to have to deal with it.
Kattie:So right now, all podcasters can do is just do the best to use, you know,
Kattie:their green bins and try and be as eco friendly as they possibly can because
Kattie:it's really coming down to how the rest of the world and these things work.
Kattie:big companies that pretty much rule our worlds are gonna help regulate this
Kattie:stuff before it starts to screw us over.
Kattie:It's a classic case of technology.
Kattie:Technology always grows faster before, way faster than
Kattie:governments are regular, ready for.
Kattie:And usually it's a matter of it's too late for us to create these
Kattie:regulations that will protect us all.
Kattie:Look at climate change.
Kattie:So, This is why, this is like, why I get a bit nervous about these things,
Kattie:because when it comes down to the individual protecting themselves, it's,
Kattie:it doesn't seem like it's doing much at the end of the day, you know, like how a
Kattie:safe word is a great thing for now, but like, what the heck happens after this?
Danny:Well, I wonder if that's an opportunity for platforms like
Danny:Capsho and others in the AI space to, to lead that conversation.
Danny:I know from a podcast hosting point of view all the podcasts or
Danny:some, the majority of the podcast hosts work with the podcast 2.
Danny:0 initiative and open index and to improve that RSS feed and make podcasts
Danny:more accessible and interactive and beneficial to the audience.
Danny:The audience, and I feel that's a great example where the likes of
Danny:Deirdre Capsho could sit down, you know, to carry his points about fears
Danny:that indie creators have about tools, et cetera, and protecting their,
Danny:their, their work and then their voice and their likeness, et cetera.
Danny:That feels like it's a really good opportunity for the likes of
Danny:Capsho to lead that conversation and lead that initiative.
Deirdre:Yeah, I was about to, yeah, because I totally agree
Deirdre:that, you know, at some point the government will have to step in.
Deirdre:But as we all know, it's a slow moving beast.
Deirdre:And and so I think with everything exactly what Kattie said, it's like the
Deirdre:private sector does have to step in.
Deirdre:It always leads the way because it's just more agile and, you
Deirdre:know, it's not bound by politics.
Deirdre:Essentially North
Kattie:America, it's
Deirdre:capitalism.
Deirdre:It's always
Kattie:leading the way,
Deirdre:which is why I think we are seeing the pockets like, you know,
Deirdre:you know, Apple and YouTube and Google and stuff like stepping in and going,
Deirdre:okay, well, this is what we can do.
Deirdre:Given what we know now, you know, we can at least try to do this in
Deirdre:our, you know, little universe.
Deirdre:And I think that that will start to broaden the conversation out to other.
Deirdre:So I used to, I grew up in Australia, I live in the States now, and I used
Deirdre:in my corporate life, I used to be in banking and I remember in Australia,
Deirdre:that's kind of how it happened.
Deirdre:It was like, you know, one bank would, you know, Or, you know, it'd be a
Deirdre:conversation to be like, Hey, we're thinking of doing this, you know, at
Deirdre:the time it was something like payments, payment rails and things like that.
Deirdre:And then it would start to be like, Oh, the other banks kind of caught on and be
Deirdre:like, Hey, well, why don't we just have this and, you know, create a bit of a.
Deirdre:Working group around this.
Deirdre:And so I, I do see that, that, that is going to happen where more and more,
Deirdre:you know, again, I don't know about social media platforms because they
Deirdre:don't really like to play with each other, but there will be, you know, to
Deirdre:your point, Danny likes more and more private companies getting together
Deirdre:and being like, okay, well, how can we start to ourselves regulate that?
Deirdre:create some kind of regulation around this.
Deirdre:And then it's like, then the government will step in and, and,
Deirdre:and, and kind of take that forward.
Kattie:Yeah.
Kattie:And as indie podcasters, you have to have a lot of faith in hoping that that will
Kattie:happen because there's really no incentive for private companies to work together.
Kattie:So it's kind of like hoping that capitalism will have a little bit of
Kattie:like socialism within it, which, you know, I don't think we've ever seen
Kattie:anything like that in our lifetime.
Kattie:So it's kind of like a cross your fingers and hope for the best kind of thing.
Deirdre:And, and unfortunately, like, again, it's, it's a very, you know,
Deirdre:there's Elon Musk, I mean, he's, The picture, you talk about capitalism,
Deirdre:like there is no one more capitalist than someone like an Elon Musk.
Deirdre:And you know, he can talk all and, and we can look at it differently, right?
Deirdre:Like some people who love what he's doing is like, yes, he's trying to
Deirdre:change the world for the better through X, Y, Z, you know you know, with these
Deirdre:neural chips, he will be able to help people with, you know, neurological
Deirdre:diseases and, and other things like that.
Deirdre:Great.
Deirdre:You know, but on the other side, it's like, Oh, you know, there is no
Deirdre:faster way to, you generality than, you know, what it is that he's doing.
Deirdre:Right.
Deirdre:Like it is.
Deirdre:So there's two sides to every story.
Deirdre:So I think that's the other risk that we are taking is that because
Deirdre:capitalism is at the end of it, like it's about money, money talks.
Deirdre:So whoever has the most money is going to essentially be the one that.
Deirdre:Yeah.
Deirdre:You know, like is going to do either a lot of the good thing or
Deirdre:the bad thing, depending on which, you know, on which side you fall.
Deirdre:So I think it's, yeah, it's, it's a really tough one.
Deirdre:It is exactly like climate change, you know, again, money talks there, right?
Deirdre:Like you've got businesses and like, who don't want to do anything because it's
Deirdre:all about short term profit, you know?
Deirdre:But then you will have other people who are like businesses and, and
Deirdre:who actually see the longer term.
Deirdre:So.
Deirdre:Yeah, it's, it's, it's a great analogy because I think that's exactly where
Deirdre:we're going to find ourselves, which is this like battle of, well, you know,
Deirdre:there's a lot of short term profit that can come from AI without sight, with
Deirdre:no sight of what it is going to mean longer term for generations to come.
Danny:One of the things that I do want to have from both of you is, there's
Danny:obviously, this is like a conversation that could last for hours and hours.
Danny:There's so many depths and nuances to it.
Danny:It will never end.
Danny:It's been a real enjoyable conversation.
Danny:I could chat for hours with you.
Danny:So far, we've been obviously addressing maybe the questions that are, you know,
Danny:arise from AI, whether that's from an end user point of view, a creator point
Danny:of view, a platform point of view, etc.
Danny:But there's also obviously, there's huge amounts of solutions and
Danny:Kattie, you'd mentioned a cool little thing that you do with the paper.
Danny:You know, AI the paper episodes.
Danny:So I'll start with you as a creator an indie creator, indie podcaster.
Danny:Kattie, what are some of the cool things that you've.
Danny:done are doing with AI that, that really helps you?
Kattie:I will say like a big part of what I've been trying to do is
Kattie:make sure that every single episode that I produce has a transcript.
Kattie:That's like a massive thing, not just for SEO, but for accessibility.
Kattie:And that's something that I really care about, regardless of if
Kattie:the platforms actually make it.
Kattie:transcripts available.
Kattie:Shout out to Apple Podcasts for finally launching that, which
Kattie:I did talk to somebody who was like, this is really awesome.
Kattie:But anyway, AI has made making those transcripts really, really easy.
Kattie:Even if they don't necessarily get every single word right, they're normally about
Kattie:like, I don't know, 99 percent correct.
Kattie:And because I'm Canadian, pretty much I'm always seeing
Kattie:about transcribed into a boat.
Kattie:So usually I'm fixing that.
Kattie:But that's been super helpful and it's able, it's, I can get a transcript done,
Kattie:generated within a matter of minutes.
Kattie:And then I can sit back and listen to my podcast and read the transcription
Kattie:and make those corrections within the length of my podcast, which is always a
Kattie:best practice anyway, because you just.
Kattie:I always want to listen to the last edit that you've done, just in case,
Kattie:so that's been really, really helpful for me to make sure that I can make my
Kattie:podcast accessible and I would recommend anybody use those tools for that for sure.
Danny:Definitely.
Danny:And there's such a huge population as well that have, you know, that
Danny:have, that are hard of hearing.
Danny:But even, I know Ariel Nissenblatt mentioned recently on Twitter, even
Danny:if she's on the subway and a noisy subway, she can't hear the podcast
Danny:episode transcripts are ideal because now you can still read while you've
Danny:got that little bit of audio going on.
Danny:So transcripts are huge for sure.
Danny:And Deirdre, I know Capsho has evolved.
Danny:Since your initial, you know briefing when you first co created it.
Danny:Yes.
Danny:What are some of the cool things?
Danny:Because obviously you work with not only podcasters and creators, but
Danny:entrepreneurs and it goes beyond, you know, just simple say show notes and etc.
Danny:That some AI tools do.
Danny:So I'm real curious about, What's Capsho seen as really cool use of your platform
Danny:and AI in general from that side?
Deirdre:From it?
Deirdre:Yeah.
Deirdre:So we are content marketing nerds.
Deirdre:Like that's just kind of what we, what we do day in and day out.
Deirdre:And I think it's, you know, Even the reason why Capsho came about, if I'm
Deirdre:going to be honest, is because even when I had a coaching business, I,
Deirdre:that was when I had my first podcast and I did not realize that you have to
Deirdre:actually market your content, which is like the most counterintuitive thing.
Deirdre:Right?
Deirdre:Yeah.
Deirdre:Like you go like, but surely the publish, the act of publishing
Deirdre:is the marketing itself.
Deirdre:Right.
Deirdre:And it's like unfortunately it's not.
Deirdre:And one of my good friends, from the Biz Bros put it really well
Deirdre:where it's like, An hour that you spend on creating content, you
Deirdre:need to spend an hour marketing it.
Deirdre:That's really the only way that you're going to be able to get
Deirdre:yourself see, get any visibility.
Deirdre:And so, you know, that's kind of like what we are so passionate at
Deirdre:Capsho to really help solve, which is how do we actually effectively.
Deirdre:Market, not only our content, because the content is like the
Deirdre:gateway to our businesses, right.
Deirdre:To, to us.
Deirdre:And so it's so important to actually do that.
Deirdre:And that's, that's what we that's what we love using AI for.
Deirdre:So things that we're leaning into is so Capsho, we're actually,
Deirdre:that's why I kind of asked you, Danny, when is this going live?
Deirdre:Because we're literally in the next couple of weeks about to launch
Deirdre:Capsho next gen, which is it's a self, a self learning platform.
Deirdre:Cool.
Deirdre:So the more that you edit inside of it, the more that it's going to learn, you
Deirdre:know, your tone of voice the way that you like to structure, whether it's your show
Deirdre:notes or your social media captions or your LinkedIn articles, things like that.
Deirdre:But it actually makes the editing.
Deirdre:So we want the human to interact with their content and their content
Deirdre:marketing, but we also want to make it a really, really easy and seamless.
Deirdre:Process.
Deirdre:So it's how can we actually create editing tools in there, like summarizing,
Deirdre:expanding and you know, even negative words or positive words, or, you
Deirdre:know, this is how I spell about, you know, like you know, yeah, making that
Deirdre:editing process really, really easy.
Deirdre:It's all self learning.
Deirdre:And it's going to be really intelligent around, you know, for example,
Deirdre:this is the catalogue of topics or things that you've spoken about.
Deirdre:I can now create more content off the back of that because I've gone like, Oh,
Deirdre:actually I want to talk about this topic.
Deirdre:And I can now reference these past topics I've spoken about because
Deirdre:that's what AI is going to help us do.
Deirdre:Right?
Deirdre:Like it's actually an extension now of us.
Deirdre:It's a robot on our shoulders that can actually, that has the capacity
Deirdre:to remember things and recall things that we as humans can't
Deirdre:and be like, Hey, if you're going to create content on this thing.
Deirdre:Here are some other threads that you can pull on that you've
Deirdre:already spoken about in the past.
Deirdre:And this is how you can actually convert that into more content marketing assets.
Deirdre:So that's where we're looking to go with, with Capsho as well.
Danny:Okay, and that's Capsho 2.
Danny:0, right?
Danny:Next Gen is 2.
Danny:0 was, yeah, it was last year's, that was last year's story, Danny.
Danny:Okay, my bad.
Danny:I will edit this part out.
Kattie:I just wanted to add too Deirdre, you made me think of something that I
Kattie:and I think one of the things that we just came across recently that's been
Kattie:super helpful in terms of the marketing side of things is here on Riverside.
Kattie:After you've done your recording, if you've been recording video and audio it
Kattie:has this thing I think called Magic Clips, and so if you click it, it'll generate
Kattie:a bunch of, like, lengthwise clip, video clips that you can use for, like, TikToks.
Kattie:Instagram reels and that kind of thing.
Kattie:It'll provide the little captions and you can also upload like a little logo
Kattie:if you'd like to, and just have that in the corner, place it wherever you'd like.
Kattie:Oh my God, that's made my life so easy.
Kattie:It's so great having that capability to do that for the marketing side of things,
Kattie:because realistically, like we are seeing podcast clips on Instagram reels, YouTube
Kattie:shorts Tik TOK and that kind of thing.
Kattie:And having the ability to do that without having to do anything else.
Kattie:Any video editing at all has been really nice.
Kattie:The clips that it picks sometimes are completely off and you're like,
Kattie:I don't know why you picked this.
Kattie:And sometimes you just have to forego that.
Kattie:But so far it's been pretty helpful.
Kattie:So far.
Danny:I think that's where AI definitely you know, for, for the podcasters
Danny:like myself, like you, Kattie the time saving feature on and so on.
Danny:Obviously we still have to put the work in and make sure it's correct
Danny:and relevant to what we are doing.
Danny:But the time saving feature alone as a benefits is, it's just.
Danny:You know, even if you just use one little piece of the AI pie.
Danny:So, as I mentioned, I could speak for hours about this.
Danny:But we will start wrapping up soon.
Danny:However, before we do that, there are a couple of little segments that we
Danny:normally have for fun on the show.
Danny:Just to mix things up a little bit and end on a little bit of positivity as well.
Danny:So, the first part, maybe not so much positivity, but it's, it's a, a
Danny:little part of ours that we call this.
Danny:Now, we're all in the podcasting space.
Danny:We're all in the creator space and we know that there's all these,
Danny:there's always little snippets or advice online or something you see
Danny:posted or mentioned somewhere you think, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
Danny:So I just put a call out this week actually about, you know, what are
Danny:podcasters doing a lot of online that they just feel, no, no, please don't say that's
Danny:not correct or it might not be correct.
Danny:So I'd love to get your input on this one.
Danny:And that's to succeed in podcasting, you have to do video.
Danny:If you don't do video, you're not creating properly.
Danny:What do you think?
Kattie:I mean, wrong.
Kattie:That's totally wrong.
Kattie:I mean, how many podcasts have we seen that are like award winners, massively
Kattie:popular podcasts that are audio only?
Kattie:Like, let's look at the top 10 of podcasts in Apple Podcasts in Spotify.
Kattie:Those are all audio only, narrative style podcasts, investigative style podcasts.
Kattie:Like, come on.
Kattie:No.
Danny:All right.
Danny:So Kattie's not a fan of that.
Danny:How about yourself, Deidre?
Danny:Yay, nay, somewhere in-between.
Deirdre:Oh, I mean, it's a very definitive, I think I just take
Deirdre:issue with the fact that with how definitive the statement is, because
Deirdre:I don't, I, I, that's not the case.
Deirdre:But I do think that for a segment of people, if your audience is video
Deirdre:first then, then that applies to you.
Deirdre:Like, you know, like if they're going to be on YouTube, then that applies to you.
Deirdre:But.
Deirdre:Yeah.
Deirdre:You know, a lot of narrative style, like the, like that just will
Deirdre:probably will not work on video.
Deirdre:But if you have more of a, how to more of a a very interactive you know,
Deirdre:interview style podcasts and maybe video makes sense to, to be on there.
Deirdre:So, yeah, I think it's just the issue issue with the definitiveness, but I
Deirdre:would say that for people where you have to be audience first you know, if
Deirdre:they're on there, then yeah, That will, yeah, you have to be on video then.
Danny:So maybe this whole static image on YouTube isn't such a great
Danny:idea for an audio only podcast.
Kattie:As long as we look cute.
Danny:Exactly.
Danny:Yeah, take a good screenshot.
Deirdre:Yeah.
Danny:And one thing I do want both of you to have a say on, cause I, I know,
Danny:like we've been talking today about AI and it's, as mentioned, a conversation
Danny:it could go for hours and hours and offered a lot of questions, a lot of
Danny:answers, which is awesome, but I do.
Danny:Want to finish on something where it's just all positivity.
Danny:And that is our, so we know there can be some negativity and trolls,
Danny:et cetera, in the space and in, in any creator space really.
Danny:So what we want to do with this part of the show with The Flattering
Danny:Ram is just have our guest shine a light on someone, something,
Danny:anything that they feel is doing good things in podcasting and creation.
Danny:In AI tool creation, etc.
Danny:So, Kattie, I'm going to ask you first again so we can get the about and
Danny:about correctly transcribed for you.
Kattie:It's actually about.
Kattie:About.
Danny:I've not been in Canada long enough to pronounce that properly.
Danny:So Kattie.
Danny:Who's your flatterer?
Danny:What's your flattering ram?
Kattie:I wanted to shout out a newsletter.
Kattie:I'm clearly a newsletter fan.
Kattie:It is called Sounds like impact.
Kattie:It's a really great newsletter.
Kattie:That is combining audio and action.
Kattie:So every issue They highlight a certain theme that needs a call to
Kattie:action in the world whether that be climate change Feminism all sorts of
Kattie:things like that and it highlights a bunch of podcasts that are within that
Kattie:space where people can learn more.
Kattie:And it's a really great newsletter.
Kattie:I think everybody should check it
Danny:out.
Danny:Awesome.
Danny:It sounds awesome.
Danny:And Deidre, how about yourself?
Danny:What is your, who's your flattering ram?
Deirdre:Yes.
Deirdre:So I, I'm sure that your, a lot of your listeners probably know
Deirdre:this person, but Alex Sanfilippo, who is the co founder of Podmatch.
Deirdre:I call him Mr.
Deirdre:Podcast because he's like so passionate about helping indie podcasters.
Deirdre:Thrive, survive and thrive in, because it's not an easy thing that.
Deirdre:We do here.
Deirdre:You know, like it sounds easy getting into it, but then once you realize just
Deirdre:how much it gets put into, not only the actual production workflow, but then, as
Deirdre:I said, like the marketing of it, it's.
Deirdre:It's a lot.
Deirdre:And so he's created a really great resource called PodScore where podcasters
Deirdre:can actually figure out where they're kind of where, where their superpower
Deirdre:is lean into that, but then also work out, you know, if they wanted to work
Deirdre:on some, like, I don't really want to call them gaps, but you know, some,
Deirdre:some things that they could make better, be even better in then there's
Deirdre:there's some resources that he actually shares, I can help them with that.
Deirdre:So incredibly.
Deirdre:cool resource.
Deirdre:Alex is doing really great things in this space.
Deirdre:So yeah, he's, I'm going to shout him out.
Danny:That's a good shout.
Danny:I know Alex, we met him last year in Denver at the Podcast Movement
Danny:and I used PodMatch for the longest time when I had a guest podcast.
Danny:So yeah, great shows and we'll be sure to leave them either in the podcast.
Danny:Podcast show notes, if you're on audio or in the YouTube description, if
Danny:you're modern and watching on YouTube.
Danny:Since we asked about video and this should be stuff in podcast, and this is a proper
Danny:video, it's not just a static image.
Danny:So thank you for both of these flattering rams.
Danny:We'll be sure to leave the links in all the right places.
Danny:Before we do wrap up, finally for anybody that wants to connect
Danny:with yourself, do you, do you find out more about Capsho, et cetera?
Danny:Where's the best place for that?
Deirdre:Yes.
Deirdre:So as I said, we're about to launch if this might even go
Deirdre:live while we're in launch mode.
Deirdre:So I'll direct people to club.
Deirdre:Capsho.
Deirdre:com.
Deirdre:So that's C L U B.
Deirdre:Capsho.
Deirdre:com.
Deirdre:We have, we are launching with a.
Deirdre:It's literally going to be like 20 percent of the price that it's going to become.
Deirdre:So yeah, for anyone who wants to get in on the ground floor of what
Deirdre:we're, some really cool things that we're doing now with Capsho Next
Deirdre:Gen, then yeah, head over to club.
Deirdre:Capsho.
Deirdre:com.
Danny:Awesome.
Danny:I will make sure to include that too.
Danny:And Kattie, how about yourself?
Danny:I'm you'd mentioned Pod The North, where can people find you?
Danny:connect with you, et cetera, and learn more about your awesome Canadian ness.
Kattie:So you can find me, basically you just go to podthenorth.
Kattie:com.
Kattie:And once you're there, you'll be able to find a little about page
Kattie:where you can find my website.
Kattie:But it's also, Also, if you are subscribed to the newsletter, if you reply right
Kattie:to it, it'll go right to my inbox.
Kattie:So that just goes right to me.
Kattie:So you can get in touch with me that way.
Kattie:And then I'll, finally, I'll just shout out my new podcast,
Kattie:Canardian is coming out next week.
Kattie:And if you like it, it's a show all about gossiping about Canadian hometowns.
Kattie:And my information will be in the show notes there too, if
Kattie:you find the podcast on Spotify.
Danny:Perfect.
Danny:Awesome.
Danny:And we will definitely include all that too.
Danny:So again, thank you for appearing today and talking and sharing your
Danny:wisdom about AI and podcasting.
Danny:Really appreciate it.
Kattie:Thank you, Danny.
Kattie:Thank you.
Danny:So this has been another episode of In and Around Podcasting.
Danny:And I think you'll agree it's been an awesome, awesome discussion.
Danny:If you want to get more episodes and catch up with new episodes as
Danny:they come out, be sure to follow for free at inandaroundpodcasting.
Danny:com forward slash listen.
Danny:That's for the audio.
Danny:If you want the YouTube, you can just go over to YouTube's.
Danny:YouTube's.
Danny:The YouTube's.
Danny:You can go there too.
Danny:And just look for In and Around Podcasting.
Danny:We're always there.
Danny:We have little snippets and episodes like this.
Danny:Until the next time, keep podcasting and keep asking questions.