Every once in a while, friends say to me, “You should do a podcast. Interview all the people you meet in your travels.”
And I think, “Do you know how much WORK that is?!” (Which was exactly the answer I gave my mother when she said, long ago, that she wished I would be a writer.)
The reason it felt like too much work to me was the image I had in my mind of what a podcast like that would look like: thirty-minute or even hour-long interviews, like I used to do in radio, where you stretch it out with dumb questions to get boring answers that will fill the allotted time. I didn’t want to do that again.
I also didn’t want to do the kind of show where I would have to talk-talk-talk, giving advice or how-to information about productivity or whatever.
I don’t like to talk. I like to listen.
I like stories
I like to listen to the new wave of public radio podcasts that are jam-packed with stories — This American Life, Snap Judgment, The Moth, RadioLab… too many to listen to on my paltry 20GB-per-month, Verizon hotspot plan. But I try.
The thought that loops constantly in my head as I listen to them is, Why didn’t I go into public radio when I had the chance? WHY?! Of course, this kind of storytelling wasn’t even invented when I worked in radio. The granddaddy of them all, This American Life, began the year my career as a newscaster ended.
I had a dream once, of buying an RV and traveling the country interviewing ordinary Americans, like the old “On the Road” segments Charles Kuralt used to do on CBS Sunday Morning. I dreamed of sharing these stories on radio somehow, but I couldn’t then figure out how to make it work.
Now I am here, on the road, and I have everything I need: a vehicle to live and travel in, a Social Security check to pay the bills, an iPhone to record, free software to edit, the Internet to broadcast on for a few paltry dollars a month, and people with lives and stories to tell.
It’s time
A podcast doesn’t have to be a set number of minutes long. It can be as long or as short as the story it shares. I have recorded and edited two interviews so far, both less than five minutes. Others may be longer, but they will depend on the story and the teller.
I might string several stories together into a longer show, or just release each one as a stand-alone podcast. The structure and process will evolve over time.
Right now, I am in the process of interviewing, editing, and setting up the tech aspects of the podcast. I hope the first episode will be ready to go in a week or two. When it is, I will let you know.
Here’s a clip from my interview with 14-year-old Russell, who lives on the road with his mom and two dogs. Hope you like it.
The name of the show?
That seems to work. I like your low-key questions. Nice to get a kid’s slant on this life too.
Thanks, Charlene! The full interview was quite revealing. 🙂
You’re on to something with the short podcast idea. Keep it coming!
Thanks, Rick!
Gosh, every time I turn my back you are moving forward! This feels very good to me…I think this could fly! Talk soon…
Haha, that’s one way to look at it. Some people would say I jump around too much, but I don’t listen to them any more. Talk Sunday!