January 6, 2021
10 summer podcasts perfect for strolls along the beach
From 'Dolly Parton's America' to 'S-Town' - true stories that will get you hooked
A friend listened to her first podcast last month - an investigative journalism narrative - and binged the whole series over a long Friday evening. Now she鈥檚 avid for more. It was a reminder that, despite the vaunted podcast boom, 70% of Australians last year still hadn鈥檛 listened to one.
So to get you started, here are some of the best to listen to on these long summer days.
I鈥檝e avoided heavy true crime, and while audio fiction is on the rise, I鈥檝e opted for mostly true stories because to me that鈥檚 what podcasting does best: taking us inside another person鈥檚 head and heart.
Scintillating and surprising, this series examines notions of morality, home, politics, inclusion and the American psyche, with classic country songs and brilliant production by Shima Oliaee and host Jad Abumrad.
Premised on the question 鈥渉ow did the queen of the boob joke become a feminist icon?鈥, the podcast interviews Parton to document her life story, alongside commentary from academics who parse pro-woman lyrics written by someone who despises the word 鈥渇eminism鈥.
Parton defies pigeonholing. One story explored is her friendship with Abumrad鈥檚 father, Naji, a doctor at Vanderbilt 精东传媒. They met when he treated her after a car accident, and the episode traces the unlikely connection between his Lebanese village and the two-room Appalachian cabin where she grew up.
From this friendship, last month it was revealed Parton had US$1 million (A$1.37 million) towards COVID-19 research at Vanderbilt.
A quirky Kiwi take on the 鈥淚-was-scammed鈥 genre, in Snowball, three brothers track down the Californian con-woman who made their parents homeless.
Host Ollie Wards鈥 wry, affectionate approach blends serious sleuthing with domestic detail - such as informing us of his father鈥檚 burning ambition to make it on to an episode of Dr Phil.
The most likeable family in podcast land.
A woman recounting her husband鈥檚 death from lung cancer doesn鈥檛 sound like standard holiday fare, but this is a precious, tender offering from veteran ABC Radio National producer Sophie Townsend and acclaimed UK producer Eleanor McDowall.
Townsend鈥檚 writing is achingly honest, moving from well-observed trivia of family life to the surreal horror of watching your partner die. McDowall has a real feel for personal storytelling and the production avoids mawkishness.
You will smile and cry.
A compelling British variation on the con artist genre started by and given an Australian twist by , this centres on a charismatic Bulgarian purveyor of bogus currency, .
Host Jamie Bartlett and producer Georgia Catt uncouple themselves from their BBC background to include podcasty, meta-stories about their process as they hunt Ignatova across Europe while the FBI close in.
A soaring Bulgarian choir adds class and the bonus episode provides a satisfying close-up of the elusive Ignatova.
The payoff doesn鈥檛 deliver, but the journey is so delicious you forgive host Patrick Radden Keefe.
Keefe is exploring a fascinating theory: that the CIA tried to gain 鈥渟oft power鈥 in the disintegrating Soviet Union of the early 1990s by writing the song 鈥淲ind of Change鈥 for a popular German heavy metal band The Scorpions.
Throw in cocaine dealers, intelligence agents and former Panama dictator General Noriega and you鈥檙e still only halfway there.
A strangely touching exploration by New York Times journalist Ellen Barry of a family caught in a time warp in the fallout of the India-Pakistan partition.
Barry comes across a man professing to be part of a displaced Muslim royal family, who lives in a crumbling palace in the jungle, in the middle of New Delhi.
The Jungle Prince is a study of Barry鈥檚 own obsessive urge to investigate, as she gets caught up with the tragic prince and heads to the UK to sort out an intertwined history of colonialism, sectarianism and madness.
A clever idea from the Metropolitan Opera and New York radio station WQXR, this podcast explores one famous aria each episode, featuring a celebrated opera singer and guests who relate to the opera鈥檚 theme.
A for opera, the podcast links compelling contemporary personal stories, whetting the appetite for the conclusion where the guest singer delivers the aria in full.
Aria Code is an engaging way to get acquainted with the canon, or a satisfying extension of the relevance of the aria for those already in the zone.
Resistance tells stories of black activism around the world in a warm, personal style.
In one episode, host Saidu Tejan-Thomas Jr introduces us to a 22-year-old black New Yorker who, in a few months, goes from attending his first street protest to deciding to run for city council.
In another, Tejan-Thomas tries to understand how the only black man in a mid-Western town hangs onto his 鈥渂lackness鈥 in such a cultural void.
A timely show that chimes with the #BlackLivesMatter movement.
An effortlessly seductive podcast in which a Great Writer selects a short story by another Great Writer, tells fiction editor Deborah Treisman why they like it 鈥 and reads it aloud.
Sometimes the pairing seems obvious: Margaret Atwood selects fellow Canadian Alice Munro; Dave Eggers picks another American former wunderkind Sam Shepard.
Sometimes it is more intriguing: Salman Rushdie goes for Italo Calvino; Orhan Pamuk for Jorge Luis Borges.
Apart from the sheer pleasure of having great stories read aloud, the podcast provides an intimate insight into writers鈥 literary passions.
Yes it鈥檚 been around since 2017, but this is the apotheosis of audio storytelling.
Set aside seven hours for this Southern Gothic ode to the mordant genius that is John B. McLemore, a disgruntled resident of 鈥淪hit-town鈥, Alabama.
Produced by the team who broke the internet with , this is literary journalism for your ears. It starts a bit slowly, but episode two is a massive gut punch and it gets more and more mesmerising from there.
If Truman Capote had had a podcast, this would be it.
, Honorary Associate Professor, Journalism,
This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license.
UOW academics exercise academic freedom by providing expert commentary, opinion and analysis on a range of ongoing social issues and current affairs. This expert commentary reflects the views of those individual academics and does not necessarily reflect the views or policy positions of the 精东传媒 of 精东传媒.