313 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
313 lines
18 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 560
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Title: HPR0560: Old soldiers
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0560/hpr0560.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-07 23:05:45
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---
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Music
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Hello, this is Lost in Bronx.
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It's been a while since my last episode of HPR.
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Fact is, I haven't had a whole lot to say, or at least I haven't felt like I have.
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But it occurs to me that this, on its own, is a point worth a little consideration.
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What are the causes of that dreaded scourge of our collective edification and entertainment,
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namely, pod fading?
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You likely know the term, but just in case, what I'm referring to here is that tendency
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for podcasters to slowly, over the course of time, or maybe not so slowly, stop releasing
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episodes of their respective shows, all the while intending to continue with it, you
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know, later, sometime when they're not so busy.
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Said shows sometimes return and fits and starts over time, or come back with both barrels
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blazing, often only to peter out again.
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Or indeed, they become ghosts and just fade away.
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This is a marked difference from those few shows, like Chess Griffin's Linux reality,
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that hit a certain mark and then call it officially quits.
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It was sad to see that show go, but it was nice to have a final word on this subject.
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It certainly be waiting nebulously for a next episode that would never come.
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A class act starts to finish and one we could all stand to emulate, myself included.
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Which I'm not doing right now, because I was just, you know, busy, I'll get back to
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it.
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Yet, what if I don't?
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What if this is my swan song?
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What if you never hear from me again?
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What the hell are you gonna do about it?
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Sorry, my combative nature reveals itself.
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And therein lies the rub, or it is a combative nature that causes pod fading to begin with.
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It is the very tenacity and good intentions of the average fading podcaster that makes
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them want to hold on, that makes it nearly impossible for them to look at the situation
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at hand and say, that's it, I'm done, it's over.
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There certainly must be some who have what appears to be a temporary impediment to producing
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a show, which turns out to be a long term or permanent one.
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But more often, it strikes me that few people stop recording solely due to outside pressures.
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Internally, we, and by who, I mean, they, because like I said, I'm not fading here.
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I say, internally, we are fighting the good fight.
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Are they listening?
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Do they care?
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Is anything I'm saying actually worth anybody's time?
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We overcome that when we can, and we say what we want to say, and when we can't, we
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don't.
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So simple.
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A voice ringing in a vacuum, or nearly so, is hard enough, but add to it the pressures
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and drains of daily life, of full-time work and family and personal troubles, and it
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rapidly seems amazing that anyone can do this at all.
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And let us not forget the personality clashes and politics inherent in even small shows.
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Now I'm not talking about the Leo LePortz out there who make a living at it.
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They're just DJs by any other name.
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The vast majority of podcasters do not have those enviable production resources available.
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The inner and outer worlds intrude, and their shows sometimes grow thin and disappear.
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That's my view anyway.
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There are so many exceptions, it's hardly worthwhile to count them, but there are even more
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tombstones in the podcasting graveyard.
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My focus here is on the root causes of podfating.
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Why do people stop?
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What makes a person go through the trouble of creating a show covering a topic that inspires
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them only to let it pass away?
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Understanding some common causes might add strength to those currently producing shows, or
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at the very least, it might prove of some value to those yet to start up this odd hobby.
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Yes, hobby.
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Some people have had a great deal of success at it, true, but that is not most podcasters
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circumstance.
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And even so, the luck may have had a hand in the popularity of some people and their shows.
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It was certainly said people's hard work that brought such success into being.
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Even beyond that, or maybe before that, I'm not sure just how best to express such successes.
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The measure of them, the descriptor we should use.
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In the, shall we say non-fiction arena of tech podcasting, where money doesn't really
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change too many hands, what kind of success can you say a show has gained?
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Commercial?
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Certainly not.
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Well, not usually.
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Artistic?
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Maybe, to some degree, but it's not exactly art that we're talking about here, at least
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I don't think so.
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Maybe popular success is the term I'm after.
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The shows are popular.
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The people involved are well-known in their niches.
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Okay, so a show gains a measure of popular success.
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It has a core audience.
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The people look forward to downloading it each week, or fortnight, or whatever.
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That's one end of the spectrum.
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The other end is that graveyard I spoke of.
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And the goal is to strive for the former and stay out of the ladder.
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To my mind, the first order of business, therefore, is to see what works and avoid what doesn't.
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Popularly, successful shows will have at least several reasons why they are so well-liked.
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And the priority of any of these is somewhat subjective, so you may well disagree here,
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and I would not argue.
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But for me, the success or failure of any endeavor can be summed up by the three letters
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AIC, meaning ass-in-chair.
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Every successful project starts with an idea, but if it never goes farther than that, then
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all you have are someone's thoughts locked in their head.
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The philosophy of AIC has about one tenant.
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Put your ass in the chair and get the job done.
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Don't just think about doing it.
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Don't just intend to do it.
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We're not talking about paid work here.
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That's too easy.
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No money involved.
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No addition to your bottom line.
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In fact, it steals away your moments.
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Your time.
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Still, it's ass-in-chair.
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You do whatever you have to do to make the work a priority in your life.
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Not just a desire, certainly not just a dream.
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There are likely as many ways to approach this as there are people who want to, and those
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journeys on their own are difficult.
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But the basic underlying motivation of AIC is to work.
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There are more dreamers than doers, and I will stay here and now that good ideas are
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a dime, a dozen.
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Good projects are not.
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Mating your dreams with your actions and maintaining the resulting momentum is the demon to be faced.
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The empty chair is the enemy.
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It seems like it's a personal battle, but the chair in fact represents your world and
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every good reason in it not to do the work.
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Every valid excuse not to put your ass in your chair and realize your dreams.
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Now this may seem like motivational drivel from the 90s and far afield from the subject
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at hand, but bear with me a moment longer.
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Whether your project is a podcast or a knitted sweater is immaterial if you aren't able
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to get yourself back to it over and over.
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Neither one is done in a single day since as avocations both should be ongoing.
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A steady stream of sweaters keeps everybody warm.
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A steady stream of podcasts gets your voice out there, gets your thoughts heard.
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It's damnably easy to be ignored in this world, especially by yourself.
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So you're motivated, you start your show, you do a bunch of them, you get some feedback
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and everything is gold, it's fun, it's educational and you get an awesome feeling of accomplishment.
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In fact, it starts to fall into a routine.
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In fact, it starts to feel like an obligation.
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Yes, this is the crisis point.
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This is when the show starts to fade, when the newness has worn off.
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And mostly what you see is the work.
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The idea of it is still so attractive, it still seems like so much fun.
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But the reality of it is, you've got a lot on your mind, your free time is limited
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and your energy is flagging.
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And when these things aren't so pressing, so immediate, well, you'll get right back
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on it, because it's fun, it is fun, but it's a lot of work too, and you just can't
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right now.
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But soon, honest, honest, it's yourself you're lying to, of course, other people aren't fooled
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for long.
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They've seen the pattern, held you've seen it yourself plenty of times, and if it wasn't
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coming from such an impeccable source, you wouldn't fall for it either.
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But you do, because you do intend to keep going.
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But you end up doing so, more like you don't.
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Either way, it's a poor place to find yourself in, especially if you really do like podcasting.
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See, now you feel guilty about not doing shows and you're robbing yourself of something
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you enjoy, to say nothing of stifling your own voice.
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So we're clear that this is usually a bad thing, and I say usually because exceptions
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about AIC, it is the reason for much success, it is also the reason for much failure because
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the do battle with the chair means to sometimes lose.
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The world takes precedence because it must, because you have a career or just a job, whatever,
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and you have family and money problems and personal issues to numerous or private
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to publicize, and because what the hell podcasting is just a hobby anyway, then maybe not even,
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I mean, how long has it been since the last one?
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And so you fade.
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A thought can go through one's mind when considering the status of their fading show, namely,
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am I any damn good at it?
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There's so many better people out there, funnier people with better voices, better writing
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maybe, better audio skills, equipment, information, whatever.
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These seem like valid concerns, but they're not.
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Of course, there are better podcasters out there.
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Some people have talent, plain and simple.
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They all wish we could count ourselves among them, they just have a knack for it.
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They're good talkers, good hosts, by nature it seems.
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Certainly, by inclination, perhaps a nature and inclination we mere mortals don't properly
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share, and you know what, that's okay.
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Because what you say, what you have to share matters, oh, maybe not a couple thousand
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downloads per episode worth, but it matters to somebody.
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And that somebody, first and foremost, is you, or it ought to be.
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Because damn it, it mattered enough to start the ball rolling in the first place.
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And oddly, weirdly enough in this disconnected age, people whom you have never met, people
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you will never meet, will miss you when you're gone.
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Think not.
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They ask about the show, don't they?
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When's the next one coming out?
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What's it going to be about?
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Will there be a format change or whatever?
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Even one odd email is someone who cares enough to write, who likes what you have to say,
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and wants to hear more of it.
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And what if no one writes, so what if no one noticed the show, let alone it's fade?
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You do, that's enough, that's plenty of reason to keep fighting that good fight without
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and within.
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Ah, but you say it's really the cost issues, the hosting, especially, it's unreliable,
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it's expensive, you just can't do it anymore.
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Well, that's a crack of shit, and you know it because this is exactly what archive.org
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is for.
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No, it's not the fastest thing out there, but it works, and it's free, and they host
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whatever format you want to throw up there, unless you aren't releasing your work under
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the commons, or in the public domain, now that's your choice, obviously.
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But if you aren't making any money with it anyway, and you don't realistically believe
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you ever will, not that creative commons, and making a buck or incompatible at all,
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but if you restrict your redistribution opportunities, you're only hurting your potential listeners.
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Fewer listeners means less feedback, less feedback means less AIC motivation when the going,
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or should I say the sitting gets tough.
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Archive.org isn't the only option either, you're listening to one right now, hacker
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public radio.
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It welcomes everyone with something vaguely tacky to say, and not even good lord, if
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they'll release my rambling nonsense, sharp characters like yourselves, with real points
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to speak on, real information and opinions, are not just welcomed, but encouraged to participate.
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Whether you're up to your own show, or not, this one has room for you, whenever you have
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room for it.
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Oh, now that sounds like a commercial, sorry, wasn't meant to be.
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What I'm really saying is it's an option, and not a poor second class one either.
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And neither is your own show, the one you don't think you can do, or do anymore.
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But you know in advance that popular success is elusive and not worth serious consideration,
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right?
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That it's only for those few talented heroes of ours, while relative obscurity and the
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fandom of the few is our lot in podcasting life, I'm being deliberately insulting, partly
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due to my combative nature, but also because a healthy dose of humility goes a long way.
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As does a thick skin.
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In the very few things I've done, I've gotten mostly kind responses, but there have been
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a few who have expressed disagreement or dislike.
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Hey, at least they responded.
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Most of the time it's silence.
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And that right there can be the hardest burden of all.
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It can be a blamed source of pod fading.
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No one's listening anyway.
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You might justify it to yourself.
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That may be true, but more likely you do yourself an injustice.
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In fact, whether they listen or not, you're definitely doing yourself a bad turn believing
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that, because it matters to you.
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If you do indeed have a liberal license associated with your work, you have no idea how far
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your show is going to travel.
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HPR gets linked to and even republished by various audio services around the world.
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That's in keeping with its license.
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Mostly I've seen a few things that seem a little shady, but anyway, your show can and
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most likely will do the same.
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There's no way, in fact, of knowing who your real audience is, or will be going into
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the future.
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I can tell you for a fact that Charles Dickens never expected people to read his works 150
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years into the future on portable media players they carry in their pockets.
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The eventual impact of your show will be a mystery, perhaps, but you'll have one almost
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guaranteed.
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See, your thoughts matter.
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Your show matters to you, to others, but what if it really doesn't?
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To you anymore?
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What if you're well and truly sick of it or well and truly cannot do it anymore?
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Well, everything has an end.
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The key here is to announce it, admit it to yourself, and then to your listeners.
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They deserve it.
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You deserve it.
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All things end, but not all endings are graceful.
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This one, though, is within your power to control.
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You can terminate your show, you can revive it, or you can finesse it under those circumstances,
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and by that, I mean something like, I'm taking a six months sabbatical, or I'll be gone
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for a while, but when I return, the show will have a slightly new format, stuff like that.
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Waffling by any other name?
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Well, only if you don't really mean what you say.
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If you announce that you'll be back in six months, then damn it, be back in six months.
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And we're not really talking about the details, anyway, are we?
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You're really talking about making the show a priority.
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Your hobby, your fun time, make it a part of your life.
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You have family, work, social, or religious obligations, problems galore, maybe.
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And you podcast.
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I will bet you, if you looked very carefully at your schedule, you could probably find
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a few things each week which you do that you neither have to do, nor want to do.
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Is there a show on TV you watch that, honestly, you're ambivalent about?
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That's time, your precious time that you will never, ever get back, which could be spent
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getting your voice and thoughts out there for others to hear and enjoy.
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So what if you only have a handful of listeners that you know of?
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It's not about them, anyway, it's your damn show.
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It's about you, and what you enjoy or think is important.
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That beats the idiot box any day of the week, and you know that.
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It beats letting your show fade away when you've still got things to say.
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But if it's true that you cannot or do not want to continue your show, at the very least
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admit that to yourself and have a final episode, say your goodbyes.
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Close your baby, it's not just for romance anymore.
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Give people a chance to take it out of their RSS feeds or let them know they don't have
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to check your site anymore for new content.
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It makes the best of impressions, it shows respect for your listeners and yourself, and
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they'll respect your show all the more.
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That starts you off with a very good impression for your next project, assuming you have one,
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and if not, well a good reputation hurts no one.
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They'll remember you for that, if nothing else.
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If you never get a second chance to make a first impression, you never get a chance
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to make another one at all after your last.
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So make it a good one.
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You gave them your time and your thoughts and feelings.
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Give them a fond, fairly well, and call it a day.
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And I fully believe that if you're at that point, you yourself will feel relief.
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You won't have that nagging little voice in the back of your head telling you to podcast
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urging you to do something you used to love, which has now mostly become a chore, pushing
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you to get a show out there because people are expecting it.
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Because it's been too long now because your show is fading.
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No, you don't need that, a clean getaway.
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You did your show, you can't seem to anymore, thanks for listening, goodbye.
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And you can always bring it back, and people will be gladdened by the news.
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So why not go out on top, go out when you choose to.
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Not when outside pressures and lethargy and maybe fear, choose it for you.
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If your podcast is fading or in danger of fading, do something about it.
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Bring it back or put it down.
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Don't just let it slide, it's your show, a piece of your life.
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It deserves the best treatment you can give it under your particular circumstances.
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And by giving it that attention and respect, you are in fact giving those things to your
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listeners and to yourself.
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That's not for you or for me, because I've just been busy, see ya, I'm on it, I'm on it.
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This has been Lost in Bronx.
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You can contact me at Lost in Bronx at gmail.com, that's L-O-S-T-N-B-R-O-N-X at Gmail.
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You can find a transcript of this episode at my gopher space that's gofer, colon, slash
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slash gofer.info-underground.net, slash one, the number one, slash Lost in Bronx, slash.
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There'll be a link in the show notes for that.
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Don't let your feedback fade away before it's even begun.
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Write me, read me, never leave me.
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Take care.
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Thank you for listening to H.P.R. Responsed by Carol.net, so head on over to C-A-R-O-DOT-E-T for
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all of us in need.
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Thank you for listening to H.P.R. Responsed by Carol.
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Thank you.
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