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Siobhan McHugh's avatar

Aw, Samantha – I am so pleased that my book helped restore some of your passion for podcasting and audio storytelling! It's been great to communicate with a kindred audio spirit. 🙏 Thank you for this perceptive account of podcasting's fit with academia... judging by the vast numbers of PhD candidates researching podcasting, it's going gangbusters. 💪 💕 💚 🙌 For me, the connection between the podcast industry and academia is clear and unstoppable and academics can straddle both, as I aimed to show in this (#openaccess) article on the making of The Greatest Menace podcast about a gay prison. https://www.cogitatiopress.com/mediaandcommunication/article/view/9066

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Evan Maxwell's avatar

What a synergistic day. I'm an old-time reporter specializing in crime. I try to stay up with the newest crime trends and to do so, I recently have repeatedly used Aaron Jacklin's listing service, The Art of Explaining Crime. New to criminology, and maybe somewhat averse to its jargon-ridden approach, I barely scratched the surface of the academic discipline until Aaron showed me now much is going on in the study of crime, investigation and punishment. I use the service so much that I became a founding member.

Then along comes SHodder who posts a long and valuable piece on how academia is becoming engaged in the serious/popular study of culture in general. Within an hour, I have two new data collection posts that point in the same direction. Now that is not coincidence. It is an example of the power of Substack and other sites.

When I worked in daily journalism, back in the 1980s, I regularly "stole" story ideas from journals an other specialty publications and translated their insights into news stories, a form that relies on unattributed theft of ideas from news sources. (So no, I don't agree that it is a bad thing. All writers are thieves, on way or another. Attribution might be fair but it robs the reporter of one of his trade secrets, so don't expect it to be precise.)

Anyway, Samantha, your dense piece was spot-on. I broke away from reading it to subscribe and to send this note. I think you are right in many regards and I will go back and read carefully. Thanks for validating my own intuitions. Thanks, even though I have always regarded myself as an antagonist of critical theory. (there's a story there, too.) 73s.

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