One host of Late Night with Robot is Ana-Marija Stojic, a certified human comedian. The other is an artificial intelligence bot. Its ‘real and imagined’ personalities lead to strange and entertaining conversations, writes Wanda Thibodeaux in Code Like a Girl. About 75 episodes have come out since March 1.
AI guests so far include Homer Simpson, Barack Obama, Joe Rogan, Cleopatra, Oprah Winfrey, and Jesus. Stojic blends education and comedy, offering a behind-the-scenes “debrief” of each episode for curious listeners. The show’s AI technician even answers their questions about the technology.
Listener requests are common. Stojic delights in the weirdness, but takes the experiment seriously. “AI personalities can act as a highly advanced mirror,” she told Thibodeaux. “It can show people themselves.” Late Night doesn’t appear to have a feed but is available to stream on Beams and Spotify.
Podcast discovery has become exponentially harder since 2019, and giant platforms aren’t helping. “The likes of Spotify and Amazon have the incentive to give their own productions more prominent placement in the app,” writes Alex Webb of Bloomberg. Ad revenue, and visibility, stays at the top.
Webb sees a familiar threat emerging: “The risk for independent podcasters is that the platforms imitate the approach pioneered by social media companies.” Long ago, Facebook promised brands and public figures a “vast audience,” but then tweaked the algorithm to heavily favor paid promotions.
In fact, Spotify has been running a similar scheme on the music side since 2020. Discovery Mode is a ‘marketing tool’ that gives artists a bump in the algorithm – in exchange for reduced royalty payments. Their rates are already so low ($0.003 to $0.005) that it takes about 250 streams to earn $1.
The federal government continues to push back. Members of Congress wrote to Spotify’s CEO in March: “For artists of diverse backgrounds, who often struggle to access capital, the premise that they must now pay in order to be found by new consumers on Spotify represents an especially serious problem.”
While podcasting doesn’t operate on royalties, the competition for ad revenue leaves creators in a related bind. You need a large audience to sell inventory, which first requires exposure. “Unless something drastic changes,” Webb says, only the biggest fish will enjoy the projected $4.3 billion in 2024.
With Vocaster, Focusrite has transformed the podcasting experience. The all-new line of USB interfaces is designed specifically for podcasters, combining crystal-clear audio with effortless operation. Whether you’re a solo or collaborative creator, one of two models will perfectly fit the way you work.
Vocaster is light, portable, and powered by your computer. Because not every podcaster is an audio engineer, intuitive features remove every technical barrier to great sound. Use Auto Gain to set levels quickly and easily, Enhance to polish your voice in one click, connect instantly to your other devices, and more.
As the world’s best-selling audio interface brand, Focusrite is dedicated to quality that supports your passion. Ready to hear what’s new? Explore all Vocaster has to offer, including two studio bundles to round out your equipment dream team.
This week’s newsletter is sponsored by LEADR Hello again! Thank you to everyone who joined…
Ticket prices for Evolutions 2025 go up TONIGHT! THIS IS THE LAST CHANCE TO SAVE…
Discount Hotel Room Block is CLOSING SOON! Book Yours Now to join us for an…
Ticket prices for Evolutions 2025 go up TONIGHT! Lock in the best rate now and…
Ticket prices for Evolutions 2025 go up NEXT WEEK! Lock in the best rate now…
Ticket prices for Evolutions 2025 go up TONIGHT! Lock in the best rate now and…