Why Can I Upload My Podcasts in Itunes

Photo Courtesy: Crooked Media; The New York Times podcasts; earwolf; Nicholas Hunt/Getty Images; IMDb; Kleptomaniacal Media; Rodin Eckenroth/Getty Images

Due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, many of u.s. have been at home a lot more than often, and that's meant finding ways to piece of work, connect and entertain ourselves, largely with the aid of screens. In the wake of Zoom happy hours and Netflix marathon afterwards marathon, yous probably took a much-needed screen break — and, if you're anything like us, that meant you queued up some podcasts. From immersive audio dramas and popular civilisation-focused comedy pods to incisive cultural critiques, insightful interviews and top-notch investigative journalism, these podcasts not only stood out in a twelvemonth total of content, but they also helped u.s. weather an incredibly challenging and isolating year.

Editor's Annotation: we've compiled a list of the 10 podcasts that got us through 2021.

1. Code Switch

"The fearless conversations nearly race that you've been waiting for" is how NPR describes its pop podcast, Code Switch. Although the hosts of Code Switch take spent years interrogating race and how it impacts everything from popular civilisation to history, the podcast reached a few significant milestones just this year. That is, the show striking No. 1 on Apple's charts, and, in June, there was a 270% surge in downloads.

Photo Courtesy: NPR

For co-host Shereen Marisol Meraji, who leads the podcast alongside Gene Demby, the success was conflicting because it came in the wake of the murders of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and Ahmaud Arbery. On the whole, however, Meraji, Demby and the show's rotating contributors are glad that the show has resonated — and reached such a wide audition. "We're talking to people who have been marginalized and underrepresented for so long," Meraji notes, "[people] who are then hungry to run across themselves represented fully and with nuance and complication."

Without a doubt, Code Switch is ever-relevant, funny and educational, but information technology also provides access to stories the mainstream media might not usually comprehend — told past folks who accept lived those experiences. Now, information technology's upwards to listeners to proceed supporting Code Switch, to keep confronting oppression and racism — not just when it's trending on Apple'due south charts.

What do the 1839 assassination of a Cherokee leader and a 1999 murder instance have in common? For one, they're the "courage" of a "2020 Supreme Court determination that adamant the fate of v tribes and virtually half the land in Oklahoma." It'southward likely that you simply heard about this monumental case and its ties to native land rights and tribal sovereignty in one case SCOTUS reached its verdict earlier this year, but getting the full moving picture is essential to understanding only how landmark the ruling is for Indigenous folks.

Photo Courtesy: Crooked Media

"Our sovereignty is boxed in through the creation of reservations," This Land host Rebecca Nagle, an Oklahoma announcer and citizen of the Cherokee Nation, told Outside. "Only the U.S. doesn't fifty-fifty respect that box." If you lot've been paying attention, and so you'll recall that the July 2020 SCOTUS ruling led to the largest restoration of tribal land in the history of the U.South. However, knowing the consequence of the case isn't enough: With This Land, listeners can delve deeper into specific events, and the means they intersect, in order to learn just how much continues to be at stake when it comes to tribal sovereignty and the larger Land Dorsum movement.

3. Queery

Hosted by queer standup comic Cameron Esposito, Queery allows listeners to sit down in on hour-long conversations between Esposito and her interviewees. What connects Esposito'southward guests is that (with a few exceptions) they are all role of the LGBTQ+ community, meaning that identity, queerness, gender and other topics are prioritized and explored with much more than dash and intimacy than a straight host could manage. Upwards top, Esposito notes that the show is "nearly individual experience and personal identity," which means one invitee'due south detail experience of queerness — or the language they utilize — might not ever align with yours.

Photo Courtesy: EarWolf

In that vein, Queery feels similar media that was created for queer folx — as opposed to something like the Queer Eye reboot, which feels like it was made to be both palatable and attainable for straight/cis viewers. There'south a time and place for both approaches, and centering not only queer guests, only besides queer listeners, is refreshing — and necessary. For Esposito, the podcast was a manner to "[reinvest] in the queer community," and while we honey her humorous takes and tangents, we also love the way she's leveraging her platform and resource as a white and cis queer person to amplify the stories and voices of queer and trans folx.

4. Proceed It

If there's ane podcast that mixes incisive political and cultural commentary with pop civilization references and ever-Tweet-able quotes, it's Proceed It, a evidence started a few years ago by writer Ira Madison Iii. Overflowing Magazine describes the origin of the podcast's title best, noting that it's "named later on a cheeky phrase Ira coined with his biggy Twitter presence, always in reference to some moving-picture show, book, collab, political candidate, act of artificial wokeness, or anything, really, that he merely doesn't have fourth dimension for and would rather not exist." Honestly, same.

Photo Courtesy: Crooked Media

What really elevates Continue It is the conversational energy its charismatic, witty — and consistently laugh-out-loud funny — hosts bring to each episode. Joining Madison are pop civilization-, Oscars- and Karen Carpenter-enthusiast Louis Virtel and Large Oral cavity writer Aida Osman, who just celebrated a year on the podcast. The chemistry, the bickering, the stanning, the lovable tangents — this evidence has it all. In fact, Keep It is unequivocally our favorite weekly podcast from Crooked Media — and, yes, keep that, Lovett or Leave It.

v. Nice White Parents

"I don't think I'll be forgetting the start episode of Dainty White Parents anytime soon," Nicholas Quah wrote in a review for Vulture. That's quite the introduction to the New York Times and Series collaboration, only it'south too not hyperbole. Hosted and reported by This American Life vet Chana Joffe-Walt, Squeamish White Parents shines a spotlight on the "60-year human relationship between white parents and the public school down the block."

Photograph Courtesy: Serial via The New York Times

The thesis at hand? That even well-meaning white parents are preventing "schoolhouse integration and a more than equitable distribution of resource." Quah elaborates, writing that Joffe-Walt "substantiates your gut feeling with vivid documentation, giving flesh to what was previously skeletal suspicion." That is, if you lot think you know, dig deeper — acquire more nearly how this ultimately oppressive and unequal system operates. In the end, it'southward white people, especially wealthy and straight and cis white people, who benefit the nearly from maintaing the arrangement that'southward in identify — and those are the same people who need to listen to this podcast the virtually.

6. Back Event

New York Times author Sandra Eastward. Garcia called the Back Issue hosts' "encyclopedic memory of pop civilisation moments…a balm in trying times." Each episode, hosts Tracy Clayton, best known for hosting Netflix'southward Strong Blackness Legends, and Josh Gwynn, a Pineapple Street Studios producer, take a wait at some of the biggest badgering questions that crop up in pop culture history. For them, it's all about investigating why certain moments stick — or why certain words, trends and moments became so popular — because "nostalgia is more than just a feeling."

Photo Courtesy: Pineapple Street Studios

In addition to the hosts' articulate chemistry and a slate of corking guests, Back Consequence stands out because, unlike other pop civilization podcasts, information technology never centers a discussion on current entertainment offerings. Speaking to Garcia nigh the podcast's focus on nostalgic pop culture versus new releases, Gwynn noted that "There is a reason these moments stuck with united states and why they are so fundamental." In many ways, pop culture shapes usa, but information technology tin can too have the same calming effect as a hot cup of tea. And that kind of comfort was invaluable during a challenging twelvemonth similar 2020.

seven. Cute Anonymous

Hosted by Chris Gethard, Beautiful Anonymous takes everything you once loved — or, maybe, could've loved — about a late-nighttime talk radio show and updates it for podcast listeners. The concept is straightforward, simply also genius. Guests call into the evidence, and Gethard is obligated to stay on the phone with them for an hr and chat about whatsoever comes up. The caller, on the other manus, can hang up at any time — though they more often than not don't.

Photograph Courtesy: EarWolf

Since callers don't reveal their names or other identifying information, things stay anonymous, which means callers often get quite vulnerable and share otherwise hard or uncomfortable experiences, feelings, opinions and confessions with Gethard. While Gethard'southward standup preparation equips him with some great on-the-spot comedy chops, he'due south also such a compelling host when it comes to discussing the heavier stuff, too. In his own special, Career Suicide, Gethard discussed his experiences of depression, expiry by suicide attempts and alcoholism, and, perhaps considering of his own lived experiences, the e'er-caring Gethard actually reaches callers (and listeners) in a poignant style one-time-school radio hosts only dreamed of.

8. The Left Right Game

This year, the QCode media commonage has released several incredible audio dramas, but 1 of the best is The Left Right Game, which was written by Jack Anderson, produced by its star Tessa Thompson and based off of a story post on Reddit's r/nosleep. For those who don't know, every story posted on r/nosleep is considered truthful, fifty-fifty if it'south fictional, and so if you lot comment on said story, the subreddit's gimmick is that you play along and stay in character. All of this has led to the ascension of a kind of internet-based urban-legend-meets-campfire-horror-story genre. And let'southward just say it works amazingly well in podcast form.

Photo Courtesy: @Qcodemedia/Twitter

The podcast centers on two different, but interrelated, stories. In one thread, a man named Tom (Aml Ameen) is searching for a journalist named Alice Sharman (Thompson); no 1 seems to believe that she exists — and Tom is the only one who seems to retrieve her. Meanwhile, seemingly a little while before the start of Tom'due south story, Alice heads to the U.S. to investigate a strange phenomenon called The Left Right Game. The game, which merely involves going for a bulldoze and taking a left plough and and then a right turn and then a left and and so on, takes a paranormal turn. The sound drama is made all the more unsettling thanks to QCode's employ of audio panning to create an incredibly immersive, surround sound experience.

ix. Staying In With Emily and Kumail

Unsurprisingly, the pandemic caused some podcasters to take a pause from weekly uploads, but, for others, beingness stuck at home meant finding new artistic outlets and ways to connect. Married couple Emily V. Gordon and Kumail Nanjiani definitely fell into the second category of creatives, and their brusque-lived Staying In podcast brought us so much joy. The first episode, fittingly titled "Fumbling for Normalcy," was released on the heels of early pandemic phenomena, like Tiger King, and saw the duo discussing how to keep from catching motel fever while sheltering in place.

Photo Courtesy: Stitcher

Lighthearted enough to accept your mind off of all the stressful COVID-19 stuff but real and vulnerable plenty to feel similar a genuine boost (unlike, say, the infamous celeb "Imagine" video), listening to Emily and Kumail on a weekly ground felt like connecting with pals. From discussing a thrilling Final Fantasy 7 Remake playthrough to reminiscing nigh bursting into tears while blistering bread, no stone was left untouched. The bottom line: This i was incredibly relatable, and information technology all helped us experience a footling less alone during that first moment of irrevocable change.

10. The Bechdel Cast

Named after cartoonist Alison Bechdel, the Bechdel test is a way to measure the representation of women in fiction. Although Bechdel credits her friend Liz Wallace and the writings of Virginia Woolf with the idea for the test, it start appeared in the cartoonist's seminal work Dykes to Scout Out For (1985). The bones idea? In social club to pass the examination, ii women must talk to each other about something other than a human. Ideally, the two women should also have names, because the bar is absolutely on the floor.

Photograph Courtesy: iHeartRadio Network; @BechdelCast/Twitter

If those sound like easy requirements to hitting, think once again. Of 8,076 movies surveyed simply 57.half-dozen% hit all the marks. And that's where something similar the The Bechdel Bandage comes in. Hosted by comedians Caitlin Durante and Jamie Loftus, the feminist comedy podcast takes a look at a different movie each week and delves into its depiction of women — among other things (and long-running in-jokes). "[It'southward] the symbiosis betwixt Durante'southward scholastic, organized mind and Loftus'southward filthy, absurdist one that take kept afloat this lightheaded-salty show…," Vulture's Sean Malin writes. "[…From] its inception [the testify] has earnestly considered the representation of women in film while as well talking sh-t about it."

11. Hysteria

Another Crooked Media gem, Hysteria is a weekly podcast that sees political commentator and comedy writer Erin Ryan — and her "bicoastal squad of funny, opinionated women," including folks like Ziwe Fumudoh and Alyssa Mastromonaco — taking on politics, current events and popular civilisation happenings. Without a doubt, Hysteria shines in a body of water of political, news-axial podcasts. Why? Well, writing for Cosmopolitan about the prove, Hannah Smothers notes, "The smartest thing Crooked Media's male founders have done: hire so many women and allow them do their thing."

Photograph Courtesy: Crooked Media

Yes, that seems obvious, merely, at the fourth dimension when the show first launched, Kleptomaniacal didn't really take any women-helmed podcasts. And whether Hysteria is centering on trending news stories or rom-com tropes, the host and her colleagues are looking at topics that bear upon women and filtering them through their own lived experiences. "It's not about impressing the people y'all're having a conversation with if you're doing a podcast," Ryan explained in that Cosmo article. "I actually wanted Hysteria to be a show that fabricated our listeners think that talking virtually politics was something they can and should be doing, even if they're non professional political-opinion-havers."

12. Still Processing

Nevertheless Processing is a New York Times culture podcast that'southward hosted by Jenna Wortham, staff writer for The New York Times Magazine and co-editor of Black Futures, and Pulitzer Prize-winning Times critic-at-big Wesley Morris. Formatted as a discussion between the co-hosts — and often punctuated past interviews, guests' insight and soundbites from media — Nonetheless Processing takes on everything from current events to works of art and pop culture, and information technology does so with a tone The Atlantic called "precipitous and intellectual, goofy and raw."

Photo Courtesy: The New York Times

Whether the hosts are putting Toni Morrison's Beloved and Hashemite kingdom of jordan Peele's The states (2019) into conversation or interrogating how works of dystopian and utopian fiction can help united states of america imagine a better world, Wortham and Morris have a comfortable, energizing chemistry. As they get excited about where their conversation leads, you experience that, too. "Perchance now more than than ever," Thomas Curry writes in AnOther magazine, "Still Processing's return, with Morris and Wortham's blend of familiar intimacy and incisive criticism, is a welcome condolement."

13. Borrasca

Relatively new to the scene, QCode's narrative dramas are oft produced, in role, by a big-name star, and Borrasca is no exception. Hither, Riverdale'south Cole Sprouse plays Sam Walker, a man who, after years of personal struggle and keeping things pent up, tells his parole officer, Leah Dixon (Lisa Edelstein), nigh a agonizing series of events that occurred in his babyhood afterwards his family moved to the modest town of Drisking, Missouri. Each episode begins and ends with a session between Sam and Leah, but sandwiched in betwixt are flashbacks that highlight key moments in Sam's past.

Photo Courtesy: @Qcodemedia/Twitter

In the outset episode, a young Sam befriends 2 other Drisking kids, Kyle (Daniel Webber) and Kimber (Sarah Yarkin). While on a bike ride, a horrifying sound known as the "Borrasca Scream" tears through the forest. Kyle and Kimber explain that no one knows the origins of the scream — it's just something that happens — and, in its backwash, the older teens in town throw a Borrasca party at a creepy treehouse in the woods. Sam finds his globe upended when his own sister, Whitney (Peyton Kennedy), vanishes at 1 of these parties. Although his parents choose to believe that Whitney but ran away, Sam is convinced that something more nefarious is going on — and that it connects to Borrasca, this place of legend.

Written by Rebecca Klingel, this horror podcast started as a multi-part short story that Klingel (a.k.a. CK Walker) posted on Reddit's r/nosleep customs, where it won the subreddit'south award for Scariest Story in 2015. Pro tip: Every bit is the example with The Left Right Game, definitely listen to this dark, disturbing and all-consuming audio drama with headphones — the sound blueprint is unparalleled and merely adds to the immersive atmosphere.

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Source: https://www.ask.com/entertainment/podcasts-2020?utm_content=params%3Ao%3D740004%26ad%3DdirN%26qo%3DserpIndex

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