We love to talk about podcasts as their own little economy: there are podcast rushes and听. Likewise, I鈥檝e found that the appeal of podcasts听can appreciate and depreciate in my heart, based on how many mindless chores I鈥檓 doing or my overall desire to keep up with听the fire hose of news and cultural offerings on any given day. Toward the end of the year, my personal podcast bubble had burst, as I found them most useful as background noise for staring into the void while brushing my teeth. A new batch of podcasts for 2021, however, have held my attention and increased听the value of podcast stocks in my life.听Giving these shows a try may freshen up your library and teach you something about science, history, and human nature, too. Priceless!听听
The Modern West
Ghost towns are more often known for their lively pasts, but in the second season of Wyoming Public Radio鈥檚听, their present and future are equally fascinating. The season鈥檚 name, 鈥淕host Town(ing),鈥 refers to a general trend of shrinking small towns throughout the West. They鈥檙e often struggling to survive the boom-and-bust roller coaster of extractive industries and the increasing consolidation of resources in more populated areas. Host Melodie Edwards grew up in one such town鈥擶alden, Colorado鈥攁nd the show benefits from her personal perspective on the loss of these rural communities. But she also gets ambitious in scope,听with each episode听focusing on bigger issues like food deserts, immigration, environmentalism, and, on more than one occasion, the misguided hubris of the ultra wealthy. It鈥檚 a fascinating look at how ghost towns aren鈥檛 just dusty relics听but听can in fact teach us a thing or two about what a vibrant community could be in the 21st century.
Maintenance Phase
Being smart about fitness and wellness often involves thinking critically about statistics鈥攂ut wait, in a fun way! In听, hosts Aubrey Gordon and Michael Hobbes declutter the scientific, historical, and cultural B.S. that鈥檚 led to America鈥檚 troubled relationship with bodies. If you鈥檙e familiar with听Gordon鈥檚 writing听under the name听听or听Hobbes鈥檚听reconsidering-history podcast听, you鈥檒l have听a decent idea of what you鈥檙e听getting: whip-smart banter that manages to provide surprising insights on phenomena that have shaped our culture. Topics range from Halo Top ice cream鈥檚 appeal to biohackers听to how the Presidential听Physical Fitness Test completely fumbled the opportunity to make us all better V-sitters听and instead made a lot of kids feel bad. It鈥檚 satisfying to hear just how much of the diet and fitness culture that convinces us to hate our bodies is based on bogus science (or misinterpretations of perfectly fine science).
Completely Arbortrary
If the name of this got a chuckle out of you, it鈥檚 very likely you鈥檙e the target demographic of this听, which promises, simply, to review and rate trees. Not yet a tree fan?听Hosts Casey Clapp (a self-identified tree zealot) and Alex Crowson (a tree agnostic) may convince you otherwise. Each 30-ish-minute episode spotlights a different tree (Oregon white oak, Douglas fir, black walnut), with attendant facts about its natural history and ecological impact. Clapp is a dendrologist鈥攈e studies wooded plants鈥攁nd Crowson is a skeptical bystander armed with fun tree anecdotes. All are delivered with contagious enthusiasm, and each tree is lovingly rated on a scale of one to ten 鈥済olden cones of honor.鈥 There鈥檚 not much more rhyme or reason than that, but Completely Arbortrary appeals for the same reason we all love now: it just feels nice to have more awareness of what鈥檚 going on around us when we step outside.
Greetings from Somewhere
When Zach Mack decided to create a podcast in听2018, there weren鈥檛 many popular travel ones, and he had just spent a lot of time on a road trip听interviewing strangers. By the time听 premiered in November 2020, both of those concepts certainly felt like relics of the past. But even though the show now has plenty of competition and exists in a travel environment completely changed by a global pandemic, it manages to stand out as a thoughtful new contribution. It听explores how travel affects us and how our traveling affects the places we visit, asking listeners to think a little more deeply听about travel trends like vanlife, favorite destinations such as听Mount Rushmore, or what it鈥檚 like to travel with a wheelchair. Every episode is impeccably made鈥擬ack is a senior producer at Vox Media, though he鈥檚 producing this podcast independently鈥攁nd somehow the show manages to discuss travel in a way that鈥檚 perfect for these COVID days but doesn鈥檛 feel like a retrofit, even if Mack had been working on it long before the pandemic. Some episodes, like those about road trips, elicit nostalgia and offer a history lesson for a bit of听armchair traveling.听Others, about people听still went听to Disney World听during the pandemic听or听traveled to Black Rock Desert even while Burning Man took place virtually in 2020,听prompt听something more like morbid fascination but听provide interesting insights on听destination-based fandoms in the time of coronavirus.
In Strange Woods
I was delighted to read听the description of this show, because it sounds absolutely kooky听and like no other outdoors-adjacent podcast听I have ever encountered. The听 (yes, I know) tells a familiar kind of story about a teen who disappears within听the fictional Whitetail National Forest. His sister, Peregrine Wells, wants to find out what happened. It all sounds very convincing at the outset, narrated by Brett Ryback, who sounds like a reporter in the podcast but is an actor in real life. 鈥淭here are no official statistics on how many people vanish each year on federal lands, but some theorists believe that nearly 1,600 people currently remain unaccounted for to this day,鈥 he says in the first episode. (This is true!) He introduces friends and family who share their theories about what happened, and then suddenly they are singing about it. Later on, Peregrine and her classmates are learning survival skills in the woods, and suddenly they are singing about it. Truthfully, you may have to be someone who enjoys musical theater in order to get听absorbed in this conceit. I was totally taken aback anytime people burst into song, because I am no fun, but I genuinely admire the creativity on display here.听We need more out-there concepts like this in the outdoorsy podcast world.