Podcasts are to radio as streaming services are to television, and we’re lucky to be living through a golden age of both. But you need help finding the best podcasts worthy of your ear because, while you can find a podcast about almost anything these days, with great choice comes great mediocrity. Our expertly curated list will entertain and educate you, whether you’re doing the dishes, working out, commuting, or lazing in the bath.
There’s a world of free podcasts, but you can also snag various podcast subscriptions that provide different benefits, including ad-free listening, early episodes, and bonus content. Subscriptions can also get you access to virtual events and discounted merch, and let you support your favorite podcasters.
Audible Plus ($9 a month): With a growing catalog of exclusive podcasts, it’s worth considering Audible Plus. If you want to pick an audiobook each month, you need the Premium Plus subscription at $15 a month. This also now includes podcasts that were under the Wondery+ banner.
Pushkin Plus ($7 a month, $40 a year): There’s a decent selection of podcasts in different genres at Pushkin, and this subscription provides ad-free listening, bonus content, and support for any podcast app.
NPR Plus ($8 a month): This subscription gives you full access to around 25 NPR podcasts, exclusive shows, and shop discounts.
Best Tech Podcasts
Courtesy of Wondery
Flesh and Code
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With human and AI relationships on the rise, this podcast tells the stories of people who have fallen in love with AI partners. With a gentle, empathetic approach, hosts Hannah Maguire and Suruthi Bala (Redhanded) unpick emotional human tales from what is becoming a big business with potentially tragic results.
Courtesy of Darknet Diaries
Anyone with an interest in hacking and cybercrime will appreciate this investigative podcast from Jack Rhysider. Densely packed and tightly edited, the show covers topics like Xbox hacking, a Greek wiretapping Vodafone scandal, and the impact of the NotPetya malware. Rhysider skillfully weaves informative narratives to unravel complex issues and keeps things mostly accessible, though it may occasionally get a little too technical for some folks.
Courtesy of ABC News
Sneak a peek behind the curtain, as this podcast follows the trials and tribulations of Elizabeth Holmes and Theranos, the tech startup that promised to disrupt blood testing but disintegrated in the face of whistleblowers, inaccurate results, and fraudulent claims. John Carreyrou’s reporting broke the scandal, and his book Bad Blood also spawned another interesting podcast. But The Dropout is a refreshingly clear recounting of the sordid tale, with season two tackling the trial.
Courtesy of Center for Humane Technology
Ex-Googler Tristan Harris, whom you may recognize from the Netflix documentary The Social Dilemma, talks with Aza Raskin about the dangers of living your life online. As cofounders of the Center for Humane Technology, they delve into the ethics of Big Tech, unpack the potential pitfalls, and try to imagine ways to harness technology for the good of humanity.
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Courtesy of Dallas Taylor
Painstakingly researched, this podcast dives deep into the world of sound to explain everything from those sounds you always hear in movie trailers to car engines, choral music, the Netflix intro, and way beyond. Learn how iconic sounds were created, why certain sounds make us feel the way they do, and how sound enriches our lives in myriad ways.
Other Great Tech Podcasts
WIRED’s Uncanny Valley: If we may be so bold, our flagship podcast offers an insider look at the people, power, and influence of Silicon Valley. Check out our Big Interview episodes hosted by Katie Drummond, and our roundtables with Zoë Schiffer, Brian Barrett, and Leah Feiger.
The Lazarus Heist: This captivating investigation starts with the Sony hacks, digs into the involvement of North Korean hackers, and moves on to a billion-dollar cybertheft.
Rabbit Hole: What is the internet doing to us? New York Times tech columnist Kevin Roose investigates things like the impact of algorithms on radicalization with a dreamy soundscape backdrop.
Reply All: The beautifully paced, always convivial, and sorely missed Reply All dragged us down internet rabbit holes to investigate long-forgotten songs, phone scammers, hacked Snapchat accounts, and Team Fortress 2 bots.
Click Here: With a focus on cybersecurity, this podcast unravels tales of hacking, misinformation, cyberterrorism, and more, with interviews and insight from experts in episodes that usually come in under half an hour.
Waveform: Laid-back chats about the latest gadgets and developments in the world of tech with tech YouTuber Marques Brownlee (MKBHD) and cohost David Imel.
Best Society Podcasts
Courtesy of BBC
Things Fell Apart
If you want to understand the culture wars blighting our society, this well-researched podcast charts the slide into extremism. Through interviews with pro-lifers and anti-vaxxers, Ronson skillfully tackles unpalatable topics and roots out their inception, which is often based on misunderstanding. Jon Ronson is my favorite podcaster, as he brings an inquisitive, empathetic, and slightly neurotic intelligence to bear on fascinating and often surprising tales. We also recommend The Butterfly Effect (only on Audible) and The Last Days of August, which delve into the pornography industry, and So You’ve Been Publicly Shamed, about folks being canceled on the internet.
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Courtesy of Apple
Wild Things: Siegfried and Roy
Famous German duo Siegfried and Roy were a mainstay on the Las Vegas show scene and performed about 30,000 times over five decades with an act that included white lions and tigers. When Roy was attacked live on stage, it made headlines everywhere. This podcast unravels their rise to stardom, touches on their controversial handling of wild animals, and digs into what happened that fateful night.
Courtesy of Pushkin Industries
In this eclectic mix of quirky stories, Malcolm Gladwell tackles misunderstood events and rarely discussed ideas, veering from subjects like Toyota’s car recall to underhand-throwing basketball legend Wilt Chamberlain, and even the firebombing of Tokyo at the end of World War II. Gladwell freely mixes research and opinion and enjoys challenging conventional views, but every episode serves up facts and stories you have likely never heard before.
Other Great Society Podcasts
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Mother, Neighbor, Russian Spy: You will be shocked by this true story about All-American Cindy Murphy with her two daughters, a house in the burbs, and a finance job in Manhattan, who turns out to be a deep cover Russian spy. There’s narration by Rosamund Pike and interviews with Cindy’s best friend and employer.
Dreamtown: The Story of Adelanto: This story of a small California town that turns to cannabis cultivation to try and revive itself soon descends into chaos.
Run Bambi Run: The riveting story of former Milwaukee police officer and Playboy Club bunny Laurie Bembenek, who was convicted of murdering her husband’s ex, despite conflicting evidence, and subsequently escaped prison and fought to have her conviction overturned.
Missing Richard Simmons: Ebullient fitness guru Richard Simmons used to be everywhere, and this podcast charts an investigative reporter’s attempts to find out why he disappeared.
The Moth: This podcast offers random folks the chance to tell deeply personal stories to a crowd of strangers and reinforces just how weird and wonderful humans are.
The Trojan Horse Affair: This tale unpacks the British scandal over an alleged attempt by Islamist extremists to take over a Birmingham school and radicalize its students.
Day X: A sobering look at the neo-Nazi specter in modern-day Germany, its possible infiltration of police and government, and a plan involving a military officer and a faked refugee identity.
Project Unabom: Delving into the life of Ted Kaczynski, this podcast interviews his brother and recounts the FBI investigation to try to make sense of Kaczynski’s terrifying bombing spree.
Will Be Wild: Curious about the January 6 insurrection? This podcast interviews people from both sides, examines the struggles of law enforcement and intelligence under Trump, and charts the anti-government extremism that led to this dark day for democracy.
Best Culture Podcasts
Courtesy of Imperative Entertainment
The Cost of Happiness: Tony Hsieh
The online shoe store Zappos made Tony Hsieh a billionaire, and this podcast investigates his $350 million investment in the Downtown Project in Las Vegas. His utopian vision of a happy worker village promised to revitalize the depressed heart of Sin City. The experimental community generated much excitement, but the charismatic and eccentric Hsieh soon ran into trouble.
Courtesy of Novel
Part of the way into this investigation of the Rain City Superhero Movement, a real-life group of self-proclaimed superheroes active in Seattle a few years ago, I had to stop listening and check that this wasn’t fiction. The podcast focuses on the arrogant Phoenix Jones, an ex-MMA fighter turned violent vigilante, and his fall from grace. But there is also a fascinating glimpse into the friendlier side of the movement, with some heroes handing out water to homeless folks and helping people in distress.
Courtesy of The LoudSpeakers Network
Brutally honest comedians with chemistry, Kid Fury and Crissle West recap and review the latest pop culture news and offer their opinions on everything. Insightful, funny, challenging, and refreshingly different from the podcast pack, these sprawling conversations run for a couple of hours, covering recent events and frequently touching on social justice, mental health, race, and sexual identity.
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Courtesy of Forever35
Like eavesdropping on conversations between relatable besties, Forever35 started as a physical self-care podcast but expanded to discuss mental health, relationships, and any other topic that appeals to LA-based writers Doree Shafrir and Kate Spencer. They go from chatting about serums and creams to seasonal affective disorder and how to deal with a new stepmother as an adult—but always in a fun, inclusive, and down-to-earth way.
Other Great Culture Podcasts
The Big Flop: Where did all go wrong? From Watergate to Tom Cruise, this podcast pokes fun at pop culture fails. Host Misha Brown unpacks each disaster with the help of different guests and keeps things breezy and silly.
KILLED: Many magazine or newspaper stories are spiked every day, filed away, never to be seen again. This podcast delves into often shocking or disturbing stories silenced because they were considered dangerous, with interviews from the journalists who wrote them.
Sounds Like a Cult: Fanatical fringe groups have never been so prevalent, and there’s something more than a little cultish about celebrity stans, multilevel marketing, and marathon runners—just three of the subjects this lighthearted podcast unpacks.
Armchair Expert With Dax Shepard: Now a Spotify exclusive, this often funny and always insightful podcast seeks out human truths and sometimes finds them.
Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy: Ably hosted by author David Barr Kirtley, this sci-fi fantasy extravaganza digs into fascinating topics with the help of accomplished guests like Brent Spiner and Steven Pinker.
The Allusionist: If you are interested in words, this witty but accessible show will delight you as it charts the evolution of slang, explains euphemisms, and generally celebrates language.
Best True-Crime Podcasts
Courtesy of CBC
The Outlaw Ocean
This is gripping, incredibly dangerous-sounding investigative reporting on the lawless high seas. Extremely heavy listening, Ian Urbina exposes slave labor, unchecked environmental crimes, and murder on our oceans, beyond the reach of any authorities. This anthology series is riveting and vital, but can be deeply upsetting.
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Courtesy of Las Vegas Review Journal
Mobbed Up: The Fight for Las Vegas
This fascinating tale, told through interviews with old gangsters, law enforcement, politicians, and journalists, charts the symbiotic rise of organized crime and Las Vegas. The first season recounts the FBI’s attempts to take down the “Hole in the Wall Gang” and reveals the true-life inspiration for movies like Casino. Season two tackles Jimmy Hoffa and the battle to oust the mafia from the Strip’s casinos.
Courtesy of Vox Media
Soothing host Phoebe Judge unravels captivating tales with reverence in this polished production about the spectrum of crime. Criminals, victims, lawyers, police, historians, and others whose lives have been altered by crime voice their stories as Judge carefully avoids the sensational and exploitative by respectfully teasing out the heart of each subject. A Criminal Plus subscription ($6 a month or $60 a year) gets you ad-free listening, bonus episodes, access to virtual events, and 20 percent off merch.
Courtesy of WBEZ
Give this compelling mystery five minutes and you’ll be hooked. The talented host, Brian Reed, investigates a small town in Alabama at the behest of eccentric horologist John B. McLemore, who claims the son of a wealthy family has gotten away with murder. The script, pacing, editing, music—basically everything about this production—are perfect.
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Courtesy of Lava For Good
Painstakingly researched, thoughtfully told, and skillfully produced, this true-crime podcast hosted by Gilbert King focuses on a 1987 Florida murder. After an incompetent police investigation and distinctly dodgy trial, Leo Schofield was convicted of killing his wife. Despite fresh evidence and a confession from someone else, Schofield spent 35 years in prison.
Courtesy of Campside
Chameleon: Hollywood Con Queen
Murder may dominate this genre, but there are other fascinating stories worth telling in the world of crime, like this one, which is about a scammer posing as a Hollywood mogul. This weird, compelling, investigative podcast unwinds a satisfyingly twisty tale that’s mercifully free of blood and violence. The third season, Wild Boys, tells a completely new story, and the fifth tackles hypnotist Dr. Dante.
Courtesy of Wondery
Can you hire a hitman on the dark web? This compelling podcast uncovered a scam website offering murder for hire, but when the police suggested there wasn’t much they could do about it, host Carl Miller began tracking down the proposed victims to warn them. It’s a fascinating tale, full of ethical dilemmas, as Miller enlists local journalists to help him get in touch with prospective victims all over the world and tell their stories. It may take a few episodes to get into, and the prevalence of misogynistic murderers is depressing, but this is a gripping show with good intentions.
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Other Great True-Crime Podcasts
Someone Knows Something: David Ridgen skillfully and sensitively interviews bereft families about cold cases and investigates to try and figure out what really happened. There are several seasons of this harrowing podcast and it is beautifully made.
West Cork: This engrossing, nuanced, and insightful podcast investigates the murder of Sophie Toscan du Plantier which shocked bucolic West Cork in Ireland. A local reporter inserts himself into the story and soon becomes the chief suspect.
Cold: Investigative journalist Dave Cawley investigates missing persons cases, starting with the tragic tale of Susan Powell. Well-researched and respectful, this slow-burn podcast is a must for true crime fans.
The Thing About Pam: Beautifully narrated by Keith Morrison, this podcast is a rollercoaster ride that gets weirder as it goes on. This case inspired a mini-series with Renée Zellweger playing Pam.
Your Own Backyard: This sensitive and meticulous investigation into the disappearance of Kristin Smart from Cal Poly in 1996 uncovered fresh leads for detectives and doggedly fought for justice.
Who Killed Daphne: Investigative journalist Daphne Caruana Galizia was murdered by a car bomb in Malta, and this podcast delves into her work exposing the unscrupulous elite to identify her killers.
The Clearing: The families of serial killers often seek obscurity (understandably), but that means we never hear their stories. That’s something this podcast about April Balascio, daughter of American serial killer Edward Wayne Edwards, rectifies.
The Trials of Frank Carson: Police and prosecutors go after the defense attorney who has been beating them in court for years, sparking accusations of conspiracy and one of the longest trials in US history.
Sweet Bobby: This British catfishing tale charts successful radio presenter Kirat’s relationship with handsome cardiologist Bobby, and things get impossibly weird.
Dr. Death: A gripping podcast that focuses on incompetent or psychopathic (maybe both) ex-surgeon Christopher Duntsch and exposes terrifying institutional failures.
Crimetown: Taking a forensic approach to organized crime in American cities, this slick podcast comes from the supremely talented makers of The Jinx.
Hunting Warhead: A journalist, a hacker, and some detectives go after a chilling child abuse ring led by a criminal known as Warhead in this tactfully told and thorough podcast.
Love Janessa: Catfishing scams are big business, but why do so many use photos of Janessa Brazil? This podcast tracks her down to find out.
The Evaporated: Gone With the Gods: Journalist Jake Adelstein dives deep into Japanese culture, pursuing his missing accountant and exploring the mysterious disappearances of thousands of people in Japan every year.
Wisecrack: A stand-up comic tells the tale of his brush with a killer, sparking a true-crime podcaster to investigate.
Aftermath: Hunt for the Anthrax Killer: A look at the FBI’s investigation into the Anthrax-laced letters that terrified the country in the aftermath of 9/11.
The Ballad of Billy Balls: This beautifully made podcast delves into the death of punk musician Billy Balls in early ‘80s New York.
The Retrievals: A shocking look at how badly ignored and mistreated female patients often are by contemporary medicine.
Best Science Podcasts
Courtesy of Ologies
Lighthearted, enthusiastic, and endlessly curious host Alie Ward interviews smart people about their specialist subjects. This accessible podcast covers many topics from a scientific perspective and delights in diving down random rabbit holes. Episodes have covered the sun, pelicans, and repulsion.
Courtesy of Aubrey Gordon & Michael Hobbes
The worlds of wellness and weight loss are awash with questionable products and advice, so a podcast to debunk fads and junk science with reasoned argument and research is welcome. It’s more fun than it sounds, thanks to the entertaining hosts, and there’s even a fascinating episode on “snake oil” that recounts the history of health scams.
Courtesy of NPR
An absorbing deep dive into human behavior with the help of psychologists, sociologists, and other experts, Hidden Brain is densely packed with informative nuggets. The host, NPR’s accomplished science correspondent Shankar Vedantam, renders complex ideas accessible and offers insight into the inner workings of our minds.
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Courtesy of BBC
This whimsical show, hosted by physicist Brian Cox and comedian Robin Ince, poses questions like “Does time exist?.” These are then debated by a diverse panel of three guests, usually a mix of experts and entertainers. Definitive answers are in short supply, but it’s always articulate, enthusiastic, and thought-provoking.
Other Great Science Podcasts
Stephen Fry’s Inside Your Mind: Listen to Stephen Fry tell easily digestible stories about the brain, drawing on research from neuroscientists, psychologists, anthropologists, and philosophers.
Houston, We Have a Podcast: Anyone interested in spaceflight must give NASA’s official podcast a listen, for interviews with astronauts and scientists.
Science Rules!: Bill Nye, the science guy, teams up with science writer Corey Powell to grill experts on all sorts of interesting science-related topics.
Stuff You Should Know: Prizing knowledge for its own sake and provoking healthy curiosity, this podcast is comical, charming, and full of interesting conversational nuggets.
From First Principles: Two Princeton graduates (one PhD, as they jokingly point out), cover the top science news of the week, breaking down complex research into fun and understandable stories anyone can get excited about.
Best Economics Podcasts
Courtesy of Audacy
What We Spend
For something so important to modern life that we all have to grapple with, it’s weird how taboo it is to discuss your finances. This fascinating podcast delves into the financial lives of ordinary people, from lawyers to copywriters to the working homeless, revealing how much they earn and exactly what they spend it on.
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Courtesy of NPR
This Planet Money spin-off delivers digestible, fast-paced, well-told stories about business and the economy, tackling topics that range from TikTok marketing to opioid nasal sprays and ticket scalpers. Each enlightening episode comes in under 10 minutes and serves as a quick primer that will leave you feeling well-informed.
Courtesy of Freakonomics Radio Network
Promising to delve into the “hidden side of everything,” this long-running, data-driven show is hosted by Stephen J. Dubner, co-author of the Freakonomics books, and it regularly features economist Steven Levitt. It’s a clever mix of economics and pop culture that flows easily and balances entertainment with education, presenting both sides of debates while consulting relevant guests.
Courtesy of Macro Musings
If you long to understand the economy better, this topical show, hosted by David Beckworth of the Mercatus Center, interrogates a diverse line-up of economists, professionals, and academics to bring you invaluable insights. It takes a serious look at macroeconomics and monetary policy, but the guests do a solid job of unpacking complex topics.
Other Great Economics Podcasts
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Scene on Radio: Capitalism: As we descend into increasingly dystopian late-stage capitalism, this intelligent deep dive outlines its history and explores how it might be reformed or radically overhauled.
Conversations with Tyler: American economist Tyler Cowen interrogates some of the world’s smartest people in this intellectually challenging interview podcast.
Planet Money: This top-notch podcast has entertaining, digestible, and relatable stories about the economy, unraveling everything from health care to income taxes.
EconTalk: This no-frills show sees economist Russ Roberts engage in sprawling conversations with writers and academics on a range of economics topics.
Best Business Podcasts
Courtesy of Wondery
This NPR podcast hosted by Guy Raz explores the stories behind some of the biggest companies in the world from the perspective of the innovators and entrepreneurs who built them. Expect cautionary tales, nuggets of wisdom, and business lessons galore in probing and insightful interviews that reveal a lot about their subjects and what drove them.
Courtesy of Steven Bartlett
The Diary of a CEO With Steven Bartlett
Serial entrepreneur Steven Bartlett built a successful business from nothing and is now an investor on Dragons Den (the UK’s Shark Tank). He talks frankly about his own experiences and interviews various CEOs to find out why they started their businesses and how they guided them to success. Sprawling discussions range from personal life challenges and mental health to business strategies and advice.
Courtesy of TED/Audio Collective
Expertly hosted by organizational psychologist Adam Grant, this podcast offers practical advice on tackling various issues you are sure to encounter in the average job. The show features interesting psychological perspectives on everything, from how to rethink a poor decision to crafting a great pitch to dealing with burnout. The podcast also boasts insightful interviews with business leaders.
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Other Great Business Podcasts
The Pitch: Fans of Shark Tank will enjoy this podcast, which features entrepreneurs pitching investors to secure real money for their startups.
Ask Martin Lewis: Personal finance guru Martin Lewis has been helping folks in the UK save money for years and provides straightforward financial advice here.
BizChix: This podcast from business coach Natalie Eckdahl is aimed squarely at female entrepreneurs and is packed with no-nonsense expert advice.
Teamistry: With a focus on teams and what they can achieve, the latest season of this podcast tells the fascinating story of the supersonic passenger jet Concorde.
Best Celebrity Interview Podcasts
Courtesy of Adam Buxton
Consummate conversationalist Adam Buxton is always witty and well-prepared, and he has interviewed many interesting people throughout his long-running show, from Charlie Brooker to Jeff Goldblum. Ostensibly rambling, Buxton skillfully pulls fascinating insights from his interview subjects, bouncing between their personal lives, work, and popular culture with seeming ease.
Courtesy of Wondery
Life Is Short With Justin Long
Likable actor Justin Long and his brother Christian host this enthusiastic and sprawling interview show, where they chat with guests like Zack Snyder, Kristen Bell, and Billy Crudup. The siblings get sidetracked by nostalgic reminiscences and occasional bickering, which sort of makes the show, but they are always generous and kind to their guests.
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Courtesy of Wondery
Charming and goofy, this conversational podcast stars Jason Bateman, Will Arnett, and Sean Hayes, and they always have a surprise celebrity guest, like Ryan Reynolds or Reese Witherspoon. It is warm, gentle, and often laugh-out-loud funny, but don’t expect challenging questions or bared souls.
Other Great Celebrity Interview Podcasts:
WTF With Marc Maron: Self-deprecating, sardonic, supremely skilled interviewer Marc Maron interviews some of the world’s most famous people, from Barack Obama to Paul McCartney.
Grounded With Louis Theroux: A soothingly gentle facade belies Louis Theroux’s ability to draw fascinating insights from his subjects with tact and humor.
Where There’s a Will, There’s a Wake: Kathy Burke laughs in the face of death, asking guests like Stewart Lee and Dawn French how they’d like to die, what sort of funeral they want, and who they plan to haunt.
Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend: Fans of Conan’s late-night talk shows will feel right at home here as the host interviews celebrities like Ben Stiller and Ted Danson. He hosts it alongside his long–time assistant-turned-friend Sona Movsesian and Matt Gourley.
Mad, Sad and Bad with Paloma Faith: Singer Paloma Faith invites all kinds of celebs to discuss the most challenging moments of their lives.
Best Sports Podcasts
Courtesy of Goalhanger
With long-term Match of the Day host Gary Lineker about to leave the show, this soccer podcast, cohosted by no-nonsense Alan Shearer and the infectiously enthusiastic Micah Richards is a great way to keep up with the legendary England striker. It’s a relaxed, jokey, but often insightful chat among top-level pros past and present, covering the latest Premiership matches and wider football news. It’s just a shame there are so many ads.
Courtesy of Wondery
Epic rivalries and long-anticipated showdowns are a massive part of the enduring appeal of sports, and this slick production homes in on them. Rivalries like Federer vs. Nadal in tennis and Tyson vs. Holyfield in boxing are unpacked over a few episodes apiece by host Dan Rubenstein, who digs into their backgrounds to understand why some face-offs get so highly charged.
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Courtesy of The Ringer
This hugely popular sports podcast features fast-paced roundtable conversations with athletes and celebrities that usually focus on the NFL or NBA. Unfiltered opinions, witty remarks, and encyclopedic sports knowledge collide, but this is enthusiastic and accessible enough for casual sports fans to enjoy.
Courtesy of The Athletic
Primarily focused on baseball, this long-running podcast sometimes covers other sports and often meanders into comical conversations. Guests offer amusing anecdotes, but the chemistry between hosts Joe Posnanski and Michael Schur, who can debate endlessly about any old nonsense, is what makes this show so special.
Other Great Sports Podcasts
Soccer A to Z: If you remember watching Soccer AM on lazy Saturday mornings this reunion podcast gets the gang back together, including Tim, Helen, Tubes, and the rest, for sprawling chats on soccer, interviews, anecdotes, and banter galore.
Broomgate: A Curling Scandal: This comedic exploration of the furor around new broom-head technology that threatened to sweep away the curling competition will spark your interest in this gloriously peculiar sport.
Undr the Cosh: Open and honest banter from ex-professional soccer (football) players, as they talk to current pros and recount hilarious on- and off-pitch anecdotes.
Around the NFL: This funny, fast-paced look at the National Football League runs through all the latest football news, blending anecdotes and analysis.
32 Thoughts: A slickly produced, insightful dive into all the latest hockey news and controversy from knowledgeable hosts who bounce off each other.
Best Music Podcasts
Courtesy of Spotify
The enticing premise of this show is that a qualified fan of a band or artist (usually a music journalist or musician) will make the case for why they are great, punctuated by a curated playlist of their music. Hosted by the slightly skeptical Yasi Salek this podcast dives deep into legends and cult bands alike, and the episodes can run for hours. Some highlights include Guns n’ Roses, Pixies, Metallica, and Nine Inch Nails.
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Courtesy of Aquarium Drunkard
This indie podcast is an eclectic mix of interviews mostly with musicians but also with artists, authors, and filmmakers, recorded by the folks at Aquarium Drunkard, which started as a music blog many moons ago. Recommended by WIRED senior editor and podcast host Michael Calore, these passionate, informed, and thought-provoking conversations will take you deep into the underground of popular culture, and may just turn you on to your new favorite tunes.
Courtesy of BBC
Famous people (recent guests include Cillian Murphy and Delia Smith) pick eight songs, a book, and a luxury item as the only things they can take to a desert island. This wonderful premise offers sometimes surprising insights into the guests as they explain their choices. This legendary podcast started in 1942 and would be equally at home in the celebrity interview section.
Courtesy of Tyler Mahan Coe
You don’t have to be a country music fan to enjoy this fascinating podcast that charts the history of country music, warts and all. Host Tyler Mahan Coe grew up traveling the country with his father’s band and thoroughly researched every episode from his home in Nashville. The first season touches on Loretta Lynn, Bobby Gentry, and The Louvin Brothers, among others. The dysfunctional relationship of George Jones and Tammy Wynette and their meteoric rise is the core of season two.
Other Great Music Podcasts
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60 Songs That Explain the 90s: A funny, thoughtful skip down nostalgia lane, as host Rob Harvilla (usually with a guest) dissects all the big tunes of the decade, some you love, some you hate, but he explains why they mattered.
Song Exploder: Learn exactly what some of your most-loved tracks are about and how they came to be from the people who wrote and performed them.
Lost Notes: Billed as the “greatest music stories never told” this podcast is a blend of music, interviews, and well-researched history that delivers fascinating insights.
No Dogs in Space: This sweet, smart, and funny music history podcast delivers biographies of bands like the Beastie Boys, the Stooges, and Joy Division.
Best Movie Podcasts
Courtesy of Earwolf
We have all asked this question of a movie at some point but hosts Paul Scheer, June Diane Raphael, and Jason Mantzoukas invite guest creatives to engage in heated and hilarious chats about some of the worst films ever. Movies that are so bad they are entertaining, from Face/Off to Junior to The Room, are dissected and thoroughly ridiculed.
Courtesy of BBC
Kermode and Mayo’s Film Review
Respected film critic Mark Kermode has an infectious love of movies and an incredible depth of knowledge about the world of film, and Simon Mayo is a veteran radio presenter. Together they discuss the latest movies, interview top-tier directors and actors, and invite views from their listeners. While the podcast ended earlier this year, the duo have a new show called Kermode & Mayo’s Take.
Courtesy of You Must Remember This
Diving into Hollywood myths to investigate and uncover the truth about infamous secrets, scandals, and legends from Tinseltown is a compelling premise, and talented creator and host Karina Longworth makes the most of it. Among the best shows are the “Dead Blondes” series, which includes Marilyn Monroe; the run on Manson; and the “Frances Farmer” episode.
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Other Great Movie Podcasts
The Director’s Cut: Listen to directors like Benicio del Toro, Steven Spielberg, and James Cameron being interviewed about their latest movies by their peers in roughly half-hour episodes.
The Rewatchables: Bill Simmons and a rotating cast of cohosts discuss and analyze beloved movies and dig up interesting nuggets of trivia.
Lights Camera Barstool: Reviews, interviews, rankings, and accessible chats about the movies with pop culture debates thrown in.
Black Men Can’t Jump [in Hollywood]: This comedic movie review podcast highlights films featuring actors of color and analyzes the movies in depth, with an eye on race and diversity.
Best TV Podcasts
Courtesy of Headgum
Join comedian and actor Connor Ratliff on his mission to discover why he got fired from Band of Brothers. His amusing and honest account of how his big break went bad, reportedly because Tom Hanks thought he had “dead eyes,” is often very funny. An easy listen, peppered with celebrity guests like Seth Rogen, Elijah Wood, and Zach Braff, Dead Eyes affords listeners an insight into the world of auditions, acting triumphs, and humiliation.
Courtesy of HBO
HBO’s Succession Podcast
Whether you’re new to this captivating show or a long-time fan, the official podcast affords you a peek behind the curtain as it dissects episodes and explores character motivations. Roger Bennett interviews the main players from the show and then Kara Swisher steps in for the third season to interview the makers and various guests, from Mark Cuban to Anthony Scaramucci, to examine its impact and where it mirrors world events.
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Courtesy of Wondery
Harsh Reality: The Story of Miriam Rivera
Recounting the tragic tale of the exploitative 2004 reality TV show There’s Something About Miriam, this podcast reveals just how cruel reality TV can get. Six young men set up house in an Ibizan villa to compete for the affection of Miriam and a £10,000 ($12,100) cash prize, but the show producers failed to tell them Miriam was trans. It’s a story that ended badly for everyone.
Courtesy of Steve Schirripa
Hosted by actors from the show, Michael Imperioli (Christopher Moltisanti) and Steve Schirripa (Bobby Baccalieri), this podcast is essential listening for fans. It runs through every episode with big-name guests, most of whom worked on or appeared on the show. It’s candid about the entertainment industry and packed to the brim with behind-the-scenes anecdotes and insider revelations.
Shrink the Box: Actor Ben Bailey Smith talks with psychotherapist Sasha Bates as they put some of the best TV characters of all time (like Walter White and Omar Little) on the couch for analysis.
Obsessed With…: This BBC podcast is hosted by celebrity superfans of various TV shows, including Killing Eve, Peaky Blinders, and Line of Duty.
Fake Doctors, Real Friends: Rewatching Scrubs with Zach Braff and Donald Faison is a joyous experience that’s every bit as entertaining, poignant, and silly as the TV show.
Welcome to Our Show: A warming dose of nostalgia and comfort for New Girl fans as Zooey Deschanel, Hannah Simone, and Lamorne Morris rewatch the show together.
Best Fiction Podcasts
Midnight Burger
This sometimes witty and irreverent, sometimes heartwarming and philosophical sci-fi drama is set in a time-traveling greasy spoon diner. With an interesting and eclectic cast of characters, solid writing, and a classic radio drama feel, what starts as a slow burn will soon have you hooked. It opens at 6.
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Courtesy of The Paragon Collective
Horror fans will enjoy reliving the last gruesome moments of various corpses that have landed at the mysterious Roth-Lobdow Institute in this deliciously creepy and occasionally gross chiller. Wonderful narration from Lee Pace; acting from the likes of Denis O’Hare, Missi Pyle, and RuPaul; and clever sound design make for a memorably thrilling ride that you just know is going to end badly.
Courtesy of Hello from the Magic Tavern
Hello From the Magic Tavern
Thoroughly absurd, this fantasy improv-comedy show is the brainchild of Chicago comedian Arnie Niekamp, who falls through a portal at a Burger King and ends up in the magical world of Foon. The role-playing game and fantasy references come thick and fast, guests play bizarre characters of their own creation, and loyal listeners are rewarded with long-running gags and rich lore.
Courtesy of Battle Bird Productions
Short and sweet episodes of this sci-fi comedy-drama fit neatly into gaps in your day and whisk you away to a nightmare corporate dystopia in a galaxy fraught with evil artificial intelligence and monstrous aliens. Struggling repair technician Kilner gets stuck with a rich murder suspect, Samantha Trapp, after accidentally smuggling her across the galaxy in this polished show with a distinct 1980s feel.
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Courtesy of Audible
Alien: Out of the Shadows
Set between Alien and Aliens this impressive fiction podcast follows a mining engineer who finds something other than precious minerals lurking in the deep. You can expect Xenomorphs galore, artificial intelligence, and a few surprises. Not to be confused with the audiobook, this audio drama features a full cast, including Rutger Hauer, Corey Johnson, and Kathryn Drysdale. It may not be very original, but fans of the movies will love this.
Other Great Fiction Podcasts
Marigold Breach: This intriguing sci-fi tale about a soldier with a sentient AI implant stars Jameela Jamil and Manny Jacinto.
DUST: This podcast started as an anthology of audio sci-fi stories from the likes of Philip K. Dick and Ray Bradbury but has changed things up with each new season.
The Bright Sessions: The therapy sessions of mysterious psychologist Dr. Bright, bookended by voice notes, form intriguing short episodes, as all of her patients seem to have special abilities.
Welcome to Night Vale: This pioneering creepy show is presented as a community radio broadcast from a desert town beset by paranormal and supernatural happenings.
Best History Podcasts
Courtesy of Vox Media
Utopian ideals have led to the development of some fascinating communities over the years, and season one of Nice Try! delves into their history, the hope that drove them, and why these communities ultimately failed. Season two moves on to lifestyle technology, from doorbells to vacuums, all designed to help us realize a personal utopia in the ideal home.
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Courtesy of Revolutions
The modern world was shaped by some of the ideas that drove revolutions, and this deeply researched series runs through the English Civil War and American, French, Haitian, and Russian revolutions; Simon Bolivar’s liberation of South America; and more. The writing is concise, the narration is engaging, and host Mike Duncan does a fantastic job contextualizing revolutionary events and characters.
Courtesy of Radiotopia
A dreamy, emotional quality elevates these tales of seemingly random moments from the past, expertly told by the eloquent Nate DiMeo and backed by wonderful sound design. These distilled stories serve as historical snapshots of rarely discussed events, and it’s hard to think of another podcast as artful and poignant as this one.
Courtesy of Grim Mild
Assured in their divine right to rule over everyone, royal families were often incredibly dysfunctional. Author Dana Schwarz examines tyrannical regimes, murderous rampages, power struggles, and dynasty deaths. The madness of monarchs from various nations is concisely dissected in tightly scripted half-hour episodes that will leave you questioning the idea that there’s anything noble about their bloodlines.
Other Great History Podcasts
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Something True: Enjoy utterly bizarre true stories, as every episode of this podcast explores a seemingly forgotten historical footnote.
Lore: Spooky and witty, this classic podcast plumbs history to uncover horrifying folklore, mythology, and pseudoscience.
Medieval Death Trip: An enthusiastic and well-researched look at medieval times, this podcast offers a witty analysis of the primary texts left behind.
Hardcore History: Relatable and endlessly fascinating, Dan Carlin brings history to life with his riveting narratives on notable events and periods, peppered with facts and hypothetical questions.
Best Food Podcasts
Courtesy of BBC
Learn all about the business, science, culture, and history behind the food we eat with half-hour insights into wide-ranging topics like chocolatiers, the best foods for new moms, or the history of banh mi. Engaging and informative, this is a fun listen that’s perfect to stick on while you whip up dinner.
Courtesy of Ramble
Whatever side of the titular, age-old debate you stand on (I’m with the British Sandwich Association), this fast-paced, often funny show will suck you in as it poses tough food-related questions and then debates them. Chefs Josh Scherer and Nicole Enayati decide whether American cheese is really cheese, if Popeye’s and In-N-Out are overrated, and what the best pasta shape is.
Courtesy of Gastropod
If your love of food extends to an interest in the history and science of everything from the humble potato to a soothing cup of tea to ever-polarizing licorice, then this podcast is for you. Knowledgeable cohosts Cynthia Graber and Nicola Twilley talk to experts and serve a feast of delicious bite-size facts that surprise and delight.
Courtesy of The Ringer
Celebrity chef Dave Chang, whom you may know from his Netflix show, Ugly Delicious, talks mostly about food, guilty pleasures, and the creative process with other chefs and restaurateurs. There is plenty here to satisfy foodies, but some of the funniest moments come when the show covers other random topics, like the perfect email sign-off or wearing shoes indoors.
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Other Great Food Podcasts
Out to Lunch With Jay Rayner: This podcast seats you at a top restaurant to eavesdrop on consummate food critic Jay Rayner with a celebrity guest at the next table.
The Sporkful: You can learn a lot about people and culture through food, and this podcast proves it by serving up delectable bite-size insights.
Best Health and Wellness Podcasts
Courtesy of Lionrock
The Courage to Change: A Recovery Podcast
Whether you are struggling with addiction, childhood trauma, eating disorders, or something else, or you know someone who is, this accessible and inspirational podcast can help you examine why. Host Ashley Loeb Blassingame speaks from experience and offers practical advice to help you onto a healthier path. This podcast is honest, insightful, and emotional but ultimately heartwarming and uplifting.
Courtesy of LYT
Hosted by Yoga leader and physical therapist Lara Heimann, this podcast is a mix of Q&A sessions, interviews with experts, and motivational advice. It focuses on understanding your body and mind, but you will also find practical advice for chronic pain sufferers and different kinds of injuries, explanations of why and how yoga is good for you, and firsthand accounts of the positive impact yoga has on many lives.
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Courtesy of Great Love Media
My Wakeup Call With Dr. Mark Goulston
Each episode sees psychiatrist Mark Goulston interview a notable person about the wake-up call moment that changed their path forever. He encourages them to interrogate what sparked their drive, made them want to be a better person, and led to their success. Some guests are better than others, but the podcast is closing in on 500 episodes, so there are plenty to choose from.
Other Great Health and Wellness Podcasts
The Big Silence: Host Karena Dawn has conversations about mental health with an eclectic mix of therapists, psychologists, and ostensibly successful folks.
Spiraling With Katie Dalebout and Serena Wolf: Candid chats about anxiety with advice on how to cope. The relatable hosts are open and honest about the anxious feelings that modern life can evoke.
Huberman Lab: Host Andrew Huberman, a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine, interviews various experts to offer advice on optimizing your health and fitness.
Best Comedy Podcasts
Courtesy of Kayvan Novak
Fonejacker
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Often absurd, usually juvenile, but always hilarious prank calls from Kayvan Novak, who you may know as the vampire Nandor the Relentless from the What We Do in the Shadows TV show. Novak revives some of his most memorable characters from his British sketch show (somehow 20 years old now), but it doesn’t matter if you’re familiar. This is still very funny.
Courtesy of Audible
Dara Ó Briain’s Timewasters
What better way to waste time than listening to lovable Irish presenter Dara Ó Briain preside over two comics arguing over who is the biggest time waster? From watching the intro of The Office every episode during a binge to learning a language you never use or losing years in a failed marriage, the guests run the gamut of time-wasting possibilities. It’s a shame there are only six episodes.
Courtesy of Global Player
Irreverent Irish chat with comedian Joanne McNally and TV presenter Vogue Williams as they put the world to rights. It feels like eavesdropping on brutally honest best pals as they discuss relationships, work woes, health issues, awkward social situations, and sometimes recent news. The down-to-earth pair liberally dole out a mix of sound and questionable advice that is frequently laugh-out-loud funny.
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Courtesy of Shiny Ranga
Comedians and friends Tom Davis (the Wolf) and Romesh Ranganathan (the Owl) chat aimlessly and expertly poke fun at each other for around an hour. It’s often nostalgic, sometimes offers decent advice for listeners, and is always warmhearted and relatable.
Courtesy of Team Coco
Why Won’t You Date Me? With Nicole Byer
Perennially single stand-up comedian Nicole Byer is every bit as charming and funny here as in Netflix’s Nailed It baking show, but this podcast delves into some adult subjects. Byer is disarmingly open about her insecurities and struggles and seamlessly stirs in vulgar humor. She also hosts hilarious conversations with guest comedians.
Courtesy of Athletico Mince
Ostensibly a soccer (football) podcast, this surreal show is brought to life by lovable British comedy legend Bob Mortimer, with support from sidekick Andy Dawson. Tall tales about real footballers, complete with strange voices and fictional personalities, are mixed with songs, silly inside jokes, and rambling conversations. You don’t need to know anything about soccer to enjoy it.
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Other Great Comedy Podcasts
Old Harry’s Game: A sitcom set in hell, written by and starring Andy Hamilton as a jaded Satan, this deliciously satirical show may have landed in the late 90s but is still worth listening to. Slightly cheating here because this was a radio show rather than a podcast but you can get all the episodes online now.
Locked Together: Only on Audible, this show features lockdown chats between comedian pals like Simon Pegg and Nick Frost or Rob Delaney and Sharon Horgan.
My Neighbors Are Dead: The wonderful premise of this hit-and-miss improvised show is interviews with lesser-known characters from horror movies, like the caterer from Damien’s party in The Omen and the neighbors from Poltergeist.
Apple Glass will be a direct competitor to Meta’s Ray-Ban smart glasses, but it will be only a part of a larger three-pronged AI wearable strategy for the company. Here’s what’s coming.
Optimistic renders of what Apple Glass could look like – Image Credit: AppleInsider
Apple has long been working on its smart glasses, known as Apple Glass. What is anticipated to actually launch will be quite close to what the existing Meta Ray-Bans can already do. In Sunday’s “Power On” newsletter for Bloomberg, Mark Gurman writes that the Apple Glass will be easily able to handle everyday uses, including photographs and video capture, dealing with phone calls, handling notifications from an iPhone, and music playback. Rumor Score: 🤔 Possible Continue Reading on AppleInsider | Discuss on our Forums
Data quality has always been an afterthought. Teams spend months instrumenting a feature, building pipelines, and standing up dashboards, and only when a stakeholder flags a suspicious number does anyone ask whether the underlying data is actually correct. By that point, the cost of fixing it has multiplied several times over.
This is not a niche problem. It plays out across engineering organizations of every size, and the consequences range from wasted compute cycles to leadership losing trust in the data team entirely. Most of these failures are preventable if you treat data quality as a first-class concern from day one rather than a cleanup task for later.
How a typical data project unfolds
Before diagnosing the problem, it helps to walk through how most data engineering projects get started. It usually begins with a cross-functional discussion around a new feature being launched and what metrics stakeholders want to track. The data team works with data scientists and analysts to define the key metrics. Engineering figures out what can actually be instrumented and where the constraints are. A data engineer then translates all of this into a logging specification that describes exactly what events to capture, what fields to include, and why each one matters.
That logging spec becomes the contract everyone references. Downstream consumers rely on it. When it works as intended, the whole system hums along well.
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Before data reaches production, there is typically a validation phase in dev and staging environments. Engineers walk through key interaction flows, confirm the right events are firing with the right fields, fix what is broken, and repeat the cycle until everything checks out. It is time consuming but it is supposed to be the safety net.
Once data goes live and the ETL pipelines are running, most teams operate under an implicit assumption that the data contract agreed upon during instrumentation will hold. It rarely does, not permanently.
Here is a common scenario. Your pipeline expects an event to fire when a user completes a specific action. Months later, a server side change alters the timing so the event now fires at an earlier stage in the flow with a different value in a key field. No one flags it as a data impacting change. The pipeline keeps running and the numbers keep flowing into dashboards.
Weeks or months pass before anyone notices the metrics look flat. A data scientist digs in, traces it back, and confirms the root cause. Now the team is looking at a full remediation effort: updating ETL logic, backfilling affected partitions across aggregate tables and reporting layers, and having an uncomfortable conversation with stakeholders about how long the numbers have been off.
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The compounding cost of that single missed change includes engineering time on analysis, effort on codebase updates, compute resources for backfills, and most damagingly, eroded trust in the data team. Once stakeholders have been burned by bad numbers a couple of times, they start questioning everything. That loss of confidence is hard to rebuild.
This pattern is especially common in large systems with many independent microservices, each evolving on its own release cycle. There is no single point of failure, just a slow drift between what the pipeline expects and what the data actually contains.
Why validation cannot stop at staging
The core issue is that data validation is treated as a one-time gate rather than an ongoing process. Staging validation is important but it only verifies the state of the system at a single point in time. Production is a moving target.
What is needed is data quality enforcement at every layer of the pipeline, from the point data is produced, through transport, and all the way into the processed tables your consumers depend on. The modern data tooling ecosystem has matured enough to make this practical.
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Enforcing quality at the source
The first line of defense is the data contract at the producer level. When a strict schema is enforced at the point of emission with typed fields and defined structure, a breaking change fails immediately rather than silently propagating downstream. Schema registries, commonly used with streaming platforms like Apache Kafka, serialize data against a schema before it is transported and validate it again on deserialization. Forward and backward compatibility checks ensure that schema evolution does not silently break consuming pipelines.
Avro formatted schemas stored in a schema registry are a widely adopted pattern for exactly this reason. They create an explicit, versioned contract between producers and consumers that is enforced at runtime and not just documented in a spec file that may or may not be read.
Write, audit, publish: A quality gate in the pipeline
At the processing layer, Apache Iceberg has introduced a useful pattern for data quality enforcement called Write-Audit-Publish, or WAP. Iceberg operates on a file metadata model where every write is tracked as a commit. The WAP workflow takes advantage of this to introduce an audit step before data is declared production ready.
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In practice, the daily pipeline works like this. Raw data lands in an ingestion layer, typically rolled up from smaller time window partitions into a full daily partition. The ETL job picks up this data, runs transformations such as normalizations, timezone conversions, and default value handling, and writes to an Iceberg table. If WAP is enabled on that table, the write is staged with its own commit identifier rather than being immediately committed to the live partition.
At this point, automated data quality checks run against the staged data. These checks fall into two categories. Blocking checks are critical validations such as missing required columns, null values in non-nullable fields, and enum values outside expected ranges. If a blocking check fails, the pipeline halts, the relevant teams are notified, and downstream consumers are informed that the data for that partition is not yet available. Non-blocking checks catch issues that are meaningful but not severe enough to stop the pipeline. They generate alerts for the engineering team to investigate and may trigger targeted backfills for a small number of recent partitions.
Only when all checks pass does the pipeline commit the data to the live table and mark the job as successful. Consumers get data that has been explicitly validated, not just processed.
Data quality as engineering practice, not a cleanup project
There is a broader point embedded in all of this. Data quality cannot be something the team circles back to after the pipeline is built. It needs to be designed into the system from the start and treated with the same discipline as any other part of the engineering stack.
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With modern code generation tools making it cheaper than ever to stand up a new pipeline, it is tempting to move fast and validate later. But the maintenance burden of an untested pipeline, especially one feeding dashboards used by product, business, and leadership teams, is significant. A pipeline that runs every day and silently produces wrong numbers is worse than one that fails loudly.
The goal is for data engineers to be producers of trustworthy, well documented data artifacts. That means enforcing contracts at the source, validating at every stage of transport and transformation, and treating quality checks as a permanent part of the pipeline rather than a one time gate at launch.
When stakeholders ask whether the numbers are right, the answer should not be that we think so. It should be backed by an auditable, automated process that catches problems before anyone outside the data team ever sees them.
The word clanker — a disparaging term for AI and robots — “has made its way into the Linux kernel,” reports the blog It’s FOSS “thanks to Greg Kroah-Hartman, the Linux stable kernel maintainer and the closest thing the project has to a second-in-command.”
He’s been quietly running what looks like an AI-assisted fuzzing tool on the kernel that lives in a branch called “clanker” on his working kernel tree. It began with the ksmbd and SMB code. Kroah-Hartman filed a three-patch series after running his new tooling against it, describing the motivation quite simply. [“They pass my very limited testing here,” he wrote, “but please don’t trust them at all and verify that I’m not just making this all up before accepting them.”] Kroah-Hartman picked that code because it was easy to set up and test locally with virtual machines.
“Beyond those initial SMB/KSMBD patches, there have been a flow of other Linux kernel patches touching USB, HID, F2FS, LoongArch, WiFi, LEDs, and more,” Phoronix wrote Tuesday, “that were done by Greg Kroah-Hartman in the past 48 hours…. Those patches in the “Clanker” branch all note as part of the Git tag: “Assisted-by: gregkh_clanker_t1000”
The T1000 presumably in reference to the Terminator T-1000. It’s FOSS emphasizes that “What Kroah-Hartman appears to be doing here is not having AI write kernel code. The fuzzer surfaces potential bugs; a human with decades of kernel experience reviews them, writes the actual fixes, and takes responsibility for what gets submitted.” Linus has been thinking about this too. Speaking at Open Source Summit Japan last year, Linus Torvalds said the upcoming Linux Kernel Maintainer Summit will address “expanding our tooling and our policies when it comes to using AI for tooling.”
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He also mentioned running an internal AI experiment where the tool reviewed a merge he had objected to. The AI not only agreed with his objections but found additional issues to fix. Linus called that a good sign, while asserting that he is “much less interested in AI for writing code” and more interested in AI as a tool for maintenance, patch checking, and code review.
The biotech industry’s engineered cells could become an $8 trillion market by 2035, notes Phys.org. But how do you keep them from being stolen? Their article notes “an uptick in the theft and smuggling of high-value biological materials, including specially engineered cells.”
In Science Advances, a team of U.S. researchers present a new approach to genetically securing precious biological material. They created a genetic combination lock in which the locking or encryption process scrambled the DNA of a cell so that its important instructions were non-functional and couldn’t be easily read or used. The unlocking, or decryption, process involves adding a series of chemicals in a precise order over time — like entering a password — to activate recombinases, which then unscramble the DNA to their original, functional form…
They created a biological keypad with nine distinct chemicals, each acting as a one-digit input. By using the same chemicals in pairs to form two-digit inputs, where two chemicals must be present simultaneously to activate a sensor, they expanded the keypad to 45 possible chemical inputs without introducing any new chemicals. They also added safety penalties — if someone tampers with the system, toxins are released — making it extremely unlikely for an unauthorized person to access the cells.
“The researchers conducted an ethical hacking exercise on the test lock and found that random guessing yielded a 0.2% success rate, remarkably close to the theoretical target of 0.1%.”
The long-rumored Nvidia N1 chip has been circulating in leaks and rumors for what feels like an eternity. But with a fresh leak, we may finally be getting our first proper look at it – and this time, it includes actual, high-quality images. From these, the product appears closer to… Read Entire Article Source link
In an official announcement translated by Automaton West, the two firms recently confirmed plans to strengthen their partnership to maintain the supply of Blu-ray discs and players in Japan. Verbatim and I-O Data acknowledged that, despite the rise of digital distribution, individuals and businesses still use optical discs for recording,… Read Entire Article Source link
Finland usually exports two things with authority: hockey players like Teemu Selänne and beverages that feel like a dare. High-end loudspeakers? Not so much — at least that was the assumption before Amphion Loudspeakers decided to quietly ruin that narrative.
First unveiled at High End Munich 2025, the new Argon X-Series which includes the Argon3X, Argon3LX, and Argon7LX, finally made its way to AXPONA 2026, giving us our first real chance to hear what all the quiet confidence was about.
No, Amphion doesn’t offer the same overwhelming breadth of models as the Danes who practically carpet-bombed this show with options, but that’s not really the point. What Amphion brings is focus: cleaner execution, refined engineering, and a sound that leans toward honesty over theatrics. With expanded U.S. distribution through Playback Distribution, these Finnish imports are no longer a niche curiosity.
Finnish Precision Meets Studio Credibility
For more than 25 years, Amphion Loudspeakers has taken a more restrained approach to speaker design. Instead of boosting bass or adding extra sparkle up top to grab attention in a quick demo, their speakers are built to play it straight. What you hear is closer to what was actually recorded, which means better recordings sound great and bad ones have nowhere to hide.
That same approach has carried into the pro audio world over the past decade, where engineers working with Billie Eilish, Beck, and Kendrick Lamar rely on Amphion studio monitors for mixing. Film composers such as Ali Shaheed Muhammad and Jussi Tegelman have adopted them as well, where consistency and accuracy matter more than sounding impressive for five minutes.
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Amphion Argon7LX: What It Is and What Actually Changed
The Argon7LX is a floorstanding loudspeaker from Amphion Loudspeakers that sticks to a fairly straightforward concept on paper but executes it with a level of precision that’s anything but casual. It’s a two-way design using a passive radiator system, built around a newly developed 1 inch titanium tweeter and dual 6.5-inch aluminum woofers. That configuration is meant to deliver full range sound without relying on a traditional port, which helps keep the bass tighter and more controlled, especially in real rooms where things can get messy fast.
The biggest update here is the tweeter, and it’s not a cosmetic change. Amphion revised it to improve low level detail and clean up the top end without pushing things into fatigue. There’s more information, but it’s presented in a controlled way. The crossover has also been reworked and sits at 1600 Hz, which is relatively low, helping create a smoother transition between the tweeter and woofers. The result is better integration, so the sound doesn’t feel segmented across frequencies.
That carries into the soundstage. Imaging is stable, placement is precise, and nothing shifts around when the material gets more complex. The bass remains controlled, but the more noticeable change is how it connects with the midrange and treble. The overall presentation is more cohesive and consistent.
For the demo, Amphion Loudspeakers used two compact TEAC AP-507 power amplifiers, also distributed in the U.S. by Playback Distribution. Each amplifier delivers 170 watts per channel into 4 ohms and can be configured for stereo, bi-amp, or bridged operation, with higher output available in BTL mode. The pairing had no issue driving the Argon7LX to normal listening levels with control and stability, which is notable given the size of the amplifiers.
On the practical side, the Argon7LX is a 4 ohm speaker with a sensitivity rating of 91 dB, which means it’s not especially hard to drive but will benefit from an amplifier with solid current delivery. Amphion recommends anywhere from 50 to 300 watts, which gives you some flexibility depending on your setup.
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Frequency response is rated from 28 Hz to 55 kHz at minus 6 dB, so it reaches low enough for most music without needing a subwoofer, while also extending well beyond the limits of human hearing on the top end.
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Physically, it’s a substantial speaker without being ridiculous. Just over 45 inches tall, under 10 inches wide, and weighing about 60 pounds each, it’s designed to fit into real living spaces without dominating them.
So how did it sound? Calm, controlled… and slightly judging you
I walked into the room expecting at least a small crowd and… nothing. A few seats open, plenty of space, almost suspiciously calm. This system had no business being that overlooked. My host didn’t rush anything, just handed me the reins. When I asked for electronic music, he cracked a slight smile and queued up a few tracks he clearly had ready. Finns get it. They’ll dismantle your penalty kill and still have time to argue about synth textures.
Right off the bat, the neutrality hits. No extra flavor, no “look what I can do” tuning. Just fast, clean, open sound that moves with real intent. Propulsive fits. The music had momentum, not just presence. It filled the room without feeling pushed, and there was an ease to it that made you stop thinking about the system and just let it run. Detail was there, but it didn’t feel dissected. More like everything was just… available.
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The bass? Not trying to win any Texas BBQ competitions. This isn’t brisket dripping onto your plate. More like a perfectly trimmed filet—tight, controlled, and cooked exactly how it should be. You might want a little more heft if that’s your thing, but it never felt thin or out of place. There was even a hint of that club-like scale, just without the kind of low end that rearranges your organs and your plans for the next morning. Don’t forget to bring some protection.
The company frames the dispute not as a question of safety or bias mitigation, but as a First Amendment issue over who controls the information that large-scale AI systems generate. Read Entire Article Source link
In April 2025, a new company called Slate Auto came out of stealth and shocked the car industry. Not only was this startup focused on making an ultra-cheap, customizable electric pickup truck with funding from Jeff Bezos, but it had also been operating in secret for three years in Troy, Michigan — the backyard of major automakers like Ford and General Motors.
TechCrunch was first to the story, reporting in early April about the company’s existence, its involvement with the Amazon founder, and its curious and unique business model. The weeks between our report and Slate’s official coming out party in late April provided a whirlwind of news, with prototypes of the startup’s truck popping up around California.
Slate is an aberration in the U.S. EV sector, where bankruptcies, failed product launches, and pivots have become commonplace. And while its current backers, executive lineup, first product, and business model provide a compelling path forward, the road is still riddled with potential hurdles as it pushes toward production in late 2026.
Here’s a timeline that charts out everything you need to know about Slate Auto, from its origin story and backers to its product, business model, and production plans.
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Inside the EV startup secretly backed by Jeff Bezos
April 8 – After a year-long investigation, TechCrunch published a story revealing that a secretive EV startup called Slate Auto had been operating for three years with the financial backing of Jeff Bezos and LA Dodgers owner Mark Walter.
Unlike other EV startups, Slate had been working on developing an extremely low-cost electric pickup truck that would start at around $25,000. This truck would be deeply customizable, leveraging the experience of many former employees from Harley-Davidson and Chrysler, two companies that have extensive accessories and aftermarket parts businesses.
Slate Auto’s pickup truck spotted in the wild
April 10 – One day later, a photo of a nondescript electric truck started circulating on the r/whatisthiscar subreddit, with Redditors speculating it could be Slate’s mystery EV.
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San Francisco, CA | October 13-15, 2026
TechCrunch was able to confirm the photo was, in fact, of a prototype of Slate’s truck parked outside the company’s Long Beach, California design center.
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An EV that can change like a ‘Transformer’
April 21 – Slate began putting concept versions of the Slate EV on public streets to generate marketing buzz ahead of its planned launch event on April 24. Curiously, some of them appeared to be styled more like SUVs or hatchbacks, not just pickup trucks.
TechCrunch was able to confirm the company had developed the EV to have “Transformer-like” modular capabilities, and that this stunt was a way to tease this customization.
The analog EV pickup truck that is decidedly anti-Tesla
April 24 – Slate made its debut at a launch event in Long Beach, California, where it revealed its customizable electric pickup truck. Slate also announced the truck would be available for under $20,000 — with the $7,500 federal EV tax credit.
The base version of the truck was revealed to be very bare-bones, with just 150 miles of range, no power windows, no main infotainment screen, and not even any paint. Slate promised essentially everything about the truck would be customizable, even down to the number of seats and the overall silhouette.
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A former Indiana printing plant eyed for EV truck production
April 25 – TechCrunch reported that Slate had identified a former printing plant in Warsaw, Indiana as the location for its truck factory. The 1.4 million-square-foot facility was built in 1958 and had been dormant for around two years.
Slate Auto crosses 100,000 refundable reservations in two weeks
May 12 – Slate confirmed to TechCrunch it had already surpassed 100,000 refundable $50 reservations for its affordable EV truck. It was evidence that the company’s ideas had caught on with a wide audience, despite no one knowing about Slate just two months prior.
Slate Auto drops ‘under $20,000’ pricing after Trump administration ends federal EV tax credit
July 3 – The Trump administration pushed through a massive tax-cut bill that, among many other actions, set a September end-date for the $7,500 federal EV tax credit. That means Slate’s truck will no longer be able to lean on that credit to reach the “under $20,000” starting price the startup was touting. As such, Slate pulled that language from its website before the bill was even signed into law.
Why this LA-based VC firm was an early investor in Slate Auto
July 8 – Slate’s 2023 funding round included at least 16 investors — one of them being Bezos. While most of those investors have still not been identified, Los Angeles-based Slauson & Co. spoke to TechCrunch about why it threw in with the EV startup in that initial funding round, as well as Slate’s Series B.
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Slate Auto appears on the TechCrunch Disrupt main stage
October 30 – Slate Auto CEO Chris Barman sat down for an interview on the main stage at TechCrunch Disrupt 2025, where she talked about Jeff Bezos’ involvement, the challenge of building an automaker from scratch, and how the company plans to make a marketplace for customization.
Slate passes 150,000 reservations
December 16 – Despite EV growth cooling off in the U.S., Slate Auto crosses 150,000 refundable reservations for its truck and SUV, showing there is still serious interest in the vehicle despite the loss of the federal tax credit. And with fewer EVs set to come to the U.S., it appears that the startup will have very little competition at the low end of the market.
2026
A surprise CEO swap
March 9 – Slate pulls a surprise and swaps in a new CEO: former Amazon Marketplace VP Peter Faricy. Former CEO (and Slate’s first hire) Chris Barman is staying with the company though, shifting over to a “President of Vehicles” role. Slate tapped Faricy to get the startup ready for its end-of-year commercial launch – starting with converting the reservation list into as many full orders as possible.
Mobile gaming is the future. At least, that’s what we’ve heard for the last decade. But it’s fair to say that plenty of us are still pretty skeptical about that notion.
It seemed that, for a while, the available technology was not making the leaps forward needed to deliver a satisfying gameplay experience in this alternative format. Console gaming excelled while mobile gaming fell behind.
However, we’ve heard a great deal recently about the incredible capabilities of the modern generation of mobile platforms; that these entertainment hubs have become legitimate consoles unto themselves. For the skeptical out there, it was important to explore that concept fully. That’s why I spent six hours straight gaming on the Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra — to really test its mettle as a legitimate rival to the best game consoles.
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The Galaxy S26 Ultra is among the best phones money can buy, and its Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 For Galaxy chipset and 6.9-inch AMOLED display are billed as a formidable combo for mobile gaming. But which game did I choose for my test?
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Choosing the game
(Image credit: Future)
Selecting the right game to test out the Galaxy S26 Ultra’s performance credentials was critical. The title in question needed to not only push the best Samsung phone to its limits, but also be well-known among the mobile gaming community. That’s why I settled on Genshin Impact.
Developed and published by miHoYo, with HoYoverse taking on distribution duties globally, Genshin Impact was released back in 2020 on Windows, PlayStation 4, and, critically, iOS and Android. The action RPG has proven extremely popular and has since been released on both the PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X|S. It’s a title with critical acclaim, a firm player base, and crucially, the ability to perform cross-platform.
Genshin Impact received over 23 million downloads in its first week of release and has since become a staple of mobile gaming. Its stunning world, vibrant graphics, and fast-paced combat provide a perfect variety of tests to push the S26 Ultra to its limits.
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Of course, I played the game with high SFX quality, the highest render resolution, high shadow quality, the highest environmental detailing, high motion blur, and bloom all activated.
The initial performance
(Image credit: Future)
Logging in to Genshin Impact was a breeze, with the game taking around 30 seconds to get through its various loading screens. Sure, a dedicated console goes through the same motions slightly quicker, but 30 seconds is significantly quicker than the minute-long wait times demanded by previous smartphone generations.
Running smoothly with a target of 60fps, I was instantly struck by the ease of traversing the game’s settings and menus. The Galaxy S26 Ultra showed no signs of early stress, and jumping into the game itself, I thought it appropriate to take a minute to explore the lush landscape of Teyvat, one of the game’s seven nations.
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It’s a landscape full of rich greenery and ethereal man-made constructs, the complex lighting putting the phone’s custom Snapdragon chipset to work. Whether it was a desert-like landscape with dry, barren vistas or a more fruitful, forest backdrop, I couldn’t help but marvel at the level of detail the Galaxy S26 Ultra captured. The Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chipset showed initial promise as it powered through some difficult moments, avoiding lag where needed.
(Image credit: Future)
A quick word on the Galaxy S26 Ultra’s size. We’ve seen a drive towards larger phone displays in recent years, and sitting at 6.9 inches, Samsung‘s latest flagship mobile display offers plenty in the way of cinematic spectacle. With a high-fidelity stereo speaker system providing a promising audio balance, I felt as though there was real depth to everything I was seeing and hearing in Genshin Impact.
For a moment, it seemed that perhaps this smartphone was genuinely giving the console world a run for its money….
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Long-term play became slightly more taxing
However, after extended play, things started to look a little different. The longer I played, the more framerate imperfections I noticed. Momentary lag started to creep in, and with the phone’s gradual but managed warming, it became clear that mobile gaming is built to be a sprint, not a marathon.
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(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)
(Image credit: Future)
Prolonged, busy set pieces began to have a visible impact on the Galaxy S26 Ultra’s performance. With combat sequences came screen cramming, as multiple enemies and detailed SFX fought for visual dominance. Inconsistencies were rare, but they were still present.
So, while the Galaxy S26 Ultra is far better for gaming than many other mobile devices I’ve tried, Genshin Impact still played as if it were not the phone’s primary focus.
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And in fairness, why should it be? This is a smartphone after all. But there’s still a noticeable gap between the performance of phones and consoles.
Still, considering that the Galaxy S26 Ultra is not a stationary block of mains-powered circuitry à la the PS5, it handled the intense demands of Genshin Impact remarkably well. Mobile gaming isn’t yet a threat to major PC and console platforms, but it is a genuine alternative that can provide quick, easy, and satisfying access to the AAA titles you love.
For an even more complete experience, the best gaming phones offer extras like shoulder triggers and improved cooling mechanisms, but the Galaxy S26 Ultra gets the seal of approval for accessible, short-term play.
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