This is a special post for quick takes by HugoB. Only they can create top-level comments. Comments here also appear on the Quick Takes page and All Posts page.
I really love the 80 000 hours podcast (Rob Wiblin is one of my favourite pod hosts), but I wish the episodes were shorter. These days I barely manage to get through 1/3rd of the often 3 hour episodes before a new episode comes out, leaving me with a choice between leaving one topic unfinished or not staying up to date with a different topic. I think 1.5 hours is the podcast length sweet spot; I particularly like the format of Spencer Greenberg's Clearer Thinking. I remember Rob Wiblin speaking about episode length at some point, arguing that longer episodes are really valuable in that they allow a much more in-depth conversation than would otherwise be possible; I agree!, but there is a tradeoff with conciseness and use of time.
Maybe a solution would be to have a shorter episodes that cover all the relevant topics and then a bonus follow-up episode that dives into more detail? I believe this was done in the past with the 80k After Hours supplementary podcast. I know it is also possible to increase the listening speed, but this does not work for everyone (I rarely go above 1.2x speed).
I remember Rob Wiblin speaking about episode length at some point, arguing that longer episodes are really valuable in that they allow a much more in-depth conversation than would otherwise be possible; I agree!, but there is a tradeoff with conciseness and use of time.
I’ve looked into our own data and, contrary to the expectations of many, people just keep listening to long episodes, at least so long as they’re good.
People do indeed drop off as episodes get longer, but two-thirds as many people are still with me between 3h30m and 4h as were with me between 30m and 1h. So the benefit of incrementally longer recordings remains high. ...
Another possible objection: maybe fewer people are willing to start listening to longer episodes? Not as far as we could see (see figure 2). There’s no relationship between episode length and the number of people who start playing it.
That said I do agree with Nick that I wish they tightened up their editing. This seems doable in a way that still gets the benefits Rob mentioned in his essay, like getting to new questions the guest hasn’t been asked before, and the guests easing into the conversation over time as Rob et al build chemistry with them ("I find the best moments on the show are often past the 2h30m mark, when we’re both more likely to be at ease, let our guard down, be authentic and go off script").
I am however wary of using marginal listener acquisition (i.e. listener growth) as the main "steer" for 80K podcast fine-tuning, because of the tyranny of the marginal user, which leads to the enshittification of all once-great products.
Re your suggested solution, the reverse approach might be more implementable? Have a shorter, highlights-version of the episode published on a second channel, possibly with some delay to factor in the extra editing time needed? As main channel episodes have to be more polished than 2nd channel episodes, and I'd personally prefer longer, more in-depth podcasts to be prioritised by being on the main channel.
I agree, for me they are too long and could be tightened up, there's a lot of less-interesting content that could be edited out even. 1.5 hours for me is around the sweetspot of the best longform podcasts (Tim Ferris, Dwarkesh)
In saying that few EAs who I've complained to about this disagree and love the length, but I'm skeptical how much of that is coupled with it being the original format of "the" ORIGINAL EA podcast.
I wonder how many people who have encountered the podcast in the last couple of years find them too long compared to people who have been into it from the beginning.
You don't need to listen to podcasts as soon as they come out :)
In fact with most media, you can wait a few weeks/months and then decide whether you actually want to read/watch/listen to it, rather than just defaulting to listening to it because it is new and shiny
In fact since you like Rob Wiblin, you can go and listen to old episodes (from another podcast) that he recommends
I really love the 80 000 hours podcast (Rob Wiblin is one of my favourite pod hosts), but I wish the episodes were shorter. These days I barely manage to get through 1/3rd of the often 3 hour episodes before a new episode comes out, leaving me with a choice between leaving one topic unfinished or not staying up to date with a different topic. I think 1.5 hours is the podcast length sweet spot; I particularly like the format of Spencer Greenberg's Clearer Thinking. I remember Rob Wiblin speaking about episode length at some point, arguing that longer episodes are really valuable in that they allow a much more in-depth conversation than would otherwise be possible; I agree!, but there is a tradeoff with conciseness and use of time.
Maybe a solution would be to have a shorter episodes that cover all the relevant topics and then a bonus follow-up episode that dives into more detail? I believe this was done in the past with the 80k After Hours supplementary podcast. I know it is also possible to increase the listening speed, but this does not work for everyone (I rarely go above 1.2x speed).
The essay by Rob analysing this is Our data suggest people keep listening to podcasts even if they’re very long; the relevant part that responds to your tradeoff remark is (emphasis his)
That said I do agree with Nick that I wish they tightened up their editing. This seems doable in a way that still gets the benefits Rob mentioned in his essay, like getting to new questions the guest hasn’t been asked before, and the guests easing into the conversation over time as Rob et al build chemistry with them ("I find the best moments on the show are often past the 2h30m mark, when we’re both more likely to be at ease, let our guard down, be authentic and go off script").
I am however wary of using marginal listener acquisition (i.e. listener growth) as the main "steer" for 80K podcast fine-tuning, because of the tyranny of the marginal user, which leads to the enshittification of all once-great products.
Re your suggested solution, the reverse approach might be more implementable? Have a shorter, highlights-version of the episode published on a second channel, possibly with some delay to factor in the extra editing time needed? As main channel episodes have to be more polished than 2nd channel episodes, and I'd personally prefer longer, more in-depth podcasts to be prioritised by being on the main channel.
I agree, for me they are too long and could be tightened up, there's a lot of less-interesting content that could be edited out even. 1.5 hours for me is around the sweetspot of the best longform podcasts (Tim Ferris, Dwarkesh)
In saying that few EAs who I've complained to about this disagree and love the length, but I'm skeptical how much of that is coupled with it being the original format of "the" ORIGINAL EA podcast.
I wonder how many people who have encountered the podcast in the last couple of years find them too long compared to people who have been into it from the beginning.
You don't need to listen to podcasts as soon as they come out :)
In fact with most media, you can wait a few weeks/months and then decide whether you actually want to read/watch/listen to it, rather than just defaulting to listening to it because it is new and shiny
In fact since you like Rob Wiblin, you can go and listen to old episodes (from another podcast) that he recommends