About this item

Podcasting is the fast-growing media platform in the world, with currently 650,000 podcasts out there, in 100 languages, and offering over 20 million episodes. And we're only at the beginning. More and more podcasts appear every day, and more and more entrepreneurs, businesses, individuals, and distributors, like Spotify, are getting into this world. One person so many people turn to to help launch their podcasts is Eric Nuzum, a veteran of NPR and Audible who's had a hand in creating and launching over 130 podcasts, including some of the most successful out there like TED Radio Hour, Invisibilia, Where Should We Begin? with Esther Perel, The Butterfly Effect, and West Cork. And the reason is that Nuzum understands the essentials of what makes a podcast work, and knows how to help creators shepherd their vision from rough idea to finished product. Make Noise brings all the wisdom, advice, practical information, and big-picture thinking that any individual or business needs to make a successful podcast. He identifies core principles - create empathetically, i.e., think like the audience listens, and stay focused on what's unique to you and what you have to say. He helps readers come up with a "Ten Word Description" that will guide them throughout the creative process, and then gets into how-tos - how to develop character, story, voice; how to conduct an effective interview; how to be mindful of the limitations of audio (be more like Hemingway than Faulkner) . Here are the rules of storytelling, advice on how to test-drive an idea (make six individual lunch dates, talk it over with each, and by the end see how you've refined your thinking) , and, when it's all ready, how to develop your audience. Make Noise won't tell you what microphone to buy. But its insights and guidance will help readers better express themselves as an audio storyteller.



About the Author

Eric Nuzum

Eric Nuzum is a recovering pop culture critic, VH1 pundit, and author. His latest book is a memoir about ghosts entitled Giving Up The Ghost (Dial Press, 2012) . His previous books include Parental Advisory: Music Censorship in America and The Dead Travel Fast: Stalking Vampires From Nosferatu to Count Chocula. He was awarded the 2002 National Edward R. Murrow Award for News Writing and his work has appeared in a few publications you've heard of and many more that you haven't heard of. He works for NPR in Washington, D.C., where he lives with his wife. He opines regularly on his Web site, www.ericnuzum.com.



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