We proudly present this article from our partners at PureWow [1].
So you've binge-listened to 12 hours of a true-crime drama [2]. Now what? It's time to branch out to other podcasts — and there are plenty worthy of your time. Here are six to consider.
- Like cooking shows? Cooks Illustrated editor-publisher Christopher Kimball hosts this weekly hour called America's Test Kitchen Radio [3]. It's a perfectly seasoned blend of tips (say, how to broil a bell pepper), equipment advice (the best tablet stand for cooking) and chef interviews.
- Like the evening news? Get a global perspective with the BBC World Service's Newshour [4]. Host Tim Franks's crisp presenter voice is reassuring whether he's covering international crises or lighter current affairs.
- Like novels? Your inner book-lover will vibrate with pleasure listening to Bookworm [5] as Michael Silverblatt geeks out talking to literary giants like Junot Diaz and Marilynne Robinson every week.
- Like Shark Tank? The producer of This American Life (pretty much the gold standard in thoughtful radio) just debuted StartUp [6], a program about entrepreneurialism . . . by starting a business, cluelessly, as we listen.
- Like psychology? Invisibilia [7] is another show by TAL alums — this one a potpourri of storytelling and science. The first episode described the inner thoughts of a man who overcame more than a decade of locked-in syndrome.
- Like pop culture? Look no further than Slate's Culture Gabfest [8], which features the site's culture critics debating the highbrow, the lowbrow, and everything in between.
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