Who’s ready for “YouTube Podcasts”?
Bloomberg reports that YouTube is hiring an executive to “oversee its podcasting experience,” which currently does not really exist. YouTube is a popular place for podcast hosting, but the site doesn’t offer any podcast-specific features.
YouTube is the most popular video site on Earth, and if you’re a for-profit company obsessed with growth, it’s actually a bit of a problem that everyone already uses YouTube. The endless quest for more revenue and more watch minutes has led YouTube to expand into areas other than the typical YouTube video.
We’ve seen YouTube Red, which—in addition to the surviving ad-free playback feature for $9.99—originally tried to take on Netflix with premium original content from YouTube’s star creators. YouTube Movies lets users buy and rent Hollywood movies. YouTube Gaming is YouTube’s clone of Twitch, allowing people to watch livestreamed gaming sessions. YouTube Shorts is a clone of TikTok’s bite-size video service. YouTube TV is for cord-cutters and replicates the expensive bundled cable TV experience—but over the Internet. YouTube Music offers an ad-supported or paid streaming music service, just like Spotify, and cloud music storage, just like Google Music, which it replaced. The only other thing YouTube could do to expand its audience is to make regular YouTube available to more people, and for that, we have YouTube Kids for small children and YouTube Go, a lower-bandwidth version for the developing world. Behold, the YouTube empire.
YouTube has turned into Google’s all-encompassing media brand, so adding YouTube Podcasts is not a big stretch. The story of YouTube podcasts sounds a lot like the pitch for YouTube Gaming: “YouTube is already a popular place for this type of content, so let’s build a custom interface around it!”


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