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Welcome to episode four of My Digital Life for June eleventh,
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twenty thirteen. I'm Rob Greenley and thank you for downloading
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or just clicking play to listen to this podcast from
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all over the world. I can be reached at Rob
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at Rob Greenley dot com or on Twitter at Rob Greenley.
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The show can be found in iTunes and Windows Phone
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podcast Area, Stitcher, and SoundCloud. Those are the last two.
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There are new additions to the distribution of the show.
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I also manage the podcast on Windows Phone, So if
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you have a podcast you would like to submit it
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to me and I can add it to the Windows
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Phone podcast directory. Just send it to podcasts at Microsoft
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dot com. Well, I want to share my digital highlights
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of the week here. I attended the cris Perillo Vlogger
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Fair this past Saturday. It's about five minutes away from
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my house. It's extremely convenient, and I've known Chris for many,
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many years, but it was really cool that it was
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so close to have a kind of like a YouTube,
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kind of digital media kind of kind of fair and
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event so close to my house. It's so unusual to
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see that. I usually I have to travel to Austin,
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or La or Las Vegas in order to get access
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to show a show an event like this. So it
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was great. It was a lot of fun. It was
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actually sold out. Chris sold about thirteen hundred tickets. Now,
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a lot of people that were there were to see
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the YouTube celebrities. There were certainly a lot of teen
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girls at the event to see those popular YouTube celebrities.
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I certainly wasn't a geek event. It was really all
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about personalities and content, which I thought was really really fascinating.
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I typically go to more geek type of events, and
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this was an interesting change, and I think it's a
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little bit of a sign of the times of what's
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happening with media online. It's going a little bit more
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towards just being focused on content and personalities and less
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about the tech technology of making it all happen. The
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other big thing that happened this week is that another
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comedy podcaster hits the big time. I don't know if
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everyone listening to this knew this or not, but the
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new host of the Daily Show is a longtime podcaster.
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He has a podcast called The Bugle. It's John Oliver
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and he's a He's a typical kind of correspondent with
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John Stewart on the show, and as of Monday, he
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takes over the hosting gig for three months from John Stewart.
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So another podcaster hits the big time. So if you
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wanted to go listen to John's podcast, it's at The Bugle,
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so go check out. It's actually a British comedy. His
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co host is in London and he's in New York
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and they call each other each week and talk about
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the news of the world and it's it's very well
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done and it's a it's a really popular show, so
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definitely go check it out The Bugle. The show show
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topic of the week that I'm going to cover this
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week is the growing globalization of podcasts and what that
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means for the future of podcasting. I'm going to share
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my thoughts, but I'm also going to have Karen Hogue,
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a longtime podcast consultant at podcastconsult dot Dk from Copenhagen, Denmark,
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on the show with me, and she's going to give
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me her real world experience from Europe. She has been
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a very active kind of representative of podcasting in Denmark
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and in the area of Europe and as a very
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early early podcaster.
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And it's interesting to see if we can in such
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a big country as China and also Japan and Korea,
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the very big country countries, and they're all mobile, as
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you say, so there is a big, big, consumer based
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so competition there for all you Americans who think that
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you are the only people in the world. And I
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know I hear American to find out when they check
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the stats. Oh, I have listeners in Switzerland and Sweden
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and Korea and Australia, and you know, yes you do
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because we all understand English. It's for me, it's my
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second language. I don't speak it. I speak it as
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good as you know. We learn in school. So in
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i'd say in any country in Europe, they would be
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able to understand English.
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That conversation is coming up a little bit later in
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the show, and it's about about eighteen minutes long. Well,
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let's dive into the topic of the week, the growing
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globalization of podcasting and what that means for podcasting's future.
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I wrote a blog post on my website at Rob
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Greenley dot com. I don't know that it will be
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up quite when this recording goes live, but it will
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be posted this week, so you can definitely go check
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that out. The summary of the article really gets down
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to some key areas, and I wanted to focus on
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the growing global future of podcasts. So what's happening is
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there's been some missing areas of focus in the podcasting space.
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A huge one, I believe is the international aspect of podcasting.
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I know a lot of podcasters have had a lot
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of listeners in Europe and Asia, but I don't believe
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that a lot of the early podcasters or even the
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podcasters have given really much thought to the international aspect
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of what they do and what that future might look like.
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Based on how we as American podcasters produce our content.
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Shows that are being produced now in the podcast medium,
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at least coming out of North America are very US centric,
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and it's really kind of understandable that that happened that way,
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as most of the audience and the content is being
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consumed in North America, but in greater numbers that is
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starting to check. But what's really fascing about is if
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you talk to podcasters outside of the US, they are
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generally kind of polite about it, but most will tell
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you that they feel like that the podcasts coming out
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of the US are a little bit too American centric
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talking about you know, kind of you know, American holidays,
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American politics, American news, and that podcasters are going to
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be successful globally will need to be a little bit
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more kind of aware of what's going on around the world,
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and then also maybe just create their shows a little
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bit more generically and not spend time talking about local,
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country specific kind of activities that are happening in those
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local areas. But there is a large number of podcasters
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that will find success in creating shows that we'll just
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cater to to that country or as I'm going to
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go into in greater depth here, focus on local languages,
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which is I think I think if you look into
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the future, I believe that language is going to be
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more important than topic. Though topic is it tends to
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be kind of local specific or culturally kind of relevant
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to the audience. But the whole aspect of language is huge,
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as most of the content that's being produced now tends
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to be in English, tends to be targeted towards cultures
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that are more favorable to the English language. Right, So
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there's many countries around the world that are dominant English speakers,
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but there's also many countries around the world that have
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English speakers, but they have a big population of people
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that the local languages is the primary method of communication
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in that language and that culture. So I think over time,
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what we're going to see is that that languages are
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going to start to dominate the success and the consumption
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of podcasts. If you were to ask me what are
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the largest and most common languages on the planet, you
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would probably say Spanish, Chinese or Mandarin and the English language.
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Though those are important languages on a global basis, the
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whole language spectrum is much broader than that. The answer
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to this question and this issue that I'm raising here
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will help us get a glimpse I believe into the
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future of podcasts and maybe we're all on demand media
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consumption is going over the next five to ten years,
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and how important language is to the growth of online
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digital media. I want to run through a list of
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the top ten rank most spoken languages in the world.
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So if you look at the number one languages, Mandarin,
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which is basically Chinese over one billion, and number two
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is the English language, which is about is about over
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five hundred and eight million. The Hindu language is over
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five hundred million, Spanish is over four hundred million, Russian
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over three hundred million. Number six is the Arabic language
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with two hundred and fifty million. Number seven is the
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Bengali language with two hundred and fifteen million, and number
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eight is Portuguese with two hundred million. Number nine is
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melae in the Indonesian language with one hundred and seventy
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five million, and number ten is the French language with
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a one hundred and thirty five million. So over the
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last few years, podcasting has been fairly dominated by English
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language content coming from the US and England, Canada and Australia,
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but with the growth of Europe and Asia, that dominance
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is really starting to change. The recent stats that we're
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starting to see come out as kind of like referring
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to that's by country, are breaking out into a little
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bit different mixed than what we've seen in the past.
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The top countries consuming podcasts over the past few months.
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The data and the ranking chart that I'm going to
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read you is from the largest podcast hosting provider in
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the world, and it's lipsyn at lbsyn dot com. They
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are actually owned now by a Chinese company of all things.
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So it's a little tidbit that will become a common
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thread throughout the rest of the show, but most people
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listening this would know that the number one country for
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podcasts is the United States. Number two is the United Kingdom,
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number three is Canada, and number four now is China.
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Number five is Australia, Number six is Japan, number seven
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is Korea, number eight is Germany and number nine is Spain.
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Number ten is Mexico, number eleven is France, twelve is Sweden,
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thirteenth is the Russian Federi Federation and number fourteen is Singapore,
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and fifteen is Brazil. Number sixteen is Saudi Arabia, Number
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seventeen is of Italian and number eighteen is the Netherlands.
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Number nineteen is Thailand and number twenty is India's another
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huge country in the world. China is clearly the common
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thread that we're starting to see here. It has now
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broken into the top five, and Lipsen has, like I
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said earlier, has an association with China as it's now
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owned by a Chinese company, which I think is really
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kind of ironic as you're starting to see the trends
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start to move this direction. The other aspect of this
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is that the other languages are represented in this top
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twenty list that are not part of the top ten
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most spoken languages are Japanese, Korean, German, Swedish, the Italian language, Thai,
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and Dutch. So those are smaller languages that are pretty
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significant in the podcast area, that are not kind of
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huge languages on a global basis, but they are very
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important to podcasting. The current largest languages that are not
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represented in the top twenty country list is Malay in
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the Indonesian language and Bengali, which are not significant players
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in the podcasting space today. And it could just be
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because of online access and they're not as strong and
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I'm getting online on the web and the internet either.
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This tells me that the largest languages are already having
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a big, big, significant impact on podcasting and is only
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going to grow over over time as more smart more
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smartphones and good wireless data access grows, you know, around
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the world. Because most of the top twenty here is
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represented in the top ten most spoken languages on the planet,
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there's a total of about seventeen language is here if
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you total them all up, the top ten plus the
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seven that I just mentioned here, so there's about seventeen
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languages that are important to podcasts today and they cover
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pretty much every continent on the planet. So you're starting
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to see those seventeen languages being really really important for
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aggregators podcasts aggregators on a global basis to support each
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of the people within those countries around the world will
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be able to get easy access and to be able
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to consume the podcasts that are being created either inside
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those countries or in other countries around the world. As
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you're starting to see, you know, many of the countries
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around the world become more global in their their languages
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spoken inside those countries, getting access to media that will
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fulfill that that desire and that need is going to
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become more important to help them find content that fits
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with their their particular needs. The world of podcasting has
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really been centered around, you know, American focused content. I
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think that the rest of the world is starting to
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really catch up. The trend is really clear that within
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a few short ears, China will be the largest consuming
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audience for podcasts. The actual numbers are already starting to
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show that this is starting to happen. There's also been
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some other recent data that's come out that's showing that
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China has a significant kind of propensity to consume online
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content more so than even in the US. The mobile
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adoption is also significantly more in the time spent in
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the internet and mobile is even more so than in
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the USA. So those are the trends that I think
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are that are actually driving this. Also, many of the
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state run kind of radio networks in many of the
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countries started back in two thousand and five, back in
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the early days of podcasting, and there was a little
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bit of a scale down of that, but I believe
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that we're starting to see that starting to scale back
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up again, and it's being driven really by OEM's phone
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manufacturers and iOS and Android and Windows phone and starting
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to expand and grow in those countries around the world.
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And I think it's going to be really important for