WBEZ in Chicago runs On the Media at noon on Sundays. I generally listen to it while eating lunch. The national network of public radio stations produce a wealth of quality content suitable for podcasting. 
  WBEZ has become a source of some very hard hitting investigative journalism, taking up the slack left by the withering of the Tribune and the Sun Times. Lots of targets in Illinois. The sports section in the Saturday Sun Times in generally two times the size of the general section.
  Spotify may be toying with a subscription service:
  Spotify hints at subscription podcast service
  No music included
  By  Jacob Kastrenakes @jake_k  The Verge  Nov 6, 2020, 2:36pm EST
  Spotify appears to be interested in launching a subscription podcast service that would offer access to original shows or exclusive episodes for a monthly fee. The potential service was described in a survey sent out through Spotify’s app, which was  reported on by Andrew Wallenstein, president of Variety’s Intelligence Platform.
  The survey describes at least four possible subscription podcast plans, ranging from $3 to $8 per month. The cheapest plan would include “access to exclusive interviews and episodes,” but would still include ads. The most expensive plan would include access to “high quality original content,” early access to some episodes, and no platform-inserted ads. None of these plans would include access to Spotify’s premium music subscription.
  A spokesperson for Spotify indicated that the survey should not be taken as concrete product plans. “At Spotify, we routinely conduct a number of surveys in an effort to improve our user experience. Some of those end up paving the path for our broader user experience and others serve only as important learnings,” the spokesperson said. “We have no further news to share on future plans at this time.”
  
That means there’s no guarantee that Spotify will follow through with launching any of the described services. Companies often survey customers about potential new products and may shape their plans based on the results. But the fact that Spotify is surveying users means that it’s likely considering launching some sort of subscription podcast plan, even if it doesn’t necessarily end up taking any of the exact forms described here.
  Spotify has been making big investments into podcasting over the past two years. The company acquired several major podcast producers, including Gimlet, Parcast, and The Ringer; signed exclusive podcast deals with  Michelle Obama,  Kim Kardashian West, and  Joe Rogan; and has increasingly promoted podcasts inside its app. Podcasts offer a lucrative opportunity for Spotify because it doesn’t have to pay licensing fees and royalties to stream them, but it can still make money on subscriptions and app-inserted ads played around them.
  Eventually, Spotify is going to want to make money off of the huge sums it has sunk into podcasting — and it seems we may have an early look at what that’ll be like. Whether Spotify can pull it off is another question, though. The podcast service Luminary signed a splashy roster of talent to make podcasts for its subscription service, but it  frustrated the podcast industry in the process and  seems to have struggled to get listeners to sign up.
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