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The Castle Is on Fire and You Have a Podcast

The Castle Is on Fire and You Have a Podcast

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Free resources: https://www.spekepodcasting.com/freeresources Work with us: https://www.spekepodcasting.com/pricing-plans Every time regular people got a new tool, the people in power called it the end of civilization. The printing press. The typewriter. The internet. YouTube. Podcasting. Same panic. Different century. This episode is a history lesson with a blueprint attached. Name your industry's ivory tower. Map the moat. Pick a breach point. Ship the rebellion. The gates are not just open. They are on fire. Key Takeaways Every technology that lowers the cost of expression raises the blood pressure of the people who used to own the mic. That pattern has not changed in five hundred years. The castle is not the enemy. The moat is. And the moat is not what it used to be. Distribution, credentials, shelf space, capital: all of it has a workaround now. Podcasting did not kill legacy media. It killed the part that mattered most to them: the exclusive authority to decide who gets to explain the world. You do not need to storm all four walls. Pick one breach point and attack it consistently. One show. One channel. One newsletter. One wall. Ship a rebellion, not a rant. Complaining about the castle is easy. Making the castle less necessary is the actual work. Measure progress in castle damage, not likes. Who switched from legacy sources to you as their primary teacher. That is the metric that matters. The printing press let people write without permission. The internet let people publish without permission. Podcasting lets people speak without permission. You are still early to the breach. Timestamped Overview 0:00 Cold open: the printing press, the typewriter, YouTube, podcasting, and five centuries of the same panic 1:00 Show intro and the one blunt question driving this whole episode: what is the ivory tower in your industry 1:45 Before Gutenberg: who controlled the scribes, the books, and who got to be considered smart 2:30 What the elites actually said when movable type showed up and why it sounds identical to what they say now 3:15 The typewriter arrives: no scribe, no calligraphy certificate, just you and a machine 4:00 The broadcast era: spectrum licenses, expensive gear, and a handful of execs who owned the yes 4:45 The Buggles, MTV, and why Video Killed the Radio Star was actually a eulogy for gatekeeping not for radio 5:45 What the internet did to publishing and why the walls of the castle started creaking with blogs and email newsletters 6:30 YouTube: a kid with a Logitech webcam quietly pulling more views than a cable network with no casting director 7:15 Why podcasting is radio with the locks removed and what that actually means for epistemic authority 8:30 The castle structure explained: the institution, the moat, and the tiny group of gatekeepers in every industry 9:15 Your industry's version: certification bodies, trade associations, agencies, and whoever hands out the speaking slots 10:00 Move 1: Name the tower out loud on paper with no metaphors 10:30 Move 2: Map the moat and identify what they used to control that you can now bypass 11:00 Move 3: Pick one breach point and attack it with one consistent project 11:45 Move 4: Ship a rebellion not a rant and build the thing that makes the castle less necessary 12:30 How to measure castle damage: who switched to you, who landed something because your content existed 13:15 This week's assignment: one tower, one moat, one breach project in the next 30 days 14:00 The close: the gates are not just open, they are on fire, and you are still early
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