Democratic contender Andy Beshear of Kentucky launches podcast on SiriusXM
Democratic contender Andy Beshear of Kentucky launches podcast on SiriusXM
Speaking to the anxiety of Americans
Learning to master the format of podcasts
If Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear vaults into national prominence as a Democratic leader, he may one day look back at Thursday as a key step in that direction.
SiriusXM announced that it was giving Beshearâs new podcast a national platform starting this month, along with featuring him in a regular call-in show on its Progress network.
President Donald Trumpâs appearances on podcasts were a pivotal media strategy in his successful 2024 Republican campaign. Moving forward, mastering a personal podcast could replace soft-focus biographies or wonky books as a way for politicians to increase their profiles.
Beshear said on NBCâs âMeet the Pressâ this summer that he will âtake a lookâ at running for president in 2028. California Gov. Gavin Newsom, also in the circle of potential presidential nominees, started his own podcast earlier this year.
In an interview, Beshear said a motivating factor in his own podcast was people who have come up to him, especially during the Trump administration, to talk about their anxieties.
âThatâs how Americans feel,â he said. âThey feel like the news hits them minute after minute after minute. And it can feel like chaos. It can feel like the world is out of control. With this podcast, weâre trying to help Americans process what weâre going through.â
Heâs already done nearly two dozen podcasts, with his audience heavily weighted toward Kentucky residents. His guests have included some potential Democratic presidential rivals, including Maryland Gov. Wes Moore and Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar. Entrepreneur Mark Cuban, former Kentucky basketball coach John Calipari and Kentucky-born actor and comic Steve Zahn have also appeared.
Beshear, the son of a former governor whoâs been leading Kentucky since 2019, talks issues himself. Two of his friends, a Republican and a Democrat, are regular guests, and his 16-year-old son helps Dad navigate some youthful lingo.
Newsom attracted attention â some of it negative among Democrats â for interviewing conservative guests Steve Bannon, Michael Savage and Charlie Kirk on his podcast.
âI did disagree with him on certain guests because I donât like to give oxygen to hate,â Beshear said. âBut Gavin is out there really working to communicate with the American people, and he deserves to be commended for it.â
Newsomâs podcast started slowly in the marketplace but has caught fire in recent weeks, his regular audiences jumping from the tens of thousands to the hundreds of thousands, said Paul Riismandel, president of Signal Hill Insights, an audio-focused market research company.
The California governorâs increased visibility, particularly on social media, is likely a factor in the growing popularity of the podcast, Riismandel said. But itâs also a function of how podcasts often catch on: Many tend to be slow burns as audiences discover them, he said.
Whether ambitious politicians start their own podcasts or not, theyâre going to have to be familiar going forward with what makes people successful in the format.
âWith a podcast, the audience expects a more unfiltered, authentic kind of conversation and presentation,â Riismandel said. If politicians come across as too controlled, looking for the sort of soundbites that will be broken out in a television appearance, itâs not likely to work, he said. They have to be willing to open up.
âThat is something that is probably new for a lot of politicians,â he said, âand new for their handlers.â
Beshearâs first podcast for SiriusXM will feature an interview with House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, D-N.Y., conducted in the companyâs New York studio and debuting Sept. 10. The Progress network will air Beshearâs podcasts regularly on Saturdays at 11 a.m. Eastern.
The first live call-in show will be next Tuesday at noon, with Beshear joined
Beshear stressed that his work for SiriusXM is ânot just aimed at a Democratic audience.â
âWeâre aiming,â he said, âat an American audience.â
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Claire Dubois
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