The company is able to produce each episode for $1 or less

Saturday, September 13th, 2025

Inception Point AI is attempting to build a stable of AI talent to host podcasts :

“We believe that in the near future half the people on the planet will be AI, and we are the company that’s bringing those people to life,” said CEO Jeanine Wright, who was previously chief operating officer of podcasting company Wondery, which has recently had to reorganize under the changing podcast landscape.

The company is able to produce each episode for $1 or less, depending on length and complexity, and attach programmatic advertising to it. This generally means that if about 20 people listen to that episode, the company made a profit on that episode, without factoring in overhead.

Inception Point AI already has more than 5,000 shows across its Quiet Please Podcast Network and produces more than 3,000 episodes a week. Collectively, the network has seen 10 million downloads since September 2023. It takes about an hour to create an episode, from coming up with the idea to getting it out in the world.

The company produces different levels of podcasts. The lowest level involves weather reports for various geographic areas or simple biographies and higher levels involving subject-area podcasts hosted by one of about 50 AI personalities they’ve created, including food expert Claire Delish, gardener and nature expert Nigel Thistledown and Oly Bennet, who covers off-beat sports.

As for how it stacks up against human podcasts? “I think that people who are still referring to all AI-generated content as AI slop are probably lazy luddites. Because there’s a lot of really good stuff out there,” Wright said.

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The idea behind the company came after Corbin accidentally developed a hit podcast during the pandemic in which he read daily CDC reports, and then branched out into weather reports and other shows that took off, including A Moment of Silence (an actual minute of silence). At the time, they were not using AI.

Comments

  1. Bob Sykes says:

    I read a short story or essay many years ago in which it was proposed that the courts would only accept eye witness testimony, no documents or recordings of any kind, because documents and recordings were so easily fabricated.

  2. Gaikokumaniakku says:

    Human eyewitness testimony often goes astray. Humans report seeing things that are not confirmed by other witnesses, or by cameras. Evidence in the mundane world is a thorny problem.

  3. T. Beholder says:

    Considering most podcast bobbleheads probably are not very different from automated parrots to begin with, why not, indeed.

    So the talking head bots generate product, then astroturf bots generate clicks as a part of «programmatic advertising»…

    It’s much like this: https://xkcd.com/600/

    But how do the money flows from outside enter the owning company?

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