BGTG 160 - Reflections on my Podcast (with Greg Pettit)

Published: June 10, 2015, 4:21 a.m.

b'Ok,\\xa0now\\xa0I\'m finally on my break from the podcast. I wanted this one last, odd episode as a chance to reflect on the 10 years I\'ve been doing the show. (And as longtime listeners remember, I never really think of it as a "show." I like to think of it more as an "audioblog.")To answer the question that keeps coming up, my break/hiatus/sabbatical won\'t last forever. I\'m not quitting, I\'m just taking a year off. Maybe it won\'t be that long, but the point is to take a significant break while I recharge my batteries and think about some other things. Also, I\'ll still be boardgaming the whole time I\'m on this break, and I\'ll keep posting to BGG. I\'ve enjoyed posting my\\xa0Recent Gaming\\xa0geeklists, and hope some of my listeners read & respond to those. I\'ve also been having fun talking with the boardgame community on Twitter (@BoardgamesToGo). Come join us! You may even spy on the occasional episode of\\xa0Game Night!On this episode you\'ll hear me talk about envying the way other podcasts and videocasts have taken the idea of "seasons" from television and used it to frame their broadcasts. That never occurred to me in the old days, but I wish it had. Well, I\'ve decided to retroactively apply annual seasons to all of my episodes, and put them all up on BGG in a series of geeklists. I\'m really happy with how it all came out. Whether new listeners discover my old episodes, or you go back and re-listen to part of one you remember, it should now be easier. They were always on the podcast feed, but now they\'ve got an easy place to find on the web. Also, the geeklist format has proved useful and robust for so many purposes. They\'re easier to subscribe to, and they\'re a good place for comments. I even cut & pasted my accompanying blog entries for those old episodes, putting them in the geeklist entries. I may even look into porting over some of the notable comments/discussion from those old episodes. Yes, this may mean that the focus for writing & feedback shifts to these geeklists instead of this blog. That\'s ok. Blogs on BGG are nice, but they\'re just not as convenient for everyone as geeklists. I think this will work better for everyone.As I\'ve said many times, my original impetus for creating Boardgames To Go was demonstrating how do-able an amateur podcast could be. I hoped there would be more boardgame podcasts available for me to listen to on my drive, run, or whatever. It worked! Well, I know for a fact that these podcasts would\'ve come along anyway. But if I did my small part to create some to arrive a few months earlier than they otherwise would\'ve, then I take some small pride in that. Geekspeak/Boardgamespeak was first (Aldie is always on the leading edge!), but I\'m pleased to be\\xa0the Avis\\xa0of boardgame podcasts. Although Aldie let Boardgamespeak lapse as he moved on to other projects, there are other podcasts besides mine that have been chugging along for years & years.\\xa0Tom Vasel\\xa0&\\xa0Doug Garrett\\xa0have each racked up over 400 hundred episodes, and\\xa0Dave & Stephen\\xa0have recorded over one million hours.\\xa0\\xa0Congrats to all! I\'m happy to be in this club.-MarkP.S. When you listen to the end of the show, mentally replace my answer of "Pergamon" with "Tigris & Euphrates." Much better choice.'