The Daily (podcast)

News podcast by The New York Times From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Daily (podcast)

The Daily is a daily news podcast produced by the American newspaper The New York Times, hosted by Michael Barbaro and Sabrina Tavernise. Its weekday episodes are based on the Times reporting of the day, with interviews of journalists from The New York Times. Episodes typically last 20 to 30 minutes.

Quick Facts Presentation, Hosted by ...
The Daily
Thumb
Presentation
Hosted by
GenreLong-form journalism, Political podcast
LanguageEnglish
UpdatesWeekdays, by 6 a.m.[1]
Lengthavg. 20–25 minutes
Production
Production
Producers
  • Theo Balcomb
  • Andy Mills
  • Lisa Tobin
  • Rachel Quester
  • Lynsea Garrison
  • Annie Brown
  • Clare Toeniskoetter
  • Paige Cowett
  • Michael Simon Johnson
  • Brad Fisher
  • Larissa Anderson
  • Wendy Dorr
  • Chris Wood
  • Jessica Cheung
  • Alexandra Leigh Young
  • Jonathan Wolfe
  • Lisa Chow
  • Eric Krupke
  • Marc Georges
  • Luke Vander Ploeg
  • Adizah Eghan
Theme music composed byJim Brunberg and Ben Landsverk
No. of episodes2,200 (as of March 2025)[1]
Publication
Original releaseFebruary 1, 2017 (2017-02-01)
Cited for2020 Webby Voice of the Year
ProviderThe New York Times
Related
Related shows
Websitenytimes.com/thedaily
Close

Background

Summarize
Perspective

The Daily launched in January 2017, hosted by the Times political journalist Michael Barbaro,[2] as an extension of The New York Times' 2016 election-focused podcast, The Run-Up.[3]

The Daily is based on interviews with Times journalists,[4] in which they summarize and comment on their story, and is complemented by recordings related to the topic, or original reporting such as interviews with persons involved in the story, and letting them speak uninterrupted.[5] A summary of headlines concludes the podcast.

The Daily is free to listen and financed by advertising; it is profitable according to the Times.[6] The Times said it intended to build a news podcast franchise around it, beginning with a spin-off podcast, The New Washington, in summer 2017.[7] The New Washington ran from July 2017 until December of the same year.[8] A children's edition of The Daily was also planned.[9] In January 2019, The Daily launched a weekly newsletter.[10]

In March 2022, Barbaro was joined by the second host Sabrina Tavernise, following her guest hosting and reports including the Russian invasion of Ukraine.[11]

In September 2024, The New York Times launched podcast subscriptions to The Daily on Apple Podcasts and Spotify. Subscribers to The Times would be able to link their accounts to Apple Podcasts and Spotify, to listen to archived episodes and receive early access to new shows.[12]

Opening theme

The opening theme for The Daily is composed by Jim Brunberg and Ben Landsverk, collectively known as Wonderly. Brunberg and Landsverk are long-time associates of Lisa Tobin, one of the podcast's producers. Barbaro suggested that Brunberg and Landsverk take inspiration from the theme music of the TV series Westworld, composed by Ramin Djawadi. Andy Mills, one of the producers of the podcast, sent Brunberg and Landsverk music by Cliff Martinez from the TV series The Knick, which also influenced The Daily's theme music.[13]

Spinoff TV series

The success of the podcast led to a weekly documentary series The Weekly on FX, with its first episode airing on June 2, 2019.[14] Initially, The Weekly was a narrative investigative journalism docuseries covering recent topical news and cultural stories, which later lead into longer documentaries, as The New York Times Presents.[15]

Reception

Started in January 2017, The Daily became a noted success for the Times; TheStreet described it as "a phenomenon, an out-of-the-blue hit."[7] It had 3.8 million individual listeners by August 2017,[16] and was regularly in the top ten most-listened podcasts by autumn 2017.[7] The New Yorker attributed this success, in part, to the podcast's "conversational and intimate" tone, which made news more accessible, and to Barbaro's "idiosyncratic intonation" (he is known to say "hmm" after interesting commentary from guests, a habit that has generated much online commentary from listeners[17]).[4]

The podcast began being syndicated to radio by American Public Media in 2018.[18] As of June 2018, the podcast receives 1.1 million downloads every weekday,[19] and 2 million in January 2020.[20] It was recognized as the Webby Voice of the Year, a Special Achievement award at the 2020 Webby Awards.[21] In November 2024, Apple announced that the podcast was the No.1 most popular show on Apple Podcasts platform in 2024.[22]

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.