When is the last time you've had a good ice cream cone?
Intro
Hands-on session. “We learn by doing.”
Guest: Carson.
Why audio matters
Listeners value sound over visuals.
Bad audio drives people away.
Clean audio tips
Treat the room (curtains, closets, drop cloths).
Use good mic placement, not just good mics.
Control echo, hum, and plosives.
Avoid “fix it in post”
Clean source saves time.
Bad habits add distortion and phase issues.
Light editing keeps sound natural.
On-mic performance
Smile—energy is heard.
Conversational tone beats scripted delivery.
Filler words are okay in moderation.
Remote recording
Record each side locally.
Use Zoom or Riverside for video.
Simple USB or wired mics work fine.
Final tips
Record separate tracks.
Get it right on the front end.
Like, follow, and subscribe.
Why free tools matter
You can start on a budget.
Free tools work if you use them well.
Where to find everything
Podsquadwithjason.com → Section 2 links.
ElevenLabs (low-cost)
Text-to-speech, voice changer, custom voice training.
Export MP3 for intros and VO.
Use lightly to avoid uncanny results.
Photos, vectors, video, music, SFX, 3D, some AI assets.
Pick short stingers (5–10s) for intro/outro.
YouTube Studio Audio Library
Free music and SFX inside YouTube.
Filter by genre, mood, duration.
Royalty-free tracks; credit optional but appreciated.
Free photos and videos (no audio).
Good for B-roll and transitions.
Fast cover art and thumbnails.
Brainstorm episode lists, bullet points, light script polish.
Avoid rigid teleprompter feel if that’s not your style.
Remote recording, editing, clips, captions, reels.
Adobe Podcast (Enhance)
Clean noisy audio; don’t overdo to avoid robotic sound.
Also captions and audio-to-video tools.
Descript (paid)
Easy captions, audio enhancement, and script tweaks; export fast.
Example workflow demo
Photo → script (90% self, polished in ChatGPT) → ElevenLabs VO → Pixabay music → captions → publish.
Wrap / next module
Free tools recap.
1. Set Up Your Environment
Record in a quiet, soft-surfaced room (avoid echo).
Turn off fans, HVAC, and notifications.
Use a dynamic microphone (like the Shure SM58 or Samson Q2U) for best noise rejection.
Plug in your mic before launching Audacity.
2. Create a New Project
Open Audacity.
Go to File → New or File → Project → New.
Save immediately: File → Save Project As… → name your project (e.g., Podcast_Ep01).
3. Check Input Settings
In the toolbar, select:
Microphone Input: Choose your external mic.
Channels: Mono (1 channel) is fine for voice.
Playback Device: Headphones (avoid feedback).
Test input: speak into the mic — you should see green bars move.
4. Record Your Voice
Click the red Record button.
Keep mic 4–6 inches away from your mouth, slightly off-center.
Stay consistent in tone and distance.
Stop recording with the brown square Stop button.
Hit Spacebar to play back.
5. Clean Up the Audio
Trim & Silence
Select unwanted noise with the cursor and press Delete.
Use Effect → Silence Audio to quiet background spaces.
Noise Reduction
Highlight a section with only background noise.
Go to Effect → Noise Reduction → Get Noise Profile.
Select all (Ctrl+A) → Effect → Noise Reduction again → adjust:
Noise reduction: 10–15 dB
Sensitivity: 6.0
Frequency smoothing: 3–6
Preview → OK.
Normalize Volume
Select all → Effect → Normalize → set to -1.0 dB → OK.
6. Add Music & Transitions
Import intro/outro music: File → Import → Audio.
Use Time Shift Tool (↔) to move clips.
Lower music under your voice:
Select the music track → Effect → Amplify → reduce by -15 to -20 dB.
7. Edit Like a Pro
Cut (Ctrl+X) and Paste (Ctrl+V) to remove mistakes.
Use Fade In/Out (under Effects) for smooth transitions.
Add short pauses for clarity and pacing.
8. Mix & Export
Listen through once more with headphones.
Adjust levels using the Mixer Toolbar.
Export:
File → Export → Export as MP3.
Choose Bit Rate Mode: Constant, Quality: 128 kbps or higher.
Add metadata: title, artist, podcast name.
Links:
Goal
Final module: where to publish and how to reach people.
YouTube works, but a host maximizes reach.
Host choice: Podbean
Free tier: 5 hours.
Paid tiers scale ($9/month annual billing and up).
Podbean workflow
Dashboard → Episodes → Add new.
Upload audio. Set title, description, image.
Use strong, click-worthy titles.
Use AI to help
Paste transcript into ChatGPT for title/description ideas.
Distribute everywhere
Connect Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon, iHeart, YouTube.
Auto-push on publish.
Stats available after launch.
Embed on your site
Grab Podbean player code.
Paste on podsquadwithjason.com to showcase episodes.
Notes
Spotify is growing fast; Apple still big.
Start free. Upgrade as you grow.
Podbean – Free tier (5 hours), easy distribution, analytics.
Buzzsprout – User-friendly, automatic episode optimization, free plan with limited hours.
Spotify for Podcasters (formerly Anchor) – 100% free, unlimited hosting, integrated with Spotify.
Captivate – Built for growth; analytics, private feeds, team collaboration.
Libsyn – Established, reliable, detailed stats, wide distribution options.
Transistor – Professional analytics, multiple shows under one account.
Simplecast – Clean interface, strong analytics, embeddable players.
RedCircle – Free hosting, built-in cross-promotion and monetization tools.
RSS.com – Simple setup, unlimited storage with affordable paid plans.
Blubrry – WordPress integration with PowerPress plugin, good analytics.
Acast – Monetization tools, dynamic ads, strong distribution network.
SoundCloud – Easy start for creators, music and podcast friendly.
Spreaker – Live recording, ad monetization, mobile app support.
Podomatic – Free tier, social sharing tools, simple analytics.
Castos – Integrates with WordPress, video podcasting support, private feeds.