
What Is a Podcast RSS Feed and Why Does It Matter?
Your RSS feed is what makes your podcast portable, distributable, and genuinely yours. Here’s how it works — and why it matters more than most beginners realise.
Every quarter, Edison Research releases its list of the top 50 podcasts in the United States.
While the American market operates at a different scale, the trends it reveals are deeply instructive for South African podcasters looking to grow their shows, sharpen their focus, and reach new audiences.
By studying what’s working across the most listened to podcasts in the world, we can identify strategies that are adaptable to our local context, especially for creators building independent or niche productions.
Here are six key lessons from the U.S. Top 50 Podcasts (Q1 2025), grounded in an accurate look at what the leading shows are doing right.
Although the list features a variety of genres, a few stand out: true crime, interview shows, news, and comedy-driven personality podcasts.
At the top are The Joe Rogan Experience (long-form interviews), Crime Junkie and Dateline NBC (true crime), The Daily (news), Call Her Daddy (celebrity relationships and culture), and This Past Weekend with Theo Von (comedy and interviews).
For South African podcasters, this reveals a few opportunities.
True crime remains massively popular, and our country has no shortage of compelling, complex stories that can be told with respect and research.
But the presence of interview-led formats and news commentary also suggests that people want context, conversation, and authentic voices, not just entertainment.
From Joe Rogan to Theo Von to Alex Cooper (Call Her Daddy), the personality of the host drives the success of these shows.
These hosts aren’t trying to sound like anyone else.
They’re confident, consistent, and authentic.
Local creators can learn a lot from this.
Your podcast doesn’t need to be flashy or overproduced to work.
It needs to feel like you.
Whether you’re serious, sarcastic, nerdy, or nurturing, bring your full self to the mic.
In South Africa, we often underplay individuality, but in podcasting, it’s a superpower.
Interview shows like The Joe Rogan Experience, Call Her Daddy, and The Diary of a CEO aren’t just asking surface questions.
They dig deep, create space for guests to talk, and follow tangents that lead to insight.
The goal isn’t to impress the audience with clever questions.
It’s to create meaningful, revealing conversations.
If you’re running an interview podcast in South Africa, challenge yourself to go deeper.
Do your research.
Ask better follow-ups.
Let guests speak without interruption.
That’s what makes interviews feel alive.
The Daily (from The New York Times) and This American Life remain in the top ten because they consistently deliver high-quality episodes on a reliable schedule.
Their formats are familiar, their production values are high, and their audiences know what to expect.
If you want to grow your audience here at home, consistency is key.
That doesn’t mean publishing daily.
It just means showing up regularly and maintaining quality.
Missed deadlines and erratic schedules make it hard for listeners to build a habit around your show.
Shows like Rotten Mango (a breakout hit this year) have gained traction through smart social media use, especially on platforms like YouTube and TikTok.
Clips, summaries, reels, and behind-the-scenes snippets have turned casual viewers into dedicated listeners.
If you’re not promoting your podcast on social media, you’re leaving reach on the table.
And you don’t have to dance or go viral.
Just show people what your podcast is about, tease what’s coming, and invite them in.
The U.S. Top 50 is surprisingly diverse.
You’ll find podcasts about science (Huberman Lab), personal finance (The Ramsey Show), motivation (The Mindset Mentor), Christian spirituality (Bible in a Year), and feminist investing (Financial Feminist).
The takeaway is clear.
Every niche has an audience if you serve it well.
South African podcasters should take note.
You don’t have to compete in crowded genres like true crime or comedy.
You can own a niche.
Maybe it’s rural farming, Gen Z politics, queer spirituality, or Afrikaans sci-fi.
When you know who you’re speaking to, you’ll create content that resonates deeply.
This list isn’t a scoreboard.
It’s a guide.
The podcasting space in South Africa is still wide open for those who are willing to focus, adapt, and improve.
If you’re already podcasting or just getting started, there’s never been a better time to refine your skills, define your niche, and grow your audience.
Our Podmaster™ Accelerator program was built with exactly this in mind.
It’s designed to help local podcasters sharpen their strategy, elevate their craft, and create standout content that holds its own in any market.
Learn from what’s working globally, apply it locally, and build something that lasts.
The Joe Rogan Experience
Crime Junkie
The Daily
Call Her Daddy
This Past Weekend w/ Theo Von
Dateline NBC
SmartLess
Morbid
Rotten Mango
This American Life
Stuff You Should Know
Office Ladies
My Favorite Murder
Huberman Lab
Pod Save America
Fly on the Wall with Dana Carvey & David Spade
The Ben Shapiro Show
Freakonomics Radio
The Toast
Pardon My Take
The Bible in a Year
Lex Fridman Podcast
Armchair Expert
The Diary of a CEO
Hidden Brain
Shawn Ryan Show
The Glenn Beck Program
The Ramsey Show
Planet Money
The Jordan Harbinger Show
Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend
Serial
Up First
The Mel Robbins Podcast
Rich Roll Podcast
How I Built This
The Viall Files
The Daily Stoic
The Megyn Kelly Show
Rachel Maddow Presents: Ultra
The Deck
Two Hot Takes
The Pat McAfee Show
Therapy Gecko
The Always Sunny Podcast
Financial Feminist
On Purpose with Jay Shetty
The Positive Mindset Podcast
The Mindset Mentor
RedHanded
Your voice is your brand. Your podcast should sound like it.
We help creators, coaches, and businesses make shows that stand out – for the right reasons.
Book a free consultation and let’s build something powerful.

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