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"path": "/blog/trim-silence/",
"publishedAt": "2026-02-18T00:00:00.000Z",
"site": "https://coyotetracks.org",
"tags": [
"Overcast",
"Pocket Casts",
"Castro",
"99% Invisible",
"Pop Culture Happy Hour",
"Relay",
"Ko-fi.com"
],
"textContent": "While I donât think Apple Podcasts itself has a âtrim silenceâ feature, itâs popular in a bunch of podcast players. Overcast probably kicked it off with its âSmart Speedâ function, but itâs in Pocket Casts, Castro, and Iâm sure a bunch of other ones. The idea is that the player âlistensâ for silences in the podcast and (hopefully subtly) shortens them, so youâre saving a little time even when youâre playing the podcast at normal speed.\n\nI suspect many users always run with Trim Silence enabled. I did, until I realized that occasionally Overcast interpreted _very, very soft_ sounds as trimmable, subtly screwing up the timing of music. No problem: you can disable it for specific podcasts, right?\n\nWell, if you do that, youâll learn that podcasts that I think of as âNPR style,â e.g., ones with a certain kind of production value like _99% Invisible_ and _Pop Culture Happy Hour_ , actually sound pretty good _without_ Trim Silence enabled. In fact, they sometimes sound better. Theyâre edited preciselyâeven though PCHH itself is, despite being an actual NPR production, very much the âseveral dudes talkingâ kind of show unique to the podcast form. (With the asterisk that PCHHâs rotating panel is _extremely_ diverse across just about any demographic line you care to name.)\n\nNow, this isnât a unique observation; I remember chatter a year or two ago on social media that I follow from people discovering this (and making dramatic denunciations of the option). But what I didnât expect is what happened when I listened to podcasts from folks who are part of what one might cheekily dub the 5by5 Diaspora _without_ trim silence enabled.\n\n(Brief aside: 5by5 was a network a decade and change ago run by Dan Benjamin, with shows featuring hosts that pod-listening Apple nerds know: Merlin Mann, John Siracusa, Myke Hurley, Marco Arment, John Gruber, and more. It was _huge_ for a brief time, then fell apart in just as brief a time, with next to all its hosts either jumping to the nascent Relay or going independent. Someday Iâd love to know the story of what happened there; reading between the lines, it sounds as if Benjamin was either difficult to work with, didnât give hosts generous business deals, or both.)\n\nMy impression of many of those conversational shows was that even though they were relatively lightly edited, they were still edited tightly enough to take out awkward pauses. But listening to a few shows that I otherwise love without the Smart Speed or Trim Silence function at work, though, makes me question that belief. Are their creators are, consciously or not, assuming that everyoneâs listening with Trim Silence enabled?\n\nThis could be a style choice, to be sure, the idea that the conversationâs going to sound more natural if you keep in the two or three seconds while a host gathers their thoughts between sentences or phrases. In a sense, it does. But I donât think itâs the kind of ânaturalâ you actually _want_ in a podcast any more than you want it in a scripted show, where any long silence is deliberately written into the script. When I listen to these podcasts as recorded, I think: this could have used a little more editing.\n\nIs this bad? No, not in the grand scheme of things. I _am_ re-evaluating my podcast listens, in part because I donât have the free time to keep up any more, and in part because Iâm burning out on tech news in general and on AI AI AI AI AI AI in particular. Even so, Iâm not going to stop listening to podcasts that I still like because of too-long pauses; Iâll just keep Trim Silence enabled for them.\n\n_To support my writing, consider a tip onKo-fi.com._",
"title": "âTrim Silenceâ: Threat or menace?",
"updatedAt": "2026-02-18T00:00:00.000Z"
}