The word 'podcast' is younger than most of the people who use it daily, yet it has already embedded itself so deeply in the language that it feels timeless. It was coined on February 12, 2004, by Ben Hammersley, a British journalist writing for The Guardian.
Hammersley's article was about the convergence of several technologies — MP3 audio compression, portable media players, and RSS syndication — that had made it possible for anyone to create and distribute audio programs. The medium existed but had no name. In his article, Hammersley floated three candidates: 'audioblogging,' 'podcasting,' and 'GuerillaMedia.' He later admitted that he generated
'Podcasting' won. The portmanteau was transparent and catchy: 'iPod' (the dominant portable music player of the era) plus 'broadcast' (to transmit widely). Former MTV VJ Adam Curry and software developer Dave Winer, who had been building the actual RSS-based audio distribution technology, adopted the term. By 2005, 'podcast' was the New Oxford American Dictionary's Word of the Year.
The 'iPod' half of the word has its own etymology. When Apple was developing its portable music player in 2001, freelance copywriter Vinnie Chieco was brought in for naming. Seeing the prototype — a small white device with a screen — he was reminded of the EVA pods in Stanley Kubrick's '2001: A Space Odyssey.' The line 'Open the pod bay
The 'broadcast' half is much older and has an agricultural origin. 'Broadcast' originally meant to scatter seeds broadly across a field by hand, rather than planting in rows — 'broad' (wide) plus 'cast' (to throw). The word appears in English from the eighteenth century in this farming sense. When radio emerged in the 1920s, the metaphor
The irony of 'podcast' is that it was named after a device it never required. Podcasts could be played on any MP3 player, any computer, any phone — the iPod was simply the most popular player at the time. As the iPod declined and smartphones rose, the 'pod' in 'podcast' became an etymological fossil: a trace of a bygone technological era preserved in an otherwise living word. Young listeners today who
Apple's relationship with the term was complicated. The company had nothing to do with coining it but eventually embraced it, adding podcast support to iTunes in June 2005 and later trademarking 'Pod' and 'Podcast.' In 2005, Apple sent cease-and-desist letters to podcast-related businesses using 'pod' in their names, asserting trademark rights over a word a journalist had invented independently.
The word has proven remarkably productive. 'Podcaster' (one who makes podcasts), 'podcasting' (the activity), 'vodcast' or 'vidcast' (video podcast, by analogy), and 'pod' as a standalone clipping (as in 'what pod are you listening to?') have all entered common usage. The medium itself — long-form, on-demand audio — has become one of the dominant forms of media in the 2020s, generating billions in advertising revenue and reshaping journalism, entertainment, and education.
That all of this traces back to a journalist who needed a word and spent half a minute inventing one is a striking example of how language and technology co-evolve. The right word at the right moment can name an entire medium into existence.