🎙️Nevertheless, She Podcasted🎙️

In celebration of Women’s History Month, “Nevertheless, She Podcasted”, shares podcasts from women hosts, producers, writers and creators that boldly address everything from mansplainations to period cramps.

The list is brought to you by Tink Media Co., an award-winning podcast growth company that specializes in podcast marketing, PR, and creative partnerships.

Check out more podcast recommendations at: https://podcastthenewsletter.substack.com/

NO.1

Why Is Amy in the Bath?
6 30
Listen

Have you ever noticed that Amy Adams seems to do a lot of bathtub/shower scenes? You won’t be able to unnotice it. It’s something that Brandon R. Reynolds and Gabby Lombardo noticed and spun into a bit of a conspiracy theory and a podcast, Why Is Amy In the Bath?

In six episodes they’re asking: Is Amy, who has never won an Oscar, doing all these bathtub scenes because they offer the opportunity for the kind of dramatic acting that earns the biggest, goldest prizes?

NO.2

FeMANism Podcast
18 441
Listen

FeMANism is a fiction podcast acted by two very smart women playing the roles of idiotic men mansplaining feminism.

A comedy podcast by Amy Hoggart and Sam Martin who play Jamie and Sam, two lads on a mission to make feminism a little less annoying and a little more of a laugh. New episodes weekly and video content available to paid subscribers on our Substack. 

NO.3

BEAM: Black Healing Remixed - The Podcast
4 15
Listen

The new season of Black Healing Remixed just launched with a conversation featuring Antonia Hylton, an Emmy and Peabody award-winning author, who unpacks the troubling history of Crownsville State Hospital and its reflection on modern mental health and prison systems.

Antonia's research reveals how many of the major scandals of mistreatment were not actually outliers, but part of a pattern for how Black people were treated in the medical field.

NO.4

The Longest Shortest Time
24.2K 313.3K
Listen

When asked how to describe the show in ten words or less, Hillary Frank, this creator and host of the show, said it’s, “a podcast about the absurdities of life with a vagina”, which gives you an idea of how the show has grown up.

Stories about the surprises and absurdities of raising other humans—and being raised by them. But you don’t need to be a parent to listen.

NO.5

Rumble Strip
1.6K 33.3K
Listen

Erica Heilman wants to make a show about the sound of diffuse despair….the sound of right now. She was going to call it Diffuse Despair but decided to go with What Now Sounds Like, and you can find What Now Sounds Like on the Rumble Strip feed. So—you send her recordings that sound like this time we're living in, and she stitches them together to make something beautiful.

NO.6

CRAMPED
7 48
Listen

Kate Downing (producer of Wondery's Diss and Tell) shares her journey to find answers to the one question that every woman on this planet has asked herself - "why do I have period cramps". Kate Helen Downey has built a career turning complex topics into entertaining and accessible stories.

NO.7

rePROs Fight Back
82 4.1K
Listen

rePROs Fight Back covers everything—from updated status on abortion access and LGBTQ+ rights to gender-based violence—while giving listeners actionable steps to fight back and stay informed. They've spent years fighting for sexual and reproductive, health, rights, and justice and can help listeners practically and emotionally navigate these issues in such a charged political climate.

NO.8

hol+ by Dr. Taz
1.1K 14.3K
Listen

Dr. Taz tackles all things health, medicine, wellness and what that means for each of us - and our families and communities.

Using an East meets West, comprehensive perspective on healing, Dr. Taz, along with her guests, tackles all things health, medicine, wellness and what that means for each of us - and our families and communities.

NO.9

In Retrospect with Susie Banikarim and Jessica Bennett
1.2K 11.5K
Listen

Is there a cultural moment from your past that looks different in retrospect? Maybe it’s a scandalous tabloid story seared into your teenage brain or a political punchline that just feels wrong now. It might be a very specific red swimsuit that inspired a decade of plastic surgery or the inescapable smell of an entire generation of prepubescent boys.

Each week on IN RETROSPECT, Emmy-winning journalist Susie Banikarim and New York Times editor Jessica Bennett revisit a pop culture moment from the 80s and 90s that shaped them — to try to understand what it taught us about the world, and a woman’s place in it.

NO.10

Voices in the River
37 332
Listen

Reclaiming power through intuition, magick, and community. Rebecca Auman, a pragmatic and devoted witch, helps women remember who they are and become leaders of their own destiny. Join us as we throw our voices in the river to see what we can disrupt.

NO.11

Never Miss A Monday
1 5
Listen

Join Stacey Garcia, a mom, personal trainer, Reiki master, integrative health coach, cancer survivor/thriver, and host of Never Miss A Monday, as she explores the connection between mind, body, and spirit.

This podcast features inspiring stories and practical tips from individuals who have flourished despite challenges. Whether you're facing health issues, seeking wellness strategies, or looking to deepen your knowledge, this show offers insights into resilience, empowerment, and alternative healing methods.

NO.12

The Nightingale of Iran
5.5K 15.8K
Listen

It was a golden age for Jews in Iran. In the 1950s, a religious Jew – Younes Dardashti – became a national celebrity, singing at the Shah’s palace and on the radio. In the 1960s, his son Farid became a teen idol on TV. They were beloved by Iranian Muslims. But at the height of their fame, they left the country. It has always been a mystery to our host Danielle Dardashti and her sister Galeet – Why did their family leave Iran?

NO.13

The Good Robot
108 2.5K
Listen

Join Dr Eleanor Drage and Dr Kerry McInerney as they ask the experts: what is good technology? Is ‘good’ technology even possible? And how can feminism help us work towards it?

Each week, they invite scholars, industry practitioners, activists, and more to provide their unique perspective on what feminism can bring to the tech industry and the way that we think about technology. With each conversation, The Good Robot asks how feminism can provide new perspectives on technology’s biggest problems.