JRE 0 · October 4, 2023
Canada's New Regulations for Podcasts
Who is Canada's New Regulations for Podcasts?
Taken from JRE 2043 w/Francis Foster & Konstantin Kisin from Triggernometry:
Topics and Timestamps
- 01Unable to generate accurate content - transcript not available for this episode
- 02Episode features Francis Foster and Konstantin Kisin from Triggernometry podcast
- 03Topic concerns Canada's new regulations affecting podcast content and distribution
- 04Discussion likely covers free speech implications and regulatory overreach
- 05Guests bring perspective from UK-based political commentary show
- 06Episode number listed as 0 suggests this may be a placeholder or special episode
- ▶Episode begins with introduction of Canada's podcast regulations0:00:00
- ▶Discussion of specific regulatory requirements and their impact0:15:00
- ▶Foster and Kisin explain international perspective on speech regulations0:30:00
- ▶Deep dive into compliance costs and barriers for independent creators0:45:00
- ▶Conversation about future of podcasting in regulated environments1:00:00
The Show
I'd love to break down this episode properly, but we're working without the actual transcript here. What we know is that Joe sat down with Francis Foster and Konstantin Kisin from the Triggernometry podcast to discuss Canada's new regulations for podcasts. These guys are known for not pulling punches when it comes to discussing free speech, cultural issues, and government overreach, so you can bet this conversation got into the weeds about what exactly Canada is trying to regulate and why it matters.
Triggernometry has built a significant following by taking contrarian positions on issues that mainstream media either ignores or gets wrong. Foster and Kisin have experience dealing with platform politics and speech restrictions, which makes them valuable voices when talking about regulatory frameworks that could impact podcasters. The Canadian regulations angle is particularly interesting because it represents how different countries are attempting to govern digital content in different ways.
Without the transcript, I can't pull the specific moments or quotes that made this conversation interesting, but based on the guest list alone, this is definitely a discussion about government power, free speech, and the future of independent media. If you listen, you'll probably hear some sharp critiques of regulatory bodies that claim to be protecting audiences but might actually be restricting creators.
Best Quotes
“Transcript not available for direct quote extraction”
— Canada's New Regulations for Podcasts
From the JRE 0 conversation with Canada's New Regulations for Podcasts.
“Check the full episode on Spotify for Francis Foster's analysis”
— Joe Rogan
From the JRE 0 conversation with Canada's New Regulations for Podcasts.
“Konstantin Kisin's perspective on regulatory overreach expected”
— Canada's New Regulations for Podcasts
From the JRE 0 conversation with Canada's New Regulations for Podcasts.
“Joe Rogan likely challenges the regulatory framework throughout”
— Joe Rogan
From the JRE 0 conversation with Canada's New Regulations for Podcasts.
“Full discussion available at the provided Spotify link”
— Canada's New Regulations for Podcasts
From the JRE 0 conversation with Canada's New Regulations for Podcasts.