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Spout Podcast

Spout Podcast

Spout Podcast & Studio71

203 episodesEN-US

Show overview

Spout Podcast has been publishing since 2021, and across the 5 years since has built a catalogue of 203 episodes, alongside 1 trailer or bonus episode. That works out to roughly 120 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a fortnightly cadence.

Episodes typically run thirty-five to sixty minutes — most land between 24 min and 42 min — though episode length varies meaningfully from one episode to the next. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-US-language Music show.

The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed 3 days ago, with 23 episodes already out so far this year. The busiest year was 2025, with 51 episodes published. Published by Spout Podcast & Studio71.

Episodes
203
Running
2021–2026 · 5y
Median length
36 min
Cadence
Fortnightly

From the publisher

You know them for their songs, videos, and epic performances, but there is always something even their super fans don't know until now. This is the Spout Podcast, where famous people spout off about more than they're famous for. For advertising opportunities please email [email protected] We want to make the podcast even better, help us learn how we can: https://bit.ly/2EcYbu4 Privacy Policy: https://www.studio71.com/terms-and-conditions-use/#Privacy%20Policy

Latest Episodes

View all 203 episodes

Tank Ball Is Done With Balloons. Now Comes the Big Leap

May 11, 202640 min

Story of the Year on ARSON, Warped Tour, and 30 Years of Controlled Chaos

May 7, 202653 min

Shinedown: No Rules, No Lanes, No Holding Back

May 4, 202623 min

Honey Revenge on Hot Commodity, Warped Tour, Summer School & Their Next Era

Apr 27, 202642 min

Parker McCollum: New Music, Big Dreams, and the Power of No

Apr 24, 202620 min

The Road to Stagecoach

Apr 20, 20261h 44m

Redferrin

Apr 15, 202642 min

Bayker Blankenship Is Having the Kind of Rise Country Music Dreams About

Apr 13, 202640 min

Patrick McEnroe

Patrick McEnroe joins the Spout Podcast for a wide-ranging conversation on the past, present, and future of tennis. The former Grand Slam champion, Davis Cup captain, ESPN analyst, and President of the International Tennis Hall of Fame breaks down how the game has evolved from the eras of Agassi, Sampras, Federer, Nadal, and Djokovic to the rise of Carlos Alcaraz and Jannik Sinner. He shares why Novak Djokovic stands above the rest in the GOAT debate, what makes Alcaraz such a magnetic star, and why Serena Williams remains one of the most dominant athletes the sport has ever seen. Patrick also opens up about facing his brother John McEnroe, what leadership taught him as Davis Cup captain, how young players develop greatness, and why tennis and even pickleball continue to connect generations through competition, passion, and personality. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Apr 11, 202636 min

Dermot Kennedy

Dermot Kennedy joins Spout to talk about the making of his third studio album, The Weight of the Woods, and the emotional headspace of releasing music that feels both deeply personal and fully lived in. He opens up about why “Funeral” became the lead single, how “Refuge” became one of the album’s most vulnerable songs, and why this project feels like the purest blend of who he was before fame and everything he’s learned since. He also gets into writing in Nashville with Gabe Simon, embracing imperfection in the studio, hearing Taylor Swift praise his songwriting, performing with Zach Bryan, wanting to collaborate with J. Cole, and how fatherhood has added a new perspective to his life. From singing on the streets of Dublin to selling out stadiums in Ireland, Dermot reflects on the quiet confidence that kept him going and the creative values that matter most now. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Apr 6, 202642 min

Gashi on Rap, Reinvention, Relationship and Reality

Gashi joins The Spout Podcast for a conversation that goes way deeper than a typical album interview. Fresh off the release of “Snowed In at the Plaza Hotel” and stepping into the world of The Killer Whales of Gotham, he opens up about the stories, chaos, and mindset behind what he calls the best rap album of the year. But this episode doesn’t stay on the surface for long. Gashi gets candid about immigrant identity, the pressure of fame, dating while being constantly recognized, the state of rap, why streaming changed music culture for the worse, and the anxiety he’s been navigating in real time while promoting this new chapter. Along the way, he’s hilarious, unpredictable, emotional, and brutally honest in a way that makes this conversation feel less like press and more like getting the truth from someone who has nothing to hide. If you want an episode with big opinions, real vulnerability, and plenty of moments you won’t see coming, this is it. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Mar 30, 202638 min

Hunter Hayes

Hunter Hayes joins Erik Zachary for a thoughtful, wide-ranging conversation about Evergreen, the album he spent nearly a decade building into what he now calls season one of a larger creative story. Hunter opens up about the freedom of making music on his own terms, why this project had to wait until he was ready to live it, and how songs like “Human Again,” “Too Late,” “The Ones You Love,” and “Around the Sun” reflect growth, grief, hope, and the complicated process of becoming who you’re meant to be. Along the way, the conversation stretches beyond the record into flying lessons, creative discipline, rare instruments, watches, mentors like Elton John, and the mindset shift from fearing “what if” to asking what happens if it all works out. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Mar 23, 202656 min

Two Feet Gets Honest About Sobriety and His New Era

Tamara Dhia sits down with Two Feet for an honest conversation about creativity, sobriety, and finding his next musical direction. He opens up about his new EP Songs for February, why he’s releasing music faster than ever, and how fan feedback is shaping what comes next. Two Feet also reflects on creating from a sober place for the first time, the truth behind the “tortured artist” myth, and the life-changing moment that forced him to reset everything. Plus, he talks about his upcoming tour, collaborating with artists like Suki Waterhouse and Michele Morrone, and the songs new listeners should hear first to understand who he is as an artist. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Mar 16, 202637 min

Willa Ford Returns After 20 Years: From “I Wanna Be Bad” to Her New Album Amanda

After more than 20 years away from music, the singer behind the Y2K hit “I Wanna Be Bad” returns with a deeply personal new album titled Amanda — named after her birth name and a reflection of who she is today. In this episode of the Spout Podcast, Willa opens up about her return to music, navigating fame during the early-2000s pop boom, and the journey that led her back to the studio. She shares stories from the peak of the TRL era, working alongside pop icons like Britney Spears, Christina Aguilera, Jessica Simpson, and Mandy Moore, and how the industry often pitted her against them. Willa also discusses the deeply personal experiences that shaped this new chapter, including her diagnosis with PNES seizures, the importance of mental health for artists, and why she chose to return as an independent artist in full control of her music. Plus, she reflects on her pivot into entrepreneurship, building a successful interior design business, and why stepping away from music may have been the best decision she ever made. Now, she’s ready to return to the stage with her first-ever headline tour and a new body of work that represents her most authentic self. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Mar 9, 202643 min

Rachel Grae: The Story Behind Turned Into Me

Rachel Grae joins Tamara Dhia to unpack her debut album Turned Into Me, out March 6. She describes the record as “a hug to my younger self,” built in emotional pairs that contrast past and present — from codependency to independence, toxic love to healthy relationships, and the shift from shrinking herself to standing firm. Rachel shares the turning point behind the empowering opener “Run With the River,” the vulnerable rewrite that became “Come a Day,” and the anger-fueled clarity of “Me and Your Ego.” She also talks candidly about dating as a songwriter, the promise she once made not to write a bad song about someone, and the lyric that captures the album’s core: “I’m sorry for her, but I’m grateful she turned into me.” The conversation revisits the TikTok moment that pushed “Friend Like Me” into the spotlight — filmed casually while making eggs — and what that taught her about authenticity, audience connection, and letting go of perfection. Rachel discusses performing unreleased songs on tour in the UK and Europe, preparing for a move to Nashville, and why she believes the city’s songwriting culture hits differently. She also reflects on “Outsider,” the early release that built her community, and how healing has changed the way she writes — and the way she sees herself. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Mar 2, 202639 min

David Archuleta on Religion, Identity, and Reclaiming His Voice

David Archuleta joins to talk about his deeply personal new memoir, Devout — and the raw three-song EP that accompanies the audiobook. David opens up about growing up in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, wrestling with faith and sexuality, and the emotional toll of trying to reconcile religion with his identity as a queer man. He shares what it was like to feel called to honesty while simultaneously feeling pressured to hide, and how writing this book became a turning point in reclaiming his voice. The conversation explores: Why Devout became the right vessel for his story The courage it took to overshare — about family, faith, and dating Recording the audiobook in his own voice and the unexpected impact it had The vulnerable EP that serves as a musical prequel to his current era What he’d say to “younger David” stepping into the spotlight on American Idol Finding joy today — from the gym to the beach to late-night EDM shows Devout is out now, with the exclusive EP available through the audiobook. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Feb 23, 202637 min

Concerts, Content & Condoms | Bad Bunny Drama, Stranger Things Wedding Shade & An Olympic “Shortage”

This week on The Spout Podcast, Tamara Dhia and Nick Major break down the biggest headlines in pop culture and there’s no shortage of drama. Bad Bunny is fresh off a massive Super Bowl halftime moment, but Devin Booker isn’t exactly applauding. With Kendall Jenner back in the mix, the love triangle narrative resurfaces and the petty shade continues. Maya Hawke secretly tied the knot in New York City, turning her Valentine’s Day wedding into a full Stranger Things reunion, minus two very noticeable cast members. The internet has questions. Following the heartbreaking loss of Dawson’s Creek star James VanDerBeek, a multi-million dollar GoFundMe for his family sparks online backlash. The hosts unpack both sides of the debate and the larger issue of medical costs in America. At the 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympics, organizers reportedly ran out of condoms in just three days inside the Olympic Village. Yes, really. The episode also dives into Ryan Murphy’s dramatized take on JFK Jr. and Carolyn Bessette, Harry Styles stepping into full creative control of London’s Meltdown Festival, the return of Warped Tour, Netflix reviving Star Search with live voting, the newest season of Love Is Blind, and former President Obama’s latest comments on extraterrestrial life. Concerts, controversy, culture and a few unanswered questions about aliens — all in one episode. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Feb 16, 202632 min

Bad Bunny Reframed the Super Bowl

This week on Spout, Erik Zachary and Tamara Dhia break down the most talked-about Super Bowl halftime shows of all time and why Bad Bunny’s performance landed so differently. From the sugarcane fields of Puerto Rico recreated on the field, to the now-iconic “human trees,” to surprise moments with Lady Gaga and Ricky Martin, this wasn’t just a halftime show. Erik pulls back the curtain on the production mechanics (including the real reason those “trees” were people), while Tamara dives into the symbolism, representation, and emotional impact especially for viewers who didn’t need to speak Spanish to enjoy the show. They also unpack: Why this became the most-watched halftime show ever The subtle (and not-so-subtle) cultural callbacks you might’ve missed Lady Gaga’s salsa-infused moment and why it added to the show The wedding on the field, the child watching his future self, and the power of visual storytelling Celebrity sightings, box-seat politics, and why hate-watching still counts What modern halftime shows get wrong and why this one got it right Whether you’re here for the music, the production, the culture, or the bigger conversation about live moments that actually matter, this episode is about why Bad Bunny didn’t just headline the Super Bowl… he reminded us why we still watch it. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Feb 9, 202643 min

The Grammys Are Fun Again (Yes, Really)

The Grammys gave us something we haven’t had in a while: a reason to actually watch live. Spout hosts, Erik Zachary and Tamara Dhia break down the biggest moments from music’s biggest night, from Bad Bunny’s emotional Album of the Year win to Olivia Dean taking home Best New Artist. They debate surprise wins, standout performances, questionable choices, and the moments that had everyone texting each other “did that really just happen?” Highlights include: Bad Bunny’s win and why it felt bigger than music Best New Artist and why live vocals still matter Trevor Noah’s final turn as host and who should host next Bieber, Bruno, Gaga, Sabrina, and the performances that worked (and didn’t) Lola Young’s F bomb Cher’s unforgettable or regrettable moment Pharrell’s Impact Award speech Red carpet fashion, bold choices, and Chapel Roan doing Chapel Roan things This is a fan-and-industry take on a Grammy Awards show that finally remembered how to be entertaining again. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Feb 2, 202638 min

Mothica joins Spout to officially usher in her boldest era yet , MOTHICORP, INC.

Mothica breaks down the world-building behind her new music and visuals, including the release of “Evergreen Misery” and “Save Your Roses,” and the upcoming five-song EP Somewhere In Between (out February 20). What started as an inside joke has evolved into a full creative universe — complete with lore, symbolism, and a heavier sonic direction fans are already calling “Rocka.” Mothica opens up about sobriety, rehab, anxiety, and the hard decision to cancel a major tour to prioritize her mental health. She talks candidly about addiction, creative rebirth, and learning to live in the gray area between extremes. The episode also goes into: Why this era leans heavier and more rock-driven The meaning behind Somewhere In Between Re-releasing “Vices” and rewriting its future Touring again after recovery and what’s different this time Her love of practical effects, moth lore, and visual storytelling Shrek, All Star, and why it somehow all makes sense Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Jan 26, 202650 min
Spout Podcast & Studio71