This is a brief update about what’s been happening on the 80k podcast team over the last 6 months, because we’ve undergone quite a few changes. We’re also hiring (more details below).
As background: The podcast has been running for 8(!) years, run and predominantly hosted by Rob Wiblin. Over that time the podcast has grown to ~127,000 subscribers across Spotify, YouTube and Apple Podcasts, the production value and knowledge of how to execute a great podcast have very much improved, and Luisa Rodriguez joined Rob as a host. But, given capacity constraints, 80k hasn’t invested significant resources into testing out ways to substantially scale the podcast’s impact. Rob hosted while also needing to manage the team and leading on strategy. Alongside this, he has led projects like selecting and appointing a new board for 80,000 Hours as we spun out of EV. Over the coming year, with me now focused on strategy for the podcast, 80k aims to invest notably more in experimenting with potential ways to grow the podcast team and scale its impact.
There are a couple of reasons we think it’s worth investing significant resources into growing the podcast team. The first is that the podcast has had good impact returns:
- In OpenPhil’s 2023 survey about what caused people to be interested in GCR work, 80k is mentioned as a leading influence, and 45% of the people who said they were significantly influenced by 80k cited the podcast as an important part of how 80k had influenced them/their trajectory.
- The EA survey tells a similar story. For example, in the 2024 survey, the 80k podcast comes out similarly to things like EAG on influencing personal ability to have an impact.
The second reason is timing. Along with the rest of 80k, the podcast team thinks that our largest vector for improving the longrun future right now is focusing on the transition to transformative AI. Right now, AI progress is coming more into the public consciousness and a greater number of societal decision makers are needing to make choices which impact and/or are impacted by AI developments, and are needing to do so without having a background in the technology. Having been learning about and working on this for a decade, we’re relatively well placed to inform people about how the technology might affect the world, and the risks associated with it. Our aim is that the discussions and issues we highlight on the podcast will help guide decisions people take in their current roles, as well as decisions about where they work.
In order to capitalise on those, we’d like to increase the output of episodes and experiment with more formats. To achieve this, we need to hire additional capacity. I joined the team to push on these goals and allow Rob to focus on hosting. We started by running a hiring round for additional hosts, which we’re getting towards the end of, though it’s likely we will want to hire for further new hosts in 2026. A large part of what goes into these episodes isn't just having the conversation and finessing the audio -- there's researching topics, inputting on the episode flow, and publicising them. Right now, the hosts are mostly responsible for these but we don't think that's necessary. We’re looking to hire people with complementary skills to take on a large proportion of these responsibilities, to allow the team to really ramp up our output. To give a sense of the types of work:
- Coming up with topics for episodes that are important for our audience to hear and finding potential guests to cover those topics
- Suggesting and editing questions for an interview, and editing episodes post recording to streamline episodes and make them more engaging
- Figuring out titles and framings for episodes, and drafting copy to accompany them on other platforms (such as X) to help them reach the right people
If you would like to join our small ambitious team to produce content to shape humanity’s longrun trajectory as it navigates transformative AI, please consider applying. You can read more about the roles we’re planning to add and what we’re looking for on our website.
To galvanise our team around a central mission, and help ourselves to remain ambitious and remember what we can achieve, I wrote a brief vision for the podcast over the coming years. I find these types of documents a bit tricky to engage with because making them truly aspirational is often in direct tension with realism, so they always feel like a work in progress to me. But I thought people might like to get a sense of what the podcast team is currently aiming at. Since it was written as an internal doc for people with a lot of context, I’ve made an abridged version with some tweaks and some explanation (denoted by square brackets) which hopefully makes it more intelligible and helps avoid confusions. I wanted to get this out fairly swiftly though, so I’m afraid it still reads like an internal doc.
What does all this mean for what you might expect to be able to listen to and watch over the coming months?
- We’re hoping to put out decidedly more episodes this quarter than we did last quarter, including interviews with Ajeya Cotra, Rob Long, Max Harms, Marius Hobbhahn and Dean Ball.
- Rob will be experimenting more with voice essays, starting with one about how his AGI timelines have shifted given the developments over the year.
- In the new year we hope to add a third host to the team and potentially try out other new formats such as debates.
- We don’t expect all our episodes to focus on AI, though we do expect it to be around 80% for the foreseeable future.
It's great to see the podcast expanding. I think the ship has already sailed on this, but it feels important for me to flag two experiences I've had since the podcast's "shift to AI."
This also applies to the 80k brand as a whole. I used to recommend it to people interested in having an impact with their career but ever since 80k pivoted to an AI career funnel I recommend it to fewer people and always with the caveat of "They focus only on AI now, but there is some useful content hidden beneath"
"Though I think AI is critically important, it is not something I get a real kick out of thinking and hearing about."
-> Personally, I find a whole lot of non-technical AI content to be highly repetitive. It seems like a lot of the same questions are being discussed again and again with fairly little progress.
For 80k, I think I'd really encourage the team to focus a lot on figuring out new subtopics that are interesting and important. I'm sure there are many great stories out there, but I think it's very easy to get trapped into talking about the routine updates or controversies of the week, with little big-picture understanding.
My suggestion along these lines would be to try to get guests on who come with a different perspective on transformative AI or AGI than most of the 80,000 Hours Podcast's past guests or most people in EA. Toby Ord's episode was excellent in this respect; he's as central to EA as it gets, yet he was dumping cold water on the scaling trends many people in EA take for granted.
Some obvious big names that might be hard to get: François Chollet, Richard Sutton, and Yann LeCun (the links go to representative podcast clips for each one of them).
A semi-big name who will probably be easier to get: Jeff Hawkins of Numenta.
A less famous person who might be a good stand-in for Richard Sutton's perspective on AI is Edan Meyer, an academic AI researcher.
With some research and asking around, you could probably generate more ideas for guests along these lines.
I think one good way to get more clarity on the big picture and stimulate more creative thinking is to bring people into the conversation who have more diverse viewpoints. Even if you were to come at it from the perspective of being 95% certain that LLMs will scale to AGI within 10 years (which AFAIK is a big exaggeration of the 80,000 Hours team's real views), one really useful part of having guests like this one would be prompting the hosts and the audience to think about why, exactly, these guests are wrong in their LLM skepticism.
I think even in cases where you are 95% sure you're right, talking to brilliant, eloquent experts who disagree can only serve to sharpen your thinking and put you in a better position to think about and articulate your case. Conversely, I think when you're only talking to people who agree with you, you don't develop an ability to make a persuasive case to people who don't already agree. You take for granted things other people don't take for granted, and you're maybe not even aware of other people's objections, qualms, and concerns. Maybe the most important part of persuasion is showing people you know what they have to say and that you have an answer to it.
A lot of the stated goals in the Google Doc come down to persuasion, so this seems in line with your goals.
Thanks for all the suggestions!
Thanks for the nudge. I agree it seems crucial to try to find things that are actually different to cover - both for the sake of being interesting and more importantly to actually have an impact. I'd love to hear any particular suggestions you have about things that seem underexplored and important to you!
I had a similar experience. I recommended the podcast to dozens of people over the years, because it was one of the best to have fascinating interviews with great guest on a very wide range of topics. However, since it switched to AI as the main topic, I have recommended it to zero people and I don't expect this to change if the focus stays this way.
Useful to know, thanks
Thanks Matt and other commenting here. I have independently starting worrying about the show being too narrow and repetitive this year, and will be factoring in the issues people have raised here in planning for next year!
(Unfortunately I can't say we'll probably get back to being as interesting for an EA Forum audience as we once were, as we're working with a different theory of change now and I think for better or worse the times we're living in call for shifting strategy.)
To be 100% clear about what I see as the main issue (by what I think are 80k's lights), it's not that the podcast is less interesting for an EA Forum audience, but rather that it's less interesting in general. It's a niche podcast for people who already think AI is very important.
I'm sort of confused by how this interacts with the goals laid out in the Google Doc. I think it's great to target elite decision-makers — but I would have assumed the greatest impact is on the extensive margin, among people who (1) have decision-making power but aren't AI specialists or (2) don't already have well-developed views.
By not offering content that will allow the podcast to grow along this margin, I would worry that you are preaching to various existing choirs! I certainly can't imagine anyone becoming interested in working in AI as a result of this podcast - they'll never listen!
But I think surely you have thought about this — I am interested in the answer, though.
Hey Matt, obviously there's a tonne one could say here, just to offer some quick thoughts:
Thanks! This is very helpful/informative — particularly the thing about YouTube!
Thanks for letting us know! That's useful data.
Do you see other podcasts filling the long-form, serious/in-depth, EA-adjacent/aligned niche in areas other than AI? E.g., GiveWell has a podcast, but I'm not sure it's the same sort of thing. There's also Hear This Idea, often Clearer Thinking or Dwarkesh Patel cover relevant stuff.
(Aside, was thinking of potentially trying to do a podcast involving researchers and research evaluators linked to The Unjournal; if I thought it could fill a gap and we could do it well, which I'm not sure of.)
No, I really don't. Sometimes you see things in the same territory on Dwarkesh (which is very AI-focused) or Econtalk (which is shorter and less and less interesting to me lately). Rationally Speaking was wonderful but appears to be done. Hear This Idea is intermittent and often more narrowly focused. You get similar guests on podcasts like Jolly Swagman but the discussion is often at too low of a level, with worse questions asked. I have little hope of finding episodes like those with Hannah Ritchie, Christopher Brown, Andy Weber, or Glen Weyl anywhere else anytime soon. It's actually a big loss in my life and (IMO) leaving many future potential EAs and AI people on the table.
Hi Matt. Since you mentioned "vaccines", you may be interested in the podcast Hard Drugs.
Here's some suggestions from 6 minutes of ChatGPT thinking. (Not all are relevant, e.g., I don't think "Probable Causation" is a good fit here.)