Company type | Subsidiary |
---|---|
Industry | Podcasts |
Founded | 2016 |
Founders |
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Headquarters | Brooklyn, New York City, New York |
Key people |
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Parent | Audacy, Inc. (2019-present) |
Website | pineapple |
Pineapple Street Studios (formerly Pineapple Street Media) is a podcast studio based in Brooklyn, New York. In August 2019, it was acquired by Entercom (now Audacy, Inc.). [1] Pineapple's work includes multi-episode narratives, investigative journalism, branded podcasts, and talk shows. They have created series for companies like Nike, Hulu, Netflix, HBO, and The New York Times . [2] In 2020, they led all podcast companies with two Peabody Award nominations, for The Catch and Kill Podcast with Ronan Farrow and Running From Cops . [3] Twelve of their shows have reached #1 on Apple Podcasts.[ citation needed ]
Pineapple Street Media was founded in 2016 by former BuzzFeed head of audio Jenna Weiss-Berman and Longform co-founder Max Linsky. [4]
In August 2016, Pineapple released With Her, a commissioned podcast following Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign (the first to be hosted by a candidate for US President). Max Linsky co-hosted. [5] [6]
In September 2016, in collaboration with The New York Times, Pineapple launched Still Processing , a culture podcast hosted by Jenna Wortham and Wesley Morris. [7]
Pineapple teamed with filmmaker Dan Taberski on a series of investigative podcasts: Missing Richard Simmons , Surviving Y2K and Running from Cops . Missing Richard Simmons spent almost three weeks as the #1 series on Apple Podcasts. [8] Vulture called it "brilliant" and "the strongest narrative podcast out there." [9]
In 2017, they helped in the production of the podcast for Wormwood on Netflix. Errol Morris, the director, converses with multiple guests about the circumstances of Frank Olson's death and CIA involvement. Guests include: Jon Ronson (author of The Men Who Stare at Goats ), Peter Sarsgaard (lead actor), Eric Olsen (son of Frank Olson).
In October 2019, it was announced that HBO Max greenlit a television adaptation of Pineapple and Stitcher's podcast, Heaven's Gate . [10] Heaven's Gate: The Cult of Cults , a four-part documentary series, premiered on HBO Max on December 3, 2020. [11]
In association with Gimlet Media, Pineapple produced The Clearing , a docu-series about April Balascio and her father, serial killer Edward Wayne Edwards. It reached #1 on Apple Podcasts. [12] The Guardian described the series as an "immense achievement." [13] On December 18, 2019, Deadline announced that a television adaptation was in the works with Chernin Entertainment and Weimaraner Republic Pictures. [14]
In partnership with investigative reporter Ronan Farrow, Pineapple debuted The Catch and Kill Podcast with Ronan Farrow , an audio companion to Farrow's bestselling book, Catch and Kill: Lies, Spies and a Conspiracy to Protect Predators . It won the 2020 Edward R Murrow Award for Best Podcast. [15] Farrow also won a 2020 Webby People's Voice Award for Best Host. [16]
With Crooked Media and Spotify, Pineapple produced Wind of Change. The series, hosted by writer and journalist Patrick Radden Keefe, was selected as one of the best podcasts of 2020 by The Guardian (#1 overall), [17] The Atlantic , [18] The New York Times, [19] Rolling Stone [20] and The New Yorker . [21] Hulu is adapting the podcast for television with Alex Karpovsky signed on to write and executive produce. [22] The podcast explored the theory that the 1990 Scorpion's song Wind of Change was Cold War propaganda, written by the CIA. [23]
In August 2020, Pineapple launched Back Issue, a look at formative moments in pop culture, hosted by writer Tracy Clayton and Pineapple producer Josh Gwynn. On the series, The New York Times wrote, "Tracy Clayton and Josh Gwynn use their encyclopedic memory of pop culture moments as a balm in trying times." [24] It was featured on Time and The Atlantic's lists of the best podcasts of 2020. [25] [18]
In early January 2024, it was announced that their parent company Audacy would be preparing to file for bankruptcy within the upcoming weeks. On January 7, 2024, Audacy filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. As part of the bankruptcy reorganization, Audacy has made a deal with its creditors to transfer control to them while cutting approximately $1.6 billion of its debt. [26]
Title | Host(s) | Description |
---|---|---|
Back Issue | Tracy Clayton & Josh Gwynn | Back Issue tells the stories behind formative moments in pop culture. |
The C-Word | Lena Dunham & Alissa Bennett | Lena Dunham and Alissa Bennett take listeners on a historical deep-dive into the life of a woman society dismissed by calling her mad, sad, or just plain bad. |
The Catch and Kill Podcast | Ronan Farrow | An inside look at Ronan Farrow's investigation of Harvey Weinstein. |
The Clearing | Josh Dean | When April Balascio was 40 years old, something she'd feared for decades was finally proven true—her father, Edward Wayne Edwards, was a murderer. |
Doctor's Log | Esther Choo | Dr. Esther Choo, an emergency room physician in Portland, Oregon, delivers reports from the front lines of the coronavirus crisis. |
Heaven's Gate | Glynn Washington | In 1997, thirty-nine people took their own lives in an apparent mass suicide. 20 years later, those who lost loved ones and those who still believe – tell their story. |
Headlong: Missing Richard Simmons | Dan Taberski | On February 15, 2014, fitness guru Richard Simmons disappeared. What happened? Filmmaker Dan Taberski leads listeners down a winding road to find the star. |
Headlong: Running From COPS | Dan Taberski | Dan Taberski investigates COPS — the longest running reality show in TV history — and its cultural impact on policing in America. |
Headlong: Surviving Y2K | Dan Taberski | Dan Taberski takes listeners back to the turn of the millennium to meet the people for whom it was anything but a joke. |
The Kids Are All...Home | Max Linsky | A podcast for kids stuck at home, by kids stuck at home. |
Making Gay History | Eric Marcus | Intimate, personal portraits of both known and long-forgotten champions, heroes, and witnesses to history. |
Never Before with Janet Mock | Janet Mock | Janet Mock and special guests talk about work, love and life—like you've never heard before. |
Stay Tuned with Preet | Preet Bharara | Former U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara breaks down legal topics in the news and engages thought leaders in a podcast about power, policy, and justice. |
Suspicious Activity: Inside the FinCEN Files | Azeen Ghorayshi, Jason Leopold and Anthony Cormier | A five-part series investigating how the most powerful banks in the world can facilitate the worst of humanity – terrorism, human trafficking, the drug trade – all in plain sight of the government. |
Underdog | Eric Benson | A behind-the-scenes of the most expensive, most talked-about political race of 2018: the U.S. Senate contest between Beto O'Rourke and Ted Cruz. |
UNDISTRACTED | Brittany Packnett Cunningham | Brittany Packnett Cunningham examines the most pressing issues of our time through the lens of intersectional feminism. |
Unhappy Hour with Matt Bellassai | Matt Bellassai | Matt Bellassai and special guests vent about all things political, personal and cultural. |
Welcome to Your Fantasy | Dr. Natalia Mehlman Petrzela | Historian Natalia Petrzela exposes one of the great, sordid, unexamined stories in American culture. |
Wind of Change | Patrick Radden Keefe | A power ballad helped bring down the Soviet Union. Was it written by the CIA? Journalist Patrick Radden Keefe investigates. |
With Her | Max Linsky | Coverage of Hillary Clinton's 2016 presidential campaign. |
Women of the Hour | Lena Dunham | A miniseries about friendship, love, work, bodies and more. |
The 11th |
Title | Host(s) | Description |
---|---|---|
30 For 30 (ESPN) | Captivating stories from the world of sports and beyond. | |
Behind the Scenes (Netflix) | Brandon 'Jinx' Jenkins | Brandon Jenkins talks to showrunners, writers, voice actors and other creators. |
The Chernobyl Podcast (HBO) | Peter Sagal & Craig Mazin | The official podcast of the miniseries Chernobyl, from HBO and Sky. |
Dream it Real (Coach) | Heben Nigatu | A podcast for those who dream, produced by Coach. |
The Gateway (Gizmodo) | Jennings Brown | A six-part series about Teal Swan, a spiritual guru, who draws in followers with hypnotic self-help YouTube videos. |
Going Through It (Mailchimp) | Tracy Clayton | Black women discuss a pivotal moment when they decided it was time to make a change. |
Hard Knocks (HBO) | Peter Schrager | Peter Schrager and guests break down episodes of Hard Knocks. |
I'm Obsessed With This (Netflix) | Bobby Finger | Bobby Finger invites guests — fans, critics, friends — to gab about the most-discussed titles of the moment. |
Julie: The Unwinding of the Miracle (Random House) | Julie Yip-Williams | The series chronicles Julie Yip-Williams' process of preparing for her death and revisiting the events of her extraordinary life. |
Lovecraft Country Radio (HBO) | Ashley C. Ford & Shannon Houston | The official podcast for HBO's Lovecraft Country . |
No Man's Land (The Wing) | Alexis Coe | A podcast about women who were too bad for textbooks. |
Noisemakers (Spotify/Time's Up) | Ashley Nicole Black and Chelsea Devantez | A 6-part series which examines the impact of harassment, gender inequality, and pay inequity on women in the workplace. |
The Official Watchmen Podcast (HBO) | Craig Mazin | Host Craig Mazin discusses Watchmen with its Executive Producer and Writer, Damon Lindelof. |
Okay, Now Listen (Netflix) | Scottie Beam & Sylvia Obell | Scottie Beam and Sylvia Obell share what's on their minds, what they're binging and what's blowing up their timelines. |
The Plot Against America Podcast (HBO) | Peter Sagal | Host Peter Sagal discusses the adaptation and production of The Plot Against America with creator and executive producer David Simon. |
Still Processing (New York Times) | Wesley Morris & Jenna Wortham | Wesley Morris and Jenna Wortham talk television, film, books, music — but also the culture of work, dating, the internet and how those all fit together. |
Strong Black Lead (Netflix) | Tracy Clayton | Tracy Clayton sits down with the legends that paved the way for black representation both on and off screen. |
TRAINED (Nike) | Ryan Flaherty | Mindset. Movement. Nutrition. Recovery. Sleep. |
WorkLife with Adam Grant (TED) | Adam Grant | Organizational psychologist Adam Grant takes you inside the minds of some of the world's most unusual professionals. |
You Can't Make This Up (Netflix) | Rebecca Lavoie | Rebecca Lavoie (Crime Writers On...) digs into the real stories behind Netflix Original true crime series and films. |
Your Attention Please (Hulu) | Kimberly Drew | Kimberly Drew gets to know Black visionaries who are defining the future and inspiring the world. |
Satchel Ronan O'Sullivan Farrow is an American journalist. The son of actress Mia Farrow and filmmaker Woody Allen, he is known for his investigative reporting on sexual abuse allegations against film producer Harvey Weinstein, which was published in The New Yorker magazine. The magazine won the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service for this reporting, sharing the award with The New York Times. Farrow has worked for UNICEF and as a government advisor.
William John Simmons III is an American podcaster, sportswriter, and cultural critic who is the founder and CEO of the sports and pop culture website The Ringer. Simmons first gained attention with his website as "The Boston Sports Guy" and was recruited by ESPN in 2001, where he eventually operated the website Grantland and worked until 2015. At ESPN, he wrote for ESPN.com, hosted his own podcast on ESPN.com titled The B.S. Report and was an analyst for two years on NBA Countdown.
Audacy, Inc. is an American broadcasting company based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Founded in 1968 as Entercom Communications Corp., it is the second largest radio company in the United States, owning over 220 radio stations across 47 media markets.
Wesley Morris is an American film critic and podcast host. He is currently critic-at-large for The New York Times, as well as co-host, with Jenna Wortham, of the New York Times podcast Still Processing. Previously, Morris wrote for The Boston Globe, then Grantland. He won the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for Criticism for his work with The Globe and the 2021 Pulitzer Prize for Criticism for his New York Times coverage of race relations in the United States, making Morris the only writer to have won the Criticism prize more than once.
Noah Oppenheim is an American television producer, author, and screenwriter. Previously, Oppenheim was the executive in charge and senior producer of NBC's Today Show, where he supervised the 7–8am hour of the broadcast, and head of development at the production company Reveille. He became president of NBC News in 2017. The same year, Ronan Farrow claimed that Oppenheim attempted to stop his reporting on the Harvey Weinstein sexual abuse cases, a claim that Oppenheim denied. Oppenheim stepped down as president of NBC News in January 2023 and entered into a film and TV production agreement with NBCUniversal.
Audacy, previously known as Radio.com, is a free broadcast and Internet radio platform developed by the namesake company Audacy, Inc.. The Audacy platform functions as a music recommender system and is the national umbrella brand for the company's radio network aggregating its over 235 local radio stations across the United States. In addition, the service includes thousands of podcasts created for the platform, hosted elsewhere or station programming on demand. It was initially developed by CBS Radio and was acquired by the former Entercom as part of the company's takeover of CBS Radio. The service's main competitors are rival station groups iHeartMedia's iHeartRadio and TuneIn. Audacy is available online via mobile devices and devices such as Chromecast and Amazon Fire TV.
Juliet Elinor Litman is an American journalist, editor, and American media personality. As of 2017, she is the Head of Production at The Ringer, Bill Simmons' latest online enterprise. Litman is the former host of the Right Reasons and NBA After Dark podcasts and was also formerly the Special Projects Editor at Grantland.
The Ringer is a sports and pop culture website and podcast network, founded by sportswriter Bill Simmons in 2016 and owned by Spotify since 2020.
J Wortham is an American journalist. They work as a culture writer for The New York Times Magazine and co-host The New York Times podcast Still Processing with Wesley Morris. In 2020, with Kimberly Drew, Wortham published Black Futures, an anthology of Black art, writing and other creative work.
Jenna Weiss-Berman is a podcast producer and co-founder of Pineapple Street Media. Formerly she was director of audio for BuzzFeed.
Still Processing is a New York Times culture podcast hosted by Jenna Wortham, a writer for The New York Times Magazine, and Wesley Morris, the paper's critic at large. The show debuted on September 8, 2016. Still Processing won a 2017 Webby Award in the Podcast & Digital Audio category, and was nominated for a 2019 Shorty Award.
Jonathan Ira Lovett is an American podcaster, comedian, and former speechwriter. Lovett is a co-founder of Crooked Media, along with fellow former White House staffers during the Obama administration Jon Favreau and Tommy Vietor. Lovett is a regular host of the Crooked Media podcasts Pod Save America and Lovett or Leave It. As a speechwriter, he worked for both President Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton when she was a United States senator and a 2008 presidential candidate. Lovett also co-created the NBC sitcom 1600 Penn, and was a writer and producer on the third season of HBO's The Newsroom.
Cadence13 was a media company based in New York City that created, distributed, and monetized audio content, primarily podcasts. The company was founded in 2015 and was a division of Audacy, Inc. The company was helmed by chief executive officer Spencer Brown, Chief Content Officer Chris Corcoran and President John Murphy. It was a major podcasting network and has produced podcasts for actor Joseph Gordon-Levitt, reality star Lauren Conrad, journalist Neil Strauss, and author Rachel Hollis. Cadence13 had partnerships with several other companies, including Goop, Crooked Media, and Tenderfoot TV.
Dan Taberski is a writer, director, and producer based in New York City. He is best known for hosting investigative journalism podcasts Missing Richard Simmons, Surviving Y2K,Running From Cops, 9/12, The Line, and Hysterical.
Max, formerly and still known in some regions as HBO Max, is an American subscription video on-demand over-the-top streaming service. It is a proprietary unit of Warner Bros. Discovery Global Streaming & Games, which is itself a division of Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD). The platform offers content from the libraries of Warner Bros., Discovery, HBO, CNN, Cartoon Network, Adult Swim, Animal Planet, TBS, TNT, Eurosport, and their related brands. Max first launched in the United States on May 27, 2020.
Catch and Kill: Lies, Spies, and a Conspiracy to Protect Predators is a 2019 book by the American journalist Ronan Farrow. He recounts the challenges he faced chasing the stories of Harvey Weinstein's decades of rape, sexual assault, and sexual abuse of women and the case against him. Farrow argues that Weinstein was able to use Black Cube, a private Israeli intelligence service, to successfully pressure executives at NBC News to kill the story there, leading him to take it to The New Yorker, where it was published and helped spark the international #MeToo movement exposing sexual abuse, mostly of women, in many industries.
Allen v. Farrow is an American documentary television miniseries directed by Kirby Dick and Amy Ziering that explores an allegation of sexual abuse made against Woody Allen in 1992. It consists of four episodes and premiered on February 21, 2021, on HBO.
Catch and Kill: The Podcast Tapes is an American documentary television miniseries, directed and produced by Randy Barbato and Fenton Bailey. It follows Ronan Farrow, as he conducts interviews with whistleblowers, victims, private investigators and sources for his book Catch and Kill. It consists of 6-episodes and premiered on July 12, 2021, on HBO.
Welcome to Your Fantasy is a true crime podcast about the Chippendales that was produced by Pineapple Street Studios and Gimlet Media and hosted by Natalia Petrzela.
The Catch and Kill Podcast with Ronan Farrow is a documentary podcast by Ronan Farrow and produced by Pineapple Street Studios.