Origin
Story
Every podcast starts with a question. Ours was: why do some voices feel like home?
"First recording attempt. A USB mic, a closet lined with jackets, and 45 minutes of audio I deleted the same night."
The levels were wrong. The room was wrong. I was wrong. But the question — why do some voices pull you in while others don't? — that stayed.
"Interviewed my first guest. A schoolteacher who started a podcast about beekeeping. 400 downloads in 6 months. No ads. No algorithm tricks."
She said: "I just wanted to talk to people who care about the same weird thing I do." That sentence became our north star.
"Reached 50 conversations. Noticed a pattern: the podcasters who grow aren't louder — they're more specific."
Specificity is the superpower nobody talks about. We started building a framework around it.
"Pilot episodes recorded. Format settled: one guest, one hour, no edits to the uncomfortable silences."
The pauses are where the real answers live. We stopped cutting them out.
"Airwave announced. Waitlist opens. The quiet before someone presses record."
You found us early. That means something.
Episode
Highlights
Six conversations. Each one a different room in the same building.

The Closet Studio Chronicles
Mara Osei
Why Your Downloads Stopped Growing
Theo Nakamura
Mic Placement Is Not Precious
Priya Chandrasekaran
The Specific Audience Paradox
Lena Hoffmann
Compression as Conversation
Marcus Webb
First Episode Paralysis
Aisha Diallo
The
Hosts
Two people who've made every mistake so they can ask better questions.

Soren Calloway
Creator & Host
"Former radio producer. Spent 8 years learning what makes a voice trustworthy. Left to find out why indie podcasters do it better."
Started with a broken Blue Yeti and a theory that the most interesting conversations happen outside broadcast studios. Still believes that.

"A 12-minute ramble about why NPR's silence edits feel wrong. Recorded in a Subaru, engine off, winter 2021."
— You can hear the snow.

Yuki Tanaka
Co-Host & Sound Designer
"Audio engineer by training. Podcast listener by obsession. Joined Airwave after a 3am argument about whether reverb should ever be audible on a podcast."
The answer is no, by the way. Unless it's intentional. Which is the whole point.

"A field recording of a Tokyo train station at 6am, run through a lo-fi chain, used as an intro for a 9-listener podcast about architecture."
— Still the best thing I've ever made.
Save
My Seat
Airwave launches with its waitlist first. Founding listeners get early access to every episode, plus a private community channel where guests keep the conversation going.
We're keeping the room small on purpose. 500 seats. 126 remain.