We analyzed over 200,000 active, long-running podcasts to uncover the hidden naming patterns that actually drive success and longevity.
In the realm of visual arts podcasting, titles seem to reflect a blend of creative ingenuity, specificity, and practicality, appealing to both curiosity and searchability. A tendency towards the subtly descriptive is clear, with names often clearly indicating the podcast's primary topic without being overly literal. We see this in names like "The Art Marketing Podcast" and "Film Photography Podcast," which are both clean and informative. However, injecting personality or a unique hook comes into play too. Examples are "For Flux Sake," which uses a pun to catch attention, or "3 Point Perspective: The Illustration Podcast," which intrigues with its cryptic main name, followed by a straightforward subtitle for clarification. Some podcast names stray from the purely descriptive to incorporate an element of storytelling or a standout theme. "A Brush with..." and "Tales From The Trip!" leverage a storytelling vibe, enticing potential listeners with the promise of intriguing narratives woven into their respective art-focused content. They use intriguing phrases as titles to peak listeners' curiosity. There's also a trend toward utilizing well-known branding within the names, particularly if linked with popular culture. For instance, "Gom Jabbar: A Dune Podcast" piggybacks on the popularity of the iconic science fiction franchise. Similarly, “The Bancroft Brothers Animation Podcast” leverages the reputation of the famous animation duo. Overall, the winning formula for naming visual arts podcasts seems to lie in balancing between descriptiveness, creativity, personal branding, and some connection to greater cultural or discipline-specific context.
There are many free podcast name generators, but you shouldn't rely on them 100%. Most of such tools are just "wrappers" for basic AI (for example ChatGPT), it works very straightforward: simply takes your description and asks ChatGPT to "make a list of names." You could do that yourself directly on ChatGPT! The problem is that suggestions you get are often random and generic variants, so the hard work is left to you. You need manually checking for trademarks, available websites, and social handles to avoid the legal issues mentioned above.
That is why we built a different AI podcast name generator. Our generator isn't wrapping basic AI, it has been trained on database with more than 200,000 successful, active podcasts. It understands what makes a podcast name stick and it doesn’t just give you a name - it runs an initial analysis on SEO and availability right away, saving you from spending time on potential podcast names you can't actually use.
"web3 with a16z" is a show about the next generation of the ...
The Team Deakins podcast is an ongoing conversation between ...
A weekly film podcast hosted by Elric Kane (of the Shock Wav...
A PODCAST FOR ARCADE LOVERS. From the owners of 100+ arcade ...
Gom Jabbar is the ultimate guide to the Dune universe for bo...
Illustrators Will Terry, Lee White, and Jake Parker talk abo...
A weekly podcast that brings the biggest stories in the art ...
Streaming horror trip reports and The Trip Sitters podcast!
Dave, Charlotte & Zack read the essential Marvel Comics univ...
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The Witch Wave is a podcast for bewitching conversation abou...
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Stories That Stick is a podcast where your host Chad Quandt ...
Quilting is the best hobby on earth! It includes everything ...
Matt and Rose Katz of the Ceramics Materials Workshop and Ka...
The Storytelling Lab covers everything you need to know abou...
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Every month, you'll hear conversations with artists and teac...
Moonbeaming helps creatives, intuitives, mystics, visionarie...
Join us as we bring you stories from model railroaders just ...
The Film Photography Project informs, engages and inspires f...
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A show about the most important comic of the 21st century, a...
Bonsai Mirai is a company, a place, a practice, an ethos. Th...
Kevin Mullins and Neale James present The FujiCast Photograp...
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Annyeonghaseyo! We’re three best selling American novelists ...
Photography stuff explained in plain English by me, Rick, in...
Street Life is a street photography podcast hosted by John S...
Come hang out and have some laughs with Eric, of Spencley De...
Twin animators Tom and Tony Bancroft get together and talk a...
TransMissions is about all things Transformers! We discuss e...
In a world where a camera is always within reach and creativ...
Weekly digital photography podcasts, photo tips, reader subm...
Design journalist Dan Rubinstein introduces listeners to the...
Artists and Photographers have a marketing problem. Let's fi...
A Dragon Ball rewatch podcast, exploring every nook and cran...
Paul O'Brien (The X-Axis) and Al Kennedy (One Hundred Days o...
Giuseppe Castellano talks to folks in illustration, graphic ...
The Plastic Posse Podcast is a bi-weekly podcast about Scale...
Meet Me Here is your podcast guide to the most exciting arts...
Kevin Mullins and Neale James present The FujiCast Photograp...
This photography podcast is brought to you by FRAMES - quart...
The Official Journal of Street and Documentary Photography
This podcast is a channel on the New Books Network. The New ...
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In Material Matters, host Grant Gibson talks to a designer, ...
While ChatGPT is a great brainstorming buddy, it has a major blind spot: it doesn't know what is currently available. It will happily suggest a perfect name like "The Daily Grind," unaware that there are already 15 podcasts, a coffee shop chain, and a trademark holder with that exact name. Using a standard AI "wrapper" forces you to manually fact-check every single suggestion. Our tool differs because it is trained on 200,000+ active podcasts and performs immediate availability checks, filtering out the "noise" so you don't waste time on taken names.
Yes, but be careful. Including a keyword (like "Marketing," "True Crime," or "Vegan") helps listeners find you when they search for a topic. However, Apple Podcasts creates issues for titles that look like spam.
Aim for a natural title where the keyword fits legally and grammatically.
This is a risky move. Even if you don't plan to build a website immediately, not owning the domain makes it much harder to build a brand later. If the .com is taken by a similar business, you will confuse your audience.
Pro Tip: If the exact domain is expensive or parked, try adding "pod" or "show" to the URL (e.g., marketingmasterclasspod.com). If an active business already owns the main domain, it is usually safer to pick a different name entirely.
Checking podcast apps (Apple/Spotify) is not enough. A name might not be a podcast yet, but it could be a registered brand that can legally force you to take your show down.
Short and punchy is best. Aim for 29 characters or less. Why? Because on most podcast apps, titles longer than that get cut off with ellipses (...) on mobile screens. If your distinguishing word is at the end of a long sentence, potential listeners scrolling through their phone won't see it.
Technically, yes—you can change the text in your RSS feed, and it will update on Spotify and Apple. However, you will lose brand recognition. Listeners might unsubscribe if they don't recognize the new name, and you will have to rebuild your SEO ranking from scratch. It is much better to spend the extra time now to find a name you can grow with for years.
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