Skip to content

Breaking News

Super Hi-Fi introduces Neuron AI music scheduling engine

Cumulus Media secures court approval for reorganization plan

DHD marks 30 years with brand relaunch

GatesAir adds to customer support team

Lithuania moves toward DAB+ rollout

Rai Firenze examines AI’s impact on radio

Genelec monitors support recording studios at Tallinn music academy

DAB+ role in synthetic media era discussed at ABU DBS 2026

International media organizations warn over Czech public media funding debate

Orban and Quu partner on RDS and metadata

Friday April 17, 2026
Partners
Newsletter
Contact us
About
RedTech RedTech
  • News & Business
  • Strategy & Views
  • Technology
  • Products
  • All stories
  • Contact
  • Advertise
Tieline Releases New Firmware for Gateway, Gateway 4
Trending
Tieline Releases New Firmware for Gateway, Gateway 4

DTS, AutoStage, Xperi
Featured Technology

Xperi launches DTS AutoStage Broadcaster Portal Premium tier

The upgrade adds new analytics capabilities for more detailed, timely audience insights

2026 NAB Show Featured Products

WorldCast to unveil Audemat FM/HD Probe at NAB Show 2026

The probe is designed for monitoring, alignment and regulatory compliance

Featured News & Business

Super Hi-Fi introduces Neuron AI music scheduling engine

The system uses neuroscience-informed models and real-time context to guide programming

Featured News & Business

Cumulus Media secures court approval for reorganization plan

The plan aims to cut debt and position the broadcaster for post-Chapter 11 operations

Orban, processors, NAB Show 2026
2026 NAB Show Featured Products

Orban updates OptiMod 5950 HD processor

Software updates and new options are offered

Featured Products Technology

vCreative adds cloud automation integrations with ZettaCloud and WO Aurora

The integrations aim to streamline audio workflows

  • Contact
  • About RedTech
RedTech RedTech
  • News & Business
  • Strategy & Views
    • Strategy & Views
    • Videos
  • Technology
    • Tech Focus
  • Products
  • Events
    • RedTech Summit 2026
    • Previous RedTech Summits
      • RedTech Summit 2025
      • RedTech Summit 2024
      • RedTech Summit 2023
      • RedTech Summit 2022
    • RadioWeek 2026
      • RadioWeek 2025
      • RadioWeek 2024
      • RadioWeek 2023
    • Global Online Content Series 2024
    • Events
      • 2026 NAB Show
      • World Radio Day 2026
      • IBC2025
      • 2025 NAB Show
      • IBC2024
      • 2024 NAB Show
      • IBC2023
      • 2023 NAB Show
      • IBC2022
    • Events Calendar
  • Publications
  • News & Business
  • Strategy & Views
    • Strategy & Views
    • Videos
  • Technology
    • Tech Focus
  • Products
  • Events
    • RedTech Summit 2026
    • Previous RedTech Summits
      • RedTech Summit 2025
      • RedTech Summit 2024
      • RedTech Summit 2023
      • RedTech Summit 2022
    • RadioWeek 2026
      • RadioWeek 2025
      • RadioWeek 2024
      • RadioWeek 2023
    • Global Online Content Series 2024
    • Events
      • 2026 NAB Show
      • World Radio Day 2026
      • IBC2025
      • 2025 NAB Show
      • IBC2024
      • 2024 NAB Show
      • IBC2023
      • 2023 NAB Show
      • IBC2022
    • Events Calendar
  • Publications

Click Here to Subscribe to RedTech's Newsletter

RedTech RedTech
  • News & Business
  • Strategy & Views
    • Strategy & Views
    • Videos
  • Technology
    • Tech Focus
  • Products
  • Events
    • RedTech Summit 2026
    • Previous RedTech Summits
      • RedTech Summit 2025
      • RedTech Summit 2024
      • RedTech Summit 2023
      • RedTech Summit 2022
    • RadioWeek 2026
      • RadioWeek 2025
      • RadioWeek 2024
      • RadioWeek 2023
    • Global Online Content Series 2024
    • Events
      • 2026 NAB Show
      • World Radio Day 2026
      • IBC2025
      • 2025 NAB Show
      • IBC2024
      • 2024 NAB Show
      • IBC2023
      • 2023 NAB Show
      • IBC2022
    • Events Calendar
  • Publications

Click Here to Subscribe to RedTech's Newsletter

Featured Strategy & Views

Southern Africa’s storytellers find a new platform

by Simmi Areff February 16, 2023 11 min read
 Southern Africa’s storytellers find a new platform
Simmi Areff. Credit: Rizqua Barnes
Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Storytelling

In this edition of Inside Podcasting, Simmi Areff, South African comedian and podcast pioneer, shares his story with RedTech. Areff, who recently received an AU Media Fellowship for his contribution to podcasting in Africa, encourages fellow Africans to tap into their rich cultural history of storytelling.

CAPE TOWN, South Africa — It may look like a lot of fun, but comedy is hard work, probably hardest for those building an audience. So, I started my podcast “Lesser Known Somebodies” in 2016 to reach out to comedians and performers on the fringe of popular success, living on hope, hard lessons from failure and two-minute noodles.

They had some of the best stories. At that stage, podcasting in Africa was very much in its infancy — I was competing in the Apple charts with guys playing “Dungeons & Dragons” online and recording their conversations! My profile as a comedian may have helped, but I think people listened to me because I was an early adopter, and they just grew to like me.

Broadcasters might say I’m breaking one of the golden rules of radio…but this isn’t radio; it’s podcasting.

I got involved in podcasting because I couldn’t get on the air at a radio station. I had been a writer and content producer for one of the country’s biggest breakfast shows and found a friend in the microphone, but most radio stations thought comedy only belonged in prank-calling, and despite my experience and profile, would ask me for a demo. So, I thought, what better way to develop a catalog of demos than to imagine my own “radio show” and reach out to others with a mic; and “Lesser Known Somebodies” was born.

I started interviewing fellow comedians, then other artists, Vine stars and “influencers” and even people in advertising, and they had great stories to tell. The problems started when the podcast became better known, and I started interviewing so-called “big-name” guests. I got swallowed into a machine I couldn’t keep up with. Also, the guests were less engaging. The moment the mic came on, they’d hold back as if they were following a script. Listeners reacted accordingly. Examining audience engagement, I could see when it dropped off. I also didn’t find their stories riveting. So, I decided to do something radical.

Taking it to the streets

The interviewee’s seat is open to anyone and their dog.
The interviewee’s seat is open to anyone and their dog. Credit: Dean Peterson

Knowing that there are no somebodies lesser known than the unknown, I now take my podcasting gear to the streets and set up a table with a sign offering to pay anyone ten rands, the equivalent of a couple of euros, for their story. It takes 10–15 minutes for the first person to sit down and talk, but then a queue starts forming, and I’ll be busy for about two hours.

I find their stories fascinating! Broadcasters might say I’m breaking one of the golden rules of radio by handing the mic — and the show’s responsibility — to someone probably ill-equipped to handle it. But this isn’t radio; it’s podcasting. I have the power to edit or not even use the interview. But I think my experience in radio and onstage interacting with audiences helps me craft their story.

Plus, it’s like improv — I have no idea who’s taking the microphone. It’s the closest I’ve felt to where podcasting and stand-up can meet. Importantly, the listener can hear that. They may not know the person telling their story or what crazy views they have, but they know it will be new, interesting and in some way relatable. And here’s the thing: They almost always never take the money I offer for their story; they’re just happy to have someone listen.

Storytelling in Africa

Africans are connected by storytelling — it’s in our blood. In traditional African culture, a “griot” is a person entrusted to learn the stories of a village. Their sole purpose is to pass on these stories to others to keep the stories alive in successive generations. Historically, in a culture where things weren’t written down, storytelling was more than entertainment; it was a way of keeping a cultural identity alive.

Simmi Areff and guest at the District 6 Museum in Cape Town.
Simmi Areff and guest at the District 6 Museum in Cape Town. Credit: Dean Peterson

So, theoretically, Africa should be a rich fertile ground for storytelling on podcasts, but we’re hampered very much by technology. Africans overall do not have access to technology as enjoyed by those, say, in Western Europe. Data, for one, is so expensive, so it’s mainly used for sending messages; podcasts are usually reserved for when there’s access to Wi-Fi. However, we’re seeing a slow but steady growth in podcasting production and consumption in Africa.

I think some try their hand at podcasting because they can’t access a camera to get on YouTube and think it’s cheaper, but they soon find out how expensive making professionally sounding audio is. Our biggest challenge in Africa is familiar to podcasters worldwide: monetizing content, a significant barrier to entry for up-and-coming African podcasters. Approximately 0.1% of podcasts globally are sufficiently monetized. People may point to Joe Rogan selling his podcast to Spotify for US$200 million, but such cases are outliers.

Equipment

Recording: A Zoom Podtrak 4. I love it because of the 70 db of gain it gives me when I record. It allows me to boost audio so much in post. It has four channels, and I can connect it to my phone or computer.

Editing: Adobe Audition at the office, but Audacity when I’m on the go — it’s free and uncluttered, and it just works.

Mics: Two Shure SM58 microphones — They are some of the best microphones you can get that use an XLR cable.

Headphones: JBL Quantam 100 headphones. I had to buy these at an airport tech shop after I left my beloved Sennheiser HD 280 PROs at a hotel.

Artwork: Canva or Adobe Express.

Distribution: “Lesser Known Somebodies” is available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Podchaser, Omny, Podbay and POC Podcasts.

Building an ecosystem

Regardless, podcasting globally has now exploded. Personally, I don’t look at all those podcasts as competition; instead, we’re building a podcasting ecosystem. And that’s where POC [“People of Content”] Podcasts comes in — we’re helping to make part of that ecosystem in Africa.

I founded POC Podcasts primarily to give a voice to diverse stories you don’t typically hear on radio. I come from a radio background and know that what you hear on radio doesn’t fully reflect the diversity of the African story. There are a lot of stories that don’t get told. For example, stories from the LGBTIQ+ community are largely unheard. So, we have an LGBTIQ+ podcast in our stable that reaches out to African countries, like Uganda, where the LGBTIQ+ community isn’t as protected as in South Africa.

We want people with great, diverse stories to tell to do just that using podcasts. We help them create and produce podcasts to a high level of quality and provide ongoing consulting services. The Media Fellowship from the African Union has helped raise the profile of what we’re doing. I am grateful to the AU for its support and the opportunity to meet others in African media giving a voice to our storytellers.

Read more Inside Podcasting stories here.

Tags: Inside Podcasting Podcasting South Africa
Previous post
Next post

Simmi Areff

author


Most Recent
Tech Focus

Tech Focus: Comrex now shipping FieldLink

April 17, 2026
Featured

Xperi launches DTS AutoStage Broadcaster Portal Premium tier

April 17, 2026
2026 NAB Show

WorldCast to unveil Audemat FM/HD Probe at NAB Show 2026

April 17, 2026
Latest Newsletters

9 April 2026 – ARN Shifts Focus | Bauer Embraces Android | Belgium Plans Crisis Radio

6 April 2026 – RedTech Special Edition ‘The Innovators 2026’ Is Now Available

2 April 2026 – Radio’s Next Phase | New BBC Chief | Creating Tune-In

30 March 2026 – RedTech Magazine March/April is Here!

26 March 2026 – Celebrating Radio Luxembourg | RCS Names New Chief | Radiodays Riga Recap

19 March 2026 – Dual Standard Argument | Making Magic Between Music | Dashboard Dolby Atmos

12 March 2026 – 26 Radio Lessons | Japan Turns To Shortwave | RTL Belgium’s New Boss

5 March 2026 – Radio’s Competitive Advantage | Local News Rules | Radio Mandatory in Cars

25 Feb 2026 – East Africa Rising | Swedish Shake Up | Finnish Radio Strong

19 Feb 2026 – Young African Digital Voices | Bauer Drives Connected Journeys | Audio Campaign Effectiveness

12 Feb 2026 – AI Sound Design | World Radio Day Global Broadcast | New Code of Practice

5 Feb 2026 – Saudi Media Forum Explores Transformation | Free AI Tools | Broadcasters Reunite

1 Feb 2026 – RedTech Magazine Jan/Feb is here!

29 Jan 2026 – Reinventing Content Creation | Philippe Generali Retires | AI Energizes Cumulus

22 Jan 2026 – Rebuilding For Visual | RadioWeek Next Week | Trouble In Italy

15 Jan 2026 – Fishy Collaborative Podcasting | Italian FM Interference | Podcast Growing at Home

8 Jan 2026 – London Calling U.DAB | Audio Listening Habits | Sweden’s FM Race

30 Dec 2025 – The Quiet Engineering Behind Radio’s Next Phase

18 Dec 2025 – Radio 2 Winter Heat | Radio’s Human Advantage | Mediaset Muscles Up

11 Dec 2025 – Growing Nordic Radio | Lighting Up Christmas | A Commemorative Stamp

10 Dec 2025 – Meet The Solutioneers 2025/2026

4 Dec 2025 – Africa IP Shift | MPW Scholarships | LATAM Listener Trends

2 Dec 2025 – RedTech Magazine November/December 2025 Is Here!

27 Nov 2025 – Bright Color Radio | Win For Bauer | Radio Still On Receivers

20 Nov 2025 – Football-Mad Radio | 30 Under 30 Talent | Berlin Online Listening

13 Nov. 2025 – AI Radio News | Debating Radio’s Impact | Immersive Streaming Audio

6 Nov 2025 – Music An Asset |Bold Aussie Radio | DRM Drives India

30 Oct 2025 – Africa’s Collective Voice | AI As PD | Bauer Media Group realigns

23 Oct 2025 – Culture Powers Growth | 60 Years Of Innovation | Marconi Awards Winners

16 Oct 2025 – Is DAB+ The Answer? | Saothair Acquires GatesAir | Rethinking The Radio Console

9 Oct 2025 – Campus Radio Project | In The Club | AI In The Driver’s Seat

8 Oct 2025 – RedTech Magazine September/October 2025

2 Oct 2025 – BBC Mobile Tech | NPO Cuts Jobs | Awards Canned

25 Sept 2025 – AI Revisited | Rádio Rock Powers Up | RTL’s Six Of The Best

18 Sept 2025 – IBC2025 Insights | RedTech Award Winners | 2 Minutes Of Tech

11 Sept 2025 – Hearing Children’s Voices | Broadcast Giants Honored | Virtual Mixing

5 Sept 2025 – Read Now — Radio Futures: AI and Radio

4 Sept 2025 – IBC2025 All Change | Incentivizing Digital Transition | Video Takes The Lead

 

Related Stories for you

The Innovators 2026: Practical innovations shaping audio broadcasting’s next phase

by RedTech Staff April 6, 2026 4 min read

Central to this issue is the idea that innovation matters most when it works

Edison Research releases U.K. Top 25 podcasts for Q4 2025

by RedTech Staff March 3, 2026 4 min read

The latest ranker tracks reach among weekly listeners ages 15+ and highlights notable movers in the Top 25

Mercury marks first year with subscription service and indie honors

by Daryl Ilbury February 6, 2026 7 min read

The network is introducing a paid service, a new Hall of Fame and fresh partnerships

RedTech RedTech

RedTech International SAS
250 bis boulevard Saint-Germain
75007 Paris, France

contact@redtech.pro

Subscribe to our newsletter

About

About Us
Work With Us
Contact Us

Advertising

Advertise

Useful Links

Partners
Newsletter

more

Terms and Conditions
Privacy Policy

latest news

DTS, AutoStage, Xperi
Featured

Xperi launches DTS AutoStage Broadcaster Portal Premium

2026 NAB Show

WorldCast to unveil Audemat FM/HD Probe at

Featured

Super Hi-Fi introduces Neuron AI music scheduling

Featured

Cumulus Media secures court approval for reorganization

Orban, processors, NAB Show 2026
2026 NAB Show

Orban updates OptiMod 5950 HD processor

Follow us:

Copyright RedTech International 2026. All Rights Reserved