Hi. We’ve been on a hiatus due to work and other pressures, but we’ll be back soon with a summer season.
(Southern hemisphere summer, that is.)
Talk soon!
News
Announcements and updates from the Unladylike team
It’s a wrap – for now
Thanks for listening to Unladylike podcast.
With episode 20, we’ve come to the end of season 2. We’re taking a break over our summer holiday season (apologies to everyone in the northern hemisphere). But we’ll be back early next year.
First up in 2018: an international, interdisciplinary roundtable on academic writing, especially for all of us starting or resuming our studies or research.
So stay tuned.
And thanks again for all your support.
Missed us?
Oh look, we’ve been a bit hopeless lately, haven’t we?
We’re not lazy – far from it. Just very, very busy. So we’re moving to releasing episodes in short series, rather than on a specific week of the month.
We’ll be back soon with some shit-hot new episodes of Unladylike, underway now.
You’ll hear from us soon. Stay tuned.
How to interview a writer
In case you missed it, here’s our guest post on Aerogramme Writers’ Studio on how to interview writers – or how to be interviewed, if you are a writer. It explains what we do, or try to do, when we interview writers for Unladylike, or at literary events.
First: prepare. Read as many of the other writers’ books, stories, scripts, poems as you can. Read them like a writer – look for themes not evident at first glance, technique, structure, characterisation, world-building, language. Read or watch interviews with them, and check their blog posts and social media to see what interests them, how they respond, which questions they’ve answered a million times.
How to start a writing podcast
Planning
Lead-up
Recording

Kathleen Syme recording studio (Photo: City of Melbourne)
- A Blue Yeti multi-directional microphone
- Laptops (we are the living embodiment of the Mac/PC argument)
- Audacity software for capture and editing
- Pamela software for recording Skype calls (though we can never quite get it to work properly)
- Sennheiser headphones we always forget to use in the excitement of the moment.
Mysterious technical things
- Our website is built in WordPress.com and the theme/template is Motif
- Our audio files are hosted in AudioBoom, and fed from there through to iTunes and Stitcher
- Most other podcasting apps draw a feed from iTunes, so we can relax about them
- We edit in Audacity, a free but very powerful audio editing tool.
- We pay for premium licenses to WordPress and AudioBoom, because we believe in supporting the platforms on which we rely – and also we get more functionality
- We also bought our domain name
- We asked a designer friend to produce artwork, which needed to be in all sorts of specific shapes and sizes for different platforms, and paid her to do it – again, because it’s important to invest in things that matter and we don’t mind working for free but don’t see why anyone else should.

And then…
Are we there yet?
Now what are we doing?
Editing. Mostly.
It’s only a few weeks until we release Unladylike into the wild.
We’ve been in the studio and on the road (in New Zealand and in the US), and we’ve recorded conversations with some wonderful writers. Now we’re getting the audio into shape for you.
So very soon, you’ll hear our first few episodes, with many more to come.
Stay tuned.
What are we doing?
Brilliant idea, starting a podcast.
It’s also a whole lot of work.
In case you’re thinking about doing it too, here’s a list of all the stuff we’ve been doing in the lead-up to our June launch:
- Setting up interviews
- Booking studio time
- Buying gear (because it’s all about the accessories)
- Pre-recording episodes
- Commissioning artwork
- Social media
- Talking to writers, publishers, festivals, agents and publicists
- Mysterious technical things (some work, some don’t)
- Learning
- Listening
- Reading
- Laughing (that actually takes up quite a lot of our time in meetings)
- Thinking.
It seemed like we had months to do it all in, and now time is flashing by very fast.
We’ve also had so much enthusiastic support and feedback since we announced Unladylike. So thank you.
We can’t wait for you to hear the voices of all these amazing women.
Soon.

See? How gorgeous is gear? Who knew?