editing the human out is also a sin
You're editing your podcast into a sterile bot voice and wondering why the listens are flat.
Real conversation has texture. Some 'ums' belong. Some pauses are the whole point. The over-edited podcast loses warmth and intimacy, which is exactly what podcasting has over other media. We talk about which filler stays, which goes, the pacing edit that makes 47 minutes feel like 28, and how to write episode outlines that hold without scripting yourself stiff. Edit for clarity, not perfection. The human texture is your competitive advantage.
Texture · sterility
| Texture (keep) | Sterility (cut) |
|---|---|
| Laugh that bleeds into next sentence | Pause after every 'um' |
| Pause where the speaker thinks | Filler unrelated to thought |
| Sentence restart mid-idea | Sentence restart from nerves |
| Honest 'I don't know' | Polished evasion |
The texture edit
- Listen to your raw episode. Mark only the dead air over 3 seconds.
- Cut crosstalk that's confusing, not crosstalk that's lively.
- Leave the laugh. Leave the half-sentence. Leave the breath.
- Tighten pacing by cutting tangents, not pauses.
- Add chapter markers in the show notes so listeners can navigate.
The 'um' is part of the human. Edit it out and you've left a voice memo from an AI. People listen to podcasts to feel less alone. Don't remove the company.
— L.A. Walton, The Book Maven
From the Maven Catalog
- Master Course — Sound Like a Person
- eBook — The Texture Edit
- Toolkit — Podcaster's Toolkit
- Planner — Podcast Season Planner
Leave the texture. Cut the tangents. Add chapter markers. The episode feels human and findable. Both matter. Both bring people back.