Entering the podcast realm was something I’ve been thinking about for a while because I love podcasts. I am an avid podcast listener, and heard about an app called Anchor, which was a free way to create, record, and edit your own podcast.
I was interested and joined right away. The title Chicago’s Underground came to me one day driving home from work. I often will reflect on my day from work with an interview with myself – checking in on my thoughts, feelings, and experiences I lived through. I have a strong love + passion for Chicago, and have various ways I think I could use this platform (hence the underground). After playing around with it a few months ago, I put together a podcast based off of an interview I completed from another class with the owner of a nutrition company in Lakeview East Chicago. Without giving time to experiment, I wouldn’t have known how to properly put together a podcast. The app itself is easy to navigate, but it was beneficial to practice before hand.
For this particular podcast called “Restricting Student Athletes in 280 characters or less,” I began with making a decision on what to talk about. We were given the complete freedom to choose what we wanted to talk about. With extensive research on free-speech with student athletes for my sport law class, i was very committed to talking about it on the podcast.
The difference I needed to make sure I implemented in my podcast as opposed to a law class was the casualty I wanted my podcast to have. It was possible to do this by keeping it real and genuine, laughing, not editing every single mistake I made, and creating it to sound like a conversation with myself and my listeners as opposed to me just reading from a paper.
Podcasts are a trend I’m overly excited to now be apart of. Go listen to Chicago’s Underground, streaming on Spotify + Apple Podcasts, if you haven’t checked it out yet!






