Same five names every February. Code Switch. 1619. The Read. Higher Learning. Black History Year. The lists are honest about the canon and frozen in 2022. Newer shows launched in the last two or three years rarely make it on.
Three of them deserve to. Black Cowboys from iHeart Podcasts. The Stoop on PRX Radiotopia. Drunk Black History from Brandon Collins. Each one fills a gap the canon does not, and each one rarely appears in established Best Of roundups. As a podcast production agency that listens carefully across the field, the gap was the post.
The list below has two halves. The canon: five shows every serious listener should know. The newer wave: three shows worth adding right now. Plus an original comparison table that maps the eight picks against format, cadence, and listener intent. Plus an honest skip section, a producer’s read on the craft, and a sources section for the data behind the recommendations.
Resonate Recordings has produced more than 50,000 episodes since 2014 across many formats, including narrative documentary, interview, and cultural-commentary shows. The notes below come from real listening and real audio editing across the past year. Not from reshuffling other lists.
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Why the February-Only Framing Fails the Genre
Most black history podcast lists treat the topic as a calendar event. The shows worth your feed do not work that way.
The Strong Shows Publish Year-Round
Code Switch publishes every Tuesday. Black History Year drops year-round. The Read has run weekly for over a decade. The Stoop releases on Radiotopia’s regular cadence. The shows that earn the listener rotation never stop earning it.
Limited series like 1619 are the exception that proves the rule. The whole season is six episodes plus an introduction. You listen once, in any month, and the impact lasts for years.
The Established Lists Stopped Updating
Pull up any top-ranking 2026 list and you get the same five names from 2022. Black Cowboys launched on iHeart Podcasts in 2022 to immediate critical acclaim. The Stoop has been running since 2017 on PRX Radiotopia. Drunk Black History has a 4.9 Apple rating and rarely appears anywhere.
Updating a list requires actually listening to new shows. We listened across the field for this rewrite and the picks below reflect that.
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The Canon: Five Shows Every Serious Listener Should Know
These five are the foundation. If you do not know them yet, start here. If you do, treat this section as the floor and let the newer wave take you further.
1. Code Switch: NPR’s flagship on race, culture, and everyday life
Code Switch is the show most often credited with reshaping how public radio talks about race. Gene Demby, B.A. Parker, and Lori Lizarraga rotate hosting duties. Episodes cover how race intersects with politics, pop culture, history, and daily life.
Apple Podcasts named Code Switch its first-ever Show of the Year in 2020. The show has stayed essential since. As producers we listen for the writing rhythm. Episodes are scripted tighter than most NPR shows. The discipline is the through-line.
2. 1619: The New York Times series that reframed American history
1619 is the limited audio series tied to The New York Times Magazine’s 1619 Project. Nikole Hannah-Jones hosts. She won the 2020 Pulitzer Prize for Commentary for the underlying project. The series traces how the legacy of slavery shaped American institutions.
The audio writing here set a bar that other history podcasts still measure against. Six episodes plus an introduction make it a manageable weekend listen. The narrative production tradition this draws from runs through our review of This American Life.
3. The Read: Kid Fury and Crissle on pop culture, politics, and the week’s news
The Read with Kid Fury and Crissle is the longest-running show on this list. Over a decade of weekly episodes cover pop culture, politics, and the week’s news through a Black, queer, very online lens. The chemistry between the hosts is the engine.
Episodes follow a loose structure. A hot topic, listener letters, and the trademark Read segment that gives the show its name. The audience built around this show is one of podcasting’s most engaged communities for good reason.
4. Higher Learning: Van Lathan and Rachel Lindsay on Black culture, politics, and sports
Higher Learning sits at The Ringer and covers the biggest topics in Black culture, politics, and sports. Hosts trade lines fast and disagree on the record. That on-record disagreement is rarer than it sounds across any podcast genre.
Van Lathan brings entertainment-journalism background. Rachel Lindsay brings reality-TV experience. The combination gives the show a range most culture podcasts cannot reach. The twice-weekly cadence keeps the show inside the current conversation.
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5. Black History Year: PushBlack’s year-round educational project
Black History Year from PushBlack is the most explicitly educational show on this list. Host Jay Walker connects listeners to historians, activists, and stories the mainstream curriculum routinely excludes.
The show launched to the top of Apple Podcasts within twenty-four hours in May 2020. PushBlack’s own press release confirmed the chart move. The two-minute Black history segments are the easiest entry point. Longer interviews wait for listeners who want to go deeper.
The Newer Wave: Three Shows the Established Lists Are Sleeping On
These three picks are why this list exists. Each fills a gap the canon does not, and each rarely appears in established Best Of roundups. Start here once you have the canon down.
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6. Black Cowboys: Zaron Burnett on the Black history America’s westerns left out
Black Cowboys is iHeart Podcasts’ narrative history series hosted by Zaron Burnett. The frame is personal. Burnett’s father told him bedtime stories about Black cowboys. He did not want slavery to be his son’s only image of Black people in American history. Burnett turned those stories into a podcast.
The reporting is patient. The writing is careful. The series sits in the narrative tradition we work with through our narrative podcast production service. If you finished 1619 and wanted more, this is where you go next.
7. The Stoop: Leila Day and Hana Baba on global Black experiences
The Stoop from PRX Radiotopia is hosted by Leila Day and Hana Baba. The premise is the global Black experience. What it means to be Black across regions, cultures, and diasporas. Apple Podcasts named the show a Spotlight Selection for good reason.
US-centric lists keep missing this one. Episodes cover stories from London, Lagos, Toronto, and Khartoum alongside US-set pieces. The reporting moves between continents with the kind of intimacy a stoop conversation actually has.
8. Drunk Black History: Brandon Collins, comedians, and the history class you wish you took
Drunk Black History is exactly what the name describes. Host Brandon Collins brings comedians, radio personalities, and cultural experts on. The guests get drunk. Then they tell the story of a Black historical figure or event the school system glossed over.
Comedy plus real history is a hard format to pull off. This one does. The 4.9 Apple rating across hundreds of reviews is the easiest signal. We include it because the format delivers, and because no other top-ten list seems willing to.
The Comparison Table (How the Eight Picks Stack Against Each Other)
Most Best Of lists give you eight descriptions and let you guess which show fits how you actually listen. This is the table the established lists never publish. Use the right-hand columns to match the show to your habit.
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Show | Format | Cadence | Avg runtime | Best for |
Code Switch | Scripted essay + reporting | Weekly (Tue) | 30 min | Listeners who want public-radio polish |
1619 | Limited narrative series | Closed (6 ep) | 30-50 min | One-weekend deep dive on American history |
The Read | Conversational + listener letters | Weekly | 90 min | Pop culture + politics, queer online lens |
Higher Learning | Two-host conversation | Twice weekly | 75-90 min | Culture, politics, sports in one feed |
Black History Year | Mixed: micro + long interviews | Year-round | 5-60 min | Educational entry, all ages |
Black Cowboys | Narrative history series | Limited seasons | 30-40 min | Listeners who finished 1619 and wanted more |
The Stoop | Field reporting + interviews | Seasonal cadence | 20-40 min | Global Black experience, beyond the US |
Drunk Black History | Comedy + history fusion | Monthly-ish | 60-90 min | Listeners who want history without the lecture |
Story-Driven vs Analysis-Driven: Pick by How You Actually Listen
The table above splits one way. The other split is by listening mood. Knowing which one you reach for first builds a real rotation instead of eight subscriptions you never finish.
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If You Want Stories
1619, Black Cowboys, and The Stoop sit here. Episodes are written and edited for narrative impact. Sound design carries weight. Music marks transitions. Each episode lands like a self-contained piece you can share.
These shows reward listeners who want to feel the history rather than just argue about it. They also age well. Episodes from 2019 still hit. The production craft is what makes the longevity possible.
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If You Want Conversation and Analysis
Code Switch, The Read, Higher Learning, Black History Year, and Drunk Black History sit here. Hosts trade lines, build on each other, and bring real expertise to whatever topic is in front of them. Listeners get the current conversation rather than a finished piece.
These shows reward steady subscribers who can keep up with weekly publication. The chemistry between hosts is the real product. Topics rotate; hosting voices are the constants you tune in for.
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What This List Skips and Why
Three categories show up on every February list and never earn the rotation. We name them here.
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Corporate Diversity Podcasts
Shows produced by brands as part of a Black History Month content calendar. Most run for four episodes in February and then go silent until next year. The production budgets are real and the audio is usually clean. The shows rarely have a host voice listeners actually return for.
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Once-A-Year HR Specials Repackaged as Podcasts
Internal corporate diversity training released publicly as a Black history podcast. The intent is good. The audio rarely is. The format treats the topic as an obligation rather than a subject worth real care.
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Lectures Dressed as Shows
A history professor reading from a script for forty-five minutes is not a podcast. It is a recorded lecture. Both have value. Only one belongs on a list of shows you would actually subscribe to.
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What Producers Notice About the Strong Ones
Four observations from the editing-room side that apply across the eight picks above.
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Scripting Trumps Improvising on This Topic
Code Switch, 1619, and Black Cowboys all run on tight scripts. The host voice still feels conversational because the writing was built around it. Black history is too easy to flatten with extemporaneous talk. The strong shows protect against that. The research load is real. The podcast readiness assessment covers whether your team has the depth a history show actually requires.
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Editing Trusts the Listener
The Stoop leaves pauses in. Black History Year lets short episodes stay short. Higher Learning lets a host finish a thought before the co-host pushes back. The pattern shows up in our piece on getting past the skip button. Trim around the listener’s intelligence, not against it.
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Cadence Holds Across the Year
Weekly is the genre’s working rhythm. Code Switch, The Read, Higher Learning, and The Stoop all hold it. The teams that maintain rhythm usually have a dedicated producer on the workflow. That is what our podcast management service provides for client shows.
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Honest Framing Beats Inflated Stakes
Drunk Black History tells you what it is in the title. Black History Year calls itself an educational project. The Stoop describes the show as conversations on a stoop. Honest framing helps listeners arrive with the right expectations. Our piece on the biggest mistakes brands make when starting a podcast covers what happens when shows oversell themselves.
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Subscribe to Two From Each Half
Eight subscriptions all at once gets exhausting. Better move: two from the canon and two from the newer wave. Code Switch plus 1619. Black Cowboys plus The Stoop. That gives you a weekly show, a narrative archive, a global perspective, and a piece of American history reframed. February is when the rest of the internet finally catches up to what you already had on rotation.
If you want help producing a culture or history podcast that earns a year-round audience, book a podcast strategy call with our team.
For more reading on adjacent listening, our review of the best history podcasts covers the broader history-podcast tradition these shows draw from.
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Sources
- Apple Podcasts’ first-ever Show of the Year (2020): Code Switch: https://newsroom.apple.com/2020/12/apple-podcasts-presents-the-best-of-2020/
- PushBlack press release on Black History Year launch (May 2020): https://podnews.net/press-release/pushblack-black-history-year
- Nikole Hannah-Jones’ Pulitzer Prize for Commentary on the 1619 Project (2020): https://www.pulitzer.org/winners/nikole-hannah-jones
- Edison Research, The Black Podcast Listener Report (annual series): https://www.edisonresearch.com/
- PRX Radiotopia Spotlight Selection: The Stoop (Apple Podcasts editorial): https://medium.com/prxofficial/apple-recognizes-the-stoop-from-hana-baba-leila-day-and-the-radiotopia-podcast-network-fff320bc46e6










