









A digital campfire where independent podcasters pool their voices, swap editing tricks at midnight, and fund each other's next season.




247 people funded a voice this month
Where midnight edits become morning masterpieces.
I cut my edit time from 4 hours to 45 minutes by marking regions in Audacity while recording — not after. Game changer for solo hosts.
— Darius Webb · The Closet Studio
Removing room tone the right way
Keiko Tanaka · Frequency Found
847
editing tricks shared
From noise gates to narrative pacing — the co-op's running thread never sleeps.
First-timers and relaunch vets, side by side.
Maya Chen
Night Frequencies
Funding Season 2 — 8 episodes on urban sound diaries
I launched my show on a Tuesday with zero listeners. By Friday, three people in Gather had left feedback on my trailer. That's when I knew this was different.
Tomás Rivera
Open Mic Diaries
Every voice here keeps every other voice going.
Sound-design notes before you hit publish.
Does this intro hook in 8 seconds?
Priya Nair · Sound & Story
Post your rough cut on the Porch before publishing. I got 6 specific notes on my music bed in under 2 hours. My episode sounded 3x better.
— Marcus Osei · The Long Take
Priya Nair
Sound & Story
Equipment upgrade — new condenser mic for Season 3
The Feedback Porch saved my pilot episode. Someone caught a 3-second silence glitch I'd listened past 20 times. Fresh ears are everything.
Keiko Tanaka
Frequency Found
2,140
voices in the block
Solo hosts, co-hosted duos, and narrative audio creators — all recording between day jobs.
When you outgrow your free plan, post in the Launch Pad. Someone always knows a promo code or a cheaper stack that actually works.
— Darius Webb · The Closet Studio
$0
raised so far





247 people have funded a voice this month
12
creators funded
$28
avg contribution
3 days
left this month
Gather is a paid community of independent podcasters who show up for each other. No algorithms. No gatekeepers. Just voices keeping voices going.





2,140 podcasters already in the block.
From closet recordings to chart-climbers — everyone started by showing up.