If you're not making or listening to a podcast, you're not doing it right. Nearly every lawyer and blogger in Washington, D.C., who's somebody—or wants to be—has pushed himself into someone else's earbuds lately.

My colleague Miriam Rozen wrote this week about how Bracewell lobbyist Joshua Zive developed the weekly series “The Lobby Shop.” Zive pointed out how it's antithetical for some lawyers to speak openly about their work.

Yet Zive's admission hasn't stopped many names from talking. Kathryn Ruemmler, the Latham & Watkins partner and former White House counsel in the Obama administration, joined Crooked Media's popular “Pod Save America” recently to discuss the firing of James Comey. Lawfare, a widely read blog covering the Trump administration and national security, hosts several podcasts, including a cyberlaw show hosted by Stewart Baker, a partner at Steptoe & Johnson. And the public relations firm Trident, run by former Clinton confidante Lanny Davis, has a show called “The Crisis.”