Podcast transcripts, polished for reading

Why podProse

Auto-captions are unreadable. Speech-to-text tools give you a wall of text with no structure, no punctuation, wrong names, filler words, and no summary. You get a transcript, but you do not get something anyone would want to read. podProse is different -- it rewrites, structures, and lets you curate a personal library of polished podcast content.

Readable prose, not a wall of text

podProse does not just transcribe. It rewrites. The output is structured with topic headings, proper sentences, and speaker attribution. Filler words and verbal tics are removed. The result reads like an article, not a raw dump of speech-to-text.

Summary and key takeaways included

Every podProse transcript starts with a concise summary and a set of key takeaways. Readers get the substance of a two-hour podcast in thirty seconds. Researchers can quickly assess whether an episode is relevant before reading the full text.

Names done right

Auto-captions mangle names. podProse uses AI name correction with per-channel memory. Once a name is learned, it stays correct across every episode from that channel. No more “france” when the speaker said “Frantzve”.

Works from a YouTube URL

No audio files to upload. No recording software. No manual steps. Paste a YouTube URL and podProse handles everything — transcript extraction, rewriting, formatting, and publishing. One input, one output.

Your own podcast blog

Every transcript you publish appears on podprose.org under your profile. Your content gets its own URL, its own RSS feed, and full SEO metadata. Share individual episodes as readable articles. Build a curated library of polished podcast content that is indexed by search engines and accessible to everyone.

See the difference

Raw auto-captions

yeah so when when we started the company it was it was just me and and john in a garage in auckland and and like nobody would return our calls right we we pitched to i think like forty or fifty investors and they all said no and and i remember john saying to me like maybe maybe we should just go get real jobs and and i said look if if sarah blakely can build spanx out of her apartment with five thousand dollars like we can figure this out and and then ranatunga from from sequence ventures he he actually called us back and said look i dont i dont usually do this but but theres something about what youre building and and that was that was the turning point honestly

podProse output

Sam Kerridge: When we started the company, it was just me and John in a garage in Auckland. Nobody would return our calls. We pitched to forty or fifty investors and they all said no. I remember John saying to me, Maybe we should just go get real jobs. I said, If Sara Blakely can build Spanx out of her apartment with five thousand dollars, we can figure this out. Then Ranatunga from Sequence Ventures actually called us back and said, I dont usually do this, but theres something about what youre building. That was the turning point.

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Summary