About Intelligent Speech

2022

It has been quite the adventure to get to this, our fourth conference and we hope that the 2022 event will be as joyous as the ones that have gone before. Now that we have firmly established the keynote speaker concept, we think we have some fantastic ones lined up for this year. Jennifer’s ArtCurious podcast is one of the classiest history of art podcasts around. Graham and Ali of Rex Factor are legendary forefathers of the Rexypod genre and very funny people. Jamie Jeffers’ British History Podcast is a narrative history podcast done properly.

Intelligent Speech has always been about getting people together – podcasters with the audiences and podcasters together. Our roundtable sessions have always been popular and we have some great ones coming up, notably a group of stellar historians who volunteered their services on Twitter to talk about the Napoleonic Wars.

With 40 speakers joining us, there will certainly be something to match all tastes and predilections. Visit the Speakers page to see the full roster.


Past Events

Intelligent Speech 2019

Our first and, so far, only in-person event held in fair New York City.

Highlights:

  • Mike Duncan spoke about why make a history podcast.
  • Heather Teysko of Renaissance English History
  • Abishai Aziz Al-Doory of The History of Westeros

 

Intelligent Speech was set up by our Founder Emeritus, Roifield Brown, with the goal of forging stronger bonds between thoughtful online content creators and their community. The initial event was live and in person in New York City at the Centre for Social Innovation, a very cool event space in a renovated warehouse in Manhattan. This new project involved an all-hands-on deck effort from the members of the Agora Podcast Network, of which Roifield was then president. We were lucky enough to host Mike Duncan of the History of Rome and Revolutions that year, which still feels like we got away with something. And yeah, he genuinely is a really nice guy.


Intelligent Speech 2020

For obvious reasons, we went virtual at this point.

Highlights:

  • Kevin Stroud of the History of English
  • Nia Clark of Dreams of Black Wall Street
  • Eric Marcus of Making Gay History

In March 2020, as Covid spread across the world, Benjamin “Ben” Jacobs, secretary of the Agora Podcast Network, suggested to Roifield that they should move the event online. Roifield replied that it might be a good idea, and mulled it over on his flight across the Atlantic back home to Birmingham. So it was from a quarantined hotel room that the decision was taken to start planning on exactly how to move an in-person intellectual podcast fan convention into an online environment. And we are proud to say, it worked! …despite some notable technical difficulties and more truck-related injuries than you would expect at an online conference, the result was a unique and loved event. Bringing together fans and creators from around the world, the day was intense, intimate and engaging.
Huge shout out to Zachary Davis and Ray Belli of the Sound Education conference, who had been tackling similar issues and helped us all enormously.

Between a panel discussing the use of testimony as a key part of history podcasting, and a fan favourite conversation between Ray Belli of Words for Granted and Kevin Stroud of History of English, the exploration of language seemed to permeate the event. Everyone seemed to enjoy it so much that we decided to do it again the next year.


Intelligent Speech 2021: Escape

At this stage everyone needed a bit of an escape from the trials and tribulations we were all going through.

Highlights:

  • David Crowther of the History of England Podcast
  • Liz Covart of Ben Franklin’s World
  • Marco Cappelli of Storia d’Italia

In 2021, Luke Baxter, Roifield’s collaborator on The Things that Made England, was brought in to help, as Zach and Ray went on to further challenges. Luke brought a key sense of stability to a very ‘chaotic good’ aligned event. The first year to feature structured and intentional keynotes, the day was again seen as a huge success by the attendees. Notably, David Crowther’s talk on the history of English beer left everyone thirsty. But the meat of the event was always about having personal conversations with podcasters, as happened in Issac Meyer of the History of Japan Podcast’s presentation on leaving academia; or about learning something new and important, as we did with Country Boi of One Mic: Black History and his presentation on the New Negro Movement of the 1920s.