For hosts

Run your show from one operating system.

Stop the scramble before air. Your questions, guests, run-of-show, and the answers you’ve already given stop living in a dozen places and start working together.

The reality

Every show, rebuilt from memory.

Here’s the part nobody warns you about when you start a show: the hard work isn’t the airtime. It’s everything around it. Questions arrive from comments, email, DMs, the live chat, the occasional text, a form somewhere, and the scribbled notes from last week. A guest needs to be prepped, and their details are split across three apps. There are topics you keep meaning to circle back to, a sponsor you promised to mention, clips you want to cut, and an audience that expects you to remember what you talked about before.

And then there are the answers. The good ones — the questions you’ve fielded ten times, the explanations you’ve gotten really sharp at giving. They live in your head and in old recordings, which means each new episode quietly starts from zero.

So you rebuild the show from scattered memory every time you go live. It works, because you make it work. But it’s fragile, it doesn’t scale, and most of what you create disappears the moment the stream ends.

What’s broken

Scattered today, together on rede.fm.

None of this is a discipline problem. It’s a tooling problem — the pieces of a show were never designed to talk to each other.

Today

  • Questions come in from comments, email, DMs, chat, and texts — and nowhere holds them all.
  • Guest info is spread across five places, re-typed for every booking.
  • The run-of-show is a doc you rebuild from scratch each episode.
  • The great answer you gave last time is lost in an old recording.
  • Nothing remembers what your audience keeps asking for.

With rede.fm

  • One queue for every question, no matter where it came in.
  • Guest details in one place — set once, rede for every show.
  • A run-of-show that’s connected to your questions, guests, and segments.
  • Published answers you can reuse instead of re-explaining.
  • A show that remembers the topics and questions that keep coming back.

How it changes

Not a page, a link, a form, or an archive — all of it, connected.

rede.fm sits underneath the whole operation so the work you do for one show compounds into the next.

Capture better questions

Give your audience one place to send questions, and pull in what arrives across your other channels. Everything lands in a single queue you can sort, group, and pick from on air — instead of hunting across inboxes minutes before you go live.

Organize recurring topics

The same themes come up again and again. rede.fm keeps them grouped so you can see what your show keeps returning to, plan around it, and build a run-of-show that’s connected to the questions and guests behind each segment.

Keep answers useful after air

The answers worth keeping don’t have to vanish when the stream ends. Publish them so they’re searchable, shareable, and reusable — your best explanations become a library that works for you between episodes instead of disappearing into the archive.

Why it matters

A show that gets smarter over time.

When the pieces are connected, the day before a show stops being a scramble. You prep from one place: the questions waiting, the topics in play, the guest already set up, the run-of-show already in place. You walk into airtime knowing what’s actually been asked — not what you half-remember being asked.

You also start to see the shape of your own show. Which questions keep coming back. Which topics your audience returns to. What you’ve answered so well that you should be pointing people to it instead of repeating yourself. That signal is the difference between guessing what your audience wants and knowing it.

And the work accumulates. Each episode leaves behind answers, topics, and history that make the next one easier — so the show you run a year from now is built on everything the show learned before it.

See how the knowledge layer works →

See what your audience is actually asking →

Get started

Build a show that gets smarter over time — show up rede.

Set up your show once, run it from one place, and keep the work that matters. Free to start.