Fest & Flauschig

Fest & Flauschig (German for Firm & Fluffy) is a German audio podcast hosted by satirist Jan Böhmermann and musician Olli Schulz.[1] It was launched in May 2016 on Spotify as a successor of the radio show Sanft & Sorgfältig (German for Gentle & Thorough). It is the worldwide most successful podcast of Spotify.[2]

Fest & Flauschig
Presentation
Hosted byJan Böhmermann Olli Schulz
GenreTalk
LanguageGerman
Length1 to 2 hours
Production
ProductionSu Holder
Publication
Original release15 May 2016 – present
ProviderSpotify
Websitehttp://www.festundflauschig.de/

History

Schulz and Böhmermann hosted from 9 September 2012 until 24. April 2016 the radio show Sanft & Sorgfältig on the Berlin radio station Radio Eins. During the Böhmermann affair in Spring 2016 the production was stopped. Meanwhile, the moderators announced on 25 April 2016 on Facebook that Sanft & Sorgfältig would be discontinued. Shortly afterwards Spotify announced that Schulz and Böhmermann will start a podcast under new name.[3]

In Mai 2019 Spotify announced that the podcast has been extended for three more seasons until 2022.[4]

Content

Center of the podcast is the dialogue between the hosts Böhmermann and Schulz. Content of these conversations is current political and societal affairs, personal events from their life, and also fictional events. There exist some reoccurring elements, for example, Die großen Fünf (German for The Big Five) and Partyhopping.[5]

In the radio show, the conversation was interrupted with music. In the podcast, this is technically not possible but the hosts also provide a separate playlist, called Fidi & Bumsi on Spotify.[6]

Weekly, a new episode of the podcast is available on Sunday at midnight CET. As of January 2020, on Wednesdays a second, shorter episode is available.[7] During the Coronavirus disease 2019 outbreak in Germany and the accompanying lockdown, the number of weekly episodes increased temporarily to five. Virologist Christian Drosten was one of the guests during this time. [8]

Reception

The podcast has an estimated 100,000 listeners.[9]

gollark: Because the economy is the reason we *produce* things. Important things we need for, well, stopping epidemics and treating people.
gollark: It's not *that* disastrous and the economy is really important.
gollark: The UK is apparently considering shutting down schools. I'm not sure whether it's sensible or not, but it'll definitely be problematic for me.
gollark: It does seem like the governments responding to this have two states: completely ignoring the problem and wildly implementing over-the-top restrictions too late.
gollark: They do have other non-coronavirus stuff to compute too, don't they?

References

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