By Junaid Ahmed
The thoughts about my show don't happen at my desk.
They happen walking to the car after a recording, when I remember I told the guest I'd send them something specific. They happen at the coffee shop, when I'm thinking about who I haven't talked to in a while. They happen the morning after an episode goes out, when I should be sharing it and I'm scrolling instead.
Until this week, none of those moments turned into anything.
PodGlue lived on a laptop. To do anything, review a checklist, follow up with a guest, post a promo, I had to be at a desk. So the thoughts piled up. The intentions accumulated. The follow-ups got buried under whatever the next desk session was.
That's a workflow built around the wrong assumption. The assumption that the work happens when I sit down. It doesn't. The work happens in the gaps.
So we built a native iOS app for PodGlue.
It's in your pocket. You sign in once. The same workspace you use on the web is right there.
What's in it today:
The Command queue, the same focus card and next-actions list from the web app, on your phone. You can clear blockers and mark things done while you're walking between meetings.
Today's Reach Out, one contact. One reason to check in on them. Three buttons: send a message, schedule for later, skip for today. The constraint (one per day, not a queue) is the feature. A guest you recorded with three months ago surfaces. You tap "Send a message," iMessage opens with a draft, and the relationship doesn't go cold.
Episode detail, every episode you have in progress, with its checklist, its guest, its current state. You can read your own pre-interview notes on the way to the studio.
Promo art generation, tap a sparkles button on any episode, pick a style, and the app generates a 1024×1024 promo graphic for that specific episode. Save to Photos. Post before you close the app.
There's a layer underneath this for newer iPhones that's worth being precise about.
On devices with Apple Intelligence, the app uses Apple's on-device Foundation Models. The art-direction prompt gets enriched on your phone before the cloud call. Captions and hashtags for the promo are written on your phone after. Your episode notes never leave the device for that work.
On older hardware, the same buttons exist. They just don't get the on-device layer. Everything else works identically.
A real example from yesterday.
I was on a walk. I remembered I'd told a guest I'd send them a specific link three weeks ago. Before, that thought would have lived in my head until I forgot it. This time I pulled out my phone, opened PodGlue, found her in Guests, and sent the message before I got to the corner.
That's the whole point of building this. Not a feature. A surface that catches the thought when it happens, instead of waiting for it to die.
The first build was rejected by App Store Connect, turns out iPad multitasking requires a specific list of supported orientations in the bundle, and we hadn't set it. Fixed in a 1-line config change and resubmitted. (We track every regression like this in docs/regressions.md now. If you ever want to see the full graveyard of "things that broke once," it's all there.)
What's next on the iOS side:
A lock-screen widget that surfaces Today's Reach Out without opening the app.
A Siri shortcut: "Hey Siri, who should I reach out to today?"
Live Activities that show episode prep status in the Dynamic Island when an episode is hours from going live.
App Intents so the rest of PodGlue's actions, create an episode, add a guest, mark a checklist item done, become things Siri can do for you across the system.
If you're already a PodGlue user, the app will be on TestFlight shortly. If you're not, the web app still does everything. The phone version exists so the work has somewhere to land in the moments you're not at your desk, which, if you're running a show, is most of them.
Ready to make every episode compound?
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