Leave a rating and / or review in the Apple Podcast app or on the Spotify app.
This free, 30-second action on your part lets us know you value all the time & energy that goes into producing & publishing the Blister Podcast, and it ensures that we can keep the show going.
How to Leave a Rating / Review on Apple Podcasts
- Open the Apple Podcast App
- (if you’re on your phone, simply click this link)
- Go to the icons at the bottom of the screen and choose “search”
- Search for “Blister Podcast”
- Click on the SHOW — *not* the specific episode
- Scroll down to “Ratings and Reviews”
- Click on “Tap to Rate” and leave us a 5-Star Rating!
- Below that, you can click Write a Review if you’d like to share a few words
How to Leave a Rating on Spotify
- Currently, you can only rate a podcast in the Spotify mobile app
- (if you’re on your phone, simply click this link)
- Navigate to the Blister Podcast show on Spotify (not to a specific episode)
- Tap the star icon underneath the podcast description and if you like the show, leave a 5-star rating
- On Spotify, you need to listen to at least one episode before you can rate a podcast.
At our 2024 Blister Summit, Angel Collinson, Mallory Duncan, Elyse Saugstad, & Vasu Sojitra shared stories about their all-time favorite days in the mountains; their scariest experiences; times they were the most starstruck; what they wish they could tell their younger selves; and more.
Watch the conversation on our YouTube Channel.
RELATED LINKS:
Blister Recommended Shop: Sturtevants
Get Yourself Covered: BLISTER+
Watch on our YouTube Channel
TOPICS & TIMES:
How’d You Get into Skiing? (3:31)
All-Time Favorite Day or Trip? (10:24)
Scariest Experience? (24:26)
Most Starstruck Moment? (36:41)
Advice For Your Younger Selves? (47:06)
Different Forms of Inspiration? (50:32)
*Why* Do You Do What You’re Doing? (53:03)
Welp, there went another childhood ski-racing hero (Ghirardelli). I can’t say I’m completely surprised – his dad/manager Helmut was infamously boorish and I guess the proverbial apple didn’t fall far from the tree.
Ski racing is a lot like bike racing in that it draws different participant demographics in Europe vs the US.
Another thought: The avalanche incident that Elyse referenced but didn’t go into (rightly so IMO) was extensively documented by the NY Times: https://www.nytimes.com/projects/2012/snow-fall/index.html#/?part=tunnel-creek
I mention it because I think that the writeup does a good job of looking at how social and commercial dynamics drive risk-taking, especially as they pertain to Chris Rudolph, the organizer of the tour and a victim of the slide.