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product 2026-01-15 | 3 min read

Making Audio Citable: A New Way to Share What People Actually Said

The internet has embeddable text and embeddable video. Now it has embeddable audio. Cite podcast moments with proof—not paraphrasing.

A
Audioscrape Team

The internet solved sharing for text. Twitter made any sentence embeddable. YouTube made any video moment clippable. But audio?

Audio has been stuck.

When someone says something important on a podcast, your options are:

  • Link to a 90-minute episode and write “skip to 47:23”
  • Screenshot a transcript and hope people believe it
  • Just paraphrase and move on

None of these are real citations. The first one loses your audience—nobody clicks, nobody skips. The second strips away the voice, the tone, the context. The third asks readers to trust you.

We think audio deserves better.

Introducing Embeddable Podcast Moments

Starting today, you can embed any podcast moment directly into your article, blog, or research paper. One line of code. The reader hits play and hears exactly what was said.

Here’s a live example:

No paraphrasing. No “trust me.” Just the source.

How It Works

The embed includes everything a reader needs:

  • The audio clip focused on the specific moment
  • A synced transcript that scrolls as you listen
  • Speaker identification so you know who’s talking
  • One click to the full episode for broader context

Before you hit play, you see the quote. As you listen, the transcript follows along like a teleprompter. When it ends, you can replay or dive into the full conversation.

Why This Matters

Audio is now a primary source.

Journalists can cite podcast interviews with actual audio proof. Researchers can include spoken evidence in papers. Writers can let readers hear the tone, the hesitation, the emphasis—things a transcript alone can’t capture.

This is what “citation” should mean for audio: not a link people ignore, but the actual moment, playable in context.

Who This Is For

Journalists: Stop asking readers to trust your characterization. Let them hear it.

Researchers: Academic work can now include primary audio sources, not just transcriptions.

Content creators: Reference podcast moments in your articles. Your readers can verify and explore.

Podcast fans: Share the moments that matter on forums, blogs, or social media—with full context.

Deaf and hard-of-hearing audiences: Every embed includes a synchronized transcript. Audio content finally becomes readable—and shareable—for everyone.

Get Started

Find any episode on Audioscrape, navigate to a segment, and click Share. Copy the embed code. Paste it anywhere.

We think this is how audio should have worked on the internet all along. Now it does.


Have feedback? We’d love to hear what you’re building with embeds.

Cite any podcast moment

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