Top 5 Podcasts of 2025
Top 5 Podcasts of 2025
See which ASME TechCast stories, insights, and expert voices grabbed your attention in 2025.
Throughout 2025, ASME TechCast featured voices from every corner of the profession. Engineers tuned in to stories about everything from hypercars to workforce shifts--and the people pushing the ideas and innovations forward.
As we look back on a year of big ideas and big curiosity, these are the episodes that kept listeners locked in. Did you miss any? Give them a listen!
The ears have it: Check out our top episode of the year! Think of this as your digest of the most compelling engineering stories of the spring, selected by our Mechanical Engineering editors. The episode curates thought-provoking topics that reflect where the profession is headed, and is a great listen for catching up on some of the magazine's top stories.
In a year of shifting job markets and evolving industry needs, this episode dug into what makes mechanical engineers more valuable than ever, from emerging skills to evergreen fundamentals. Addison Group's Jim Gerlock gives reassurance to recent grads and seasoned pros alike with a clear view of how to stay relevant and thrive beyond 2025.
Want to learn what all the hype is around hypercars? This episode offers a behind-the-scenes look into how additive manufacturing is powering one of the fastest street-legal cars on the planet. Czinger's Ewan Baldry takes listeners for a ride through engineering design, materials science, and radical automotive manufacturing.
Who doesn't love a good 'Black Mirror'-esque episode? As robotics and automation continue to reshape the future of manufacturing, RoboForce CEO Leo Ma explores what “work” might look like, and what engineers will need to know for incoming bot arrivals. It’s especially relevant in a time of AI entering workflows and technologies rapidly advancing.
This surprising and delightful intersection of engineering and dance shows how mechanical design ideas can leap out of traditional structures and into unexpected places. A team of engineering students at John Hopkins University remind us that engineering isn’t just for factories and labs: STEAM lives in art, motion, and human expression too.
As we look back on a year of big ideas and big curiosity, these are the episodes that kept listeners locked in. Did you miss any? Give them a listen!
Mechanical Engineering Highlights
The ears have it: Check out our top episode of the year! Think of this as your digest of the most compelling engineering stories of the spring, selected by our Mechanical Engineering editors. The episode curates thought-provoking topics that reflect where the profession is headed, and is a great listen for catching up on some of the magazine's top stories.
Mechanical Engineers Remain in High Demand
In a year of shifting job markets and evolving industry needs, this episode dug into what makes mechanical engineers more valuable than ever, from emerging skills to evergreen fundamentals. Addison Group's Jim Gerlock gives reassurance to recent grads and seasoned pros alike with a clear view of how to stay relevant and thrive beyond 2025.
Inside the Engineering of a Czinger Hypercar
Want to learn what all the hype is around hypercars? This episode offers a behind-the-scenes look into how additive manufacturing is powering one of the fastest street-legal cars on the planet. Czinger's Ewan Baldry takes listeners for a ride through engineering design, materials science, and radical automotive manufacturing.
Robot Laborers Ahead
Who doesn't love a good 'Black Mirror'-esque episode? As robotics and automation continue to reshape the future of manufacturing, RoboForce CEO Leo Ma explores what “work” might look like, and what engineers will need to know for incoming bot arrivals. It’s especially relevant in a time of AI entering workflows and technologies rapidly advancing.
Engineering Better Pointework
This surprising and delightful intersection of engineering and dance shows how mechanical design ideas can leap out of traditional structures and into unexpected places. A team of engineering students at John Hopkins University remind us that engineering isn’t just for factories and labs: STEAM lives in art, motion, and human expression too.