
It seems Amazon doesn’t want Alexa to remain just a voice assistant anymore. Last week, the company announced “Alexa for Shopping.” As the name suggests, Alexa will help with online shopping, not just on Amazon, but also across third-party online stores. Now, the company is pushing Alexa deeper into AI-powered content with Alexa Podcasts.
In the announcement post, Amazon noted that Alexa Podcasts can create full podcast-style audio episodes on almost any topic within minutes. If you have used NotebookLM, you probably know what Amazon wants to achieve with this feature. Amazon says that rather than manually searching for videos, articles, or podcasts, you can simply ask Alexa about a topic you’re curious about.
Alexa Podcasts uses content of major news outlets
Alexa+ then pulls information from various sources, creates a structure for the episode, and generates an AI-hosted audio recording ready to listen to. According to Amazon, the feature taps into content from over 200 news publications and media partners. That includes outlets like the Associated Press, Reuters, The Washington Post, TIME, Forbes, Business Insider, Politico, and more.
Alexa also gives you an overview of the planned episode before generating it, which allows you to adjust the length or direction conversationally. The company also says you can generate episodes around trending news, sports highlights, travel destinations, hobbies, career advice, history lessons, and even entertainment recaps.
That’s not all; once the episode is ready, Alexa sends a notification via Echo Show devices and the Alexa app. You can also revisit generated podcasts later from the Music and More section. Notably, Amazon is already teasing bigger plans beyond podcasts. The company says it’s exploring personalized news briefings and AI-generated audio content based on users’ own files and documents in the future.

Available first in the US for Alexa+ users
As of now, Alexa Podcasts is only available for Alexa+ subscribers in the United States. It remains unclear when the feature could expand globally or whether free Alexa users will eventually get limited access.








