The average American spends 55 minutes commuting every day. That adds up to roughly 220 hours a year sitting in traffic, standing on a train, or staring at the back of someone's head on a bus. If you are anything like me, you have spent most of those hours cycling between the same three podcasts and wishing you had time to read more.
I built speakeasy because I was frustrated by a specific problem: I had hundreds of saved articles and zero time to read them. My Pocket queue was a graveyard. My browser tabs were a cry for help. Meanwhile, I was spending an hour a day in my car doing essentially nothing with my brain.
The solution was obvious once I saw it. Stop trying to find reading time. Start converting dead time into listening time.
Why Podcasts and Audiobooks Are Not Enough
Podcasts are great, but they are someone else's editorial agenda. You are listening to what the host decided to talk about, at the pace they decided to set, with the tangents they decided to include. A 20-minute article's worth of insight gets stretched into a 90-minute episode with ads, banter, and sponsor reads.
Audiobooks are even more of a commitment. You are locked into a single topic for 8-15 hours. That is fine for deep dives, but it does not help when you want to stay current on industry news, absorb a quick essay, or catch up on a newsletter you missed.
The gap is in the middle. You want to consume the specific articles, blog posts, and newsletters that matter to you, on your schedule, in audio form. Not someone else's curation. Yours.
The Case for Listening to Your Own Reading List
Here is what changes when you start listening to articles instead of reading them:
- Dead time becomes productive. That 55-minute commute transforms from wasted time into your primary reading block.
- Your reading list actually shrinks. Instead of saving articles you will "get to later" (you will not), you process them during time that was previously useless.
- You retain more than you think. Research on audio comprehension shows that for narrative and informational content, listening comprehension is comparable to reading comprehension at normal speeds.
- You reduce screen fatigue. After 8 hours of staring at a computer, the last thing your eyes want is more screen time. Audio lets you consume content without the strain.
The key insight is not that audio is better than reading. It is that audio content consumed during otherwise idle time is infinitely better than articles saved and never read.
Setting Up a Commute Listening Routine
The system that works is simple, and that is the whole point. Complexity kills habits.
The Night-Before Queue
Spend 5 minutes each evening loading your queue for the next morning. I aim for 3-4 articles that total roughly the length of my commute. Here is my process:
- Scan your sources. Check your newsletters, RSS feeds, Twitter bookmarks, or read-later app. Pick the 3-4 most interesting pieces.
- Convert them to audio. Drop the URLs into speakeasy and let it generate the audio. I do this while brushing my teeth at night.
- Order by energy level. Put the denser, more analytical pieces first when your brain is fresh. Save the lighter reads for the drive home when you are winding down.
The night-before queue is critical. If you try to set this up in the morning while rushing out the door, you will skip it. Make it part of your evening routine.
Speed Settings for Different Content
Not all articles deserve the same pace. Here is the speed framework I use:
- 1x speed for technical articles, complex arguments, or anything with data you need to internalize.
- 1.5x speed for news, opinion pieces, and familiar topics where you are catching up rather than learning something new.
- 2x speed for newsletters you skim anyway, industry roundups, and anything you are processing for headlines rather than depth.
Most people start at 1x and gradually work up. After a few weeks, 1.5x feels perfectly natural and you will get through significantly more content in the same commute.
The Commute Split
If your commute is roughly an hour round trip, here is a sustainable structure:
Morning (30 minutes):
- One substantial article (10-15 minutes)
- One medium piece (8-10 minutes)
- One quick read (5 minutes)
Evening (30 minutes):
- One longer essay or deep dive (15-20 minutes)
- One lighter piece or newsletter (10 minutes)
That is 5-6 articles a day, 25-30 per week. Over a year, you will have consumed over 1,300 articles during time that used to be dead.
What I Listen to on My Commute
I have experimented with this system for months, and my listening has settled into a few reliable categories.
Morning Drive (Information Dense)
I front-load the analytical stuff. A typical morning queue might include:
- A long-form piece from The Atlantic or Aeon on whatever topic caught my eye
- A technical deep dive from a Substack I follow in my industry
- A strategy post from Stratechery or a similar business analysis newsletter
These are the articles that require actual attention, and my brain is at its sharpest in the morning. The commute provides a focused, distraction-free window that I honestly struggle to find at any other point in the day.
Evening Drive (Wind Down)
The drive home gets lighter content:
- Personal essays or opinion pieces
- Book reviews or cultural criticism
- Newsletters that are more conversational in tone
I have found that listening to calmer, more reflective content on the way home creates a much better transition from work mode to home mode than talk radio or the news ever did.
Weekend Catch-Up
Saturday mornings, I will do a longer session during errands. This is when I tackle the pieces I saved during the week but did not get to. A grocery run plus a few errands can easily absorb 45 minutes of listening.
Making the Habit Stick
The biggest risk with any productivity system is that you use it enthusiastically for two weeks and then forget it exists. Here is what keeps this one going for me:
Attach it to an existing habit. I do not "decide" to listen to articles. I get in my car and press play. The commute is the trigger. The audio is automatic.
Keep the queue loaded. An empty queue means you will default to music or podcasts. Spend those 5 minutes the night before. It is the highest-leverage 5 minutes in the whole system.
Do not optimize too hard. Some days I listen to one article and zone out. Some days I get through six. The point is not to maximize throughput. The point is to make consistent progress on your reading list using time you were already spending.
Track the accumulation, not daily performance. After a month of commute listening, look back at how many articles you have consumed. The number will surprise you. That compounding effect is what makes this work.
With speakeasy, your audio articles sync across devices via iCloud. Convert articles on your phone at night, and they are ready to play the moment you get in the car.
The Bigger Picture
We live in an era of incredible written content. The best writers in the world are publishing daily on Substack, in newsletters, on blogs. The bottleneck is not supply. It is attention and time.
Listening to articles during your commute does not solve information overload. But it does something valuable: it takes time you were already spending and converts it into genuine learning and staying informed. No extra hours required. No heroic discipline needed. Just a simple shift from passive commuting to active listening.
If you commute 55 minutes a day, that is over 200 hours a year. Even at a conservative pace, that is 1,000 or more articles you would never have gotten to otherwise. Not because you are working harder or sleeping less, but because you finally matched the format to the moment.
Your reading list is not going to read itself. But it can listen itself, if you let it.