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Podcast · First Session

What should you know before booking a podcast studio for the first time?

First studio sessions fail for the same five reasons: no episode plan, the wrong session length, file formats nobody discussed, guests who arrive cold, and hosts who spend the first paid hour learning the room. All five are preventable with one email and this page. Union Square Loft has walked first-timers through it on Broadway since the 90s.

Before you book: three decisions

Choosing session length honestly

The 2-hour minimum isn't a tax — it's the realistic floor. A 45-minute episode takes 90+ minutes to record well: 15 for levels and settling, 60–75 of recording with natural retakes, a buffer for pickups. Booking exactly your runtime guarantees a rushed ending. Full session-length math here.

What to ask any studio (including us)

  1. What file formats do I leave with, and when?
  2. Are per-host tracks included?
  3. Who runs the board at my tier?
  4. Does my clock start at arrival or at record?
  5. What's the overtime rate?

USL's answers: WAV/MP4 same session; yes, included; an engineer at the engineered and video tiers, start with an engineered walkthrough; at record; your tier's hourly rate, flagged before it starts.

What to bring

Your outline, water, a phone on silent, and for video: solid colors, no fine stripes, nothing with logos you don't own. For guests, send a one-paragraph brief two days out: address (873 Broadway, Suite 408 — minutes from the Union Square trains), arrival time fifteen minutes before record, what the show is, and the three things you'll ask about. A briefed guest gives a better first ten minutes than an ambushed one — and the first ten minutes are usually the episode.

How the day flows at USL

Arrive, get a five-minute room walkthrough, mics set and levels checked while you settle, record, and leave with organized files the same session. The operator who built the room is the person checking your levels — ask anything; first-timers who ask questions leave with a better second session already planned. Deposit 50% holds your date; reschedules handled like humans, with notice.

Questions people actually ask

How early should I arrive?
Fifteen minutes — enough to settle, see the room, and get mics positioned. Your billed block starts at record, not at the door.
What files do I leave with?
WAV audio (per-host tracks) and MP4 video at the video tier, organized and handed off the same session.
Do I need to bring my own microphone?
No — the full mic chain is included at every tier. Bring your outline and your voice.
Can I see the room before booking?
Yes — book a visit through the site and walk it. Hearing the room is the fastest way to understand what you're buying.
What if my guest cancels last-minute?
Record anyway — a solo segment, intros for future episodes, or promo reads. Paid studio time always has a use; build a backup plan into your outline.
Do studios edit the episode?
Handoff is included; editing is separate. USL can scope editing as production work — ask when booking.
How do I prep a nervous first-time guest?
Send the brief two days out, start with two easy warm-up questions you don't intend to use, and let the room do its work — people relax fast in a space that doesn't feel like a lab.
What are the deposit and reschedule terms?
50% deposit holds the date, balance 14 days prior. Reschedules with reasonable notice are handled flexibly — talk to us.

Book your first session

Tell us the date and the format. Carlos — the owner, on Broadway since the 90s — replies personally, usually within the hour. Or call 212-529-7570.