Lets make something together.

We think the best science storytelling happens when good shows find each other. If you host a podcast, run a media brand, produce events, or book speakers, we'd love to hear what you're working on and figure out where we overlap.

Collab & Book

Okay, But... Birds is a weekly science podcast with a loyal, highly engaged audience of curious adults across 74 countries. Our listeners finish what they start, come back for more, and actually open our emails. We're always interested in the right collaboration.

Ways to Work Together

Cross-promotion

We trade promos or mentions with shows whose audience overlaps with ours. If your listeners care about science, nature, the outdoors, or the weird side of animal behavior, there's probably a fit.

Co-branded posts, shared Reels, coordinated drops. We're active on Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube, and our newsletter audience is unusually engaged.

Social Media

Joint episodes, shared guest appearances, companion content across shows. If you're covering a topic we've touched or want to touch, let's build something together instead of working in parallel.

Content Production

Book Scott

Dr. Scott Taylor is an evolutionary biologist, Associate Professor at CU Boulder, and Director of the Mountain Research Station. He makes complex science feel like a conversation, not a lecture. And he's funny.

  • Cornell Lab of Ornithology postdoc

  • Fellow, American Ornithological Society

  • Bicentenary Medal, Linnean Society

  • 77 publications, 4,500+ citations

  • Funded by NSF and National Geographic

  • Featured on NPR's 1A, TEDxBoulder, Story Collider, American Birding Association Podcast

  • Led Cornell expeditions to Antarctica, the Arctic, Hawaii, and the Galápagos

As a guest.

Comfortable in long-form and short-form, live and recorded. No jargon, no academic stiffness.

  • Hybridization and what happens when species collide

  • Bird cognition, memory, and the chickadee brain

  • Climate change

  • The genetics of color and plumage

  • Conservation genomics

  • Birding as a cultural moment

  • Equity, diversity, and inclusion in science

  • The wild lives of backyard birds

  • General ornithology and natural history

as a speaker.

Keynotes, panels, fireside conversations, field walks, and Q&A. Equally at home at Yale or a public library.

Previous venues include Cornell, the University of Chicago, the Smithsonian, Lund University, and the Max Planck Institute.

Audiences: academic departments, conservation organizations, birding clubs, science festivals, corporate sustainability events, EDI programs, and public media.

Get In Touch

If you're interested in working with us, complete the form with a few details about your project.