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core.py
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core.py

Hosted by Pablo Galindo and Łukasz Langa · 🇺🇸 US · EN · 30 episodes

Where this show ranks

Episodes
30
Last ep.
8 days ago
Avg length
105m
Booking Probability™
39
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Estimated audience
,
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Listen Score
21
Niche reach.
Virality (30d)
49
Steady cadence.

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Required Pod Score
80/ 100
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Best topics to pitch
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About this podcast

We talk about Python internals, because we work on Python internals. We joke about stuff, because we’re jokers. Episodes between 60 and 90 minutes in length. We’ve done more than a few so far and it doesn’t seem like we’ll be stopping any time soon!Hi Loren!

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About the host

Pablo Galindo and Łukasz Langa hosts core.py, a news show with 30 episodes published.

Verified host email:████████@████.comSign in to unlock →

Recent episodes

Our AI reads these to draft pitches

Episode 29: Is CPython developed with AI now?

Apr 16, 20262h 9mEp. 29S1

Let's talk about what it really means in practice that AI tools are used in the cpython GitHub repository now. First-hand opinions based on first-party experience. And some personal news! ## Timestamps (00:00:00) INTRO (

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Episode 28: 2025 In Review

Jan 3, 20261h 16mEp. 28S1

Let's take a breather from heavy content and take a look back at last year in this light but spicy episode! The good, the less good, and the disgusting. All that in barely an hour! ## Timestamps (00:00:00) INTRO (00:01:3

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Episode 27: Calling Things, Part 1

Dec 7, 20252h 5mEp. 27S1

Inside of you there are two stacks. Actually, there’s three. The system-level call stack, the CPython call stack, and the interpreter’s evaluation stack. What is all that about? Today we’ll talk about how synchronous Pyt

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Episode 26.2: CPython Sprint Week in Cambridge UK, Part 2

Oct 25, 20252h 18mEp. 27S1

More interviews from the core sprint! This time we have: Greg P. Smith, Thomas Wouters, Paul Ganssle, Pradyun Gedam, Carol Willing, Guido van Rossum, Brett Cannon, Erlend Aasland, Tal Einat, Lysandros Nikolaou, Yury Seli

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Episode 26.1: CPython Sprint Week in Cambridge UK, Part 1

Oct 15, 20252h 24mEp. 26S1

What? What do you mean this two-and-a-half hour episode is PART 1? Well, there were fifty people at the sprint in September. We interviewed thirty of them. In Part 1 you can hear from 18 of them: Ken Jin, Alex Waygood, R

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Episode 25: A Python That Never Was

Aug 26, 20252h 1mEp. 25S1

What if some rejected PEPs were actually accepted? How would Python look today? Let's go through 10 PEPs from the past and imagine an alternative future for the language! ## Timestamps (00:00:00) INTRO (00:01:00) PART 1:

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The Megahertz

Jul 12, 20251h 42mEp. 24S1

Python 3.14? That's old news. Let's talk about the first big feature of Python 3.15 -- a built-in sampling profiler for Linux, macOS, and Windows. We also cover improvements in perf support, discuss memory.python.org, an

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PyCon US 2025 Recap

Jun 13, 20251h 36mEp. 23S1

We’ve been gone a while. Here’s our excuse for being silent for a month: PyCon, PyCon, something something security. Come listen to how the conference looked like from our perspective! And whatever you do, DO NOT upgrade

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Beta Frenzy

May 6, 20251h 19mEp. 22S1

Python 3.14 Beta 1 is coming! And that means we reach feature freeze. BUT QUICK, there’s still time to squeeze in one last thing! ## Timestamps (00:00:00) INTRO (00:01:58) PART 1: Template strings (00:07:10) PART 2: Asyn

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Episode 21: A Garbage Episode

Apr 17, 20251h 57mEp. 21S1

We talked about this episode for months now, and it's finally here. Garbage collection in its full glory. Classic and free-threaded. Generational and single-pass. With eager and delayed untracking. We cover it all! Expli

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Episode 20: Remote Code Execution By Design

Mar 24, 20251h 44mEp. 20S1

In this episode, Pablo's avoiding the topic of garbage collection by talking about his latest PEP, which allows unprecedented interaction with a running Python process. We also resolve the bet about reference counting se

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Episode 19: Async hacks, unicorns and velociraptors

Mar 8, 20252h 7mEp. 19S1

In this asynchronous episode we're interviewing a fellow core developer Yury Selivanov to talk about asyncio's past and future, composable design, immutability, and databases you'd actually like using. We also broke the

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Episode 18: Reference Counting

Jan 24, 20251h 39mEp. 18S1

After we talked about memory allocation in Python back in Episode 16, we're ready to complain, uh, explain reference counting. Or at least throw a bunch of reference counting facts at you. Plus a big assortment of recent

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Episode 17: Argparse, JIT, and balloons with Savannah Ostrowski

Nov 19, 20241h 45mEp. 17S1

Meet our newest member of the core developer team, Savannah! Currently at Snowflake, she also worked with development tools at Docker and Microsoft, but also flew drones over forests. In terms of CPython, Savannah works

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Episode 16: Memory Allocation

Oct 29, 20241h 45mEp. 16S1

How does Python handle memory? Why does it need to perform custom forms of memory allocation? We talk about all that in this episode. We don't talk about Easter eggs, and we never mention Brandt by name, as promised last

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Episode 15: Core sprint at Meta

Oct 3, 20241h 56mEp. 15S1

Over 40 core developers spent a week in Bellevue WA putting finishing touches on Python 3.13, planning, prototyping, and implementing features for Python 3.14. We talked to half of them. We laughed, we cried. We were hap

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Episode 14: Integration Events

Sep 3, 20241h 30mEp. 14S1

We’ve been gone all Summer, visiting two European conferences in the mean time. In this episode we’re talking about them both, talks we liked, as well as our own talks at those events. In a rare turn of events, this one

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Episode 13: A Legit Episode

Jun 29, 20241h 51mEp. 13S1

In this lucky episode we're interviewing fellow core developer Brandt Bucher to talk about Justin, Swedish warships, and the n-body benchmark. We're also breaking the duration record with this one. We promise we'll get f

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Episode 12: WTF Python

Jun 10, 20241h 24mEp. 140S1

You think you know Python? We thought so, too. Join us for an episode of surprises. You might know some of those, but you sure don't know all of them. ## Outline (00:00:00) INTRO (00:02:22) Integer interning with a twist

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Episode 11: Live from PyCon 2024

May 28, 202430mEp. 11S1

Who says we can't do short episodes? Well, it was a challenge! But with the help of some gentle conference schedule pressure, here's our first sub-hour episode. We're discussing the language summit, answering audience qu

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Audience demographics

Age
30-65
Consumer type
Engaged citizens

Topics covered

news

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Frequently asked questions

How do I pitch core.py as a podcast guest?

core.py has a verified contact on file. Create a free PitchCentric account to access it and generate a personalised pitch in seconds. Research at least 3 recent episodes first and lead with a specific angle that serves their news audience.

Who is the host of core.py?

core.py is hosted by Pablo Galindo and Łukasz Langa. The show is categorised under news and has published 30 episodes.

How many episodes does core.py have?

core.py has published 30 episodes.

What topics does core.py cover?

core.py regularly covers news. It sits in the news category.

Is it hard to get booked on core.py?

core.py is accessible for guests with genuine news expertise. A personalised, episode-aware pitch will still outperform a generic one every time.

Is core.py currently accepting guest pitches?

core.py hasn't explicitly signalled guest openness in recent episodes. That doesn't rule out pitching. your hook just needs to be especially compelling and relevant to their recent content.

How long are core.py episodes?

Episodes of core.py average 105 minutes, giving guests a long-form format with plenty of time to expand on their expertise.

What guest credentials does core.py typically look for?

Our data rates core.py's guest bar at 80/100 (Premium tier). Established thought leaders with verified media credentials. Sign in to PitchCentric to see how your own Pod Score compares against this show.

Methodology. Booking Probability™ blends Listen Score, 30-day Virality, open-to-guests detection, and Apple ratings. Data refreshed every 60 minutes. Listen Score and Booking Probability are calculated by PitchCentric. Last enriched 8 days ago.

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