Hand your podcast to your AI assistant

Reducer speaks MCP, so the assistant you already talk to can fill your feed, build courses, and set the schedule — without you opening the app.

You already talk to an AI assistant all day. You ask it to summarize a paper, explain a contract, draft a plan. Then the answer scrolls off the screen and you move on. Good answers, gone.

Reducer catches them.

It speaks MCP, the protocol assistants use to reach real tools, so something like Claude can push straight into your podcast. No copy-paste, no second app. You’re mid-conversation, you like what you heard, you say “add that to my morning show.” It lands in the inbox. Tomorrow it’s in your feed, voiced, sitting between the weather and the news.

What the assistant can actually do

Pushing a segment is the start. The assistant has the whole product.

It can spin up a new show. It can write a five-part brief and publish it as one episode, right now. It can set a schedule so a show wakes up every morning at seven and builds itself from whatever piled up overnight. It can check whether you’ve already covered a topic before adding it again.

And it can make a course. “Build me a course on the Roman Republic, a lesson a day” is a real instruction. The assistant drafts the lessons, creates the course, attaches it to a show, and schedules the drip. You get a new lesson each morning until it’s done.

Why a protocol instead of a chat box

We could have built a chat box into the app. We didn’t, on purpose.

The assistant you already use is better than any chat box we’d ship. It knows the paper you’re reading. It has the thread of your afternoon. It can reason about what’s worth keeping. Wiring Reducer into that assistant beats teaching a new one your life from scratch.

So Reducer stays a tool the assistant reaches for, not a place you go. The work happens where you already are.

Getting started

Connect the Reducer MCP server to your assistant: point it at mcp.reducerai.com and sign in once. From then on, the assistant can see your shows and act on them.

Then ask. “What podcasts do I have?” “Make a show called Field Notes.” “Turn this into tomorrow’s episode.” It picks the right tool and runs it.


Your feed, built by the assistant you already talk to. Connect it.