So the podcast was an interview between the two hosts, who sound about 12, the Kodak product manager for film (Diane somebody), the project manager for Ektachrome (Fred somebody), and an Ektachrome "super fan" employed by Kodak in some capacity (Matt somebody), who spent most of the interview on the verge of wetting his pants with excitement.
But seriously, there was a lot of background that most of us here already know (what is a reversal film, how do you process it, why is it special, etc.). They went on to describe why Ektachrome was discontinued in 2013. The film was never "small scaled" and could only be produced in quantities so large that reduced demand levels would no longer support. (They did mention that that equipment is "no longer available.") They described the challenge of reformulation: 80 or so ingredients go into the film, and some of those could no longer be sourced from their original (pre 2013) suppliers. So they had to be either sourced elsewhere or made in house. These challenges (downscaling and raw materials sourcing) were said to be worked out.
So far, they've coated a couple small pilot rolls (100' x 5") for analysis, and the results are "pretty favorable." They described with some excitement a "wide event" slated to happen "in a few weeks." This is the making of a single master roll, 6000 feet long by four feet wide, from which the first batch of test rolls will be made (mostly for internal use). Initially they'll make the film in two formats: 35mm still film, and Super 8 movie film.
Those were the highlights anyway. The complete 40 minute interview can be heard here:
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