Finding the Humanist Frequency: How Gran Canaria Became a Hub for Progressive Media
A new humanist podcast broadcasting from the Canary Islands raises questions about the geography of alternative media and who controls the airwaves.

On 6 May 2026, a humanist podcast called "Encuentrame en las Ondas" — Find Me on the Waves — began regular broadcasts from Gran Canaria, the third-largest island in the Canary Islands archipelago. The announcement, published by Pressenza, described the programme as the internet's favourite humanist podcast, now taking to the airwaves with a new regular schedule. The geographic pivot — from purely digital distribution to terrestrial or hybrid broadcasting — is modest in scale but typifies a pattern that media observers have tracked since the mid-2020s: progressive and humanist programming increasingly seeks physical broadcast infrastructure outside the mainstream digital oligopoly.
Gran Canaria occupies a specific position in this geography. As an autonomous community of Spain situated in the Atlantic off the coast of West Africa, the island sits at a crossroads — nominally European Union territory, physically closer to Africa than to the Iberian Peninsula, and historically a site of cross-cultural transmission. For media operations seeking a European base without the regulatory entanglements of mainland EU jurisdictions, the Canary Islands offer a particular combination: Spanish legal frameworks, Atlantic positioning, and established telecommunications infrastructure built partly through tourism-driven investment.
The question of where progressive or dissenting media physically operates has gained urgency as platform consolidation has reshaped what audiences actually encounter. When a podcast or digital publication is algorithmically demoted, demonetised, or simply made harder to find on the dominant platforms, the underlying infrastructure — servers, hosting providers, domain registrars, and broadcast licences — becomes a site of political contest. Broadcasting from a location like Gran Canaria does not guarantee immunity from these pressures, but it introduces a different regulatory layer than operating from Silicon Valley-adjacent data centres or relying exclusively on US-based platform distribution.
What the Pressenza announcement does not specify is the technical scope of the broadcast. It remains unclear whether the programme has secured independent terrestrial frequency allocation, operates as an online-only stream with the labelling of "radio" as a format choice, or is carried via an existing community radio partnership. That ambiguity is itself revealing. The language of radio — "las ondas," the waves — persists in podcasting culture even as most programmes never touch a broadcast frequency. It carries connotations of reach and publicness that pure internet audio lacks, and those connotations matter to a humanist project that positions itself in opposition to the commercial logic of mainstream media.
The structural tension underlying this development is not unique to humanist media. Independent outlets across the political spectrum have grappled for years with the paradox of digital distribution: the internet promised decentralisation, but a handful of platforms captured the distribution infrastructure and with it enormous power over what audiences find. The response has included geographic diversification — hosting in jurisdictions with stronger press freedom protections, or in the case of broadcast media, seeking licences in places where community radio frameworks remain functional and lightly regulated. Gran Canaria, with its particular status within Spain and its historical role as a communications relay point, fits a pattern that includes pirate-era precedent and more recent community radio experiments.
The stakes of this geographic calculus are practical. A podcast dependent on Spotify or Apple Podcasts faces algorithmic suppression with limited recourse. A programme with its own broadcast signal, even a low-power one, possesses a distribution layer that cannot be deplatformed with a terms-of-service notification. Whether the Gran Canaria broadcast represents a full terrestrial signal or something more modest, the intent signals a desire for infrastructural independence that pure streaming cannot provide. That ambition is shared by media operators across the political spectrum, from community radio advocates to religious broadcasters to sports talk shows that chafe at YouTube's contentID system.
What remains unclear from the available reporting is the scale of the audience the broadcast intends to reach and whether any regulatory complications have arisen with Spanish or European broadcasting authorities. Community radio in Spain operates under a licensing framework that has historically been contentious — the transition from analogue to digital introduced new frequency scarcity, and advocacy groups have long argued that licensing processes favour established commercial and public broadcasters over smaller community projects. The Canary Islands add a further layer: as an outermost region of the EU, the archipelago is subject to specific EU communications regulations while also operating under Spanish national frameworks.
The Pressenza announcement is sparse on these details, which is characteristic of the outlet's usual publication style — brief, service-oriented, aimed at confirming an event's occurrence rather than providing comprehensive reporting on its context. That sparseness leaves the reader with questions about what "broadcasting" specifically entails in this case. It also leaves open the question of whether the Gran Canaria base reflects a strategic choice about jurisdiction and infrastructure or simply the location of the programme's producers. Humanist organisations have operated in the Canary Islands for decades, and Pressenza itself has roots in international humanist media networks that have long favoured European bases with relative regulatory flexibility.
For the broader media landscape, the Gran Canaria development is a small data point in a larger picture of geographic and infrastructural repositioning. As platform governance hardens and as operators across the political spectrum seek distribution alternatives, the question of where media actually lives — physically, legally, technically — has become more salient. The Canary Islands, positioned between continents and between regulatory regimes, offer one answer. The waves, as the programme's title reminds listeners, remain open for interpretation.
This desk noted that the wire carried the announcement in brief form, without the technical or regulatory detail that would allow fuller assessment of what the broadcast signal actually represents. Monexus will continue monitoring community radio developments across European outermost regions, where regulatory asymmetry creates conditions for media experiments not easily replicable on the mainland.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://www.pressenza.com/es/2026/05/encuentame-en-las-ondas-6-de-mayo-de-2026/The