Peloton Podcasts in Entertainment Tab

Peloton Podcasts Now Stream in the Entertainment Portal

Peloton Podcasts Get a New Home on Bike, Tread, Row

Move for Life, At the Next Table, and more, have moved into the Bike, Tread, and Row Entertainment portal, giving Peloton Original content a new platform for consumption.

Peloton Podcasts have a new home. Move for Life, hosted by Matt Wilpers, and At the Next Table, hosted by Jon Hosking, are two of the Peloton Originals content categories now available inside the Entertainment portal on Bike, Tread, and Row. Members can now watch these shows on the same screen they use to workout, rather than pulling up YouTube or a separate app and doing a workaround.

A Familiar Format Gets a New Screen

Neither show is new. The science-of-aging conversation gets the pro treatment in Move for Life, where Matt has interviewed guests including Peloton wellness advisory board member Dr. Kavita Patel on the research behind healthy longevity. At the Next Table has built a following of its own since its March 2026 debut, and includes an inside look at the format from our very own Clip Out Crystal, who appeared in the series’ fourth episode. Both shows have also lived on Peloton’s YouTube channel, a distribution point noted when At the Next Table first launched.

Currently, there are all of the same episodes of these two podcasts as are on Peloton’s YouTube channel.

Peloton Podcasts Move for Life and At the Next Table now available in the Entertainment portal

Additional content available includes these episodes:

  • Peloton Deutschland – die ersten 5 Jahre with Irene and Erik (31 minutes)
  • Badwater 135 featuring Susie Chan (30 minutes)
  • Together: Ally Love & USHER (8 minutes)
  • The Roadmap: Becs’ Journey – Part 1 (8 minutes)
  • The Roadmap: Becs’ Journey – Part 2 (8 minutes)
  • The Roadmap: Becs’ Journey – Part 3 (7 minutes)
  • The Roadmap: Becs’ Journey – Part 4 (5 minutes)

Peloton Podcasts Move for Life and At the Next Table now available in the Entertainment portal

Getting There: How Peloton Podcasts Works for a Workout

Finding Peloton Podcasts is straightforward. From the Entertainment tab on Bike, Tread, or Row, select the Peloton Originals tile, then choose a title from the carousel, which currently surfaces At the Next Table episodes alongside other Peloton Originals content. Tapping Play brings up a “Ready to Workout?” prompt, letting members either start tracking a workout alongside the episode or simply watch.

Choosing to start a workout opens a guidance menu, similar to the ones used for a standard class, where members can select the kind of workout they want paired with the episode. Just Ride is available as a freestyle option with no set structure, alongside additional guided options built around difficulty level.

Peloton Podcasts Move for Life and At the Next Table now available in the Entertainment portal

Members can choose from a structured ride programmed by specific instructors. On the Bike, the options include:

  • Low Impact Ride (by Emma)
  • Beginner Ride (by Leanne)
  • Advanced Beginner Ride (by Alex)
  • Rolling Hills Ride (by Robin)
  • Intervals Ride (by Tunde)
  • HIIT & Hills Ride (by Hannah F.)
  • HIIT Ride (by Ben)
  • Climb Ride (by Olivia)

Part of a Broader Distribution Push

This expansion also lines up with a pattern The Clip Out has tracked all year. For example, the Spotify partnership placed more than 1,400 Peloton classes inside Spotify’s fitness category in April, and Peloton Chief Commercial Officer Dion Camp Sanders has been direct about the reasoning behind moves like these: reach members wherever they already are, whether that is a Spotify app, a hotel gym, or now, the Entertainment portal itself.

That framing is interesting to consider beyond home equipment. As Peloton expands into commercial and residential settings, more people are encountering Peloton hardware in gyms, apartment fitness centers, and hotels rather than in their own homes. Podcast content sitting inside the Entertainment portal gives those users the same access to Peloton Podcasts as a longtime home member, without needing a separate account or app. It is a quiet piece of a larger effort to make the ecosystem feel consistent no matter where the equipment lives.

Could people watch this content on Peloton’s robust YouTube channel? Sure. But isn’t it better to listen to Matt ruminate on longevity while you are doing some cardio to put the plan into action?

For a platform that has spent this year pushing content further outside the four walls of the workout, folding its own podcasts into the equipment itself is a logical next step.

Do you use the Entertainment feature? Will you watch podcasts this way while exercising? Let us know!


 

The Clip Out is an independent Peloton news site with reporting, analysis, and community insights. We deliver breaking updates, feature reporting, and expert context on the stories driving the community and the industry.

Our weekly podcast offers deeper conversation and perspective, and you can find us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, iHeart, TuneIn, and YouTube Music. You can also follow us on our socials on Facebook, Threads, Instagram, BlueSky, and YouTube.

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About the Author: Elizabeth Schlosberg

Elizabeth (#MinuteToSpinIt) has been a Peloton member since 2019 and focuses on Power Zone Rides along with Yoga and Strength. When she's not finding a way to work Peloton into any conversation, she works as a freelance Communications Specialist helping nonprofits and small businesses tell their stories, connect with their audiences, and reach their goals. Just like here at The Clip Out, as a writer since 2024!

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