If anyone has any ideas I'm interested as well. But after many years of being a driver, I gave up on assimilating any useful information while driving. I've started using driving as my 'relax / unwind' time or using it to practice feynman technique or go through some audio recorded flashcards / tts cards.
Unfortunately it doesn't really work that way. You can't just listen and learn... that has been tried in many different forms over the years, and it fails every time. You have to actively practice and write while looking at questions or information. The exam is taken visually, so audio-only is not very helpful. The idea of passively learning while you commute is one of those absurd myths that gets disproven by learning specialists repeatedly.
But, if you are hellbent on this, then look for Audio Osmosis by EK. I have no idea when they updated it last, but it is way better than any podcast created since then. John and Jordan are super teachers, but it was not effective by itself (you needed their books too). If you do any audio work, you have to get something to go with it in paper format and on computer that you work on the second you get home after your commute.
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