You can do this with a Smart Playlist.
- Click File -> New Smart Playlist
- Configure the rule so it reads "Media Kind is Podcast"
- Make sure the "Limit to" box is unchecked, and that the "Live updating" box is
- Click OK
Once this is done you will have a playlist with all your podcasts. To sort by date, right click the column bar at the top and check "Release Date". Click on the Release Date column to sort your podcasts by date.
The only downside to this view is that this view does not provide the blue dot that indicates whether or not a podcast has been listened to. You can, however, add the "Plays" column and use that instead, as podcasts that have not been listened to will have a play count of "0". You can also have the smart playlist automatically remove played podcasts from the list by editing it and adding the rule "Plays is 0".
This has been bugging me for years, most specifically with This American Life and To The Best of Our Knowledge.
The tag that's causing them to be separated is not available via iTunes -- you need an extended tag editor. On the Mac, I used ID3 Editor.
Instructions specifically for ID3 editor:
• Open a "good" podcast file (you can drag it straight from iTunes onto the ID3 Editor icon in the dock to open).
• Click on the Podcast tab. Look for the field called Feed (It may have a different name if you're using different tag editing software). Copy the Feed field contents.
• Open your "bad" podcast files, paste/replace the "good" Feed info into the Feed field (they should be different - mine were) and click Update.
• Last important step is that you have to delete the "bad" files from iTunes and reimport them. If you right click or control click the file in iTunes before deleting, and select "Show in Finder," the enclosing folder will open. If you sort by date modified, all the podcast you just updated should be at the top, if they're in the same folder. Then you can delete all the bad ones, and drag them back into iTunes. Whey they're re-imported, they should now be grouped with the "good" podcast.
Best Answer
Best I can tell, the answer is a resounding “no” — at least without deleting your iTunes Library .itl file.