Hi Isshoni
Good realing list!
Regarding the Pali Canon, I'd recommend reading the Majjhima Nikaya first (Middle Length Discourses). In a bout of enthusiasm, I actually collected most of the Sutta Pitaka (in German translation), and out of sheer stubbornness I'm plowing through it, though at a leisurly pace (currently 2/3 through Samyutta Nikaya, with the Anguttara Nikaya next on the pile). The Dhammapada I have found to be useful only after having read the more verbose suttas, as it is an extremely compact rendering of most key doctrines. Sutta Nipata has some wonderfully inspiring passages in the "further shore" chapter (the only one I've studied so far) - Saddhatissa's translation of that chapter is very lyrical and touching.
Regarding podcasts: I like to listen to them, too. I pick and choose from sudiodharma.org, and there's good material on http://www.dhammatalks.org.uk/ though the podcast link is broken at the moment, you have to download stuff manually. I particularly like Ajahn Sumedho's talks - he doesn't talk about meditation practice, but his talks have a quality I really appreciate. YMMV.
If you know German, there's excellent material on http://www.wat-lao.com/index-2.html - particularly the series by Tan Martin is simply awesome. He visited Germany last year, and was invited to several centers and monasteries around Germany, Switzerland, and Austria. His talks - let's say, he made quite a stir, and shocked not a few people. He's a commited meditator, going on about much the same things as Daniel.
I notice I have a strong Theravada bias in my reading habits.

Cheers,
Florian