I first swapped to BT headphones for working out, as it saved me from worrying about getting the cord snagged or phone getting yanked.
The usb-c dongles (like $5) are great for when I need to connect to a speaker or use my wired headphones for whatever reason and cheap enough that I’m not too worried about them breaking/getting lost.
I can’t speak for some things, as the closest thing I’ve had to an iphone was the OG iTouch… but;
I didn’t know what “Hide my Email” was, but a quick google led me to an article that shows multiple android alternatives. No clue how good they are, and looks like they do require an extra app, but google is your friend :P
Ditto for the podcast thing
samsung lets you pick between samsung wallet and google wallet. I think google has the most breadth, though I’ve been using samsung wallet so long I’ve no real reason to swap over. If anything google will have more features and be more widely supported than apple. Assuming you have gmail as your main email. it’ll auto-add events it finds there to your calendar, boarding passes, etc.
TBH it depends what you use your phone for, and how tied into the apple ecosystem you are. Android gives you a lot more choices, so it’s easier to find something that’s right for you (I want a built-in stylus and great camera; you might want a phablet phone like the fold or something cheaper than a flagship or something with [whatever feature]), and somewhere in the android sphere it exists. Apple you have a couple choices that basically amount to “do you want more features or to spend less money?” vs actual difference based on user scenarios.
Most apps have dupes on either side. I know some apple people get hurt by the blue sms BS and them not showing likes and things properly (something Apple is holding back; not a limitation of android), lack of facetime (vs using msgr or other dedicated app), and apple products not quite working as well with a non-apple phone (again, by design, but then samsung does it too with a few watch features demanding a galaxy phone - so it’s NOT just an Apple thing).