Freakonomics Radio

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 589:43:39
  • More information

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Synopsis

Discover the hidden side of everything with Stephen J. Dubner, co-author of the Freakonomics books. Each week, Freakonomics Radio tells you things you always thought you knew (but didnt) and things you never thought you wanted to know (but do)  from the economics of sleep to how to become great at just about anything. Dubner speaks with Nobel laureates and provocateurs, intellectuals and entrepreneurs, and various other underachievers. Special features include series like The Secret Life of a C.E.O. as well as a live game show, Tell Me Something I Dont Know. 

Episodes

  • 32. Growing Up Buffett

    11/05/2011 Duration: 14min

    What’s it like to wake up one day and realize Dad is a multi-billionaire? That's what happened to Warren Buffett’s son Peter -- who then started to think about whether or not to join the family business.

  • 31. Gambling With Your Life

    27/04/2011 Duration: 18min

    Does Las Vegas increase your risk of suicide? A researcher embeds himself in the city where Americans are most likely to kill themselves.

  • 30. Does College Still Matter? And Other Freaky Questions Answered ...

    13/04/2011 Duration: 16min

    In our second round of FREAK-quently Asked Questions, Steve Levitt answers some queries from listeners and readers.

  • 29. Smarter Kids at 10 Bucks a Pop

    06/04/2011 Duration: 20min

    It won’t work for everyone, but there’s a cheap, quick, and simple way to lift some students’ grades.

  • 28. Why Can’t We Predict Earthquakes?

    30/03/2011 Duration: 21min

    We talk to a U.S. Geological Survey physicist about the science -- and folly -- of predicting earthquakes. There are lots of known knowns; and, fortunately, not too many unknown unknowns. But it's the known unknowns -- the timing of the next Big One -- that are the most dangerous.

  • 27. Death by Fire? Probably Not

    23/03/2011 Duration: 19min

    Fire deaths in the U.S. have fallen 90 percent over the past 100 years, a great and greatly underappreciated gain. How did it happen -- and could we ever get to zero?

  • 26. The Health of Nations

    16/03/2011 Duration: 22min

    For decades, GDP has been the yardstick for measuring living standards around the world. Martha Nussbaum would rather use something that actually works.

  • 25. Is Twitter a Two-Way Street?

    09/03/2011 Duration: 26min

    To get a lot of followers on Twitter, do you need to follow a lot of other Tweeps? And if not, why not?

  • 24. The Power of Poop

    02/03/2011 Duration: 19min

    Since the beginning of civilization, we’ve thought that human waste was worthless and dangerous. What if we were wrong?

  • 23. Millionaires vs. Billionaires

    24/02/2011 Duration: 28min

    Five things you don’t know about the NFL labor standoff

  • 22. Why Cities Rock

    17/02/2011 Duration: 16min

    Could it be that cities are "our greatest invention" -- that, despite a reputation as black-soot-spewing engines of doom, they in fact make us richer, smarter, happier and (believe it!) greener?

  • 21. Bring on the Pain!

    09/02/2011 Duration: 25min

    It's not about how much something hurts -- it's how you remember the pain. This week, lessons on pain from the New York City subway, the professional hockey rink, and a landmark study of colonoscopy patients. So have a listen; we promise, it won't hurt a bit.

  • 20. Waiter, There’s a Physicist in My Soup! (Part 2)

    02/02/2011 Duration: 26min

    What do a computer hacker, an Indiana farm boy, and Napoleon Bonaparte have in common? The past, present, and future of food science.

  • 19. Waiter, There’s a Physicist in My Soup! (Part 1)

    26/01/2011 Duration: 24min

    The "molecular gastronomy" movement -- which gets a bump in visibility next month with the publication of the mammoth cookbook "Modernist Cuisine" -- is all about bringing more science into the kitchen. In many ways, it's the opposite of the "slow food" movement. In this episode, you'll hear chieftains from the two camps square off: Alice Waters for the slow foodies and Nathan Myhrvold for the mad scientists. Bon appetit!

  • 18. Freakonomics FAQ, No. 1

    19/01/2011 Duration: 16min

    Levitt and Dubner field questions from the public and hold forth on everything from dating strategies and rock-and-roll accordion music to whether different nations have different economic identities. Oh, and also: is it worthwhile to vote?

  • 17. Trashed

    13/01/2011 Duration: 21min

    How economics -- and emotion -- have turned our garbage into such a mess

  • 16. Exit Interview: Schools Chancellor, NYC

    05/01/2011 Duration: 14min

    Having already amassed an eventful resume -- the Clinton White House, the Department of Justice, and Bertelsmann -- Joel I. Klein spent the past eight years at chancellor of the biggest school system in the country. So what'd he learn?

  • 15. You Say Repugnant, I Say … Let's Do It!

    29/12/2010 Duration: 26min

    What happens when the most disturbing ideas are also the best?

  • 14. Do More Expensive Wines Taste Better?

    15/12/2010 Duration: 24min

    They should! It's a cardinal rule: more expensive items are supposed to be qualitatively better than their cheaper versions. But is that true for wine?

  • 13. The "No-Lose Lottery," Part 2

    01/12/2010 Duration: 21min

    It’s the banking tool that got millions of people around the world to stop wasting money on the lottery. So why won't state and federal officials in the U.S. give it a chance?

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