Description
Freakonomics co-author Stephen J. Dubner uncovers the hidden side of everything. Why is it safer to fly in an airplane than drive a car? How do we decide whom to marry? Why is the media so full of bad news? Also: things you never knew you wanted to know about wolves, bananas, pollution, search engines, and the quirks of human behavior.
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Episodes
- 2025 / 5 / 9How to Succeed at Failing, Part 1: The Chain of Events (Update)We tend to think of tragedies as a single terrible moment, rather than the result of multiple bad decisions. Can this pattern be reversed? We try — with stories about wildfires, school shootings, and...
- 2025 / 5 / 2632. When Did We All Start Watching Documentaries?It used to be that making documentary films meant taking a vow of poverty (and obscurity). The streaming revolution changed that. Award-winning filmmaker R.J. Cutler talks to Stephen Dubner about capturing...
- 2025 / 4 / 25631. Will "3 Summers of Lincoln" Make It to Broadway?It’s been in development for five years and has at least a year to go. On the eve of its out-of-town debut, the actor playing Lincoln quit. And the producers still need to raise another $15 million to bring...
- 2025 / 4 / 23Is It a Theater Piece or a Psychological Experiment? (Update)In an episode from 2012, we looked at what Sleep No More and the Stanford Prison Experiment can tell us about who we really are. SOURCES:Felix Barrett, artistic director of Punchdrunk.Steven Levitt, professor...
- 2025 / 4 / 18630. On Broadway, Nobody Knows NothingA hit like Hamilton can come from nowhere while a sure bet can lose $20 million in a flash. We speak with some of the biggest producers in the game — Sonia Friedman, Jeffrey Seller, Hal Luftig — and learn...
- 2025 / 4 / 11629. How Is Live Theater Still Alive?It has become fiendishly expensive to produce, and has more competition than ever. And yet the believers still believe. Why? And does the world really want a new musical about ... Abraham Lincoln?! (Part one...
- 2025 / 4 / 9Policymaking Is Not a Science — Yet (Update)Why do so many promising solutions in education, medicine, and criminal justice fail to scale up into great policy? And can a new breed of “implementation scientists” crack the code? SOURCES:Patti...
- 2025 / 4 / 4628. Sludge, Part 2: Is Government the Problem, or the Solution?There is no sludgier place in America than Washington, D.C. But there are signs of a change. We’ll hear about this progress — and ask where Elon Musk and DOGE fit in. (Part two of a two-part...
- 2025 / 3 / 28627. Sludge, Part 1: The World Is Drowning in ItInsurance forms that make no sense. Subscriptions that can’t be cancelled. A never-ending blizzard of automated notifications. Where does all this sludge come from — and how much is it costing us? (Part one...
- 2025 / 3 / 21Should America Be Run by … Trader Joe’s? (Update)The quirky little grocery chain with California roots and German ownership has a lot to teach all of us about choice architecture, efficiency, frugality, collaboration, and team spirit. SOURCES:Kirk DesErmia,...
- 2025 / 3 / 14626. Ten Myths About the U.S. Tax SystemNearly everything that politicians say about taxes is at least half a lie. They are also dishonest when it comes to the national debt. Stephen Dubner finds one of the few people in Washington who is willing...
- 2025 / 3 / 7625. The Biden Policy That Trump Hasn’t TouchedLina Khan, the youngest F.T.C. chair in history, reset U.S. antitrust policy by thwarting mega-mergers and other monopolistic behavior. This earned her enemies in some places, and big fans in others —...
- 2025 / 3 / 5EXTRA: The Downside of Disgust (Update)It’s a powerful biological response that has preserved our species for millennia. But now it may be keeping us from pursuing strategies that would improve the environment, the economy, even our own health. So...
- 2025 / 2 / 28624. The Animal No One Loves, Until They DoTo most people, the rat is vile and villainous. But not to everyone! We hear from a scientist who befriended rats and another who worked with them in the lab — and from the animator who made one the hero of a...
- 2025 / 2 / 21623. Can New York City Win Its War on Rats?Even with a new rat czar, an arsenal of poisons, and a fleet of new garbage trucks, it won’t be easy — because, at root, the enemy is us. (Part two of a three-part series, “Sympathy for the...
- 2025 / 2 / 20The Show That Never HappenedA brief meditation on loss, relativity, and the vagaries of show business.RESOURCES:Billie Eilish: The World's a Little Blurry, documentary (2021)Genius & Anxiety: How Jews Changed the World, 1847-1947, by...
- 2025 / 2 / 14622. Why Does Everyone Hate Rats?New York City’s mayor calls them “public enemy number one.” History books say they caused the Black Death — although recent scientific evidence disputes that claim. So is the rat a scapegoat? And what does...
- 2025 / 2 / 7621. Is Professional Licensing a Racket?Licensing began with medicine and law; now it extends to 20 percent of the U.S. workforce, including hair stylists and auctioneers. In a new book, the legal scholar Rebecca Allensworth calls licensing boards...
- 2025 / 2 / 5When Is a Superstar Just Another Employee? (Update)In 2023, the N.F.L. players’ union conducted a workplace survey that revealed clogged showers, rats in the locker room — and some insights for those of us who don’t play football. Today we’re updating that...
- 2025 / 1 / 31620. Why Don’t Running Backs Get Paid Anymore?They used to be the N.F.L.’s biggest stars, with paychecks to match. Now their salaries are near the bottom, and their careers are shorter than ever. We speak with an analytics guru, an agent, some former...
- 2025 / 1 / 24619. How to Poison the A.I. MachineWhen the computer scientist Ben Zhao learned that artists were having their work stolen by A.I. models, he invented a tool to thwart the machines. He also knows how to foil an eavesdropping Alexa and how to...
- 2025 / 1 / 22Is San Francisco a Failed State? (And Other Questions You Shouldn’t Ask the Mayor)Stephen Dubner, live on stage, mixes it up with outbound mayor London Breed, and asks economists whether A.I. can be “human-centered” and if Tang is a gateway drug. SOURCES:London Breed, former mayor of San...
- 2025 / 1 / 17618. Are Realtors Having an Existential Crisis?Their trade organization just lost a huge lawsuit. Their infamous commission model is under attack. And there are way too many of them. If they go the way of travel agents, will we miss them when they’re...
- 2025 / 1 / 10617. Are You Really Allergic to Penicillin?Like tens of millions of people, Stephen Dubner thought he had a penicillin allergy. Like the vast majority, he didn’t. This misdiagnosis costs billions of dollars and causes serious health problems, so why...
- 2025 / 1 / 6Highway Signs and Prison LaborIncarcerated people grow crops, fight wildfires, and manufacture everything from prescription glasses to highway signs — often for pennies an hour. Zachary Crockett takes the next exit, in this special...
- 2025 / 1 / 2Can Academic Fraud Be Stopped? (Update)Probably not — the incentives are too strong. But a few reformers are trying. We check in on their progress, in an update to an episode originally published last year. (Part 2 of 2) SOURCES:Max Bazerman,...
- 2024 / 12 / 26Why Is There So Much Fraud in Academia? (Update)Some of the biggest names in behavioral science stand accused of faking their results. Last year, an astonishing 10,000 research papers were retracted. In a series originally published in early 2024, we talk...
- 2024 / 12 / 23Your Brain Doesn’t Work the Way You ThinkDavid Eagleman upends myths and describes the vast possibilities of a brainscape that even neuroscientists are only beginning to understand. Steve Levitt interviews him in this special episode of People I...
- 2024 / 12 / 19616. How to Make Something from NothingAdam Moss was the best magazine editor of his generation. When he retired, he took up painting. But he wasn’t very good, and that made him sad. So he wrote a book about how creative people work— and, in the...
- 2024 / 12 / 12615. Is Ozempic as Magical as It Sounds?In a wide-ranging conversation with Ezekiel Emanuel, the policymaking physician and medical gadfly, we discuss the massive effects of GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic, Wegovy, and Mounjaro. We also talk about the...
- 2024 / 12 / 9How the Supermarket Helped America Win the Cold War (Update)Last week, we heard a former U.S. ambassador describe Russia’s escalating conflict with the U.S. Today, we revisit a 2019 episode about an overlooked front in the Cold War — a “farms race” that, decades...
- 2024 / 12 / 5614. Is the U.S. Sleeping on Threats from Russia and China?John J. Sullivan, a former State Department official and U.S. ambassador, says yes: “Our politicians aren’t leading — Republicans or Democrats.” He gives a firsthand account of a fateful Biden-Putin...
- 2024 / 11 / 28613. Dying Is Easy. Retail Is Hard.Macy’s wants to recapture its glorious past. The author of the Wimpy Kid books wants to rebuild his dilapidated hometown. We just want to listen in. (Part two of a two-part series.) SOURCES:Mark Cohen, former...
- 2024 / 11 / 21612. Is Macy’s Thanksgiving Parade Its Most Valuable Asset?The 166-year-old chain, which is fighting extinction, calls the parade its “gift to the nation.” With 30 million TV viewers, it’s also a big moneymaker. At least we think it is — Macy’s is famously...
- 2024 / 11 / 18How to Stop Worrying and Love the Robot Apocalypse (Update)It’s true that robots (and other smart technologies) will kill many jobs. It may also be true that newer collaborative robots (“cobots”) will totally reinvigorate how work gets done. That, at least, is what...
- 2024 / 11 / 14611. Fareed Zakaria on What Just Happened, and What Comes NextAfter a dramatic election, Donald Trump has returned from exile. We hear what to expect at home and abroad — and what to do if you didn’t vote for Trump. SOURCE:Fareed Zakaria, journalist and...
- 2024 / 11 / 7610. Who Wins and Who Loses Once the U.S. Legalizes Weed?Some people want the new cannabis economy to look like the craft-beer movement. Others are hoping to build the Amazon of pot. And one expert would prefer a government-run monopoly. We listen in as they fight...
- 2024 / 10 / 31609. What Does It Take to Run a Cannabis Farm?Chris Weld worked for years in emergency rooms, then ditched that career and bought an old farm in Massachusetts. He set up a distillery and started making prize-winning spirits. When cannabis was legalized,...
- 2024 / 10 / 28Abortion and Crime, Revisited (Update)With abortion on the Nov. 5 ballot, we look back at Steve Levitt’s controversial research about an unintended consequence of Roe v. Wade. SOURCES:John Donohue, professor of law at Stanford Law School.Steve...
- 2024 / 10 / 24608. Cannabis Is Booming, So Why Isn’t Anyone Getting Rich?There are a lot of reasons, including heavy regulations, high taxes, and competition from illegal weed shops. Most operators are losing money and waiting for Washington to get out of the way. In the meantime,...
- 2024 / 10 / 17607. Is America Switching From Booze to Weed?We have always been a nation of drinkers — but now there are more daily users of cannabis than alcohol. Considering alcohol’s harms, maybe that’s a good thing. But some people worry that the legalization of...
- 2024 / 10 / 11606. How to Predict the PresidencyAre betting markets more accurate than polls? What kind of chaos would a second Trump term bring? And is U.S. democracy really in danger, or just “sputtering on”? (Part two of a two-part series.) SOURCES:Eric...
- 2024 / 10 / 10Has the U.S. Presidency Become a Dictatorship? (Update)Sure, we all pay lip service to the Madisonian system of checks and balances. But presidents have been steadily expanding the reach of the job. With an election around the corner, we updated our 2016...
- 2024 / 10 / 3605. What Do People Do All Day?Sixty percent of the jobs that Americans do today didn’t exist in 1940. What happens as our labor becomes more technical and less physical? And what kinds of jobs will exist in the future?  SOURCES:David...
- 2024 / 9 / 30EXTRA: Roland Fryer Refuses to Lie to Black America (Update)His research on police brutality and school incentives won him acclaim, but also enemies. He was suspended for two years by Harvard, during which time he took a hard look at corporate diversity programs. As a...
- 2024 / 9 / 26604. Did the N.F.L. Solve Diversity Hiring? (Part 2)What happened when the Rooney Rule made its way from pro football to corporate America? Some progress, some backsliding, and a lot of controversy. (Second in a two-part series.)Â SOURCES:Tynesia...
- 2024 / 9 / 19603. Did the N.F.L. Solve Diversity Hiring? (Part 1)The biggest sports league in history had a problem: While most of its players were Black, almost none of its head coaches were. So the N.F.L. launched a hiring policy called the Rooney Rule. In the first...
- 2024 / 9 / 16EXTRA: In Praise of Maintenance (Update)We revisit an episode from 2016 that asks: Has our culture’s obsession with innovation led us to neglect the fact that things also need to be taken care of?  SOURCES:Martin Casado, general partner at...
- 2024 / 9 / 12602. Is Screen Time as Poisonous as We Think?Young people have been reporting a sharp rise in anxiety and depression. This maps neatly onto the global rise of the smartphone. Some researchers are convinced that one is causing the other. But how strong...
- 2024 / 9 / 5601. Multitasking Doesn’t Work. So Why Do We Keep Trying?Only a tiny number of “supertaskers” are capable of doing two things at once. The rest of us are just making ourselves miserable, and less productive. How can we put the — hang on a second, I've just got to...