Freakonomics Radio

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 569:58:24
  • More information

Informações:

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

  • How to Fix a Broken High Schooler, in Four Easy Steps (Rebroadcast)

    04/02/2016 Duration: 29min

    Okay, maybe the steps aren't so easy. But a program run out of a Toronto housing project has had great success in turning around kids who were headed for trouble.

  • Is America’s Education Problem Really Just a Teacher Problem? (Rebroadcast)

    28/01/2016 Duration: 36min

    If U.S. schoolteachers are indeed "just a little bit below average," it's not really their fault. So what should be done about it?

  • 234. Do Boycotts Work?

    21/01/2016 Duration: 37min

    The Montgomery Bus Boycott, the South African divestment campaign, Chick-fil-A! Almost anyone can launch a boycott, and the media loves to cover them. But do boycotts actually produce the change they're fighting for?

  • 233. How to Be Less Terrible at Predicting the Future

    14/01/2016 Duration: 46min

    Experts and pundits are notoriously bad at forecasting, in part because they aren't punished for bad predictions. Also, they tend to be deeply unscientific. The psychologist Philip Tetlock is finally turning prediction into a science -- and now even you could become a superforecaster.

  • 232. The True Story of the Gender Pay Gap

    07/01/2016 Duration: 43min

    Discrimination can't explain why women earn so much less than men. If only it were that easy.

  • When Willpower Isn’t Enough (Rebroadcast)

    31/12/2015 Duration: 31min

    Sure, we all want to make good personal decisions, but it doesn't always work out. That's where "temptation bundling" comes in.

  • Fixing the World, Bang-for-the-Buck Edition (Rebroadcast)

    24/12/2015 Duration: 41min

    A team of economists has been running the numbers on the U.N.'s development goals. They have a different view of how those billions of dollars should be spent.

  • 231. Is Migration a Basic Human Right?

    17/12/2015 Duration: 01h58s

    The argument for open borders is compelling -- and deeply problematic.

  • 230. The Cheeseburger Diet

    10/12/2015 Duration: 32min

    One woman's quest to find the best burger in town can teach all of us to eat smarter.

  • 229. Ben Bernanke Gives Himself a Grade

    03/12/2015 Duration: 47min

    He was handed the keys to the global economy just as it started heading off a cliff. Fortunately, he'd seen this movie before.

  • Why Do People Keep Having Children? (Rebroadcast)

    26/11/2015 Duration: 40min

    Even a brutal natural disaster doesn't diminish our appetite for procreating. This surely means we're heading toward massive overpopulation, right? Probably not.

  • 228. Does “Early Education” Come Way Too Late?

    19/11/2015 Duration: 45min

    In our collective zeal to reform schools and close the achievement gap, we may have lost sight of where most learning really happens -- at home.

  • 227. Should Everyone Be in a Rock Band?

    12/11/2015 Duration: 45min

    Lessons from Tom Petty's rise and another rocker's fall.

  • 226. Food + Science = Victory!

    05/11/2015 Duration: 38min

    A kitchen wizard and a nutrition detective talk about the perfect hamburger, getting the most out of garlic, and why you should use vodka in just about everything.

  • 225. Am I Boring You?

    29/10/2015 Duration: 39min

    Researchers are trying to figure out who gets bored - and why - and what it means for ourselves and the economy. But maybe there's an upside to boredom?

  • How to Save $1 Billion Without Even Trying (Rebroadcast)

    22/10/2015 Duration: 36min

    Doctors, chefs, and other experts are much more likely than the rest of us to buy store-brand products. What do they know that we don't?

  • 224. How To Win A Nobel Prize

    15/10/2015 Duration: 45min

    The process is famously secretive (and conducted in Swedish!) but we pry the lid off at least a little bit.

  • 223. Should Kids Pay Back Their Parents for Raising Them?

    08/10/2015 Duration: 47min

    When one athlete turned pro, his mom asked him for $1 million. Our modern sensibilities tell us she doesn't have a case. But should she?

  • 222. Meet the Woman Who Said Women Can’t Have It All

    01/10/2015 Duration: 42min

    Anne-Marie Slaughter was best known for her adamant views on Syria when she accidentally became a poster girl for modern feminism. As it turns out, she can be pretty adamant in that realm as well.

  • 221. How Did the Belt Win?

    24/09/2015 Duration: 30min

    Suspenders may work better, but the dork factor is too high. How did an organ-squeezing belly tourniquet become part of our everyday wardrobe -- and what other suboptimal solutions do we routinely put up with?

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