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
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97. Lying to Ourselves
17/10/2012 Duration: 05minWe rely on polls and surveys to tell us how people will behave in the future. Too bad they're completely unreliable.
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96. The Cobra Effect
10/10/2012 Duration: 34minWhen you want to get rid of a nasty pest, one obvious solution comes to mind: just offer a cash reward. But be careful -- because nothing backfires quite like a bounty.
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95. Why America’s Economic Growth May Be (Shh!) Over
03/10/2012 Duration: 05minSure, we love our computers and all the rest of our digital toys. But when it comes to real economic gains, can we ever match old-school innovations like the automobile and electricity?
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94. The Tale of the $15 Tomato
23/09/2012 Duration: 09minTrying to go rustic by baking, brewing, and knitting at home can be terribly inefficient. And that's a wonderful thing.
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93. Why Online Poker Should Be Legal
19/09/2012 Duration: 05minThe data show that poker is indeed a game of skill, not chance, and a Federal judge agrees. So why are players still being treated like criminals?
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92. Fear Thy Nature
12/09/2012 Duration: 37minWhat "Sleep No More" and the Stanford Prison Experiment tell us about who we really are.
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91. Can Selling Beer Cut Down on Public Drunkenness?
05/09/2012 Duration: 05minBinge drinking is a big problem at college football games. Oliver Luck -- father of No. 1 NFL pick Andrew, and the athletic director at West Virginia University -- had an unusual idea to help solve it.
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90. How Deep Is the Shadow Economy?
29/08/2012 Duration: 19minWhat we know -- and don't know -- about the gazillions of dollars that never show up on anyone's books.
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89. There’s Cake in the Breakroom!
22/08/2012 Duration: 06minIf you think working from home offers too many distractions, just think about what happens at the office.
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88. Freakonomics Goes to College, Part 2
15/08/2012 Duration: 33minCollege tends to make people happier, healthier, and wealthier. But how?
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87. The Season of Death
08/08/2012 Duration: 06minWe know that summertime brings far too many fatal accidents. But you may be surprised if you dig into the numbers.
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86. Freakonomics Goes to College, Part 1
29/07/2012 Duration: 29minWhat's a college degree really worth these days?
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85. Olympian Economics
25/07/2012 Duration: 06minDo host cities really get the benefits their boosters promise, or are they just engaging in some fiscal gymnastics?
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84. Legacy of a Jerk
18/07/2012 Duration: 43minWhat happens to your reputation when you're no longer around to defend it?
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83. What's Wrong With Cash for Grades?
10/07/2012 Duration: 06minIf we want our kids to thrive in school, maybe we should just pay them.
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82. Please Steal My Car
04/07/2012 Duration: 22minLevitt and Dubner answer your FREAK-quently Asked Questions about junk food, insurance, and how to make an economist happy.
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81. Star-Spangled Banter?
26/06/2012 Duration: 07minOnce a week, the British Prime Minister goes before the House of Commons for a lightning round of hard questions. Should the U.S. give it a try?
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80. Riding the Herd Mentality
20/06/2012 Duration: 35minHow using peer pressure -- and good, old-fashioned shame -- can push people to do the right thing.
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79. A Cheap Employee Is … a Cheap Employee
13/06/2012 Duration: 06minPaying workers as little as possible seems smart -- unless you can make more money by paying them more.
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78. You Eat What You Are, Part 2
06/06/2012 Duration: 28minTo feed 7 billion people while protecting the environment, it would seem that going local is a no-brainer -- until you start looking at the numbers.