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What's The Point

English, Social, 1 season, 112 episodes, 2 days, 15 hours, 41 minutes
About
A show about our data age. Each week, Jody Avirgan brings you stories and interviews on how data is changing lives.
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Sparks: Interview with David Baron

Christie Aschwanden interviews the author of "American Eclipse," by David Baron.
8/11/201742 minutes, 45 seconds
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Sparks: The Eclipse Of 1878

The Sparks gang discusses "American Eclipse" by David Baron, and the solar eclipse coming to the U.S. later this month.
8/10/201743 minutes, 1 second
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WTP Best Of: DNA Evidence

Jody discusses the rise of forensic DNA with Erin Murphy, professor at New York University and author of the book "Inside the Cell."
7/27/201740 minutes, 38 seconds
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WTP Best Of: Adam Ruins Everything

Jody interviews Adam Conover of TruTV's Adam Ruins Everything on how his show covers stats heavy topics.
7/18/201730 minutes, 5 seconds
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Sparks: Interview with Charles Ornstein

Christie Aschwanden talks to journalist Charles Ornstein about how he reports on how money can influence doctors.
7/7/201734 minutes, 26 seconds
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Sparks: Conflicts of interest

The Sparks crew discusses how politicians and scientists wrestle with conflicts of interest, and what the science says about how conflict of interest can change our decisions.
7/6/201738 minutes, 24 seconds
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Sparks: Interview with Bob Holmes

Anna Maria Barry-Jester talks to Bob Holmes, the author of "Flavor: The science of our most neglected sense."
6/2/201740 minutes, 24 seconds
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Sparks: Flavor Science

FiveThirtyEight's science team discusses "Flavor: The science of our most neglected sense," a book by Bob Holmes. They also go flavor tripping.
6/1/201739 minutes, 30 seconds
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WTP Best Of: Bear Mapping

Rae Wynn-Grant, a conservation researcher at the American Museum of Natural History, discusses her work tracking black bears in the American West.
5/18/201736 minutes, 20 seconds
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Sparks: Interview with Thomas Levenson

FiveThirtyEight's Christie Aschwanden interviews the author of "The Hunt for Vulcan."
5/5/201746 minutes, 42 seconds
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Sparks: "The Hunt for Vulcan"

What does it take to revise a cold, hard science fact? This montha€™s Sparks podcast explores that question in the context of a€œThe Hunt for Vulcana€ by Thomas Levenson.
5/4/201747 minutes, 45 seconds
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WTP Best Of: Baseball

Jody interviews Ben Lindbergh and Sam Miller, authors of "The Only Rule Is It Has To Work," a chronicle of their summer spent as general managers for the Sonoma Stompers.
4/20/201736 minutes, 32 seconds
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Sparks: Interview with Elisabeth Rosenthal

Anna Maria Barry-Jester interviews the author of "An American Sickness: How healthcare became big business and how you can take it back."
4/12/201728 minutes, 16 seconds
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Sparks: "An American Sickness"

Our science podcast crew discusses the state of American health care, and what consumers can do about it. This month's book: "An American Sickness" by Elisabeth Rosenthal.
4/6/201750 minutes, 16 seconds
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WTP Best Of: Internet Tracking

Jody interviews Arvind Narayanan about the latest in online tracking, and what you can do to shield yourself.
3/23/201732 minutes, 21 seconds
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WTP Best Of: Your Certainty Bubble

Jody Avirgan and Carl Bialik discuss research into how we get information and what information we trust.
3/9/201725 minutes, 35 seconds
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Sparks - Interview with Alondra Nelson

FiveThirtyEight's Maggie Koerth-Baker discusses The Social Life of DNA: Race, Reparations, and Reconciliation After the Genome with author Alondra Nelson.
3/3/201750 minutes, 57 seconds
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Sparks - The Social Life of DNA: Race, Reparations, and Reconciliation After the Genome

This month, we're discussing Alondra Nelson's The Social Life of DNA: Race, Reparations, and Reconciliation After the Genome.
3/2/201740 minutes, 49 seconds
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WTP Best Of: Life In Yemen

What cell phone metadata can reveal about the patterns of daily live -- and the effect of drone strikes.
2/17/201738 minutes, 8 seconds
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WTP Best Of: James Hamblin

From the archives, Jody Avirgan and James Hamblin discuss modern medicine, personal health tracking, and why health journalism is broken.
2/2/201738 minutes, 25 seconds
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Sparks: Interview with the author of "The Unpersuadables"

FiveThirtyEight's Maggie Koerth-Baker talks with author Will Storr about his book "The Unpersuadables: Adventures with the enemies of science."
1/26/201753 minutes, 5 seconds
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Sparks - The Unpersuadables

FiveThirtyEight's science team discusses Will Storr's book, "The Unpersuadables: Adventures with the enemies of science."
1/19/201740 minutes, 2 seconds
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The Amazing Postcards You Mailed Us

Jody Avirgan and Kate Larue discuss the postcards we received for our "Dear Data" project, and then rerun our original conversation. Check it out: fivethirtyeight.com/deardata
12/22/201637 minutes, 47 seconds
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Sparks (Part 2) Nate Silver and Michael Lewis

This month we're discussing Michael Lewis's new book "The Undoing Project." Here he talks with Nate Silver about his work. Be sure to check out part 1!
12/16/201636 minutes, 43 seconds
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Sparks - The Undoing Project

Our science team discusses Michael Lewis's new book, which is about the rise of behavioral economics. Check out part 2, coming soon, in which Nate Silver talks with Lewis.
12/15/201639 minutes, 21 seconds
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.72 That Was The Point

What's The Point is coming to an end with Jody Avirgan as the host. We discuss what we've learned over the last year and a half. Stay tuned for our next big thing!
12/8/201632 minutes, 21 seconds
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.71 How Adam Ruins Everything

Adam Conover on the challenge of explaining tough topics - while being funny. Catch "Adam Ruins Everything" on TruTV.
12/2/201630 minutes, 34 seconds
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.70 Sparks (Pt 2) Kenji Lopez-Alt

In part two of our Thanksgiving special, Anna Maria Barry-Jester talks about the science of food with Kenji Lopez-Alt.
11/23/201629 minutes, 9 seconds
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.69 Sparks: Let's Eat, With Science!

A Thanksgiving cooking special from our science team as they discuss Kenji Lopez-Alt's "The Food Lab."
11/17/201632 minutes, 41 seconds
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.68 Sparks (Pt 2) Risk

Maggie Koerth-Baker talks with Kayt Sukel about how we define risk, and how to write about it responsibly.
11/5/201630 minutes, 15 seconds
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.67 Sparks: Risk

Our monthly science series looks at why humans make, or don't make, risky choices. Part 2 of this conversation - and interview with author Kayt Sukel - airs next week.
10/28/201631 minutes, 44 seconds
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.66 When The Algorithm Decides

Cathy O'Neil discusses her book "Weapons Of Math Destruction," about algorithms that are widespread, harmful, and secretive.
10/23/201635 minutes, 56 seconds
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.65 Optimized Or Monetized?

Julia Angwin of Pro Publica discusses their investigations into "black box" algorithms.
10/15/201628 minutes, 4 seconds
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.64 Do You Feel Informed?

Carl Bialik discusses a new study that shows how Americans get their information, how they make decisions, and how they change their minds.
10/7/201625 minutes, 19 seconds
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.63 Sparks (Pt 2) Mental Health Stigma

Maggie Koerth-Baker talks with Dr. Patrick Corrigan about the stigma of mental health and how it relates to public figures.
9/29/201626 minutes, 29 seconds
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.62 Sparks: Politicians' Mental Health

Our monthly science series looks at the ethics and laws of discussing and diagnosing the health of political figures. Part 2 of this show airs next week.
9/22/201634 minutes, 6 seconds
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.61 Bear Tracks

How a digital model can help prevent bear-human conflicts. Dr. Rae Wynn-Grant discusses her work in the field, and at the computer.
9/16/201636 minutes, 24 seconds
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.60 Blythe Picks A Team

From Hot Takedown, how our editor Blythe Terrell used an algorithm to help pick a new NFL team to root for.
9/8/201628 minutes, 41 seconds
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.59 Your Browser's Fingerprint

A new survey of one million websites reveals the latest tricks being used to track your online behavior. Arvind Narayanan of Princeton University discusses his research.
9/1/201631 minutes, 3 seconds
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.58 Math Gold

The coach of the U.S. Math Olympiad team shares his secrets.
8/25/201631 minutes, 12 seconds
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.57.2 Sparks (Part Two) -- Alice Dreger

In the second part of our new science podcast, Christie Aschwanden talks to Alice Dreger about her book "Galileo's Middle Finger."
8/19/201626 minutes, 44 seconds
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.57 Sparks: Galileo's Middle Finger

The debut of our new science series! The FiveThirtyEight science team discusses "Galileo's Middle Finger," and what happens when activism and science cross paths.
8/18/201639 minutes, 54 seconds
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.56 A History Of Political Data (Part 4 - Trump)

A memo from the Trump campaign reveals their attempts to go after "low P, high T" voters. Clare Malone discusses her reporting.
8/11/201628 minutes, 28 seconds
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Dog Show! [Repeat]

A visit to the Westminster Dog Show with FiveThirtyEight's Oliver Roeder.
8/4/201623 minutes, 12 seconds
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.55 Two Aspen Ideas

Mini-interviews with Charles Duhigg and Marcus Bullock of Flikshop, from the Aspen Ideas festival.
7/29/201633 minutes, 51 seconds
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.54.7 Accidents, Guns, And Stats

We conclude our series of mini-conversations about the FiveThirtyEight guns project. FiveThirtyEight.com/gundeaths
7/20/201621 minutes, 39 seconds
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.54.6 A Guns Program The NRA Actually Likes

A mini-interview a day for a week about the 538 guns project. Carl Bialik discusses the criminal justice program that is gaining GOP support. fivethirtyeight.com/gundeaths
7/18/201611 minutes, 38 seconds
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.54.5 Mass Shootings

A mini-interview a day for a week about the 538 guns project. Leah Libresco discusses how other countries have reacted to mass shootings. fivethirtyeight.com/gundeaths
7/17/201613 minutes, 50 seconds
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.54.4 - Guns And Domestic Violence

A mini-interview a day for a week about the 538 guns project. Hayley Mungia discusses how to get guns out of the hands of domestic abusers. fivethirtyeight.com/gundeaths
7/16/20169 minutes, 56 seconds
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.54.3 - Men, Suicide, And Guns

We're doing a mini-interview every day for a week about the the 538 guns project. Anna Maria Barry-Jester discusses her reporting from Wyoming. fivethirtyeight.com/gundeaths
7/15/201614 minutes, 43 seconds
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.54.2 - Stopping Gun Deaths In New Orleans

Our series - a mini-interview every day for a week - on the guns project continues with reporter Ben Casselman. See the full project fivethirtyeight.com/gundeaths
7/14/201613 minutes, 16 seconds
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.54.1 - A Week Of Conversations About Gun Deaths

Every day for a week, we'll discuss the new FiveThirtyEight project on gun deaths in America. Today, editor Simone Landon frames the issue. www.fivethirtyeight.com/gun-deaths
7/13/201613 minutes, 38 seconds
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.53 Mapping Police Violence

A rerun of a conversation with Samuel Sinyangwe describing why data on police shootings is so murky. Samuel runs mappingpoliceviolence.org and checkthepolice.org
7/7/201619 minutes, 34 seconds
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.52 A History Of Political Data (Part 3)

Daniel Kreiss of UNC is back to discuss what we've learned from the 2016 primaries. fivethirtyeight.com/podcasts
6/30/201639 minutes, 21 seconds
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.51 The $173,775 Data Set

David Yanofsky is suing the U.S. government for immigration data after they wanted to charge him $173,775 for it. fivethirtyeight.com/podcasts
6/23/201624 minutes, 21 seconds
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.50 How To Hate-Like

Tom Vanderbilt is accounting for taste. More at fivethirtyeight.com/podcasts
6/16/201642 minutes, 2 seconds
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.49 Hearing Philly

A new project is testing different polling techniques to get input from Philadelphians about their civic lives. fivethirtyeight.com/podcasts
6/10/201628 minutes, 53 seconds
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.48 The Schmidt Sting Pain Index

Entomologist Justin Schmidt is developing a way to measure painful insect stings - by stinging himself with as many creatures as possible.
6/2/201638 minutes, 9 seconds
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.47 Rivers Cuomo Has Spreadsheets (from Song Exploder)

Song Exploder talks with Rivers Cuomo of Weezer about his very nerdy songwriting style. Plus, we're collecting your playlists at DefeatedJoy.com
5/26/201621 minutes, 59 seconds
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.46 Gut Week, Gut Strong

It's Gut Week at FiveThirtyEight. Chad Matlin, filling in for Jody (who's on jury duty) discusses the world of pro- and psycho-biotics. fivethirtyeight.com/podcasts
5/19/201627 minutes, 40 seconds
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.45 The Stompers Get Stats

Ben Lindbergh describes what happened when a professional baseball team let him take over as general manager and apply the most cutting edge analytics to real games.
5/12/201636 minutes, 39 seconds
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.44 An Unusual Pattern

WTP presents a data murder mystery, reported by Joel Werner.
5/5/201639 minutes, 18 seconds
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.43 Every Song Ever

How algorithmic listening is changing our relationship to music. With New York Times music critic Ben Ratliff. Find more at fivethirtyeight.com/podcasts
4/21/201635 minutes, 37 seconds
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.42 Tagging Banksy

A geospatial mapping formula may hold the clues to the graffiti artist Banksy's real identity.
4/14/201636 minutes, 55 seconds
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.41 How To Change Minds

New developments in the story of the fraudulent research about persuasion and empathy. Visit fivethirtyeight.com/podcasts for more.
4/7/201638 minutes, 14 seconds
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.40 Mahler By The Numbers

A visit to the NY Philharmonic archives. For 147 years, the Phil has had a data-collection streak. Now it's all going to the cloud. More at fivethirtyeight.com/podcasts
3/31/201633 minutes, 43 seconds
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.39 Let's Move To The Country

Christopher Ingraham used a data sat to determine "the worst place to live in America." Then he visited Red Lake Falls, MN; and now he's moving there.
3/24/201634 minutes, 9 seconds
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.38 Wall St. vs. Internet

Doug Rushkoff is one of our favorite media/tech thinkers. His new book is about how our economy is wired for growth that stifles innovation.
3/17/201633 minutes, 17 seconds
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.37 52 Postcards

Every week for a year, Stefanie and Giorgia collected info about their lives and mailed each other postcards with a data visualization. Now it's your turn! More on our site.
3/10/201642 minutes, 34 seconds
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.36 Yemen Calling

In countries like Yemen, cell phone metadata can serve as an end-around to paint a picture of daily life, the effect of drone strikes, and more.
3/3/201643 minutes, 24 seconds
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.35 The Academy

Walt Hickey's been trying to crack the tricky data problem that is the Oscars. He talks about his reporting, and we host the first ever WTP data debate.
2/25/201639 minutes, 33 seconds
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.34 Who's A Good Dog

A visit to the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show with Oliver Roeder, who wrote about the rise and fall of the terrier dynasty.
2/18/201626 minutes, 52 seconds
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.33 A Privacy Mea Culpa

We've been screwing up in the way we talk about privacy on the show. Kashmir Hill of Fusion sets us straight.
2/11/201637 minutes, 33 seconds
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.32 Big-Time Sports

As you watch the Super Bowl this weekend, tons of data -- and millions of dollars -- will be zipping around. Jim Glanz of the New York Times discusses his reporting.
2/4/201640 minutes, 4 seconds
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.31 Don't Drink The Water

In Flint, Michigan, bad data decisions made the water crisis much worse. FiveThirtyEight's Anna Barry-Jester recently reported on the story.
1/28/201630 minutes, 31 seconds
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.30 A History Of Political Data (Part Two)

Obama 2008 to the present, including reporting from Iowa. With Daniel Kreiss of UNC.
1/21/201635 minutes, 26 seconds
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.29 A History Of Political Data (Part One)

William Jennings Bryan to Barack Obama. With Daniel Kreiss of the University of North Carolina.
1/14/201643 minutes, 52 seconds
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BONUS: Elections Pilot (Iowa!)

From a Des Moines hotel room, we talk about the Iowa caucus and the latest polling numbers. Let us know what you think by emailing [email protected]
1/13/201635 minutes, 40 seconds
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.28 Algorithmic Arugula

A visit to a data-driven farm, where the light, water, nutrients and more are all optimized and controlled from an iPad.
1/7/201629 minutes, 14 seconds
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BONUS: Election Podcast Pilot

Let us know what you think of our elections podcast as we continue to pilot. We'll launch the show formally in a new feed before the Iowa caucus.
1/4/201633 minutes, 15 seconds
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.27 The 2015 Data Awards (Part 2)

More of the most interesting stories and people of the year. Be sure to check out the special site fivethirtyeight.com/dataawards. We'll be back with new shows in 2016!
12/24/201533 minutes, 35 seconds
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BONUS: Election Podcast Pilot

538 is launching a proper election pod in January. For now, we're piloting with Nate Silver, Clare Malone, Harry Enten and Jody Avirgan. Let us know what you think.
12/22/201530 minutes, 11 seconds
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.26 The 2015 Data Awards (Part 1)

A very special evening, brought to you by FiveThirtyEight.
12/17/201532 minutes, 38 seconds
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BONUS: Election Podcast Pilot

538 is launching an election podcast in January! We're piloting now with Nate Silver, Harry Enten, Clare Malone, and Jody Avirgan. Take a listen, let us know what you think.
12/15/201530 minutes, 40 seconds
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.25 The Dark Side Of Forensic DNA

Forensic evidence has the promise of leading to science-based convictions. But for it to be reliable we need a better understanding of data and statistics, says Erin Murphy.
12/10/201539 minutes, 11 seconds
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.24 Building Pixar's Landscapes

The Good Dinosaur features vast, hyperrealistic landscapes -- powered by terabytes and terabytes of US Geological Survey data.
12/3/201528 minutes, 30 seconds
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.23 A WTP Compendium

For your holiday travels, excerpts of our favorite conversations: Neil deGrasse Tyson - (15:50) Farai Chideya - (25:40) Bike Lanes - (37:30) Police Violence - (54:10) Drones
11/25/20151 hour, 9 minutes, 48 seconds
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.22 God, In One Chart

Religion is personal, nuanced, evolving -- which makes it particularly resistant to easy quantification. Emma Green (Atlantic) and Leah Libresco (538) discuss stats and faith.
11/19/201534 minutes, 42 seconds
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.21 Rejoice! The Canadian Longform Census Is Back

Turns out, the Canadian census was a pretty big flashpoint in the recent elections, and the fight over it tells us a lot about why government data matters.
11/12/201536 minutes, 55 seconds
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.20 Fighting Outbreaks With New Tech (And Paper)

In a country like Niger, Doctors Without Borders epidemiologists use a combination of advanced technology and old-fashioned paperwork.
11/5/201531 minutes, 44 seconds
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.19 Why The Bronx Burned

In 1970's NYC, huge swaths of the city were engulfed in flames. Bad stats may have been to blame. Joe Flood, author of "The Fires," tells the story.
10/29/201545 minutes, 3 seconds
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.18 That's Just, Like, Your Opinion, Man

Walt Hickey recently discovered that Fandango's movie ratings are weirdly inflated. What he learned says a lot about trust online and the wisdom of the crowd.
10/22/201535 minutes, 52 seconds
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.17 Little Bird, Big Data

We take a hike in the woods north of Santa Cruz in search of the marbled murrelet, an elusive bird that's being tracked using remote sensors and machine learning. Tweet tweet.
10/16/201537 minutes, 51 seconds
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.16 The $2000/Month Chat Service

A tour of the Bloomberg terminal -- it's clunky, powerful, addictive and ubiquitous on Wall Street. It also costs $2000/month and has everything a trader could need.
10/8/201545 minutes, 16 seconds
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BONUS: Nate, Harry and Micah Talk Election 2016

Nate Silver, Harry Enten and Micah Cohen talk about the 2016 election as part of an Advertising Week panel. Stay tuned for the FiveThirtyEight Politics channel coming soon!
10/6/201534 minutes, 24 seconds
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.15 Cloud Self vs. Physical Self

Your data creates its own data. Farai Chideya discusses how she thinks of data, security, and why your information is like your pet -- you own it, but you can't control it.
10/1/201535 minutes, 39 seconds
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.14 Everyone Is Your Cousin

A.J. Jacobs is trying to build the world's biggest family tree, connecting him to everyone on earth. The data-driven revolution genealogy is helping.
9/24/201527 minutes, 37 seconds
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.13 Moneyball For Movies (w/ Andy Greenwald)

Josh Lynn says his "consumer engagement" algorithm can predict how a movie will do - months before it's even made. A special co-podcast with Grantland's Andy Greenwald.
9/17/201534 minutes, 43 seconds
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.12 Your Boss Is Watching

From Amazon to UPS, the data-driven workplace is here. Is your humanity being traded for your company's efficiency?
9/10/201530 minutes, 4 seconds
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.11 Make It Viral

The people behind @buzzfeed and @nba discuss how analytics help them decide what to post and when, plus the behind-the-scenes story of how Buzzfeed got that dress to go viral.
9/3/201526 minutes, 57 seconds
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.10 Science Is Hard

After a deluge of retractions, fraudsters, and high-profile failures, is it time to ask: "Is science broken?" FiveThirtyEight's Christie Aschwanden answers.
8/27/201537 minutes, 21 seconds
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.09 Our Military Is Drowning In Data

Our military collects terabytes and terabytes of data every day. Is the drone-driven obsession with tactical information preventing a conversation about the morality of war?
8/20/201539 minutes, 24 seconds
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.08 A Year Since Ferguson

It's been a year of protest and unrest -- and a year of data collection -- in the effort to understand the scope of police violence in America.
8/13/201534 minutes, 37 seconds
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.07 Pre-crime

New tools use data to predict whether someone who has committed a crime may do so again. Does this mean we'll be locking people up for crimes they haven't yet committed?
8/6/201536 minutes, 43 seconds
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BONUS: Totally Subjective 2016 Odds (Early August)

FiveThirtyEight's latest "totally subjective odds," where we handicap the (very early) presidential race. Featuring Nate Silver, Harry Enten, and Katherine Miller of Buzzfeed.
8/5/201554 minutes, 20 seconds
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.06 Behind The Browser

Journalist and internet activist Quinn Norton discusses the cookies and algorithms that track you online -- including on FiveThirtyEight.com -- and how they shape identity.
7/30/201539 minutes, 31 seconds
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.05 How Numbers Drive The Book Industry

The head of one of the world's biggest book publishers talks about how data is changing the industry, from deciding to sign an author to the war with Amazon.
7/23/201530 minutes, 52 seconds
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.04 Doctors And Data

Dr. James Hamblin, writer for The Atlantic, discusses how big (and bad) data will affect your next visit to the doctor.
7/16/201543 minutes, 46 seconds
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.03 Dear Mona, How Many People Regret Their Tattoos?

In the first audio version of our popular (and statsy) "Dear Mona"€ column, Mona Chalabi and Jody Avirgan investigate how many folks have tattoos and people's tattoo regrets.
7/9/201523 minutes, 8 seconds
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.02 Solving Our Most Vexing Transportation Problems (With Data)

During Janette Sadik-Khan's tenure as NYC transportation commissioner, the city's streetscape altered dramatically. She discusses her data-driven (and controversial) approach.
7/2/201533 minutes, 9 seconds
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.01 Neil deGrasse Tyson - "Are you wired for doubt?"

Star Talk's Neil deGrasse Tyson on how data is revolutionizing astronomy, why he hates "balance," and why his being black often leads people to confuse him for a sportscaster.
6/25/201528 minutes, 49 seconds
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.00 Welcome - Nate Silver Helps Introduce What's The Point

From fake studies to bad polling to privacy fears, is data in a moment of crisis? We launch our newest podcast with a discussion about the state of big data, and some of the major themes we hope to explore.
6/22/201527 minutes, 26 seconds