Freakonomics Radio - 372. Freakonomics Radio Live: “Would You Eat a Piece of Chocolate Shaped Like Dog Poop?”
Episode Date: March 28, 2019What your disgust level says about your politics, how Napoleon influenced opera, why New York City’s subways may finally run on time, and more. Five compelling guests tell Stephen Dubner, co-host An...gela Duckworth, and fact-checker Jody Avirgan lots of things they didn’t know.
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Today's episode is a special live installment of Freakonomics Radio.
You'll hear about New York City's subway system and the man who's trying to fix it.
You'll hear about the relationship between Napoleon and music and the relationship between politics and disgust, which is not as obvious as you might think.
If you'd like to attend a future taping of Freakonomics Radio Live, we would love to have you.
We have upcoming shows in San Francisco on May 16th, Los Angeles May 18th, Philadelphia on June 6th,
London on September 6th, and in Chicago on September 26th.
For details, visit Freakonomics.com slash live.
And now, here's our show.
Good evening, I'm Stephen Dubner, and this is Freakonomics Radio Live,
coming to you tonight from City Winery in New York City.
As you know, Freakonomics Radio is typically a studio show
based on lots of forethought and research and extensive interviews.
In this live show, we throw all that out the window.
No forethought whatsoever.
Joining me tonight as co-host, would you please welcome
the University of Pennsylvania psychology professor, Angela Duckworth.
Thank you. psychology professor, Angela Duckworth.
Angela, if you don't know,
is the author of the longtime bestseller,
Grit, The Power of Passion and Perseverance.
She's also CEO of Character Lab and one of the founders of Behavior Change for Good.
Angela, what else are you up to?
Through Character Lab,
I'm hoping to quadruple the amount of behavioral science
that's done on kids and how they grow up to thrive.
So we've been doing okay, but I think we should have more science
so that we can have more to talk about on Freakonomics.
Excellent.
So as you know, we play here a game called Tell Me Something I Don't Know.
We bring guests on stage to tell us some interesting fact or idea or story.
You and I will poke and prod them as much as we'd like,
and then later on, our live audience will pick a winner.
The criteria are very simple.
Number one, did they tell us something
we truly did not know?
Number two, was it truly worth knowing?
And number three, was it demonstrably true, which is important?
And to help with the demonstrably true part,
would you please welcome our real-time fact checker.
He's the host and producer of ESPN's 30 for 30 podcast, Jody Avergan.
Thank you, Jody.
Hello, Stephen.
Something I learned about you very recently, Jodi,
is you have a young daughter who has become an Internet phenomenon.
Well, she had a moment as an Internet phenomenon.
Actually, a photo I took of my daughter went viral.
It was a photo we took of her after she'd eaten pizza.
They were waiting.
For the first time, the audience is seeing it right now.
She went into this sort of blissful state with pizza sauce all
over her face and I put it out into the world and it just like, it went nuts. I checked this morning,
15 million people have seen this photo off of my Twitter account and then it got ripped onto all
of the meme accounts and people were sending us examples of it being used in like random
Czechoslovakian advertisements and the morning shows were asking us to come on,
and we kind of just laid low.
But yeah, it was kind of a wild ride.
All right, Jodi, I'm glad to hear that your daughter is meme-worthy.
I'm glad that you are here tonight to be our fact-checker.
Our first guest, would you please give a warm welcome?
He is president of the New York City Transit Authority, Andy Byford.
Andy, welcome to the show. Thank you. Now, the audience, this puzzles me because they're happy. Here's what we know about you or what I know about you so far. You are president
of the Transit Authority. That's correct. Which means that you essentially run the subways and
buses, correct? That's correct. And most of you essentially run the subways and buses, correct?
That's correct.
And most of these people, including myself,
we ride your subways and buses.
Yeah.
And yet, when you walked in, they applauded.
Wow.
Which, to me, seems paradoxical.
Yeah.
So, by what magic has Andy Byford
won over the transit riders of New York City?
A British accent goes a long way.
It really does.
It's British charm.
And I understand you come from a transit family, correct?
I do, yeah.
Third generation?
I do.
My granddad drove a bus through the Blitz, actually, through the Blitz.
I ride the subway or the bus into work every day.
I have never owned a car in my life.
I probably never will.
I rely on public transit, and I believe in it.
I've also failed my driving test twice.
So compared to the blitz and buildings being crumbled in the streets, I guess the New York
City subways are easy. Oh, piece of cake. Yeah, absolutely. Yeah. We have a long way to go,
but it is improving. And what I wanted to do tonight is just talk about what we're doing
to make it better. Well, let's start with a little history. Obviously, New York is one of the older subways. I guess London is the oldest in the world.
London dates back to 1863. Our subway is 1904, coming here. The challenge is the same,
but it is exponentially bigger. Interestingly, I'd say 15 to 20 years ago, the London Underground
was in a similar state to that in which we find ourselves here in New York today.
Stations looking a bit shoddy, unreliable signaling, tired vehicles, you know, lack of funding.
Sustained funding has transformed the tube.
That's what we need here today and a focus on basics.
So that's what I want to talk about.
I love that we're getting applause for infrastructure funding.
We've never had that before.
It's got to be done.
So the New York City subways, I understand,
has the worst on-time performance of any major transit system in the world.
Is that accurate, first of all?
We certainly are nowhere near where we need to be.
In January of 2018, our on-time performance,
admittedly it was a bad month,
but it was a woeful 58, just over 58%,
through a relentless focus on basics and substantial investment. A year later,
we've got it up to just over 76%. Now, to be fair, New York subways generally get people
where they're going. They can be slow and crowded and unpleasant on occasion, but they're also transporting how many million people a day?
Well, for the whole of transit, it's 8 million people.
It's made up of 5.7 million people on the subway, 2.3 million on the buses.
And on a good day, you know, going from the Bronx down to Manhattan,
where I work, southern tip of Manhattan,
that train hammered down the express line.
You try doing that in a cab and you try
doing that for $2.75, you're not going to do it. Right. When I think of New York, I think that one
reason it was able to grow into the city it did was because it had subways early. And so it was
able to move people around a lot underground without tying things up. The downside of that
is it was an old system. And therefore, I gather, like any old system, hard to retrofit, right?
So can you just kind of set the scene for us in terms of how good, I guess, the bones still are?
And assuming they're good enough to upgrade as you'd like,
what are the impediments to the higher speed, the fewer delays, et cetera, et cetera?
Sure. So I think fundamentally the system does have good bones.
And let's look at the positives.
We do have express tracks.
We do have a lot of stations.
We have the most stations in the world.
We have 472 stations.
So, you know, we're starting from a good basis.
But on a less positive side, for various reasons,
primarily lack of investment, crippling lack of investment.
Over the past few decades, the subway has been allowed to degrade to the point that now we
really struggle with on-time performance because of lack of two things. One, a lack of service
reliability, and two, a crippling lack of capacity. Can you point some fingers, please?
If your chief argument is that funding is necessary for maintenance of an expensive and complicated system,
which seems obvious,
has it been a lack of funding?
Has it been poor spending?
Is it the typical political hide-and-seek games
where the money is diverted?
And I would like you to name some names
with email addresses, please.
So, okay.
So I think one of the lessons
that constantly gets learned in transit
is you cannot stop investing in maintenance
and what's called state of good repair.
People point to the subway system
in Washington, D.C., WMATA.
That was built in, I believe it was 1976.
It's really groovy. It's a very sort of nice system. But... Usually on fire, D.C., WMATA. That was built in, I believe it was 1976. It's really groovy. It's a
very sort of nice system. Usually on fire, though. Well, that's the thing. People in D.C.,
it stands for Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority. I'm told people say it stands for We
Make a Town Afraid. That's a bad place to be. Why? Because it was a new system. It's like you can put
it off. Politicians can you can put it off, politicians
can put off the investment because, oh, well, it works perfectly fine. So to your question,
here, much the same. Politicians have lots of draws on their time. They've got to sort the
roads out. You've got to sort out education. You've got to sort out hospitals. And for various reasons,
this has snuck up on us. And you see this slow but incessant, relentless decline in terms of service reliability. The city's population's saying here about infrastructure and maintenance warms your heart,
check out Freakonomics Radio episode number 263.
It's called In Praise of Maintenance.
Okay, back to Andy Byford.
So let me tell you what we're doing about it.
The city and the state have jointly funded what's called the Subway Action Plan.
So it's installing what we call continuously welded rail,
better rail that is less prone to rail defects. It's about fixing leaks. called the subway action plan. So it's installing what we call continuously welded rail, better
rail that is less prone to rail defects. It's about fixing leaks. It's about renewing components.
It's about unblocking drains. So it's really about fixing those elements that were allowed
to degrade on the existing system. To me, on arrival, what was missing was the complementary
part, which is you must get your
operational disciplines right. So when I came here, it drove me crazy as a railwayman of 30
years experience that you see trains sit in the platform, you all see it, doors open, close,
open, close, open, close. Can we please get going? There were speed restrictions that were not
necessary. Speed restrictions went in initially for a valid reason,
that either the track had a defect years ago,
or because we had trains that were made of wood years ago
or didn't have such strong brakes.
Those speed restrictions are no longer necessary.
We had what are called signal grade timers
that were put in for a safety reason,
but they've been allowed to fall out of calibration.
So you're saying even when the equipment is capable
and the tracks are fine...
Then it's not properly calibrated.
So that was my suspicion.
Obviously, you listen to the customers,
but you also look at data.
What was it about 2012?
Suddenly, the delays went exponentially up.
That's when we started putting in those signal grade timers.
They were wrongly calibrated.
So we have set up a
team called the SPEED team. It stands for Subway Performance Evaluation and Education Development.
Because we love acronyms, right? We subscribe to the PUMA initiative at New York City Trans.
You know what PUMA stands for? I don't. Please use more acronyms. So we set this team up to cover on a specialized train
every inch of New York City Transit 600 track miles. They drive at the signal at the speed
that it should be set for. And if the train gets automatically stopped, then the signal is wrongly calibrated. So, so far, we have identified
320 such signals that are wrongly calibrated, and we're working our way through correcting them.
Can I just clarify one thing? You're saying that the only way to test a signal is to take a train
and drive it as fast as possible at the signal and see what happens?
Well, just for the benefit, this is what happens? Well, just for the benefit,
this is the fact checker,
just for the benefit of anyone listening on the radio,
this fact checker is actually on his third bottle of beer.
So I thought I should just say that.
But just to clarify,
to put everyone's minds at rest,
when I say drive the train at it,
obviously it's for the speed limit that should be,
that the signal should clear at that speed.
But still, you need a full train to test the little signal.
No, this is an empty train.
This is an empty train.
These are qualified people.
I believe Jody's question is,
isn't there software or something that does that?
No, no.
You want to test the reality.
So these people, qualified people,
drive, and if that signal, the signal plate says
that that signal should clear at, say, 15 miles per hour, but it's actually what we call tripping
the station, stopping it at a lesser speed, then it's wrongly calibrated. Can I ask a funding
question? So there is, as I understand it, a relatively new congestion surcharge on taxis and car services.
And now there is talk of another congestion fee for vehicles entering certain parts of Manhattan,
which is what we more typically think of as a congestion fee.
That money, we're told, is directed to, quote, the subways.
So how much money will there be?
Is it really coming to you?
What is the money going toward, et cetera?
First of all, the four higher vehicle surcharge, the one that you just described,
and that will now start to see a flow of funding come towards, dedicated funding coming towards
transit, which I very much welcome, because the one thing working in transit that really cripples
you is stop-start funding. You can't plan unless you know, you know, every year you're thinking,
well, what are we going to get this year?
That's no way to run a business.
I need to be able to plan with certainty.
The real game changer will be major, sustainable, affordable, long-term sources of funding.
And one of those suggested is a congestion charge because it does two things.
One, it cuts congestion.
And the other half of my focus is, of course, buses, which have
the lowest speed of any North American bus system. Why? It's nothing to do with my operators.
The buses can't levitate. They're stuck in traffic. Not yet. We're working on that, by the way.
But they're hopelessly stuck in traffic. So what it gives you is less traffic, but the traffic that does come in pay a fee,
and that fee must be lockboxed, ring-fenced, cannot be siphoned off anywhere else,
guaranteed to go into funding.
What's your annual budget now, and what do you want, let's say, two, five years from now?
So, I mean, at the moment, the operating budget of New York City Transit is around $8 billion.
So it's a big chunk of cash, but bear in mind, you know, this is a huge system in that, you know, we run thousands
of services 24-7, which is another reason this is a tricky system to upgrade, because no one wants
their lines shut down while we upgrade. It's like the 24-hour diner, and you always wonder,
when do they clean out the fryer? There you go. That's what I wonder about you. I've often wondered
that. That's my next challenge. I've often wondered that. That's my next challenge.
I've often wondered that. So what we really need, though, is to bite the bullet. And I'm saying, with the right funding, sustainable funding, we can turn this system around. No more tweaking.
Let's totally re-signal the network. Let's make the system fully accessible. We can't be proud
of this system unless and until it is fully
accessible to all New Yorkers. Let's sort out the bus network. Let's modernize the prevailing
mindset, the bureaucracy of the transit network. So some specifics. Within the first five years,
properly funded, we can re-signal five lines. In the next five years, for a total of 10 we can modernize 11 of the lines in that 10
years completely modernize 300 stations we can make 180 stations accessible within that time
frame i need i we've calculated 40 billion dollars over those 10 years can we really not afford
four billion dollars a year maybe two from the the state, one from the city, 500 million from
Washington, D.C., 500 million, maybe we could find it in transit. We can move from state of emergency
to state of the art within just 10 years. Because if we don't do this plan, all that will happen
is the infrastructure will get even older, the population will grow even bigger, and the pressure
on it will grow harder. But guess
what? The price will go up. So now's the time to bite the bullet. Jodi Avergan, we heard a lot of
interesting ideas, some statistics, massive optimism, and I would say energy, which I admire.
I mean, I'm... And grit. Yeah, a lot of grit. I want to talk specifically about one thing,
which is you said there is a lack of capacity.
Are you running at any given time the maximum number of trains that could be on the system?
No, we're not.
No.
And that is, again, something that we are in the process of addressing.
For a classic example of that would be the L line, because that line is one of the two
that has communications-based train control, model, and signaling.
That currently runs 20 trains per hour.
After the upgrade, we'll be able to run more trains
because we're providing more power.
The signaling system can handle it.
There's not enough power, which is ridiculous.
So we're addressing that.
Andy Byford, thank you so much for coming on our show.
Would you please welcome our next guest?
She is an economic historian at NYU.
She studies creativity and innovation.
Her name is Petra Moser.
Petra, how are you tonight?
Great, thank you.
Good, you teach quite nearby at NYU.
Did you, how'd you get here tonight?
Subway.
And it worked. It did. What do you, how'd you get here tonight? Subway. And it worked.
It did.
What do you have for us tonight, Petra?
So I wanted to ask you whether you might know,
how did Napoleon influence music?
How did Napoleon influence music?
Angie Duckworth, do you have any thoughts?
Did he commission a special piece for Josephine?
I don't know that.
That's not the answer then. No, that's not the answer.
You've got to be a little bit more creative.
You've got to think a little bit out of the box.
Did it have to do with war making?
Yes.
Did he conquer a nation and then have the musical traditions blend together and make new?
No.
That's a yes.
I was so close.
It was good.
War.
We're on it with war, though.
If we put the two of you together,
we're actually getting somewhere.
So that's...
Why don't...
Since we're not going to get there on our own,
why don't you tell us?
So Napoleon started his Italian campaign
at the end of the 18th century.
And he won Lombardy and Venetia, which are two
states in Italy. These states, by 1801, were under French control, and they got all the French laws,
including copyright. But Italy did not have copyrights. So now you have, in Italy, you have
two sets of states. They have the same language. They have similar culture. They both get flooded with
Napoleon, with the soldiers, with everything, with the gambling, all of that. But only two states
have copyrights for the next 20 years. So now we can actually look what that does to music. Because
now we have these two states where composers own what they produce, what they create. And what we wanted to see is whether
once you give an artist an intellectual property right,
whether that actually makes them produce more
and whether it makes them produce better stuff.
What was your measure for quality?
Opera is really great.
You can quantify both quantity and quality.
So quantity is fairly easy,
and so it's really helpful that opera is a public art form.
You can count the number of operas.
Exactly.
So it's public, right?
So you can count it.
But then the other thing is that lots of people
really love opera,
and they write everything about opera.
So we have lots of people who just say,
oh, this was a really notable performance.
There are tons of people at this performance.
People were streaming at the doors,, this was a really notable performance. There are tons of people at this performance. People were streaming at
the doors, and there's a record
of that. So we know which ones are
which were the hits.
Then another measure of quality is
whether we still play something
today. So if something
still plays at the Met today, or
whether it's still available on Amazon today,
whether you can still buy it.
It's still available on Amazon.
Whether people want to buy it.
But wouldn't that be directly following on
from whether they were popular or not?
Isn't that the same thing?
That's right.
There's some indigeneity there, right?
So if something is popular now,
then it should be related.
It may be more...
How about how many stars it gets on Amazon?
Is that part of the academic scholarship?
Not in this paper.
Not in this paper. Not in this paper.
So I'm not surprised that an economic historian
would want to understand the innovation impact of copyright, right?
Because copyright and patent,
we know there's a lot of debate over how strong it needs to be
to encourage the right amount of innovation
without overprotecting, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
Did you go looking for opera first?
Did you go looking for Napoleon?
Did you go looking for old copyright law?
No.
So I've done a lot of work on patents.
And you know when you do the same thing over and over and over again, you just get bored?
And I sang a lot as a kid, and I was trying to sing opera in college.
And then I took economics at the same time. I like that better. Do you have an example for us of an opera
that was composed during that era in one of those...
You said Lombardy and Venetia, you said?
Yeah, so we have a Rossini opera,
the Italian Algier, which I think would be a nice one.
Let's hear some.
Okay, Petra, you're welcome to join in if you'd like.
If you will, I will too.
Let me break in here to say, I chose to not sing that night because I wasn't warmed up.
But here's what I sound like when I am. And here again is the Rossini piece Petra Moser chose to play for us.
Okay, so tell us a bit about this Rossini piece and how it's an example of the phenomenon that you've measured.
Rossini was a very peculiar character,
as many of these composers.
He was also, he's poor.
And so he is, I think, a good example
of the way in which copyright influence composers.
So he really responded to what people paid him. So we have
records of him saying to theater managers, like, look, you're not paying me enough, so I'm just
going to give you the same stuff over and over and over again. So he's like, I just take this area,
and I change it a little bit, and that's it. And that's precisely what we think is not novelty,
what we think is not creativity.
But when he actually got enough money, then he would really make something that was better.
So what's really interesting about that is that creativity, most people think of as being
intrinsically rewarding, right? And in fact, people think that when you pay, you actually
decrease the intrinsic motivation. No. This completely fits economics.
He's poor.
His mother and father were ignorant musicians.
So he didn't come in saying like, oh, I'm just going to do this for fun.
So he did it in part to make money.
So suppose, say, a composer today needs like $2,000 to live, right?
And say before copyright, you get like just $1,000 per opera.
And now with copyright,
because they have to pay you for a repeat performance,
you get $2,000.
So now he only has to write one opera instead of two.
And so that gives him the freedom
to do precisely what he wants to do.
So we actually see this in Rossini and other people
that they make things more complicated.
They play around with things
and he now has more time and has more freedom. So it's like a wealth effect. I'm curious where you land on issues of
copyright and patent ownership in a world that's obviously gotten a lot more complicated
and what your position is on the optimal copyright policy. Having basic copyright protection is
important for two reasons. The first one is that it gives
people an incentive to produce better work but then the other one is if you actually make art
something that people can make money off you also change the type of person who can become an artist
so we see this actually with 19th century novelists. Before copyrights were really a thing,
the only people who would write were people,
when we matched them with their parents' wealth records,
they were actually just wealthy.
There'd be men and women, but they would both be wealthy.
Once you have stronger copyrights in England,
then when you look again at the parents of the people
who become writers, who become novelists,
now all of a sudden we have people
from, like, humbler backgrounds.
Petra, thank you so much for playing with us.
Our next guest is a psychology professor at Cornell
who studies how people make moral and ethical judgments.
Would you please welcome David Pizarro.
Hi, David.
What do you have for us tonight?
Suppose that you walked into a public restroom and there's...
Whatever comes next is not good.
And there's just a mess, an unflushed toilet.
How disgusted would you be?
Say 10, really, really, really disgusted.
Zero, wouldn't bother you at all.
Yeah, this one goes to 11, I'm going to say.
It depends on what's in the toilet.
As low as five, as high as 10.
I'd probably be in the three to six range.
Really?
Yeah, I've seen some stuff.
My follow-up is, what do you think this has to do with who you voted for in the last election?
Say, the presidential election.
And do you study disgust?
I do study disgust.
I'm really easily disgusted, so it's a difficult thing to do, but that's what grad students are for.
All right.
So the example you're using is an unfushed toilet.
You could use different examples.
I can use one of my favorite examples, actually.
How disgusted would you be if you took a sip of a soda can and realized it wasn't yours?
It was a stranger's.
Oh.
Really?
People are...
Zero.
Zero, yeah.
I ate food backstage of literally everybody's...
My plate, actually.
Yes, and I didn't even know whose it was.
I'm glad you brought that up because I thought that was really strange.
It was not disgusting.
So you're looking at how the emotion...
Is disgust an emotion, by the way?
Yeah, most people call it an emotion.
I mean, there's some debate because it seems a little different from the other emotions
because it's so reflexive. But I think most people who study disgust would call it an emotion. I mean, there's some debate because it seems a little different from the other emotions because it's so reflexive.
But I think most people who study disgust would call it an emotion.
But what you're getting at is your research is about the relationship between disgust
and political affiliation.
That's right.
Political orientation.
So how conservative or liberal are you on the spectrum?
And what we found, the more disgusted you were, the more likely you were to say you
were conservative.
We've now looked at this across different countries
in different languages.
We keep finding this relationship.
The more easily disgusted people say they are,
the more likely they are to be toward the right of the scale,
less easily disgusted toward the left.
Let me ask you, so there's a question we came across
in a series we've been doing on creativity.
And especially if you're in the creative arts,
the political orientation is
way, way left. And so that led to conversations about, is there something about creativity in
the arts that is correlated with liberalism? Because if you think of liberalism as essentially
wanting to change the state of the thing, and conservatism as an attitude toward traditionalism,
I'm curious whether you have anything to say about the mechanism by which
that kind of relationship may exist.
Yeah, that's been the most interesting question to us
because if you just demonstrate a relationship,
that doesn't get at the heart of the question.
The question was, what is the nature of this relationship?
So one way to ask that is,
what part of conservatism is really being captured by this?
And so in looking at various measures,
what we see is exactly what you said, Stephen,
that it's the traditionalism aspect, keeping things the way they are. So the old ways of
doing things are good. Don't do the new things. This shows up in other ways that you can ask the
question. So one of the big findings in personality psychology is the dimension called openness to
experience. People who are more liberal are very high in openness to experience. They want to try
out new things. People who are more conservative are very high in openness to experience. They want to try out new things. People who are more conservative are very low in openness to experience.
So you can see disgust as one of those emotions that's kind of like, well, I have a set level.
How risky do I want to behave for a reward?
So do I try a new food?
So is it true then that picky eaters and hypochondriacs are more likely to be politically conservative?
I don't know the answer to picky eaters. That's a very good question.
That would be your prediction, right?
It would be the prediction. Although, you know, whenever I talk about this stuff,
I always want to point out that this isn't like, you know, it's not as if how grossed out you are
is like 100% predictive. About between 3% and 10% of why you might be liberal or conservative
seems to be captured by disgust measures.
Hey, something I've wondered about a long time is the people who care for sick people, let's say,
I'm astonished that they're able to do it so well and regularly, etc.
And I often wonder, is that acclimation or is it a trait?
That's a really good question.
And in fact, Angela's colleague at Pennsylvania,
Paul Rosen, one of the pioneers who studied this, did a study looking at med students,
first-year med students, asking this question, trying to see if you ask a bunch of questions
like the ones I ask you, like in general, how easily disgusted are you in everyday life?
And you get a score. So if we asked everybody here, there'd be a nice normal distribution.
Some people are really easily, some people are not. He was asking those questions of incoming med students. And what
he found was that most students were like the rest of the population coming in. After a year of
medical school, when, as you might know, you have to poke into bodies and you get used to bodily
fluids and all that stuff, they were less disgusted when it came to that stuff, but not in general.
They were still disgusted by all the other stuff,
but they acclimated.
So the answer to your question is,
we are really good at acclimating to specific things.
Anybody who's a parent knows you get used to certain things.
Jody Avergan, David Pizarro has been telling us
about the politics of disgust,
which are really interesting
and lead to a lot of interesting thoughts and questions.
Anything factual we should know?
This isn't exactly a fact.
I do want to go back to how you actually measure disgust.
You ask people about hypothetical scenarios
and ask them to rate how disgusted they would be.
That's one way in which we've done it.
Other people have done the work of correlating the response.
Of actually disgusting people in real time.
Of actually disgusting people.
So they've brought people into the lab
and they've asked them to do really gross but safe things.
So would you eat a piece of chocolate shaped like dog poop?
Yes.
Right.
I think Angela's answer says less about her liberalism
than about her chocolate attitude.
That may be right, and that's why it is a noisy measure.
Exactly.
David Pizarro, thank you so much.
I really enjoyed having you here.
It is time now for a quick break.
If you'd like to attend the future Freakonomics Radio live show
or be a guest on a future show, visit Freakonomics.com slash live.
We will be right back. Welcome back to Freakonomics Radio Live.
My name is Stephen Dubner.
Angela Duckworth is our co-host.
Jodi Avergan is our real-time fact checker.
And our next guest is the commissioner
of the New York City Department of Transportation.
Please welcome Polly Trottenberg.
Polly, nice to have you here.
Thanks for having me.
First of all, tell us what the New York City Department of Transportation, I guess, is
and does and how it differs from Andy Byford's New York City Transit Authority, please.
It's a good question. Andy and I work together a lot, but New York City Department of Transportation,
we're responsible for roads, bridges, bike lanes, ferries, bike share, car share.
Before we get into what you're working on and what you're going to tell us, can you just,
you know, Andy began by describing kind of the general
state of transit. What about your overall view? What are the big problems and how many different
dimensions they exist on? We actually have a different kind of challenge for a lot of my
infrastructure, which is, it's kind of a fun challenge. The city is growing in leaps and
bounds. New York City now population 8.6 million people,
the highest it has been in the city's history, 62 million tourists last year, incredible economic
activity, construction, and then of course we have things like Uber and Lyft and Amazon and
Fresh Direct, which have just filled our streets and made an incredible competition for space.
Side note, Fresh Direct is an online grocery delivery company in New York.
They're famous for having their trucks idle on the streets for hours.
But one other thing they do is they rate their fruit on a five-star scale.
So whatever fruit has five stars this week,
maybe it's pixie tangerines or red plum cots,
you know they'll be at peak flavor.
It's a smart system, and I wish this practice would spread.
Just thought you might like to know.
Back now to Transportation Commissioner Polly Trottenberg.
Meanwhile, a new generation that's not so car-centric.
They like transit, they want to ride bikes, they maybe want to ride scooters,
and so there's a big competition now,
at least in my world, for street space. So what do you have for us tonight specifically then? Well, when you build
a bike lane on an avenue in New York City, what happens? You're asking about safety? Are you
asking about congestion? Are you asking about, you know, density, speed, or whatnot? I mean,
all of the above. There's a traditional view when people who maybe aren't cyclists think about bike lanes,
they focus on the traffic elements of it.
But there are actually a whole lot of other elements that come in when you put in a bike lane.
So I do know that when you add a lane to a highway, let's say,
it actually doesn't ease congestion because it draws more...
Induced demand is the phrase you're looking for.
Right.
So is it the case that when you subtract a lane of car traffic
and replace it with a bike lane that
actually it does not cause car congestion problems? I'm happy to say if you take out that lane but you
redesign the street at the same time, you make the traffic move in a more orderly way, you put in
turn lanes and you change the signaling, you can keep the traffic speed some cases better and a lot
of cases sort of the same while also adding in a safe space for cyclists.
And just one of the statistics where we put in bike lanes, we see huge safety improvements,
not only for cyclists who we consider a vulnerable population on the street,
but for pedestrians and for motorists too, because it calms the traffic and it organizes it better.
I love the way that you frame the problem, which is that there's a competition for a resource, and the resource is space, street space, lane space, and so on.
One thing that I'm curious on your position, in terms of congestion in New York and other places that offer free parking is caused by cars cruising around looking for a parking spot.
So economists think this is idiotic that you've got something of value, this parking space, that you're charging zero for, especially when it has so many negative externalities causing congestion for everybody else, pollution, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
So have you thought about eliminating
or severely limiting free street parking
as a means to address congestion generally in New York City?
Obviously, from the economist's point of view,
it's the same problem, both the parking and the road space,
which is it's a scarce resource
and demand greatly exceeds supply,
we should price it. It's a perfectly logical economic place to be. It is an impossible
political place to be. Nobody wants to give up their free parking. The politics of parking has
been certainly for me one of the most eye-opening parts of my job. It is something that is very
sort of intensely debated. We have, over the time that I've been in this job for five years,
we have modestly raised parking rates.
We have added in, in some places, bike share and car share.
And so in that way, taken some of those spaces
and repurposed them for uses that are more shared.
But it's certainly been a slow process.
Is that because of the endowment effect
that now that people already have their free parking i mean hard
to get but free parking you just can't take it away yes it's not complicated can i ask you are
somebody who has a really hard job but you said a lot of grit well that is where I was going. A lot of grit.
And I wanted to know how you got into this.
I mean, I don't know if you were a little girl and said,
I'm going to be the commissioner of the New York City Department of Transportation.
So can you just share a little bit of the story?
How did you get into this calling?
I went to college here in New York, sort of back maybe in what we would say were the bad old days, when the city was experiencing a lot of difficulties, a lot of crime, a lot of disinvestment. And I just
got very interested in sort of urban policy and transportation policy. And one of the great
success stories of New York, again, why my streets are so full, why Andy's subways are so full,
we took a city where there had been disinvestment and we really turned it around. You know,
one time the Williamsburg Bridge was shut down because it was coming to pieces. Now we really invest in our bridges and our roads. So
I think being part of that process, and now today we have bikes and scooters and Uber and Lyft and
all these other really exciting changes. Does the bike lane innovation actually improve physical
health? Because one of the other major trends over the last 50 years is that we
just sit around all the time. Absolutely. I mean, you know, if you think about cycling as a mode,
it is an inexpensive mode to own and operate and for us to provide for. I mean, basically,
it's paint. It emits no carbon. It burns no fuel. It gets you moving. It's physical exercise. It
connects you to your city. Of course, it is terrific for sort of general individual health,
public health, and the health of the environment. Is there any evidence of that? I mean, I'm
wondering whether, you know, when you put in a new bike lane, there's any measure that the physical
health of that, I don't know, community, that neighborhood, that might be very difficult to
quantify, but it would be very exciting if you could. Well, we're actually going to be looking
at the long-term health statistics. Anecdotally, we see evidence that it is getting people moving,
particularly kids, which is, I don't know, maybe Jodi will dig up some better numbers than I have.
If you were able to start from scratch, would you have streets on a grid system? Because one
thing that a grid does is it encourages speed because it's wide open straight.
There's a wonderful book written just recently about how the grid came about in New York City,
and it was sort of a bunch of half-drunken foreign guys
who threw it together a little haphazardly.
When you read the book, it's very surprising.
And, you know, when I'm in other cities
where they have less of a grid,
and, for example, they have alleyways,
I like to joke I have alley envy
because here in New York, without those alleys,
there aren't the places for the garbage trucks
and the deliveries and the utility poles. Everything has to happen on those same streets
where the cars are traveling, the buses are traveling, the bikes are traveling, and the
pedestrians are traveling. So no, I think there are places where a grid is very efficient, but I
would design it very differently. Jodi Avergan, Polly Trottenberg has been telling us about
the roads primarily and other things
in her purview.
Did you find anything that needs flagging?
Angela, to your question about effects on public health, there is one study from the
Mailman School here at Columbia University.
It tries to measure the effect of a bike lane on an increase in the probability of riding
a bike and then quantify the effect on health and reduced pollution and then measures that
against other public health measures.
And the conclusion is that investments in bike lanes are more cost-effective than the majority of
preventative approaches used today. So, you know, we'll see. That's one study.
Colleen Tottenberg, thank you so much for joining us tonight.
It is time, I'm so sad to say, for tonight's final guest.
She is a professor of mechanical engineering at the University of Pittsburgh.
Would you please welcome Catherine Hornbossom.
Catherine, it is nice to have you.
You are our last guest tonight, so make it good.
What do you have for us?
All right, no pressure.
So if I handed you a bucket filled with water and laundry detergent and asked you to tackle global warming, what would you do?
Oh, that's so easy. You would wash something. I would make a giant bubble bath and I would invite...
Laundry detergent. Hey, hey, don't yuck my yum. I would make a giant bubble bath and I would invite... With laundry detergent. Hey, hey. Just saying. Don't yuck my yum.
I would make a giant bubble bath,
and I would invite the climate lions and the climate lambs
to lie down together in the bubble bath and relax
and proceed to have an empirical, sane conversation
about the best ways to address climate change. That's what I would do with a big bucket
of soapy water. I really like
that approach. Are we done here?
Are we done here? Is that the answer?
That was exactly what she was going to recommend.
I can't say I wrote about that approach in my paper.
Do you have any other suggestions?
I don't really know what's in Laundry Detroit.
Can you give me a hint? Yeah, so I'm actually
talking about the active ingredient
sodium carbonate. I don't know talking about the active ingredient sodium carbonate.
I don't know if that helps.
Sodium carbonate.
Is that baking soda or baking?
Very similar.
Okay.
Would you wash the sky?
Not quite.
What would I be washing?
Are you saying like throw a bubble bath in the air?
You know, like one of those geoengineering schemes that run a giant hose into the stratosphere
and spray out some benign material that refracts
sunlight, that kind of thing? Is that a thing? Not quite. That is a very creative approach.
So I'll give you guys a little bit of a hint. So I'm going to send you to a coal power plant with
this bucket of water and detergent. So what is the specific, I guess, byproduct or whatever of
coal burning or whatever that's bad? And then maybe we'll be a little closer.
There are a lot of things that come off of coal that are bad.
Some of them, thankfully, we already have regulations against.
So things like SOX and NOx, they already scrub a lot of the crap that comes off of coal plants.
Can you give the full name of SOX and NOx, please?
So sulfur oxides and nitrous oxides.
Okay, very good.
Just gaseous compounds that are bad for the environment.
Because we all thought it was a Dr. Seuss story.
I was like, oh, that is so cute.
Why would they want to legislate against them?
So carbon dioxide is the other obvious one
that there are no regulations for currently for coal plants.
Are some of the emissions in a coal plant,
do they react in some way negatively, I guess,
with sodium carbonate?
Is that the idea?
You're on the right track. You're getting very close.
So I don't think we're going to get closer without a mechanical engineering degree,
which you do have.
So this particular combination, water and sodium carbonate, if you dissolve it in water,
can react with carbon dioxide and extract it from a gas stream coming off a coal plant.
And the really interesting thing that I've studied
is that if you put these chemicals into little capsules
that look like caviar,
you can actually pack them into a reactor,
attach it to a power plant,
and selectively take out the carbon dioxide
that's being released from the exhaust.
So you're describing a form of carbon capture, correct?
Yes, it is a carbon capture technology.
What stage is it in?
Are you one of the inventors of said technology?
So yes, I was on a team at a national lab from the DOE
that invented and kind of studied this technology.
It's been demonstrated at a lab scale.
Currently, we're looking for partners to kind of adopt it.
Commercialize or?
Not at a power plant scale yet,
but at smaller scales to test out and figure out
the kinks and try to scale it up more. And what you're describing, there's obviously chemical
reactions there, but is it essentially a filter? It's a good question. It's not exactly a filter.
I guess you could think of it from a big picture standpoint as a filter though.
So you're sending the nasty gas from a power plant through it. It selectively takes out carbon dioxide.
At some point, it reaches capacity,
and then you have to desorb or remove the CO2 from the full solution.
How do you do that?
So usually you have to heat up steam and send it through these capsules,
and it'll take the carbon dioxide back out,
and then you pressurize it and put it underground.
Okay, so it's carbon capture.
You bury the carbon underground, which some people have big concerns about there. What's
your level of concern on that? I think that's very safe if you, you know, it's actually being done
already in a lot of places. You know, it's fairly safe, and there's a lot of science to back up the
fact that it's not going to leak out or cause problems if you just stay there forever. Really,
it's, again, if you find the right formations, that's kind of beyond my research area,
but the scientists on that side are pretty confident
you can store a lot of carbon dioxide underground.
Just the sheer magnitude of carbon dioxide emissions
requires that we put it underground at this point.
So the unit or machine that you're talking about,
what do you call it?
So I guess I would call it a reactor.
So it's basically a giant vat filled with this solution
that will react with carbon dioxide to hold it until you need to release it and store it.
So I can't tell whether it's because you cleverly began the conversation by talking about laundry detergent.
Was it as simple really as just getting something kind of like laundry detergent and figuring out how that responded to these carbon emissions?
Yeah, I mean, so it is simple compared to other technologies for carbon capture.
By putting them in small capsules, what you're essentially doing is raising the surface area.
So imagine like a big vat filled with caviar.
You have a very large surface area of contact between the liquid in those capsules and then the gas flowing through,
which really allows you to use these very simple ingredients instead of a very tricky or corrosive solvent instead.
So you said laundry detergent is a lot like baking soda.
Now this might be a digression, Stephen,
but since I have a mechanical engineering professor,
is that little box of baking soda that I have in my refrigerator,
is it really absorbing the odors?
Oh, that is an excellent question. She can tell us about carbon capture, and this is the toughors. Oh. That is an excellent question.
I love how she can tell us about carbon capture, and
this is the tough question for her.
This is the most important question of the evening.
The more degrees you get,
the farther removed you are from practical
solutions to things like that.
So sodium carbonate reacts
with carbon dioxide and actually forms baking soda.
So that is the reaction. That's the product of this reaction.
Ah, it's the product.
And so I guess what to emphasize here
is that both the initial chemical
and the final product are both very safe,
very cheap, very abundant.
I have to ask this question.
This is such a simple, elegant, common sense,
straightforward hiding in blinds.
Was your team composed mostly of women?
We had a very good proportion of women on my team.
Just a hypothesis.
So when I hear the words safe, cheap, and abundant,
it does sound literally too good to be true.
So let's pretend that you were not involved
with this project at all, but you knew about it,
and you knew all the other competing carbon capture systems that are being developed and funded and so on. What would you put the odds
of this project succeeding? I'm not saying as the only carbon capture solution, but as a significant
one. So I'm very confident that it could work if we invested and did it. Confidence in terms of
whether or not this will be the winning technology, low or much lower, just
because there are a lot of technologies
out there for carbon capture. There's a lot of
competition. There are some others that are much more
mature than ours. Does it have a name?
We call it MEX. It's an acronym.
So, Micro Encapsulated
Carbonate Solution. Do you think
we could crowdsource a... Sure.
I just call them capsules, but I'm open
to suggestions. I like the caviar idea.
Caviar.
Carbon capture caviar.
That's too much of a mouthful.
Carbon capture caviar.
Oh, I like that.
It says here you invented something else
a few years back called the pump two baby bottle.
I didn't expect you to bring that little curve ball up.
Yes.
So I had twins when I was in grad school.
I was pumping for them,
and they did not nurse well.
And so I invented this little hack
where you can actually feed your babies breast milk
as you're pumping it.
So you attach it to any breast pump.
As you're pumping the milk, the baby starts drinking it.
Oh, Mike, that is genius.
So did you patent it?
Did you make a lot of money?
In the process of patent prosecution right now.
Filed for patent, working on it.
Congratulations.
Thank you.
If you are not jumping up and down with excitement about it,
then you have not nursed a child or pumped.
Yes, I haven't.
I'm going to confess right now.
Hey, Catherine Hornbostel,
thank you so much for telling us something we did not know.
Thank you.
And can we get one more hand here for all our guests, please?
It is time now for our live audience to pick a winner.
Obviously, all our guests came here in the spirit of inquiry and information sharing, so we shouldn't reduce this thing to a horse race.
But, well, this is America, and we really like to know who wins.
So we will
ask our live audience to pick a winner via text. I'd like you to remember the criteria. Did they
tell you something you did not know? Was it worth knowing? And was it demonstrably true? Who's it
going to be? Andy Byford with How to Fix New York City Subways, Petra Moser with Napoleon's Copyright
Legacy, David Pizarro with The Politics of Disgust, Polly Trottenberg with How to Fix New York City's subways, Petra Moser with Napoleon's copyright legacy, David Pizarro
with the politics of disgust, Polly Trottenberg with how to fix New York City's roads, or
Catherine Hornbostel with how to launder your carbon.
While our live audience is voting, let me ask you a favor.
If you enjoy Freakonomics Radio, including this live version of Tell Me Something I Don't
Know, please spread the word.
Give it a nice rating on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Thank you so much.
Okay, the audience vote is in.
Once again, thank you so much to all our guest presenters.
Our grand prize winner tonight, we had a dead tie.
So thank you so much to both Andy Byford and Petra Moser
for telling us about fixing New York City's subways
and Napoleon's copyright legacy.
To commemorate your victories,
you will each receive this certificate of impressive knowledge.
And it reads,
I, Stephen Dubner, in consultation with Angela Duckworth and Jodi Avergan,
do solemnly swear that both Andy Byford and Petra Moser
told us something we did not know,
and for that we are eternally grateful.
Thank you so much.
That's our show for tonight.
I hope we told you something you did not know.
Huge thanks to Jodi and Angela, to our guests,
and thanks especially to you for coming to play Tell Me Something.
I don't know.
Thank you very much.
Coming up next time on Freakonomics Radio, as housing prices keep rising in the most desirable
cities, politicians often reach for a time-honored solution, rent control.
From an economics point of view, indeed, it provides insurance against
getting priced out of your neighborhood. And what do economists think of rent control?
It's not particularly fair. It's not a good way of allocating scarce space. It's not a good way
of helping the downtrodden. The economics and politics of rent control. That's next time on
Freakonomics Radio. Freakonomics Radio is produced by Stitcher and Dub of rent control. That's next time on Freakonomics Radio.
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What do you think?
I believe that down to my toes.