63. The Dilbert Index?
Episode Date: February 22, 2012Measuring workplace morale -- and how to game the sick-day system.
Freakonomics co-author Stephen J. Dubner uncovers the hidden side of everything. Why is it safer to fly in an airplane than drive a car? How do we decide whom to marry? Why is the media so full of bad news? Also: things you never knew you wanted to know about wolves, bananas, pollution, search engines, and the quirks of human behavior. To get every show in our network without ads and a monthly bonus episode of Freakonomics Radio, sign up for SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts at http://apple.co/SiriusXM.
803 episodes transcribedMeasuring workplace morale -- and how to game the sick-day system.
The left and the right blame each other for pretty much everything, including slanted media coverage. Can they both be right?
A look at some non-obvious ways to lose weight.
A commitment device forces you to be the person you really want to be. What could possibly go wrong?
A football cheat sheet to help you sound like the smartest person at the party.
Education is the surest solution to a lot of problems. Except when it’s not.
We all know the answer is yes. But the data -- and Rudy Giuliani -- say no.
Levitt and Dubner answer your FREAK-quently Asked Questions about certifying politicians, irrational fears, and the toughest three words in the Englis...
We know it's terribly dangerous to drive drunk. But heading home on foot isn't the solution.
The thrill of customization, via Pandora and a radical new teaching method
Tyler Cowen points fingers. There's plenty of blame to go around.
Clever ways to not waste our waste.
The science of charity, with economist John List.
There’s a nasty secret about hot-button topics like global warming: knowledge is not always power.
Our appetite for breast meat renders our holiday birds unable to reproduce.
Is booing an act of verbal vandalism—or the last true expression of democracy?
On Election Day, most people focus on the obvious winners and losers -- that is, the candidates. But we went looking for some of the strange side effe...
We are constantly wowed by new technologies and policies meant to make childbirth better. But beware the unintended consequences.
High-stakes testing has produced some rotten apples. But they can be caught.
Did we needlessly scare ourselves into ditching a good thing? And, with millions of cars driving around with no passengers, should we be rooting for a...