No Stupid Questions - Is It Weird for Adults to Have Imaginary Friends? (Replay)
Episode Date: December 1, 2024Why does listening to No Stupid Questions feel like you’re hanging out with your best friends? Why did the whole world take it personally when Princess Diana died? And how do “parasocial relations...hips” affect your mental health? SOURCES:Bradley Bond, professor of communication studies at the University of San Diego.John Cacioppo, professor of psychology at the University of Chicago.Joe Cobbs, professor of marketing at Northern Kentucky University.Nick Epley, professor of behavioral science at the University of Chicago.Katy Milkman, professor of operations, information, and decisions at the University of Pennsylvania.Emily Oster, professor of economics at Brown University.Anuj Shah, professor of behavioral science at the University of Chicago. RESOURCES:"Knowledge About Others Reduces One’s Own Sense of Anonymity," by Anuj K. Shah and Michael LaForest (Nature, 2022)."Tragic but True: How Podcasters Replaced Our Real Friends," by Rachel Aroesti (The Guardian, 2021)."The Development and Influence of Parasocial Relationships With Television Characters: A Longitudinal Experimental Test of Prejudice Reduction Through Parasocial Contact," by Bradley J. Bond (Communication Research, 2020)."A Mind like Mine: The Exceptionally Ordinary Underpinnings of Anthropomorphism," by Nicholas Epley (Journal of the Association for Consumer Research, 2018)."Grit: The Power of Passion and Perseverance," by Angela Duckworth (TED, 2013)."How Soap Operas Changed the World," by Stephanie Hegarty (BBC, 2012)."The Power of TV: Cable Television and Women's Status in India," by Robert Jensen and Emily Oster (The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 2009). EXTRAS:"Can A.I. Companions Replace Human Connection?" by No Stupid Questions (2024)."Rivalry," by Tell Me Something I Don't Know (2017).Behavior Change for Good Initiative.Everything Is Alive.The Know Rivalry Project.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, NSQ listeners.
If you've been following us for a while, you know that Steven Dubner used to co-host
the show.
We're off this week, so we thought you might enjoy this classic episode in which he and
Angela discuss parasocial relationships.
We'll be back next week with a brand new episode featuring Mike and Angela. But first, here's a message from Stephen.
Hey there, it's Stephen Dubner from Freakonomics Radio, and I am busting into this No Stupid Questions episode to tell you about two upcoming Freakonomics Radio live shows in San Francisco on January 3rd and in
Los Angeles on February 13th. For tickets go to Freakonomics.com slash live shows
one word. I am told that tickets are going fast so you might want to do this
soon. Again that is Freakonomics.com slash live shows January 3rd in San Francisco, February 13th in LA.
I'll be there and I hope you will too.
Thanks.
You know me, Stephen.
I'm like, let's hug.
Let's take a selfie.
I'm Angela Duckworth.
I'm Stephen Dubner.
And you're listening to No Stupid Questions.
Today on the show, what does it mean to be friends with someone who has no idea that
you exist?
Instead of having a conversation with an actual friend, I'll just listen to Stephen and Angela
have a conversation with each other. Angela, a listener named Caitlin writes to say that the highlight of her day is listening
to this podcast on her walks. She writes, it feels like hanging out with close friends.
Oh, I was going to ask for your response. Your response is aww. That's the opposite
of my response, but okay.
Yours is ew.
No, Caitlin, just so you know, aww.
She continues, my question is how useful are these parasocial relationships in maintaining
mental health?
So Angie, before I continue reading the email, I think I understand this word from context,
but can you define a word I'd never heard before, parasocial?
I think the idea of a parasocial relationship
is that it's an asymmetric relationship, it's one-sided.
So Caitlin might feel like she's hanging out with us,
but we do not feel like, nor do we in any sense,
hang out with her.
Well, right now we are.
Well, except for now, this is as good as it gets, Caitlin.
So she says, how useful are these relationships? And then she continues,
or will my almost daily rewatching of friends and rereading of Harry Potter
hinder my ability to form quote, normal relationships in the long run.
Also, she writes, what does the research say
about our friendships and emotional dependency
with AI, artificial intelligence?
Did they count as parasocial relationships?
I think of the movie Her, did you ever see Her, Angie?
I didn't, is that the one where Scarlett Johansson
plays like the equivalent of Alexa or something?
Yes, exactly.
Sorry to, by the way, turn on a number of devices, just A-L-E-X-A.
I've noticed that I can't have a conversation around S-I-R-I anymore.
If I'm going to ever say the word S-E-R-I-O-U-S-L-Y.
Yeah.
So S-I-R-I, if you're listening, it's a problem.
We need to work it out.
But that's not what Caitlin's asking about.
Caitlin's asking, does a relationship with,
let's say your A-L-E-X-A or S-I-R-I
count as a parasocial relationship?
She writes, I don't feel anything about Alexa or Siri, but perhaps a much more advanced robot of the future
could be a friend.
So Angela, in response to Caitlin's email,
what does the research say about parasocial relationships?
I remember a talk that one of my favorite researchers,
Anu Shah, he's at University of Chicago
in the Booth School of Business,
and he's a professor of behavioral science the Booth School of Business, and
he's a professor of behavioral science, and he is part of Behavior Change for Good, which, as you
know, is a consortium of behavioral scientists that Katie Milkman and I gather to do studies
together. But in this particular conversation, Anuj was presenting new work which was inspired
by his teaching during the pandemic. What Anuj said is that when you are teaching on Zoom,
you are in your living room or in your kitchen and life is going on in the background.
He observed of his students that because they could now see some of his day-to-day life,
they had this sense that he reciprocally knew them.
In other words, there was this kind of automatic reciprocal like, well, since I know a lot
about you, you must know a lot about me.
And he found this so interesting, he decided to do research on it.
He was just published this year in Nature, which is arguably the top scientific journal.
And the title of his paper is,
Knowledge About Others Reduces One's Own Sense of Anonymity.
Run that past me again. I like that, but I need to process it.
Yeah, it's a lot. And I want to unpack it a little bit.
But the title is, Knowledge About Others Reduces One's Own Sense of Anonymity.
And I should say that Anuj did this in collaboration with a postdoc named Michael LaForest.
They say, social ties often seem symmetric, but they need not be.
For example, a person might know a stranger better than the stranger knows them.
Here we show that when people know more about others, they think others know more about
them.
Across nine laboratory experiments, when participants learned more about a stranger, they felt as
if the stranger also knew them better.
As a result, participants were more honest around known strangers.
We tested this further with a field experiment in New York City in which we provided residents
with mundane information
about neighborhood police officers.
We found that the intervention shifted residents' perceptions of officers' knowledge of legal
activity and it may even have reduced crime.
It appears that our sense of anonymity depends not only on what people know about us, but
also on what we know about us, but also on what we know about them. So Stephen,
getting back to parasocial relationships, I think one of the reasons why somebody
listening to a podcast like ours or watching Friends or, you know, Cheers,
which is something I watched a lot growing up, is that when we feel like we
know a lot about Norm or about Seinfeld or about Stephen or
about Angela, we have this almost reflexive assumption that this is a two-way relationship.
And I think it's probably because in most of human history, relationships were not possible
in this parasocial sense.
Relationships were just relationships.
So this is a whole new dynamic that the human instrument is getting accustomed to now.
Well, I guess you could go back to times where, say, for example, there was a royal family
that everyone gossiped about.
Clearly, there is an asymmetry there, right?
Because people are not talking about your typical villager.
But it's so clear that they're the royal family.
The demarcation. a typical villager, but it's so clear that they're the royal family. Jared
The demarcation.
Nicole
Whereas I think one of the features of Friends or Cheers or Seinfeld or a podcast, including
ours is that we're not at a different level, right?
Jared
Well, I am. Let's be clear.
Nicole
Except for King Stephen and Queen Angela. But the point is, I think it's voluntary vulnerability
and intimacy in a way that you don't think
that the Queen and King did 500 years ago.
So it's unprecedented, maybe.
I thought of an example that's very different from this, but it's intriguing to me, which
is about the difference in the dynamic.
We were doing a live show in Chicago once, and I want to say that this guy was an economist
at a university in Indiana.
Forgive all the details.
I'm getting wrong here, but his research was about what I guess you would call
asymmetric sports rivalries.
And he'd actually measured very intensely how these asymmetries played out.
So for instance, Notre Dame is a big and famous and historically successful
sports program, especially with football.
And then they have all these other teams
that they've played for years and years
and years and years and years.
And those schools, let's say Boston College, for instance,
Boston College considers Notre Dame its number one rival.
Notre Dame considers Boston College its number,
I don't know, 37 rival.
That's what I got to thinking about when you were telling me about
parasocial relationships generally. But that's a little bit easier to understand because it sounds
as though with the parasocial relationships, especially if they're coming from media, let's
say it's fiction like Friends or nonfiction like a podcast, that you really do feel you form a relationship with these people.
Are you saying, however, that the listener or the viewer will really cross the line
and really think that the relationship is beyond virtual?
I don't know that people think, oh my gosh, I thought we were best friends.
I think it's just that there is
something of a reflexive, like, well, if I know a lot about you, then you must know a lot about me.
That doesn't necessarily mean that people are delusional. Well, doesn't it sound borderline
delusional? Like, why would I think that you would know a lot about me? Yeah, it's on a continuum,
I guess you could argue. Maybe we're just using a heuristic.
Generally when I know a lot about you, you know a lot about me. But I remember when Princess
Diana died and there was such an outpouring of grief around the world. Do you remember
when that happened and there's just like piles of flowers and people who actually felt genuinely
sad for days or more.
I'll be honest with you.
I mean, this may make me sound more like a robot than a human.
I just didn't get it.
I didn't understand why people cared so much.
Same. I was like, holy schmolly,
what is going on with these people who are grieving like it were a brother or a sister?
But maybe just going back to this new research
that typically when we know a lot about somebody,
we have a lot of affection for them, typically it's reciprocated.
And so there is kind of like a hijacking of your normal relationship responses.
I don't know about the devices.
I think it's different to talk about your A-L-E-X-A or your S-I-R-I.
There's a podcast called Everything is Alive hosted by Ian Chilag.
It's scripted and it's really funny.
He interviews inanimate objects and he hires really good actors or comics.
Oh, I've heard of this.
He interviewed like a potato or something.
Exactly.
A sock, a vending machine.
There's one he interviews a baby's pacifier and it becomes pretty lewd pretty quickly
because the voice says, just imagine you're putting me in your mouth and rolling your
tongue around my contours.
There was this research that Nick Epley, who's at University of Chicago, is a psychologist.
He has worked on this kind of anthropomorphism when we attribute
human characteristics to inanimate objects. It was also work in collaboration with John
Cassioppo and John Cassioppo, you may know, was a psychologist who was really like the
world authority on the psychology of loneliness. So both of them were interested in this question,
but I'm thinking about a paper that Nick published only a few years ago.
Basically, what his research shows is that human beings do anthropomorphize.
We do start to interact with our car or our cell phone in a way that is like a relationship.
But what Nick wants to conclude is that human beings are, I do remember this
phrase, relentlessly social. In other words, we have such a deep need to interact with
other people that we will even do it with non-people.
Let me take a step back and just ask you if you had to make two lists about intense parasocial
relationships, the upsides and downsides.
Give me a few.
The upsides and downsides of parasocial relationships. Let me first talk about the downsides because
in a way those should be the more obvious ones. You know, I see how much time people
are spending watching Netflix or Food Network and they're on their screens. They're not
only having parasocial relationships, but all of life seems to be more vicarious than
it used to be. Like there was a time when people bought Julia Child's cookbook and made
Cacauvin for the first time. Oh my gosh, this is how French people eat chicken. It's amazing.
I can't believe it takes a whole bottle of wine. I spent all day cooking but then we had this amazing dinner party
That's life, right?
But now you could just watch somebody else cook Kakao Van of Food Network while you sit on the couch
With your bag of Doritos
I know that sounds really judgy, but I feel like so much of life is not going out for the walk yourself and
Seeing nature but instead watching a nature documentary,
you know, not cooking the Kakao Van yourself, but watching somebody else cook it. And I
hope that's not what this podcast becomes. It's like, instead of actually having a conversation
with an actual friend, I'll just listen to Stephen and Angela have a conversation with
each other.
I hear you. You do sound a little bit judgy.
I know I sounded very judgy. Jared But that's okay. Look, I appreciate the candor. And I definitely identify with those
instincts, but I also identify maybe a little bit more with the general economist instinct
versus the general psychologist instinct, which is to say, you know what, preferences are personal,
and they shift over time. And they're also not necessarily for me to
decide.
Like what's good or what's bad.
Yeah.
And also, can I just say I made Coco Van once and it was a pain in the neck.
I know.
It really does take a whole bottle of Burgundy wine too, which is really expensive.
You should just drink it.
You just order KFC and drink the bottle of wine.
You'll be much happier.
I don't even like Koko Van.
So for anybody that's been persuaded somehow
by Angela evangelizing for making Koko Van,
I'm just saying in this one rare case,
you're never wrong, Angie.
In this one case, she's wrong.
Just watch Emeril Lagasse make it.
Order KFC, drink the wine.
You'll be much better off.
Anyway, you were saying you wish people
would take nature walks and make cocoa van.
Okay, so that's the downside
of intense parasocial relationship
is they may encourage you to substitute.
It's displacing actual life.
Faux life is not life.
And faux relationships are not relationships.
I don't think anyone sensible would argue against that.
However, can you imagine that there are pretty strong positive elements of parasocial relationships?
I think back to research done by Emily Oster, who's an economist now at Brown, about women in
India who got access for the first time to television and how that changed their
status in their families and society
changed their status in their families and society because they were able to see that women in other places were actually treated pretty well and went to college and had jobs.
And so if you happen to be in a family or a town where women were treated much worse
than that, you could start to change your idea of how you should be treated.
But that's not parasocial relationships. That's just, I got to see another way of life.
How is that having an asymmetric,
like I felt like we were friends.
I see your point, but I could imagine
that if I'm watching that TV show, I could think,
oh, this person in a lot of ways is a lot like me
and I like her a great deal.
And I would like to be like her.
I should probably try to be more like her
because then
we could be closer.
This also happened in Mexico where they had a soap opera that was very much about showing
people deliberately that you, even if you're poor, could learn to read a book and so forth.
But I think the research there did not conclude that it was all working on the active ingredient
of parasocial relationships where people feel like they're friends
with the protagonist in the soap opera,
but more just modeling.
That role model gives you,
the technical term is self-efficacy,
but the lay term would be confidence, right?
Like you see somebody do something
and you can imagine yourself doing it.
But I don't think that's parasocial.
Okay, I'm not giving up yet.
So you're saying that doesn't really count,
but let's imagine that I am an Archie Bunker type.
I'm an old bigot. And for those who are too young to know Archie Bunker, he was the lead character
in a TV show called All in the Family. So imagine you're that kind of person, but you can fill in
the blank. It can be any gender, any race, any social strategy you want, who thinks that most
people who are not like them are kind of rotten people.
And then I start watching a TV show like, I don't know, Modern Family.
I love Modern Family.
So I've actually watched an episode of Modern Family.
Just one?
I don't watch a lot of TV is my problem.
You know why I watched it is because Freakonomics was on it.
It was in the first season.
Wait, Freakonomics was mentioned? You had a cameo?
Who was the super smart daughter?
Oh, right. She's supposed to be like the nerdy one.
Gosh, I can't remember.
I think they were at a swimming pool,
and everybody's jumping around, having fun,
and she's sitting by the pool reading Freakonomics.
Oh, my gosh, that's so cool, Steven!
Yeah, we're in the top, like, 58 of nerd accoutrements
in the history of nerd accoutrements.
But your point was about modern family.
Yeah, imagine there's a real life Archie Bunker type,
and then they watch a TV show that is created
and performed by these people who are really, really,
really good at making everyone likable and interesting.
So I'm watching all these different characters
who are nothing like me in any way. These are people I would never
intentionally want to socialize with. I would never invite them to my house, etc. But now, gosh, I really like them. That one's really funny. That one's really smart. That one's really sassy. Couldn't you imagine that sort of
parasocial-ish relationship? And maybe it's not exactly what we're talking about. But don't you think that could of parasocial-ish relationship?
And maybe it's not exactly what we're talking about, but don't you think that could serve a really useful function?
Yes, I do. I think that's plausible.
And I'm now looking at this article called The Development and Influence of Parasocial Relationships with Television Characters,
a Longitudinal Experimental Test of Prejudice Red reduction through parasocial contact.
So this is basically your idea, yes?
And it's by one Bradley Bond at University of San Diego.
I love Bradley Bond.
You love Bradley Bond.
Bradley Bond loves you, Stephen, I'm sure.
But essentially, this is a 10-week study and it involves a sample of heterosexual participants who watch a television series
with fictional characters who are gay. And the question is, what happens to your attitudes
as you watch over the course of two months? And the bottom line conclusion is, and I quote,
that audiences can develop socio-emotional bonds with out-group television characters, out-group meaning not in
the main group, that can influence attitudes and behaviors much the same as direct interpersonal
intergroup contact. That's some empirical support for your intuition that may be feeling like we are
friends with people that don't actually know us, that could be
used for good.
Still to come on No Stupid Questions, Angela shares a parasocial relationship of her own.
I listen to you all the time.
I watch documentaries about you.
I know so much that there has to be something on the other side.
Before we return to Stephen and Angela's conversation about parasocial relationships,
let's hear some of your thoughts on the subject.
We asked listeners to let us know how parasocial relationships have shaped their lives.
Here's what you said.
to let us know how parasocial relationships have shaped their lives. Here's what you said.
Hi, I'm in a one-sided relationship with Korean music group BTS.
I first became a BTS fan when my sister and her family moved to South Korea at the end of 2019.
Initially, it was a way for me to connect with my nephews and nieces at a distance,
but before long, I feel like I've really
become a true fan, part of the BTS Army. We know their personalities, their likes and dislikes.
I think it's been a way for me to really cope with being away from my family over the last two years
of COVID. I guess some people might think it's embarrassing, but BTS are me all the way. Hi Angela and Steven.
This is Russell Singer.
As a much younger graduate student studying transportation systems, I often found myself
having imaginary conversations with Elon Musk to vet my ideas and plan my presentations.
At the time, I looked up to him deeply for his engineering acumen and ability to accomplish
things that many tried, but no one was able.
In more recent days, I've lost a modicum of respect for him based on certain comments and
activities that he's engaged in. I still sometimes have conversations with him in my head, but they
tend to take on a more morally superior tone and be far less deferential. For several years now,
I have had a lovely one-sided relationship with singer-songwriter
Jason Isbell, who shows up with some regularity in my dreams.
My husband and 20-something children think it's hysterical.
They'll be like, oh, mom had one of her Jason dreams again.
They can laugh.
These sporadic dreams make me feel connected to someone whose work I love and whose music
makes me happy and inspired.
That was, respectively, Sarah Larios, Russell Singer,
and Colleen Massey.
Thanks to them and to everyone who sent us their thoughts.
Now, back to Stephen and Angela's conversation
about how modern media has created asymmetric relationships.
I sometimes run into people who are strangers to me, but they stop me and they say, oh,
are you Angela Duckworth?
This may be because of our podcast.
It may also be because I happen to give a TED Talk that many, many children have been
forced to watch by their parents.
What's the topic of this TED Talk?
It's GRIT.
But the point is, oftentimes in these very short interactions with strangers, there is,
to me, it seems like a familiarity.
It's like, oh my gosh, are you Angela?
And then I say yes, and then you have immediately vaulted forward into a level of intimacy that
is a little fast.
And how does that make you feel?
It generally makes me feel actually very happy.
You know me, Stephen.
I'm like, let's hug.
Let's take a selfie.
I'm flattered.
I'm happy to race forward toward best friendship,
but I'm guessing that you would not like it.
It's a matter of degrees.
I'm always honored and flattered
when someone says they like me.
I mean, who doesn't like to be liked
or even acknowledged? The thing about you though, I don't think it's so much about the
parasocial relationship making you happy. I think you're just pathologically happy and that nothing
can really disrupt. But I do think there's probably some parasocial element. Look, let me turn the
tables here. I know a lot about Taylor Swift
I have listened to Taylor Swift. I've gone to many Taylor Swift concerts
I feel like I've known Taylor since she was only a mini megastar
This is now going back like 12 years 15 years
and so when Taylor would put her hands together and make it a heart and look
meaningfully out into the audience of tens of thousands of people, I feel like I experienced
on the flip side what it felt like because, look, I didn't delude myself into thinking
that we were best friends or that she would ever take my phone call or that she even knew
who I was. But there was a sense of, I know so much about you. And if I listen to you
all the time, I hear your voice in my house, I watch documentaries about you of I know so much about you. And if I listen to you all the time, I hear your voice in my house,
I watch documentaries about you.
I know so much that there has to be something
on the other side.
It's not conscious, but it is a feeling of intimacy.
And maybe for some people,
it plays a bigger role than for others.
Hang on a second, I'm getting a text here.
Oh, it's from Taylor.
We're friends.
She says, tell Angie I will hang with her anytime.
T.S.
You know, Stephen, this is cruel.
Okay, so here's the thing.
Caitlin, who wrote this email, she said that when she listens to us, quote, it feels like
hanging out with my close friends.
And I found this piece from The Guardian last year
titled, Tragic But True, How Podcasters Replaced Our Real Friends. This is by Rachel Oresti.
She wrote, some of my friends have no idea I even exist. These are people I know intimately,
extensively, profoundly. I know what they had for dinner last night, the petty arguments they have at home, their obsessions, their insecurities, their fears, what time they wake up in the morning.
I think if she listened to this show, she'd probably know all that about us.
She said, I want to hear it all.
If this is beginning to sound slightly alarming, I should point out that they tell me all these
things and try to make me laugh in the process.
I think of podcasters as my friends
and I am not alone. She writes it, COVID-19 has accelerated the podcaster friend trend.
But you know, I've had a conversation in the past with Rebecca, our producer, who I think
has had similar-ish experience with podcasters becoming very important to Rebecca. Are you hearing
us?
Hi, yes, I hear you. I'm right here.
Hi, Rebecca.
Rebecca, is that true?
That's definitely true. I would say that parasocial relationships have been very positive for
my mental health in the past.
Wait, your relationship with people who you're listening to on podcasts?
Yeah. So I think the strongest relationships like this that I built were when I was living
in England. I was doing my junior year abroad at Oxford, the 2008-2009 academic year.
And I went there, I was so excited. I thought I was going to have this amazing experience and
meet all of these wonderful British academic friends. But I had a lot of difficulty making friends there
and I was really lonely.
It was a lot of just sitting in my room
or in one of the libraries and writing and researching
all day and the days were short and dark.
I ended up feeling really just sad and empty and tired.
Later I would find out that what I was experiencing
was clinical depression.
Oh, I thought you were gonna say what I was experiencing was England. Later, I would find out that what I was experiencing was clinical depression. Oh, I thought you were going to say what I was experiencing was England.
Oh, yeah. You go sort of hand in hand, don't they? But one of the things that would help me
was that I would take these really long walks with podcasts. So I would listen to
Fresh Air with Terry Gross and Radiolab and the Savage Love cast. And so I felt really connected
to the hosts of these shows. You know, they're in your headphones,
so it feels like they're talking to you.
Yeah.
And I didn't really have friends at Oxford,
so it felt like, oh, I have these American voices
in my head. We share a similar sense of the world.
I felt like if we met up, they would want to be my friends.
We had this similar sensibility, sense of humor.
It was just really
a relief and laughter was a relief because I didn't laugh that off. So I think it really got
me through the pain and loneliness of that year. And then it was so funny. I felt particularly
attached to Jad Abumrad, the former host of Radiolab. And when I got my first internship
at WNYC, I think in 2010 or 2011, I was walking down the hall and I
saw him coming toward me and my instinct was immediately like, oh that's my friend,
that's my friend, Jad. And so I was like, oh my gosh, hey Jad. It was so embarrassing
and he was like, oh sorry, hi, do I know you? See, that's what I mean, Stephen. And then I had to be
like, oh my gosh, no, you do not know him.
So, did you eventually revert back to humans?
Or is this still a major part of your, you know, friend circle?
I mean, podcasts are still a major part of my friend circle,
but things got better at Oxford.
The days started getting longer, and it was spring,
and I met other human beings eventually. I didn't have to solely rely on my imaginary friends as my source of socialization.
I'm just curious to know, Angie, when you hear that story, that sounds like Rebecca
kind of hacked parasocial relationships to serve as a really useful tool to get over
a tough time.
Took a bug and turned it into a feature.
This is not at all kind of like, oh my gosh, life is becoming too vicarious.
So when we're talking about parasocial relationships, where do imaginary friends fall?
And I'm not talking about for adults. I'm really thinking about children.
Not all children have imaginary friends,
but many, many children have imaginary friends
for actually extended periods.
I had this great group of friends.
They were actually a team that I called the Nothings.
And this was whenever I was playing some game or sport,
I would make them my opponent.
And I would say they were my opponent
in 95% of the games I played as a kid,
because I was the youngest in a big family, but I was the youngest by quite a bit.
So I was on my own a lot.
And this team, the Nothings, they were like, you remember the Harlem Globetrotters and
the Washington Generals?
I only remember the Harlem Globetrotters.
I do not remember the Washington Generals.
The Washington Generals were the team they always beat.
And these were amazingly good basketball players, but they always lost to
the Harlem Globetrotters. So the Nothings were like the Washington Generals in my universe.
Now, I didn't think about them as individuals, but they were a strong presence in my mind.
And I know that many, many, many children, including my own kids, have had something like
that. Doesn't that seem like a really useful way to start to think about the contours of
humankind and who we're friends with, who extends beyond our imagination and so on?
What you're saying, I think, Stephen, is that maybe it is not a pathological thing to kind of
practice relationships, either through an imaginary friend when you're a little kid or depressed
in England and you're engaging in a para relationship. And para, I think the root word means beside,
parallel, paranormal, parasocial relationships. But I think it's possibly that the answer
is if.
The answer is if?
Yeah, but let me say more.
Oh, sorry. No, I loved the beginning of that sentence.
I just got impatient to hear the rest of it.
So basically the idea is, Caitlin's question is, how useful are parasocial relationships
in maintaining mental health?
They can be useful if you are practicing certain things like maybe children are doing with
imaginary friends.
You are using this opportunity to on-ramp onto different
ways of thinking. But I think the if also cuts the other way, which is like if all you're
doing is having parasocial relationships and no social relationships, and if everything
you're doing is always at the level of imagination or vicarious experience. That's where I start
to be my cranky middle-aged self.
I think that is a lovely way of summarizing. And to Caitlin, I would say, when you write
that it feels like you're hanging out with your close friends when you listen to us,
to that I would say, you are wrong. We are not your friends, Caitlin. But, Caitlin, we love you nonetheless.
Catelyn Jones-London-London-London-London-London-London
Great to end on a completely mixed signal, Stephen.
Well done.
Caitlin, you can come over.
We'll have a glass of wine.
Catelyn Jones-London-London-London-London-London-London
Coming up after the break, a fact check of today's conversation
and a message from this week's Question Asker.
No Stupid Questions is produced by me, Rebecca Lee Douglas.
Before we move on to the fact check, we'd like to give listener Caitlin the last word.
Thank you for answering my question. Stephen, I don't know what you look like, so you're
totally safe from me going up to you in real life and badgering you. And Angela, yes to
the wine. I'm happy to report that I'm going to hang out with my friends later and I'll
try not to live my life through a screen. Love you both.
And now, here's a fact check of today's conversation.
In the first half of the show, Stephen references the work of an academic who studies asymmetric sports rivalries.
But he can't remember details about the person's identity.
Stephen was thinking of Joe Cobbs, a sports business professor at Northern Kentucky University who runs the website NoRivalry.com.
Cobbs was a guest presenter on episode 17 of Tell Me Something I Don't Know, a live
game show that Stephen hosted from 2017 to 2018.
Cobbs gave thousands of college football fans 100 rivalry points each, which they could
then allocate to their team's various opponents.
As Stephen recalled, the most unbalanced rivalry was between
Boston College and Notre Dame, with Notre Dame fans allocating an average of
two rivalry points to Boston College, and Boston College fans allocating an
average of 74 points to Notre Dame.
Later, Angela says that University of Chicago psychologist Nick Epley writes
that human beings are quote
relentlessly social and will socialize with non-human objects if other people aren't available.
This doesn't actually appear to be a phrase that Epley uses in his work. However, University of
Utah's Jesse Graham and New York University's Jonathan Haidt have used this exact terminology in their work about social
psychology and religion.
So it looks like Angela accidentally applied their words to Epley's research.
Then, Alex Dunphy is the name of the nerdy middle child on Modern Family who chose to
read Freakonomics during her family's pool party.
This scene is part of the premiere episode of season 3, not, as Stephen said,
season 1. Also, Stephen says that the Washington generals always lose to the Harlem Globetrotters.
This is incorrect. Although it rarely happens, the Washington generals have, on occasion,
defeated the Harlem Globetrotters. That's it for the Fact Check. No Stupid Questions is part of the Freakonomics Radio Network, which also includes Freakonomics
Radio, People I Mostly Admire, and The Economics of Everyday Things.
All our shows are produced by Stitcher and Renbud Radio.
Lirik Baudich is our production associate.
This episode was mixed by Eleanor Osborne with help from Greg Rippon.
We had research assistants on this episode from Anya Dubner.
Our theme song was composed by Luis Guerra.
To learn more or to read episode transcripts, visit Freakonomics.com slash NSQ.
Thanks for listening. I wonder if the Queen is thinking about what I had for breakfast today.
The Freakonomics Radio Network.
The hidden side of everything.