This week on Innovation Hub: A show on learning. First, do liberals really dominate academia? Then, if properly taught, everyone can grasp math. After that find out how reading links to health and longevity. Finally, Nancy Weiss Malkiel transports us to the moment when elite colleges finally started admitting women.
Sep 01, 2017•50 min
From Delmonico's to Howard Johnson's: Yale Professor Paul Freedman walks us through 10 of the most influential restaurants in American history. What can a restaurant menu tell us about society? Turns out, a lot. Our host Kara Miller finds out while researching the Los Angeles dining scene. Judy Cockerton is building villages around the country to change foster care. We take a look at why. Next stop: Mars? A look at how private companies are taking the giant leap into space.
Aug 25, 2017•50 min
Space: The final frontier. Now, more and more big businesses are eyeing that frontier. We look at the what a competitive market could mean for the future of space travel.
Aug 25, 2017•9 min
Judy Cockerton saw a problem and decided to do something about it. At 48, she shut down her toy store and created a village of sixty homes. The catch? They were reserved for seniors and families with foster kids. We visited Cockerton's village to learn how she built it.
Aug 25, 2017•18 min
Los Angeles has spurred countless culinary concoctions, including the chili burger, Korean tacos and the Cobb salad. Listen as our host Kara Miller takes a trip to California and learns how immigrants shaped LA’s food scene.
Aug 25, 2017•6 min
Hungry for information? Then learn about the history of the American restaurant.
Aug 25, 2017•18 min
We’re hardwired to trust people, luck matters a lot more than you think, and the lead crisis is so much bigger than Flint. That’s this week’s Innovation Hub.
Aug 18, 2017•50 min
The case against empathy, the case for technocrats, and a look at the birth of PR. That’s all in this week’s Innovation Hub.
Aug 11, 2017•49 min
America thinks of itself and its companies as exceptional. And because of that, we’ve ignored the pitfalls of globalization. For decades, blue-collar American jobs have moved to China. Why some of those same jobs are now moving to Africa. Julia Child was a chef, author, TV star... and coder? How expanding our definition of coding helps us look at the world in a whole new way.
Aug 04, 2017•49 min
It’s impossible to imagine the modern world without code. But according to Philip Auerswald, we might all be coders - without even realizing it.
Aug 04, 2017•18 min
Manufacturing jobs may have moved to China… but not all of them have stayed there.
Aug 04, 2017•15 min
The global economy is getting more competitive. What can the U.S. do to keep up?
Aug 04, 2017•17 min
Americans spend a lot of time, money and energy filing taxes every year, and yet our tax system is both less fair and less efficient than other systems around the world. Author T.R. Reid says the U.S. government should look to other countries’ tax models to fix our own.
Jul 28, 2017•19 min
Is it a completely good thing when a billionaire gives away their money? David Callahan walks us through the new world of philanthropy. Why does so much of our most popular science-fiction feature bleak, depressing futures? We talk to a science-fiction writer to find out. Our tax system is inefficient, unfair, and infuriating. TR Reid tells us how to fix it.
Jul 28, 2017•50 min
The Walking Dead. The Hunger Games. The Handmaid’s Tale. Why is so much of our most popular science-fiction bleak and depressing?
Jul 28, 2017•14 min
Big philanthropists like Bill Gates and the Koch Brothers are reshaping our society. But, we don’t really have much of a say as to how. We look at the rise of big philanthropy.
Jul 28, 2017•17 min
Dark money, microbes, oppressive ads, and overconfidence. It’s this week’s Innovation Hub.
Jul 21, 2017•49 min
Human rights are hotly-debated, but when did that debate begin? UCLA’s Lynn Hunt talks about what might have been the formative moment for human rights - and how we’re constantly changing our definition of equality.
Jul 14, 2017•17 min
Science gave us penicillin, the moon landing, and the theory of evolution. But scientists also make mistakes. NPR’s Richard Harris tells us why, and what the consequences are.
Jul 14, 2017•18 min
When did the fight for human rights begin? According to Lynn Hunt, the 18th century. And why? One answer is rather unexpected: the rise of the novel. Childhood experiences can drastically affect a person’s health for the rest of their life. We talk to a doctor about what that means for medicine. Science gave us penicillin, the moon landing, and the theory of evolution. But scientists can also make really big mistakes.
Jul 14, 2017•50 min
There’s a health epidemic that doctors have been ignoring for decades. We talk with Dr. Vincent Felitti about how childhood trauma can affect adults’ health.
Jul 14, 2017•15 min
Parents won’t shut up about their kids being precious. And with American birth rates declining, they’re actually right. Geckos can help us perform surgery, and kingfishers can help us design trains. We dive into the world of biologically-inspired design. Being lonely isn’t just bad for your emotional health, it’s bad for your physical health. We talk about why Americans are lonelier than ever and what can be done about it.
Jul 07, 2017•49 min
Loneliness is a drag. But it’s also bad for your health. We find out why feeling lonely is as dangerous as obesity.
Jul 07, 2017•18 min
The key to advancing medicine might be found right in your backyard. Harvard’s Jeff Karp finds inspiration in nature to create medical solutions for humans.
Jul 07, 2017•12 min
Our kids are our future, so what happens when we start having fewer of them? Dowell Myers and Fariborz Ghadar explain.
Jul 07, 2017•18 min
As America celebrates the Fourth with fireworks and barbeques, we take a closer look at the ideals that have shaped our country.
Jun 30, 2017•50 min
Camilla Benbow and David Lubinski spent their lives studying child geniuses. Their advice on how to create a baby Einstein? Do nothing. Then, conspiracy theories have gotten a lot of attention in the last year, but psychologist Rob Brotherton says they've been around for a long time. And finally, Thomas Gilovich thinks he can make you wise... or at least, the wisest person in the room.
Jun 23, 2017•50 min
What’s the difference between the 2017 Women’s March, and the 1963 March on Washington? Zeynep Tufekci explores protests in an internet age.
Jun 16, 2017•19 min
The wealth gap between white and black families has grown since the 1960s. But one man thinks he might have an entrepreneurial solution.
Jun 16, 2017•10 min
Millennials are feminist, progressive, and care a lot about gender equity. Right? According to Kei Kawashima-Ginsberg and Dan Cassino, it’s actually more complicated than that. It’s relatively simple to organize a massive protest using Twitter and Facebook. And Zeynep Tufekci says that can make resistance movements weaker. The average white family has 13 times the wealth of the average African-American family. Henry Rock explains how we can use entrepreneurship to lessen that divide....
Jun 16, 2017•49 min