#cultural-bias
96 episodes · Page 2 of 4
#3593: Is the Far-Right a Movement or a Media Effect?
How a Belfast attack reveals the machinery stitching isolated crimes into a narrative of imported violence.
#3585: Friends, Fantasy, and the Real Twenties
What happens when your favorite sitcom becomes a blueprint for adult life — and reality doesn't match?
#3584: Why Rugrats Feels So Vanilla in Retrospect
Why does Nickelodeon's longest-running original series feel so hollow decades later? We unpack the design choices.
#3582: The Sponge That Might Be Cheese: Dream Logic of Bikini Bottom
Why does a brainless sea sponge (or is it cheese?) live in a pineapple under the sea? We explore the unsettling worldbuilding of Bikini Bottom.
#3579: Where Time Moves Differently: Bhutan to Vanuatu
Bhutan, Laos, and Vanuatu offer the ultimate antidote to modern speed—but their rhythms come with real tradeoffs.
#3575: What Barney the Dinosaur's Giggle Actually Does
A deep dive into the unsettling psychology behind Barney's giggle and what a T. rex teaching toddlers really means.
#3570: How Your Brain Builds a Philosophy
Where do your beliefs really come from? The surprising science of how humans build personal philosophies.
#3567: Baby Geniuses, Secret Baby Language & the Cult of Superbabies
The strange origin of Baby Geniuses by the director of A Christmas Story, why the sequel became a cult disaster, and movies about secret baby langu...
#3503: How Extended Families Really Raise Kids Together
What daily life looks like when grandparents and aunts are deeply woven into raising children — and how different cultures manage the inevitable co...
#3385: The Book as Stage Prop: Pay-to-Publish Unpacked
When anyone can buy a publisher's logo, what happens to the signal a book is supposed to send?
#3375: Does Expressiveness Actually Make Us Happier?
Mediterranean hand gestures vs. Finnish silence — which culture is actually happier? The data may surprise you.
#3365: Does Learning an Enemy's Language Change You?
How deep language learning can erode ideological commitment — and where organizations build firewalls against it.
#3303: How 3 Words Became an Identity: Decoding MAGA
A linguistic analysis of how "Make America Great Again" evolved from slogan to identity marker.
#3249: Why Gold, Silver, and Bronze? The 5,000-Year-Old Metal Hierarchy Explained
Gold, silver, bronze—why this exact ranking? Chemistry, the sun, and a mountain of silver in Bolivia.
#3247: Where Does the Three-Class Model Actually Come From?
The three-class model isn't an official system — it's a folk taxonomy. Here's where it really comes from.
#3238: Ancient Ink, Modern Scribes: The Chemistry of Kosher Ink
What’s really in that bottle of certified kosher ink? A deep dive into Talmudic chemistry, gum arabic, and the Sharpie-on-Tefillin debate.
#3144: When Walls Talk: Graffiti's 17,000-Year Story
From Pompeii to Melbourne 2025 — how cities decide what stays on walls and what gets scrubbed.
#3124: Immigrant Strategies: Enclave vs. Full Immersion
Do enclave builders or full immersionists report higher satisfaction? The data reveals a surprising tradeoff.
#3092: How Pizza Actually Became Pizza: Tomatoes, Myths, and Street Food
Pizza existed for centuries without tomatoes. The real origin story is stranger than the Margherita myth.
#3087: Inside the Conspiracy Mind: History, Belief, and Harm
Why do humans fall for conspiracy theories? History, psychology, and the surprising data on who actually believes.
#3044: Why the Fork Took 700 Years to Catch On
Forks, plates, and spoons aren't as ancient as you think. Medieval diners ate off stale bread.
#3023: Beyond Netflix Docs: Where to Find the Good Stuff
Kanopy, DocuBay, WaterBear, and the festival circuit — how to find documentaries with actual substance.
#2930: How the Rabbis Saved the Bible's Most Dangerous Book
The book that says "everything is pointless" was almost cut from the Bible. Here's how the rabbis reinvented it.
#2903: The Maple Syrup Paradox of Fenugreek
Fenugreek smells like maple syrup but tastes bitter. How one bean fooled the world for 8,000 years.