 Hello everyone and welcome to Conversations with Tyler. My name is Jeff Holmes. I am not Tyler, but I produce Conversations with Tyler and we're doing our 2021 year in review. This is the third time we've done it and Tyler to start off. I just have to say it's great to see you in person. Good to see you in person as well. I have tested negative five times this week. I feel incredibly safe then. I will not develop a cough or a scratchy throat on my way home then. I take it. So the last time I saw you was April of 2020 here in this studio. Actually, we were recording the Tetlock episode and that was the last time I think we've seen each other. Amazing. All right, to start I thought the question everyone wants to know, Tyler, is how has life changed for you since you were featured on Ancient Aliens on the History Channel? I didn't even know I was featured on Ancient Aliens on the History Channel. I will say in a variety of public settings people ask me, what are my latest thoughts about UFOs? And that's the main way in which my life has changed. It seems to be now quite clear that the day to the Navy are picking up are real. It's not a mistake of the instruments or bad eye witness reports. That doesn't mean the UFOs are Aliens. I give that something ranging between 1 and 10% depending on my mood on a given day. But it seems to me a major puzzle no matter what it is. And it should change all of our lives more than it does. So last year when we were talking, you mentioned we're referring to the John Brennan episode where this came up. And you I had not listened to the episode yet, but you said, you know, John Brennan talks about UFOs. It's going to be big. And it was quite big. It got picked up a lot. And yes, you were on Ancient Aliens season 16 episode nine. Were they nice to me? Or did they mock me? They throw to the clip, but it's it's very odd to see you and John Brennan on conversation with Tyler in this studio. Virtually you're in the studio Brennan virtual, but you're just sitting there and Brennan is talking about aliens. And Marginal Revolution University is now in a Nobel lecture, right? It's a strange world we live in. This is all going to plan. In other words, this is very much in the 10 year plan for Mercatus Center comms. And I'm glad to see it's paying off. Whose simulation are we living in? Right? That's the updating we need. So actually, that was a Twitter question. I'll go ahead and ask it. Are we living in a simulation? This was prompted by the David Deutsch conversation. I'm never sure what it means to be living in a simulation. So if there's a high school kid with a project, the project is to simulate a lot of beings, then it's well defined. But is the universe as a whole a simulation? I don't think has a comparably clear answer. If you view the universe as somehow just being about computation in the broadest sense of the word, it seems under all scenarios, the universe as a whole properly construed is a kind of simulation. So in that sense, are we living in a simulation? Almost certainly. Are we the product of somebody's experiment? That seems less likely to me. I simply think that civilizations tend to perish before they can create these truly grand simulations. So the Bayesian reasoning of, well, each civilization creates so many civilizations, you need to reason backwards and assume you're in one. I don't think that works. So basically no. But the medieval point that in some sense, the universe is a simulation in the mind of God. Can you treat the mind of God as a simulation and so on? At the macro level, people, I think, are confusing those two questions rather too quickly. Has Robin Hansen's paper on grabby aliens influenced you at all on this in terms of like civilizational collapse and things like that? I think in Robin's work on grabby aliens, he's trying to infer too much from seeing nothing. In my view, we know so little about the parameters of the problem that what we can infer from seeing nothing is pretty close to nothing. And we don't quite see nothing, right? So you asked me about UFOs before. Maybe that's only a 1% chance that it's some product of an alien civilization. But no, I think we are mostly in the dark when it comes to grand speculations about the universe and how settled it is with life. So I don't agree with Robin's work, but I'm glad he did it. It's very thought provoking. Yeah. And so we may be in the dark about whether we're alone in the universe and the future of civilization. But we're less in the dark about some predictions you made this time last year. So I thought we could revisit them and see how they fared. Let's try. Let's hope I can remember the actual reality as well as the prediction. So last year, I asked when you'd have your first normal movie theater experience where you just buy a ticket, you show up, you don't know anyone else. You're not renting. And don't rent out the whole theater, which is what I was doing. Correct. Okay. You suggested it would just be like three weeks after your second dose. So like or whenever you had achieve full immunity. Do you remember when you saw that first movie and what it was? I don't remember what the movie was. I strongly expect I went to the movies as soon as I could, which would be like two, three weeks after the second dose. I think my second dose was a March first. So probably sometime in March, there wasn't much to see, you know, but I was willing to see crap. But I don't remember. How many movies did you see in a theater this year? Roughly? I would guess 30. 30. Fair number. I saw three. You have small children. Yes. And one of them was with the small child. And it was a great experience of her first movie theater experience. So it was fun to have the opportunity to do that. That was in fact my first back to the movies experience was watching Ryan Last Dragon for anyone who's wondering at home. I went on a binge once I could. What can I say? Intertemporal substitution, right? Yeah. So I asked about the first in person conversation with Tyler in general, first one on one interview in person. You suggested it would be in February. In fact, it was in June, and it was with Alexander the Great. That was outside. He lives outside. Yeah, it would have been, it would have had to be in person and outside, regardless of COVID. Correct. So I hadn't foreseen that. He is a man without permanent residence. Is that the? No fixed address. No fixed address. True of us all in the longer run. Yeah. And then in terms of a live CWT, where we have a live audience, we both thought we would do one in 2021. But in fact, the first one we're doing is going to be in January. And that is going to be just for Mercatus, folks. It's not even going to be open to the public. It will still be somewhat of a closed event. We didn't foresee Delta, right? Like many other people. Otherwise, I think we would have had one. Yeah. So I was going to ask, what, what does, what did those predictions about CWT in particular reveal to you about the state of what we were assuming would come in 2021? Well, a second doses were becoming available. My modal prediction was that there wouldn't be a major new variant of import. I certainly was aware of the possibility. But I thought by very late in the year, we'd have a, you know, vaccine mandate and have in and maybe not huge audience somewhere for a guest. But with Delta and now Omicron, it's still not going to happen for a while. That's what I got wrong. Right. Okay, let's go through the numbers on conversation with Tyler. So this year we released. So this will be the last episode of the year. And we'll have released 27 episodes with a possibility of a 28, 28, because you're potentially doing a bonus episode with Russ Roberts. Correct. So if that release is in December, that'll be the 28th of the year. How many do you think we did in person? Is it zero? No, it's not zero because there's Alexander the Great. Oh, David Rubinstein, Alexander the Great. So I guess I'll say two. And you're missing David Sallie three. Of course, David Sallie. That was a good episode in his studio. Right. Yes. Obviously, I think you would have predicted for reasons we've just gone over that we would have done more in person. But and we could have done more, but it just turned out to be okay enough to do them not in person. And other people were afraid even if we weren't. Right. And I think like a lot of people were learning that that the the benefits to remote are the logistics are easier, the access is greater. And so I would expect going forward, it'll still be we'll save the in person, maybe for special guests. But but the remote has really worked out well in terms of giving us access to a more diverse set of guests. It's easier to be snippy with people remote that may be good or it may be bad. But I find that's one difference. But for me, a big motive in doing these is getting to meet the people. So remote, in that sense, makes it less desirable for me, I'm still going to do them. But I miss meeting all the people. Yeah. And I like airports actually. Really, I genuinely honestly do. And yet I seem to recall, in your interview with Larissa McFarker, you talked about how if you could have like one sort of super power ability, I can't quite remember how it was framed, but you said just eliminating like instantly being able to travel to a place. Oh, sure. But that's like getting to Uzbekistan. So if we're like flying to Albany to see Lydia Davis or something, it's not nearly as hard. And I wouldn't say I like flying, but I do like airports. Yeah, airports are underrated, I agree. And the food in them has gotten better and better. What's your favorite airport for food? Well, Singapore, but Chicago, I like pizza and so on. Most airports now are pretty good for food. They're good enough. Yeah, Atlanta used to have a very good restaurant. One flew south. I'm not sure how good it is in the past few years, but it was excellent. Okay, so in August, you wrote a podcast really works when it is the dramatic unfolding of a story and mood between the guest and host. And in September, we had our most downloaded episode. That was Amiya Srinivasan. Yes. What was your intended story or mood there? And how do you think it diverged from what was actually perceived by the audience? She gave much more what you might call fundamental pushback to my questions than I was expecting. So I thought it made for a very good podcast. I really liked it. I think she's super smart. If someone wants to sort of fight a war over the terms of discourse, my view is bring it on, you know, one should respect that. But I thought it would be much more a kind of internal exploration of aspects of different arguments. And it wasn't it was, how can you even ask this kind of question? Response from her. So that was a bit new for conversations with Tyler. But again, that's great. One of my favorite episodes of the year. And the people either hated it, or got very upset at her or some of her fans maybe hated me. But that's a sign it had some resonance, right? It did have resonance. I mean, I was not aware of it until I looked at the stats. I knew that there was chatter about it online. But it's the most downloaded and also the retention that the amount people listen to was quite high to. So they weren't listening to it and turning it off and discuss they were in disgust. They were actually listening to almost all of it, in fact, on average. Many people are remembering that podcast. That's my sense. People still talk to me about it, write me about it. Have you thought about your, how would you describe your interview style? And I'm tired in particular with, with her, do you think that it was your style as an interviewer that caused that to go somewhat off the rails? I don't know. I think my style for my conversation with her was a little bit different. So if someone does philosophy at an abstract level, they're virtually asking or forcing you to challenge them more than would be the case, say if you're interviewing a CEO or a general. So I thought it was a kind of respect to her argument to try to challenge its premises empirically or otherwise. And that's not the case with, say, you know, Piero Paolo Barberi, who has a startup, and I asked him about his sector, but I was asking him to explain to us how it works. So it was very different. But relative to her being a philosopher, I don't think it was so different. I think that's how you should interview a philosopher you respect. Yeah, I think you could say that your interview style is very masculine, because it is, it tends to be more abstract and about getting to the point. And what do you really think about this? But also that's a more philosophical approach. And so one thing or Socratic, yeah, right. And so one thing I think drove some of the reaction to it, the negative reaction was exactly that, which is, there was a feeling that it sort of didn't follow what the standard should be given her profession. Do you think that's fair? Or, as you said, you were happy she pushed back. But should people do that more? When people interview philosophers, they should take them more seriously, and actually try to get it whether their propositions are correct. It seems to me too many people stick in the typical interview mode of tell us what's in your latest book or what's up with these in cells anyway, or, you know, how does this argument imply feminism should evolve for the next century, which are like, okay, questions, but they're too open ended. They're inviting a kind of blathery response, right? So when I interviewed Richard Prum, the ornithologist, anyone who does birds, you figure is looking for some kind of specific pointed questions about birds. And he got those. So maybe he was the only one who got an interview like that. But relative to him being an ornithologist, he still got the Tyler Cowan style. Yeah. So the one thing I'll say is I was very happy to see that it was in fact so well downloaded and listened to. We definitely see in the stats that listeners are not willing to give certain episodes a chance. And one of the factors is maybe the topic's a little more obscure, but it's pretty clear that one of the factors is also whether they're a woman. They're just one of the great injustices of podcast life under reported. So I will say this year it's better news. I think actually the the female guests who are featured this year, Patricia Farah, Sarah Park act, they all did pretty well. But perhaps it was also aided by the fact that they were talking about things that speaks to a typically male audience. So it was like the classics and Newton and archaeology. But when you have someone who's talking about feminism, well, maybe I'll skip that one. And that's not what I want. I already know what that's going to be about. I think on average, the women on conversations with Tyler do better than the men. And the difference on average is they're rarely or never willing to just be a blowhard. They always feel they have to say something of actual substance. And it's interesting that that is the difference. But I prefer the podcast with women as a whole. Yeah. And I would say as a simple heuristic, if you are considering you listener, if you're considering skipping an episode, that is in fact a good sign that you should absolutely listen to it. I think that only for our podcast, right? Not for other people's podcast. Fair enough. I'll say for our podcast, though, I feel like that's been generally true for me. It's a pretty good. You are subscribing to a show in part because you are recognizing a the host's ability to curate or select people who are interesting. Certainly for conversation with Tyler, but for a number of other interview shows as well. And so by virtue of that guest being on the podcast, that's a certain certification that you should spend some time with him. Now, for other shows, there's more of the grind to production. Like we have to get an episode out. Maybe this person just got a book to promote and I don't have a personal connection, but you're very much on the record of saying you don't have anyone on. You don't actually want to learn from. And so that may not be true anymore, by the way. Some people ask you and you figure you should do it. Like they're very famous. Like how can I say no? It may bring in some new listeners, but I'm not sure I can say that about every podcast this year. To to, yes, to say that another way. I think if you were looking for the overrated episodes of conversation with Tyler, you would not be looking at the women correct this year. And it's the famous people who sometimes are a bit, you know, the ones to be suspicious of you know, compensating differentials, right? So we talked a little bit about overrated. What's your pick for underrated episodes? You know, I don't see the listened to numbers. The Ruth Skir one on Napoleon in 18th century history was excellent. I'm not sure it's like incredibly popular, but that's probably underrated. David Sally, a lot of people just are not connected to the visual arts and painting. That's probably an underrated episode. Richard Prum, the bird guy, I thought he was one of the very best of the year. I agree. And people like Chris Blatman loved it, but I'm not sure in terms of numbers. I thought we had these three in a row. Sarah Parcek, Dana Joy, Shadi Barc, like the three best CWTs in a row ever. And I hope people realize they got that from us. Yeah, I think my two picks would be Richard Prum, which definitely underperformed a little bit. And I think people maybe just said like or anthology birds. What do I care? But you're really missing quite a lot by missing by skipping that episode. And then the other one I would submit is Dana Joy. And I think for me, the thing that unites some of the very good ones, I would count Ruzker in this as well. But Prum, Joya, they all had such a passion and enthusiasm and they so clearly still loved what they were doing. Yes. That it is just impossible not to pick up on that enthusiasm and just decide like I think I should after I listened to Prum, I started like looking at all the birds in my backyard. Like I really need to I have like 20 varieties of birds in my backyard. Who would have thought? Joya, I I realized like I felt like my life was impoverished because I couldn't appreciate the things on a level that I mean, he just seems like a person who consumes that you call them an information billionaire. And it's exactly right that he just seems to have such this wealth that he knows how to use listening to those was was wonderful. And Dana Dana Joya, along with possibly Neil Ferguson, he's the guest we've had where you can ask him literally anything and he has a good coherent answer. And there aren't many guests like that. And I appreciate that he's one of them. And he's to the point with it as well. And what's remarkable is he sent you an email afterwards saying thank you was a wonderful interview. And he said that he had felt like he was in a fog. And this conversation helped him kind of break out a little bit of that fog. And it's it's remarkable not just because that interview for someone who was in a fog. That interview is remarkable. But also the fact that, you know, we're all in a fog. And so empathizing with him in that way that even this guy who gets so much joy out of things was still feeling a little kind of down on himself was kind of amazing to me. All right, are you up for some name that production function? Your favorite segment? I'm hardly going to get any of these correct. Your favorite segment? Listeners as well. OK, let's see. OK, first one. I think I've always been good at finding things. I don't know if it's because I'm just good at pattern recognition. But even when I was five, six, seven years old, I could go to a whole patch of clover and reach in and find the four leaf clover. That sounds like Sarah Parczyk, the space archaeologist. That's right. Did I actually get one? You got it right. So she's a space archaeologist. So her visual acuity with pattern recognition is something that she still uses to this day. So who would have thought you can pick a four leaf clover out and make a make a career out of it? All right, one for one. Good job. I have that same ability, by the way. I can see like a big shelf full of books and immediately find like a single title. Do you think it's is that a general ability is a very specific to like text, for instance? I think it's general to the visual. Not only text is my sense. So I got a chessboard. That's not text, but I have reasonable ability there as well to see a combination. Say yeah. All right. Second one. This is an anti production function. I'll tell you what I am not very good at. I don't think I'm the most inspiring or compelling person. I've gotten a lot of practice at it over the years, but in terms of the early days, in terms of fundraising, pitching people, recruiting, I was never very good at that B B minus. I was enough to get to the next stage, but I never ended up being world class. Is that Brian Armstrong? That's Brian Armstrong. He's underrating himself, but that's fine. Yeah, he he gave himself some credit for, you know, talent recognition and managerial ability. I think it was, but he just doesn't think he's got the sort of charisma that he feels like he should. But his earnestness comes through as indeed it did on that podcast. And he may be underrating how much other people value his earnestness. All right. Two for two. All right. Here's the third one. The instrument that I play is really just dialogue and discourse. I've got a strongly evolutionary mindset in this notion of emergence. I think that if you're doing something that's never been done before, you have to be very humble, recognizing that you don't know what the right thing to do is, but also nobody else does. In that milieu, you need to create a culture where people are willing to say things and be wrong so that others can say other things and over time, whatever is right can emerge. I have no idea. A new bar of fine. You're right. OK. He was talking about that in the context of running Moderna and many other companies. Allowing people the scope to make bad arguments because it gets you to the good stuff, which I think is a theme we were talking before the recording of Get Back, the Beatles documentary of just kind of getting the sludge and just Paul was big on like we just got to play it poorly so that we can get somewhere good. That's right. And it worked for him. Yeah. New bar was also really good because we titled that one The Permission to Leap on The Permission to Leap. That's what he's one of his core ideas. And it was this idea that there comes a point where societal factors, policy factors, whatever give you that permission to take a big step. And in that case, it was this vaccine development. Why have we not leapt more in 2021? It feels like we were heading in when we had this conversation a year ago, like vaccines were approved, took longer than it should, but we were looking forward to widespread vaccine availability and surely things would get better. And it still feels like we're in a new administration. It's a new policy regime. It still feels like we're not able to make the leaps. The permission to leap is not there. What do you think that is? I think a lot of older institutions are broken, maybe permanently. So they're just crippled or not able to do anything other than routine. But I suppose I see the variance in our ability to leap is having gone up. So the leapers leap more quickly and leap higher in the biomedical sciences. We're seeing many different innovations against malaria, against dengue, against sickle cell anemia, CRISPR. So there's plenty of leaping. But on average, I don't know. I think this this average is over idea. We're seeing an innovation as well. Well, I think I think the innovators are doing it well. But you would think that we would see recognize some things that are like, wow, we've been maybe keeping things a little too tied down. We're a little too risk averse in terms of a societal or policy response. And I guess I'm just I'm still confused that we've seen this miraculous development of the vaccines. And still, there's there's this hesitancy to let like, I would suspect that these new vaccines like malaria vaccine will come more quickly. But still, it will take far too long. I think there's some change in the news cycle where people just don't care about so many things. They may care for a short while and then it passes. And then the new thing is here. So attention switching is much different than it used to be. So if it's something where you need a lot of people behind you to get something done, like to get 90 percent vaccinated, that seems much harder than ever before. But if the mass of people, you simply need them to tolerate what you're doing. And if the law is not hindering you, that may in some ways be easier than it used to be, because the attention switching is so rapid, it's harder for them to prove an obstacle. Now, we have a bunch of problems, vaccinating people, testing, climate change, where you need active participation from a lot of people. And there we're having problems. But the other class of innovations, I think we're kicking butt. So it's a weird world. Higher variance, I think is the key. All right, you're three for three on production function. Can we keep the trend? All right, fourth one. People who stayed with me in my house have told me that I have a habit of which I was completely unaware that I sit upstairs where I'm sitting now in my study, and I work on my computer. Then about every half an hour, there's an enormous bang, and I stamp around the world around the room swearing. The people in the house are terribly worried that something has gone awfully wrong. Then I get back to work and everything resumes as usual for the next half an hour. And then it all happens again. I was completely unaware that I did that until several people have told me that I do, but it seems to work. That sounds like Neil Ferguson because he has a summer house in Wales, right? In Wales, things go back. I agree that it sounds like Neil Ferguson, but you're wrong. But I'm wrong. You broke the streak. Oh, who is it? This is Patricia Farah. Ah, OK. Yeah, surprising answer, I think, because she... But same country. Yes, same energy, yes. This is my favorite from the year, I think, because I think actually it describes an element of my own production function is that I talk to myself and I often get very loud and obnoxious and sometimes I scare other people that are around me and have no idea I'm doing it. So me and Farah got that in common. OK, let's do two more and then we'll we'll call it quits. My favorite onion article was titled NSF studies show science is hard. What is people's response to that? The fact that science is hard. A lot of people will go and say, well, if I'm going to expend a lot of energy, I better do something that somebody else thinks is important. They look to the sides and they think that doing something somebody else thinks is important is their mission. I think about the research subject and I think what is the coolest thing that I could do with my time now or this day this next day ahead of me that would solve something. I have no idea on that one. Maybe I'll guess Daniel Carpenter, but that's a stab in the dark. His research subject that I removed for context clue is birds. Then we know Richard Prum. Richard Prum. So Richard Prum's basic his basic point was he loves birds. He loves birds and that guides everything he does. He doesn't particularly care about grand research agendas or revealing the answer to big questions. He just wants to discover something cool about birds. What do you think? Is that a general approach that should be followed or is that maybe unique to or anthology? Richard is a great person to study, I think, to learn how to be successful and that is to care more than the others. You have to do more than that, but it's a great starting point. All right, last one. The most important thing you can do in that remaining part of your life must be intellectual succession and planning. Academic life, in my view, has gone off the rails in ways that I never would have imagined in the 1980s when I was starting out. We need new institutions and I want to spend more time on institution building and less time on book writing and whatever time is left to me and that should strike terror in my enemy's hearts. And that is Neil Ferguson. The terror in the horse is like the whole Scottish thing. Sir Walter Scott, you know, the thump in the attic in the in the Welsh summer home. And he's gluing us in that University of Austin is ready to come. Right. And I heard him say that. I'm thinking, so what's he actually going to do? And I didn't know. And now I know. So you're an advisor or what's your capacity on the University of Austin? I'm on the advisory board. I don't govern. I don't work on it any particular day. I was asked to be on the advisory board, keen to see what they do. I think innovation and higher ed should be encouraged. But I'm not part of the process. So a listener on Twitter asked, what do you think is going to be different there based on what you see at the University of Austin? You know, we're very close to T sub zero in University of Austin planning. So I'm not sure how much anyone knows. But I think they will genuinely teach classic works. They will genuinely court STEM majors and give them a rigorous education. I think they will attract a fair number of students. The push I gave them in the chat I had with their president was to really be a right to really be a radical university and not just not be woke, but to change pedagogy quite a bit in innovative ways that took a lot of chances. I genuinely have no idea how much they will or will not be doing that. But that was my advice as someone on the advisory board. So if it were just like a better St. John's with more STEM majors, well, that would be great. I love St. John's as it is. Maybe they're underperforming relative to what they could be and could do. And they ought to think big and have founder energy and overturn the world. We'll see. So speaking of founder energy, if we're sort of thinking about it in terms of starting a company or venture capital or whatever, I think one thing that worries me about it, maybe it's too early in it, but I don't see people dropping everything to join it. And they're not, they don't have the skin in the game. So, so far, maybe I'm wrong, but so far, none of the big professors or whatever have revoked tenure and said like I'm full-time University of Austin. Is that a concern? I don't know. I think the first thing I said is we're very close to T sub zero and the planning horizon. It's just so, so early in the game. I'm not sure they will succeed by getting well-known people to join. That strategy itself might be a mistake. Most well-known people are somewhat older, nothing against that. But it could be they've revolutionized the world by getting a few 23-year-old YouTubers on board, right? Right. And maybe they should read your forthcoming book on how to spot talent and use that to recruit new professors or non-professors, as the case may be. The Beatles didn't try to hire Frank Sinatra, did they? No, of course not. Nothing against Frank, but look. They did joke about getting Eric Clapton at one point to replace George Harris. They didn't do it. He played guitar while my guitar gently weeps, but I don't even like his solo that much. So Billy Preston was a really good move. I mean, he was fantastic on all those songs, both on the albums and in the documentary. A much better temporary acquisition than Eric Clapton was, I think. Yeah. So I referenced your book. Last year, I think you said a draft was finished, but sort of that was where it stood. Any updates on the book with Daniel Gross on talent? The book is called Talent. It's being published by St. Martin's on May 22nd. About a week ago, we did all the final, final proofreading on the galleys. So the jacket copy and all that, it is done, delivered, ready to be published. It will be out in, what, five months, May. All right. I'm very excited. And Daniel has been absolutely wonderful to work with. Okay. So now I thought we could, another listener on Twitter asked if we could revisit some of your picks, culture picks from 2011. I did that two years ago since it was the end of the decade. So we went back to 2009 in that case and looked at your pop culture picks from 2009. We didn't do it last year, but since he asked, I went back and looked at your picks from 2011. Let's do it. So movies, books, and music. Do you remember anything from your picks then? No, I have no idea like what was in what year. Some things are in iconic years, like Sergeant Pepper was 1967. But whether it was 2012 or 2011, no idea, especially for books. So we'll do movies first. The big one is that you just come out of the gate saying I didn't like anything from Hollywood or like even Indies in 2011. So almost all your picks are foreign. The decline of Hollywood had already started. There's so many sequels, a trend that has continued. So many tentpole franchises, right? Mostly they're boring. Yeah. So I mean, but how does that compare to this year though? I think a lot of your picks this year are fairly mainstream. I mean, there's Dune, Get Back. What else have you got? Menari. I mean, they're pretty standard fare, like things you would see on pretty much any critics list. I don't think Menari is standard Hollywood fare. Maybe it's standard Indie fare. Get Back is eight hours. It's a New Zealand director. It's reassembled from footage of another movie. It's a documentary of a documentary. It's a fundamentally strange thing. Dune took forever to make. It's a French-Canadian director. Movies like Running Commentary on Islam. It's tentpole in the sense that the novel is what, from 1965? But it's a weird pick and it's not on a lot of best doubleists this year, which I find baffling. It's highly imperfect. But to not put that movie on your list at all, just for the soundtrack, the visuals, seems to me criminal. Dune was another one of the three I saw this year. I was glad I did it. Okay, let's go through your 2011 list really quickly. Sure. All right. Number one, in no particular order, I think, but number one was Incendies. Do you remember what that's about? That is by the same director of Dune. Oh, is that Denis? Yeah, that's his breakthrough movie. It's incredible. I didn't know that. I'd never heard of it. So yeah, French-Canadian movie, mostly set in Lebanon. Highly recommended. Oh, look at that. Whether or not you liked Dune. So that was a good pick. It's held up very well. The director has proven his merits repeatedly. In the market, it agrees. I'm a fan of Denis Villeneuve. Obviously, a rival was great. Oh, I can't think of the Mexican drug movie. I can't think of the name off the top of my head. Was it Sicario? Sicario, also. That was interesting, yes. He is one of the only directors today where when he now makes something, I know I will go and see him. Well, you must see Incendies, but so far I'm on a roll. What's next? All right. Number two, Uncle Boone Me, who can recall his past lives. Possibly the best movie of the last 20 years. I'm impressed by myself. It's a Thai movie. It's very hard to explain. I've seen it three times since. And a lot of other people have it as either their favorite movie ever or like in a top 10 status. But a large screen is a benefit. And if you're seeing the movie, pay very close attention to its sounds and to the sonic world it creates, not just the images. All right. Number three, of Gods and Men. You remember that one? Yeah. I don't know. The first two picks were better. That's a loosely based on the lives of some monks in Algeria. French Christian monks. Oh, I thought it was a different movie. Okay. That was pretty good. Yeah. That was good. Number four, even The Rain, a Spanish movie filmed in Bolivia. You remember that one? Yes, but not well. There's a lot of culturally specific movies that draw you in when you watch. Maybe they're not that universal. They're very good movies, but they don't stick with you. That's fine. Yeah. Number five, Melancholia. Beautiful visuals. Maybe too overblown, but an interesting film. And then a couple other you gave a shout out to. You said Drive with Ryan Gosling had excellent moments and scenes. Moneyball was a good, but not great movie. It was a great movie about business. It was a very good Hollywood movie, but you've already read the book. You know how it's going to turn out. It's all very stereotypical, super well executed, pretty good dialogue in the old school sense of the term. But again, it didn't stick with me, but Moneyball is a concept. I just wrote a book on talent, my goodness. So there should be a movie version of that, and that was as good of a movie version as we might have expected. So it's still a thumbs up. All right. Moving to best books. You had a number of lists of best books, but you had one post that you said, here's essentially your top three across genre. Number one, Stephen Pinker, Better Angels of Our Nature. That book is still talked about, right? I would say a very good pick. Maybe I'm more skeptical about the Pinker worldview than I was back then, but an excellent book. Walter Isaacs and Steve Jobs, his bio. You know, I have since heard from people who knew Jobs and or new people who knew Jobs that the portrait was not entirely accurate. I can't assess that myself. It's still a wonderfully written book about a very important figure, but maybe he's too negative on Jobs. Maybe Jobs just wasn't a foot stomping tyrant who yelled at everyone. He got a lot done. I have an iPhone still in my pocket. So I would say maybe Jobs has aged better than the book, but it's still a great book to read. Just take it with a grain of salt. What do you think of Isaacson generally as a biographer? I know a lot of people like, I think, his Leonardo da Vinci biography. I think if you're looking to read one book on Leonardo, it's a very good first or only book to read. But if you've read, say, more than 10 books on Leonardo, while it's fine, it doesn't add that much. So I'm happy to recommend it. But it wasn't for me a great experience, but it's a well-done book. Who's your pick for best biographer living, let's say? Is it Rusker? Oh, living. You know, I'm right now reading the Andrew Roberts biography of King George III, the last king of America. And Robert says this wonderful book on Napoleon and a book on Churchill I haven't read yet, but what people think is excellent. So I don't know if he's top, but he's top in my mind right now. He's done great work. And the King George book is excellent. All right. And the last one on your best books list, Haruki Murakami, IQ 84. I would like to read it again, which is a positive sign. I read some of what I read then, maybe all of it in German, because it came out first in German. So for me, reading a book in German and English, that's different. But high marks to it into him. And he should have won a Nobel Prize by now. And I say a good pick. All right. I'll run quickly through best music since you had, it looks like, 11 picks for best music. So I'll just run through this really quick. Not 12, 11. All right. In no particular order, Abigail Washburn, City of Refuge. You know, she, I think, is good friends with Sarah Parczyk. Abigail Washburn, I learned. Interesting. She hasn't done as much lately. I think she's been raising children. She's wife of Bella Flack. He just came out with the new CD. Her work has held up very well, especially the integration of, like, Chinese music with bluegrass and old timey and folk sources. Good pick. Licky Lee, Wounded Rhymes. She's a Swedish artist. I haven't followed her lately. She never struck me as a long, trajectory artist. But that's still good work. And she had her own sound. It was emotionally resonant. I'm still happy with that pick. James Blake, couple albums from him. I didn't like his very latest, but his first few are wonderful and create their own sound worlds and had a big impact. Good pick. All right. Let me run through the rest of these and you can react all to them as a mass. Okay. St. Vincent, Strange Mercy. Okay. Well, let me just, she's become a bigger deal. So a good pick. Yeah. You're very, it's a very hipster of you to like have some of these on here. St. Vincent. Okay. Quite a, quite a taste maker. You are Shabazz Palace's black up. Hmm. No, it hasn't stuck with me. I'll say not a great pick. Miles Davis, live in Europe, 1967. Sure. But that's a no brainer. It was just, you know, released that year. This may be my last time singing raw African-American gospel on 45 RPM 1957 to 1982. Well, that's a good pick, but every release in that genre is excellent. So it didn't require any intelligence on my part. Wilco, the whole love. You know, I think I only listen still to two or three Wilco albums, the famous ones, Yankee Hotel, Foxtrot. They've become quite underrated, but they've boiled down to like a two or three hour kind of set rather than their lesser albums. So pretty good pick, but I don't listen to that CD anymore. The Smile Sessions, The Beach Boys. Listen to it all the time, including the cuts on YouTube of Brian Wilson doing that in concert. So incredible pick. One of some of the greatest music ever created in the 20th century. If there was another documentary in the style of Get Back for any other musical group, who would it be? Well, there is a new Brian Wilson documentary, either out or about to come out, which I haven't seen yet. Probably it's incredible. How can it not be? But he still deserves much more attention. He was the person where Paul McCartney thought, this is my rival, right? That says it all. Paul Simon was the other one. Indeed by Oren Ambarche and Jim Orr Work as an LP. Indeed. I can't even place it. What did I say? You said a real winner, beautiful sound. Well, there you go. It must be true then. Opeca Pende, Africa at 78 RPM. Again, that's like the old blues cuts. Old African popular music. Any halfway reasonable collection if it's going to be excellent. Takes no brains or insight. But yes, good pick. All right. And then later in the post you say, the artist I listened to the most this year was probably Lonnie Mack, followed by John Fahey. The two best concerts I saw were, I'm not going to say this properly, but Sati Graha, Sati Graha at the Met. Sure. I saw that with Yana. We had like second row seats right behind Philip Glass. Oh, nice. Saw the back of his head. If we had been producing CWT, you could have leaned over and said, come on, he's on our lists and has been since the beginning. More people should listen to Lonnie Mack, the wham of that Memphis man, one of the very best LPs of its age. Early guitar hero, incredible blues guitarist, has a lot of energy, has founder energy, has a sense of impending death and doom. It doesn't seem that well known, however. Like, do you know it? No. Try it. Okay. All right. So how do you, it seems like you're very, you're standing behind your picks. You feel like they've aged well. Well, I'm not sure it's for me to say, but... I think you can only say how well you feel like your picks have stood up. It sounds like you would make them again, in other words. I would make them again. I'm sure I missed stuff, but they sound somewhat, you know, ahead of their time. Okay. All right. So those are the 2011 picks and now we're going to move on to a grab bag of Twitter questions. Okay. First one, Jeff McCarty on Twitter asks, underrated or overrated, the conversations with Tyler podcast. And I looked and we have a 4.8 star rating out of 5 for what it's worth. Are we overrated or underrated? Or correctly rated? Well, I think a lot of the episodes with women guests are quite underrated. That would be the point I would make. And maybe CEOs are the overall, the somewhat overrated category. So... So at any given point, as we veer in composition of guests, that's how you want to know... That's the best predictor of whether it's over or underrated, correct? Okay. The next question, Dwarkesh Patel. Tyler said a while back that one goal of his podcast was to teach people to ask better questions. Is that still a major goal? And how well does he think the podcast has been able to teach that? Well, apparently you taught him. That's a good question, right? So, yes. N equals one, but yes. Well done, Dwarkesh. All right. Question three from At Still Fewer. Did Deutsch convince you that Popper's philosophy is more profound than you had thought? Do you think he solved the problem of induction, for example? No, Deutsch convinced me that there's often a lot of hot air behind Popper. He didn't argue very well on Popper's behalf. Deutsch is way smarter than I am, but he seemed to me in some fundamental ways a dogmatist and not really able to defend Popper very well. That he's made up his mind and you get a particular kind of emphatic statement. But I thought at the philosophical level his defenses were weak. Someone made a comment, and I wonder if you agree with it, that maybe that's just a casualty of the fact that it's only an hour interview and he simply doesn't have the time. And in general, your style is to kind of make your point and move on. So, does he have the time to maybe go into the depth to give you the deep defense, or does he have to on some level, just assert? I think there are ways, even in a sentence or two, you could show, like, higher depth or defensibility. There's this odd feature of Popperianism. It's a bit like Missessianism. It somehow attracts a lot of dogmatists. I don't know why. I don't think a philosophy that emphasizes fallibility and refutation wouldn't do that, but it does. Okay, next question from at GASCA. Ask the number of ones. I think the one I'll pick is we talked about university curriculum, but if you could do whatever you wanted, how would you change elementary, middle school, high school curricula? I don't think I know enough to say, but intuitively, it strikes me as somewhat absurd that we group together children all of the same age. There's an obvious kind of staggering problem, but ideally you would want younger children always to be interacting with older children, and older children to take on a partial role of teacher mentor, older peer. So the idea that there's, like, the second grade, the third grade, the fourth grade, in my god, I feel that has to be wrong, and you're inducing the kids to bring out the worst in each other. So I don't know how to fix that, but that's where my attention would point on that assumption, that you group by age. Seems barbaric. Somewhere related to that, but you know, you're thinking about how do you spot talent. You also think a lot about mentorship, and you've set up programs that are, to some extent, about mentorship and trying to identify talent. Have you thought much about the role of parenting in bringing out the potential in a child, either for good or for bad? Well, I've been a parent, I mean, still am, but... And now a grandparent. Yana is now grown. So I think what you are and how you are that is more important than anything you tell them, and how you treat your spouse or partner is more important than how you treat them. They will learn by example. Primary contributions tend to be genetic, but at the margin family culture really matters. And you see this, I think it's misleadingly called, like, Tiger Mom Parenting, but whatever you want to call it, it has worked in some way. Now, it's not my style, but it proves parenting style can work, right? And you have to figure out what's a version of that that can work for me. I would agree with you mostly as stated, but I'm in particular thinking too about very young children, because I have two very young children. And I think it is about how you comport yourself and how you interact with your spouse, but also how you treat them and model interactions with them, recognizing that they're not just little adults. And for me, that's one of the hardest things to learn to do is to recognize that a four-year-old simply doesn't have the emotional development say to sort of have a reason discussion on something. And they want a kind of structure from you. They do. Which maybe it's not your intuition to feel totally comfortable providing that, because you're used to being reasonable with other people, right? There are models of education, like progressive model of education, like John Dewey, that I think in part are premised on this notion that as we become adults, we forget what it was like to actually be a child. And that is one of the core challenges of being a parent is to remember what it was like for you when you were really young. Do you think in general, that's an underrated thing that we sort of have this... I mean, how well do you remember how you were at three or four? Very well. It's hard for me to know how well. I have the feeling I've changed less over the years than most people. That I was kind of a bit older, young, and now being older, I'm still somewhat young. But I suspect the main, like market failure you see with parents is just their mode of interaction is driven by narcissism or their own problems within the family unit, rather than concern for the kid. Rather than, well, they can't remember what they would like. I would think that's pretty low on the list of what is going wrong. Do you think it's generally true in the sense that we may be conveniently or just willing to tolerate a certain kind of mistreatment as the wrong word, but we will humiliate our kids in ways that we would never humiliate another adult by, for instance, having a conversation about them and talking about some bad behavior or something. Do you think... I try not to do that. Can I say for sure I've never done that? John Dewey would be proud, yes. Yes, John Dewey would be proud. But I don't find that so difficult to avoid. Like I think in all those ways you should be quite respectful of your kids. Does that suggest that, for instance, should we actually be in some giving, treating kids more seriously and, for instance, thinking about extending voter rights at a younger age and things like that? Or is that just a different question to you? I'm not sure extending voter rights to kids would matter much. There's cozy and bargaining within the family. I would say I'm not opposed, but I'm not for it. It seems to me... Another intuition I have is children feel less in control than you as a parent realize. So in ways that don't even matter, you want to give them chances to feel in control, like of a conversation or an interaction. So just kind of hang back a bit and let them own things and own the structure of your interaction with them more than is typically the case. I don't have any real evidence that that has positive benefit, but I know it's how I act, and it sort of feels to me like at the very least it's good for me. I don't see that it's likely to be harming them, so there you go. All right, moving on. Dallas, fellow producer of Conversation with Tyler, asks, Limp Bizkit's new album, overrated or underrated? Since I haven't heard it, it must be underrated by me, right? But I don't have any other opinion than that. Hi, Dallas. You're sitting right here. You should check it out, I think, and let us know. Report back. All right, user at BA Marker, BA Marker, I don't know how to say it. What were the most important things you learned this year? Have you changed your mind? Why? I don't know if I would call them things I've learned. I think I have a new favorite saying that I didn't have at the beginning of the year, and its context is that which is scarce. Please don't elaborate further. If I go to events with people, which I do pretty often, at COVID times, it used to be I would go to hear new and daring ideas that I hadn't heard before. And, you know, that's great. But I think especially with Twitter, it's very hard to hear new and daring ideas you haven't heard before. So why are you listening to other people? The way they put things, the way they argue, the way they paint the bigger picture, you're getting a lot more context for ideas you're somewhat already familiar with. And that context is important. Or by studying other cultures, you're getting context for understanding people or situations or places. And that that at the margin is what I'm trying to get more of, is more context rather than new ideas. So realizing that's more important than I thought, at least for me right now, has been maybe my biggest mental change. But almost by definition, it's not a new idea. It's like more context for context. I wonder if sometimes the reason why we don't attract more listeners to the show is because there is a certain orientation that has to happen to appreciate conversations with Tyler. Like if you sort of get what you're doing, it's very easy. But I know from talking to people, if you just pull up a random episode and listen to it, I think a lot of people do not have that context to sort of understand. It's deeply bizarre, right? And I think that's another good example. Context is that which is scarce. So there's ways you can write where your readers have that context or ways you can podcast where they do and then ways where they don't. One thing with Twitter, like Twitter itself pulls quotations out of context, but they encourage people to read pieces that are removed from the context of a blog or a particular magazine or newspaper. And that's very much a mixed blessing. So context arguably has become a lot more scarce with social media. And that to me means there's high gains from being able to fill in those pieces. But if this is a podcast that people need context for and I strongly suspect that it is, I think that's what we need more of. And if fewer people listen, I'm not going to say great, but I don't want to explain everything from scratch. Like the first question I think ought to be jumping right in. Right. One thing that we're actually thinking about on marketing is how we can do that. So we're not asking you to do that, but we might try to find a way to sort of give people that guide to get into the show. Because while I respect these sort of like, if you don't like it, get out of your attitude. We also think that this is a good product and we want more people to enjoy it. So we want to give people the tools to enjoy it. One point guide to understanding conversations with Tyler. Yes. If anyone asked what the book is about, he will never give you a chance to explain what you're about. The first question will be very pointed and specific. Yes. Yes. If anyone out there wants to take a first stab at that, I think longtime listeners will have no problem putting that together for the benefit of new listeners. Last question for me before we close. Related to this context thing, given that you're searching more for context, how has your information diet changed? I mean, are you spending less time in the past year? How has your information diet changed in the past year? Are you spending less time on the sort of streams of social media or trying to change the composition there? I don't think it's changed all that much. I've spent a lot more time reading about the visual arts and studying images and looking at the visual arts. That would be the biggest change. That's maybe somewhat of a reversion to how I had been earlier rather than a completely new thing. But that's what I would pick as what's been different. And you wrote this book. One of your best books for this year was this guide to Sub-Saharan African architecture. And why include that? What was it about that spoke to you? Obviously, Africa is a very important continent. It's a very hard continent to learn a lot about. It's hard to get there, not always an easy experience, so many countries, even apart from COVID issues. And here are these seven books, which I'm not done reading yet, by the way, but I will finish the whole series, that just teach you the whole history of Africans building things. And that to me is, in many ways, a more fundamental history than just reading another political history of Africa, where they all go through more or less the same events. Well, apartheid fell, and the Biafran War in Nigeria, and this and that. And that's all very important. But at the end of the day, if you're interested in Africa at all, that is not what is scarce. There's something more nitty-gritty, more contextual on the ground. And these books make a very serious attempt to give you that, and they have excellent photographs, and they cover the entire African continent, and also give you a sense of diversity and lived experience, but also institutionally. How did these things actually happen? Where did the influences come from? What was the role of colonialism? Why are Finnish architects like prominent in some parts of Africa and not others, and so on? So I thought it's a pretty remarkable series and one of my topics for Book of the Year. So architecture, visual art as an entry point into learning about new fields or areas. Correct. All right. Before we go, I want to extend thanks to everyone who works on the Conversations with Tyler team. It's not just me and Dallas and Morgan and some of the other names you might hear on the podcast from time to time. It's Kate Brown, Kate Delanoi, Mike Hopper, Sloan Shearman, Caroline Bear, Karen Plant, Christina Beehe, Haley Larson, Anna McVeigh, Ashley Schiller. All of these people have contributed significant time to the show in the past year. And so on behalf of Tyler and myself, thank you to the CWT team. We appreciate your efforts and we look forward to another year of conversations. I'm very lucky to work with all of you. Thank you all who work on CWT very much. And for any listeners or readers out there who support us, your support is very greatly appreciated.