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ALL EPISODES
Three years after her first appearance, Chinese food expert Fuchsia Dunlop joins Tyler for a delicious homestyle Chinese meal. Tyler and Ted discuss the history and evolution of music, the role of music in political protests, new incentives in the music industry, how DANIEL CARPENTER ON SMART REGULATION (EP. 121 Daniel Carpenter is one of the world’s leading experts on regulation and the foremost expert on the US Food and Drug Administration. A professor of Government at Harvard University, he’s conducted extensive research on regulation and government organizations, as well as on the development of political institutions in the United States. MARK CARNEY ON CENTRAL BANKING AND SHARED VALUES (EP. 123 Whether it’s ingratiating himself as a public servant in a foreign country, managing a central bank, or addressing climate change, he’s seen the power of shared objectives and the importance of value alignment in addressing critical and complex problems. As the global economy attempts to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic, Carney has ERIC KAUFMANN ON IMMIGRATION, IDENTITY, AND THE LIMITS OFSEE MORE ON CONVERSATIONSWITHTYLER.COM SUJATHA GIDLA ON BEING AN ANT AMONGST THE ELEPHANTS (EP Sujatha Gidla was an untouchable in India, but moved to the United States at the age of 26 and is now the first Indian woman to be employed as a conductor on the New York City Subway. In her memoir Ants Among Elephants, she explores the antiquities of her mother, her uncles, and other members of her family against modern India’slandscape.
DANA GIOIA ON BECOMING AN INFORMATION BILLIONAIRE (EP. 119 You can also watch a video of the conversation here.. Read the full transcript. TYLER COWEN: Hello, everyone.Welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.Today I have Dana Gioia.The way I think of Dana is he is the only guest I have ever had who can answer all of my questions, but he does have another biography: at the top of the biography it reads, “Dana Gioia is an internationally acclaimed ANNIE DUKE ON POKER, PROBABILITIES, AND HOW WE MAKE 23. Raj Chetty. For Annie Duke, the poker table is a perfect laboratory to study human decision-making — including her own. “It really exposes you to the way that you’re thinking,” she says, “how hard it is to avoid decision traps, even when you’re perfectly well aware that those decision traps exist. And how easy itis for like
REID HOFFMAN ON SYSTEMS, LEVERS, AND QUIXOTIC QUESTS (EP Episode. 69. Hal Varian. When Reid Hoffman creates a handle for some new network or system, his usual choice is “Quixotic .”. At an early age, his love of tabletop games inspired him to think of life as a heroic journey, where people come together in order to accomplish lofty things. This framing also prompted him to consider the rules and SHADI BARTSCH ON THE CLASSICS AND CHINA (EP. 120SEE MORE ON CONVERSATIONSWITHTYLER.COM CONVERSATIONS WITH TYLER You can’t imitate a worldview. But you can form your own by listening and learning (and learning how to listen). On the Conversations with Tyler podcast, produced by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, celebrated polymath and academic economist Tyler Cowen explores the minds and methods of today’s top thinkers. Tyler’s intense research leads to stimulating and surprisingALL EPISODES
Three years after her first appearance, Chinese food expert Fuchsia Dunlop joins Tyler for a delicious homestyle Chinese meal. Tyler and Ted discuss the history and evolution of music, the role of music in political protests, new incentives in the music industry, how DANIEL CARPENTER ON SMART REGULATION (EP. 121 Daniel Carpenter is one of the world’s leading experts on regulation and the foremost expert on the US Food and Drug Administration. A professor of Government at Harvard University, he’s conducted extensive research on regulation and government organizations, as well as on the development of political institutions in the United States. MARK CARNEY ON CENTRAL BANKING AND SHARED VALUES (EP. 123 Whether it’s ingratiating himself as a public servant in a foreign country, managing a central bank, or addressing climate change, he’s seen the power of shared objectives and the importance of value alignment in addressing critical and complex problems. As the global economy attempts to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic, Carney has ERIC KAUFMANN ON IMMIGRATION, IDENTITY, AND THE LIMITS OFSEE MORE ON CONVERSATIONSWITHTYLER.COM SUJATHA GIDLA ON BEING AN ANT AMONGST THE ELEPHANTS (EP Sujatha Gidla was an untouchable in India, but moved to the United States at the age of 26 and is now the first Indian woman to be employed as a conductor on the New York City Subway. In her memoir Ants Among Elephants, she explores the antiquities of her mother, her uncles, and other members of her family against modern India’slandscape.
DANA GIOIA ON BECOMING AN INFORMATION BILLIONAIRE (EP. 119 You can also watch a video of the conversation here.. Read the full transcript. TYLER COWEN: Hello, everyone.Welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.Today I have Dana Gioia.The way I think of Dana is he is the only guest I have ever had who can answer all of my questions, but he does have another biography: at the top of the biography it reads, “Dana Gioia is an internationally acclaimed ANNIE DUKE ON POKER, PROBABILITIES, AND HOW WE MAKE 23. Raj Chetty. For Annie Duke, the poker table is a perfect laboratory to study human decision-making — including her own. “It really exposes you to the way that you’re thinking,” she says, “how hard it is to avoid decision traps, even when you’re perfectly well aware that those decision traps exist. And how easy itis for like
REID HOFFMAN ON SYSTEMS, LEVERS, AND QUIXOTIC QUESTS (EP Episode. 69. Hal Varian. When Reid Hoffman creates a handle for some new network or system, his usual choice is “Quixotic .”. At an early age, his love of tabletop games inspired him to think of life as a heroic journey, where people come together in order to accomplish lofty things. This framing also prompted him to consider the rules and SHADI BARTSCH ON THE CLASSICS AND CHINA (EP. 120SEE MORE ON CONVERSATIONSWITHTYLER.COM RUSS ROBERTS AND TYLER ON COVID-19 (EP. 90 Tyler and Russ Roberts joined forces for a special livestreamed conversation on COVID-19, including how both are adjusting to social isolation, private versus public responses to the pandemic, the challenge of reforming scrambled organization capital, the implications for Trump’s reelection, appropriate fiscal and monetary responses, bailouts, innovation prizes, and more. NASSIM NICHOLAS TALEB ON SELF-EDUCATION AND DOING THE MATH Though what Nassim Nicholas Taleb was really after was a discussion with Bryan (read that here), the philosopher, mathematician, and author most recently of Skin in the Game also generously agreed to a conversation with Tyler.. They discuss the ancient Phoenicians and the Greco-Roman heritage of Lebanon, philology, genetics, the blockchain, driverless cars, the advantages of Twitter BRYAN CAPLAN ON LEARNING ACROSS DISCIPLINES (EP. 40 Read the full transcript. TYLER COWEN: I’m here today with Bryan Caplan, professor of economics at George Mason University, a very good friend of mine, a moral man.Each of his last three books has made a major impact, most recently, the best-selling The Case against Education.Welcome, Bryan. BRYAN CAPLAN: Thanks so much for having me, buddy. On writing papers and books JOHN MCWHORTER ON LINGUISTICS, MUSIC, AND RACE (EP. 89 John McWhorter on Linguistics, Music, and Race (Ep. 89 - Live at Mason) Who can you ask about the Great American Songbook, the finer Jell-O flavors, and peculiar languages like Saramaccan all while expecting the same kind of fast, thoughtful, and energetic response? Listeners of Lexicon Valley might hazard a guess. AGNES CALLARD ON THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING (EP. 38 Read the full transcript. TYLER COWEN: Today, I’m here with Agnes Callard, who is a philosopher at the University of Chicago.She has a new book out called Aspiration: The Agency of Becoming, but like a true philosopher, she philosophizes about many things.. On Plato and Socrates. Let me start with a simple question. Why didn’t Plato just write what he meant? PATRICK COLLISON HAS A FEW QUESTIONS FOR TYLER (EP. 21 The Stripe CEO flips the script for a special Conversations with Tyler. A few months ago, Tyler asked Patrick Collison, CEO of Stripe, to be on the show. Patrick agreed, but only under the condition that he would do the interviewing. Thus, what follows is the conversation Patrick wanted to have with Tyler, not the one you wanted to have. MICHELLE DAWSON ON AUTISM AND ATYPICALITY (EP. 46 For Michelle, the best way to understand autism is to think of it as atypical information processing. Autistic brains function differently, and these highly varied divergences lead to biases and misunderstanding among typical thinkers, including autism researchers. In her conversation with Tyler, she outlines the current thinking onautism
KARL OVE KNAUSGÅRD ON LITERARY FREEDOM (EP. 66 Emily Wilson. What is Karl Ove Knausgård’s struggle, exactly? The answer is simple: achieving total freedom in his writing. “It’s a space where I can be free in every sense, where I can say whatever, go wherever I want to. And for me, literature is almost the only place you could think that that is TIM HARFORD ON PERSUASION AND POPULAR ECONOMICS (EP. 87 Why storytelling is still underrated. To Tim Harford, mistakes are fascinating. “We often only understand how something works when it breaks,” he says, explaining why there’s such an emphasis on errors throughout his work. They also tend to make great stories, which can stoke the curiosity necessary to change minds. ROBIN HANSON ON SIGNALING AND SELF-DECEPTION (EP. 35 COWEN: In all of these conversations, or as they’re sometimes called, reeducation camps, there’s a segment in the middle, overrated versus underrated. HANSON: Uh-oh. COWEN: Please feel free to pass, but I’ll toss out a few candidates, and you tell me if you think they’re under- or overrated. CONVERSATIONS WITH TYLER You can’t imitate a worldview. But you can form your own by listening and learning (and learning how to listen). On the Conversations with Tyler podcast, produced by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, celebrated polymath and academic economist Tyler Cowen explores the minds and methods of today’s top thinkers. Tyler’s intense research leads to stimulating and surprisingALL EPISODES
Three years after her first appearance, Chinese food expert Fuchsia Dunlop joins Tyler for a delicious homestyle Chinese meal. Tyler and Ted discuss the history and evolution of music, the role of music in political protests, new incentives in the music industry, how DANIEL CARPENTER ON SMART REGULATION (EP. 121 Daniel Carpenter is one of the world’s leading experts on regulation and the foremost expert on the US Food and Drug Administration. A professor of Government at Harvard University, he’s conducted extensive research on regulation and government organizations, as well as on the development of political institutions in the United States. MARK CARNEY ON CENTRAL BANKING AND SHARED VALUES (EP. 123 Whether it’s ingratiating himself as a public servant in a foreign country, managing a central bank, or addressing climate change, he’s seen the power of shared objectives and the importance of value alignment in addressing critical and complex problems. As the global economy attempts to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic, Carney has ERIC KAUFMANN ON IMMIGRATION, IDENTITY, AND THE LIMITS OFSEE MORE ON CONVERSATIONSWITHTYLER.COM DANA GIOIA ON BECOMING AN INFORMATION BILLIONAIRE (EP. 119 You can also watch a video of the conversation here.. Read the full transcript. TYLER COWEN: Hello, everyone.Welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.Today I have Dana Gioia.The way I think of Dana is he is the only guest I have ever had who can answer all of my questions, but he does have another biography: at the top of the biography it reads, “Dana Gioia is an internationally acclaimed SUJATHA GIDLA ON BEING AN ANT AMONGST THE ELEPHANTS (EP Sujatha Gidla was an untouchable in India, but moved to the United States at the age of 26 and is now the first Indian woman to be employed as a conductor on the New York City Subway. In her memoir Ants Among Elephants, she explores the antiquities of her mother, her uncles, and other members of her family against modern India’slandscape.
SHADI BARTSCH ON THE CLASSICS AND CHINA (EP. 120SEE MORE ON CONVERSATIONSWITHTYLER.COM ANNIE DUKE ON POKER, PROBABILITIES, AND HOW WE MAKE 23. Raj Chetty. For Annie Duke, the poker table is a perfect laboratory to study human decision-making — including her own. “It really exposes you to the way that you’re thinking,” she says, “how hard it is to avoid decision traps, even when you’re perfectly well aware that those decision traps exist. And how easy itis for like
MARY ROACH ON DISGUST, DEATH, AND DANGER (EP. 29 50. Bruno Maçães. Legal writing was never Mary Roach’s thing. She describes that short-lived stint as an inscrutable “bringing forth of multisyllabic words.”. Instead, she’s forged a career by letting curiosity lead the way. The result has been a series of successful books — Grunt, Gulp, Spook, Stiff, and Bonk among them— that
CONVERSATIONS WITH TYLER You can’t imitate a worldview. But you can form your own by listening and learning (and learning how to listen). On the Conversations with Tyler podcast, produced by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, celebrated polymath and academic economist Tyler Cowen explores the minds and methods of today’s top thinkers. Tyler’s intense research leads to stimulating and surprisingALL EPISODES
Three years after her first appearance, Chinese food expert Fuchsia Dunlop joins Tyler for a delicious homestyle Chinese meal. Tyler and Ted discuss the history and evolution of music, the role of music in political protests, new incentives in the music industry, how DANIEL CARPENTER ON SMART REGULATION (EP. 121 Daniel Carpenter is one of the world’s leading experts on regulation and the foremost expert on the US Food and Drug Administration. A professor of Government at Harvard University, he’s conducted extensive research on regulation and government organizations, as well as on the development of political institutions in the United States. MARK CARNEY ON CENTRAL BANKING AND SHARED VALUES (EP. 123 Whether it’s ingratiating himself as a public servant in a foreign country, managing a central bank, or addressing climate change, he’s seen the power of shared objectives and the importance of value alignment in addressing critical and complex problems. As the global economy attempts to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic, Carney has ERIC KAUFMANN ON IMMIGRATION, IDENTITY, AND THE LIMITS OFSEE MORE ON CONVERSATIONSWITHTYLER.COM DANA GIOIA ON BECOMING AN INFORMATION BILLIONAIRE (EP. 119 You can also watch a video of the conversation here.. Read the full transcript. TYLER COWEN: Hello, everyone.Welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.Today I have Dana Gioia.The way I think of Dana is he is the only guest I have ever had who can answer all of my questions, but he does have another biography: at the top of the biography it reads, “Dana Gioia is an internationally acclaimed SUJATHA GIDLA ON BEING AN ANT AMONGST THE ELEPHANTS (EP Sujatha Gidla was an untouchable in India, but moved to the United States at the age of 26 and is now the first Indian woman to be employed as a conductor on the New York City Subway. In her memoir Ants Among Elephants, she explores the antiquities of her mother, her uncles, and other members of her family against modern India’slandscape.
SHADI BARTSCH ON THE CLASSICS AND CHINA (EP. 120SEE MORE ON CONVERSATIONSWITHTYLER.COM ANNIE DUKE ON POKER, PROBABILITIES, AND HOW WE MAKE 23. Raj Chetty. For Annie Duke, the poker table is a perfect laboratory to study human decision-making — including her own. “It really exposes you to the way that you’re thinking,” she says, “how hard it is to avoid decision traps, even when you’re perfectly well aware that those decision traps exist. And how easy itis for like
MARY ROACH ON DISGUST, DEATH, AND DANGER (EP. 29 50. Bruno Maçães. Legal writing was never Mary Roach’s thing. She describes that short-lived stint as an inscrutable “bringing forth of multisyllabic words.”. Instead, she’s forged a career by letting curiosity lead the way. The result has been a series of successful books — Grunt, Gulp, Spook, Stiff, and Bonk among them— that
RUSS ROBERTS AND TYLER ON COVID-19 (EP. 90 Tyler and Russ Roberts joined forces for a special livestreamed conversation on COVID-19, including how both are adjusting to social isolation, private versus public responses to the pandemic, the challenge of reforming scrambled organization capital, the implications for Trump’s reelection, appropriate fiscal and monetary responses, bailouts, innovation prizes, and more. NASSIM NICHOLAS TALEB ON SELF-EDUCATION AND DOING THE MATH Though what Nassim Nicholas Taleb was really after was a discussion with Bryan (read that here), the philosopher, mathematician, and author most recently of Skin in the Game also generously agreed to a conversation with Tyler.. They discuss the ancient Phoenicians and the Greco-Roman heritage of Lebanon, philology, genetics, the blockchain, driverless cars, the advantages of Twitter JOHN MCWHORTER ON LINGUISTICS, MUSIC, AND RACE (EP. 89 John McWhorter on Linguistics, Music, and Race (Ep. 89 - Live at Mason) Who can you ask about the Great American Songbook, the finer Jell-O flavors, and peculiar languages like Saramaccan all while expecting the same kind of fast, thoughtful, and energetic response? Listeners of Lexicon Valley might hazard a guess. AGNES CALLARD ON THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING (EP. 38 Read the full transcript. TYLER COWEN: Today, I’m here with Agnes Callard, who is a philosopher at the University of Chicago.She has a new book out called Aspiration: The Agency of Becoming, but like a true philosopher, she philosophizes about many things.. On Plato and Socrates. Let me start with a simple question. Why didn’t Plato just write what he meant? ANNIE DUKE ON POKER, PROBABILITIES, AND HOW WE MAKE 23. Raj Chetty. For Annie Duke, the poker table is a perfect laboratory to study human decision-making — including her own. “It really exposes you to the way that you’re thinking,” she says, “how hard it is to avoid decision traps, even when you’re perfectly well aware that those decision traps exist. And how easy itis for like
BRYAN CAPLAN ON LEARNING ACROSS DISCIPLINES (EP. 40 Read the full transcript. TYLER COWEN: I’m here today with Bryan Caplan, professor of economics at George Mason University, a very good friend of mine, a moral man.Each of his last three books has made a major impact, most recently, the best-selling The Case against Education.Welcome, Bryan. BRYAN CAPLAN: Thanks so much for having me, buddy. On writing papers and books MICHELLE DAWSON ON AUTISM AND ATYPICALITY (EP. 46 For Michelle, the best way to understand autism is to think of it as atypical information processing. Autistic brains function differently, and these highly varied divergences lead to biases and misunderstanding among typical thinkers, including autism researchers. In her conversation with Tyler, she outlines the current thinking onautism
KARL OVE KNAUSGÅRD ON LITERARY FREEDOM (EP. 66 Emily Wilson. What is Karl Ove Knausgård’s struggle, exactly? The answer is simple: achieving total freedom in his writing. “It’s a space where I can be free in every sense, where I can say whatever, go wherever I want to. And for me, literature is almost the only place you could think that that is TIM HARFORD ON PERSUASION AND POPULAR ECONOMICS (EP. 87 Why storytelling is still underrated. To Tim Harford, mistakes are fascinating. “We often only understand how something works when it breaks,” he says, explaining why there’s such an emphasis on errors throughout his work. They also tend to make great stories, which can stoke the curiosity necessary to change minds. ROBIN HANSON ON SIGNALING AND SELF-DECEPTION (EP. 35 COWEN: In all of these conversations, or as they’re sometimes called, reeducation camps, there’s a segment in the middle, overrated versus underrated. HANSON: Uh-oh. COWEN: Please feel free to pass, but I’ll toss out a few candidates, and you tell me if you think they’re under- or overrated. CONVERSATIONS WITH TYLER You can’t imitate a worldview. But you can form your own by listening and learning (and learning how to listen). On the Conversations with Tyler podcast, produced by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, celebrated polymath and academic economist Tyler Cowen explores the minds and methods of today’s top thinkers. Tyler’s intense research leads to stimulating and surprisingALL EPISODES
John McWhorter on Linguistics, Music, and Race (Ep. 89 - Live at Mason) Who can you ask about the Great American Songbook, the finer Jell-O flavors, and peculiar languages like Saramaccan all while expecting the same kind of fast, thoughtful, and energetic response? DANIEL CARPENTER ON SMART REGULATION (EP. 121 Daniel Carpenter is one of the world’s leading experts on regulation and the foremost expert on the US Food and Drug Administration. A professor of Government at Harvard University, he’s conducted extensive research on regulation and government organizations, as well as on the development of political institutions in the United States. DANA GIOIA ON BECOMING AN INFORMATION BILLIONAIRE (EP. 119 You can also watch a video of the conversation here.. Read the full transcript. TYLER COWEN: Hello, everyone.Welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.Today I have Dana Gioia.The way I think of Dana is he is the only guest I have ever had who can answer all of my questions, but he does have another biography: at the top of the biography it reads, “Dana Gioia is an internationally acclaimed MARK CARNEY ON CENTRAL BANKING AND SHARED VALUES (EP. 123 May 26, 2021 Mark Carney on Central Banking and Shared Values (Ep. 123 — BONUS) How shared objectives can flip risks into value creation. KARL OVE KNAUSGÅRD ON LITERARY FREEDOM (EP. 66 COWEN: Is The Scream a self-portrait of Munch?And is he wearing a mask or a death mask? KNAUSGÅRD: Yeah.The Scream is based upon an experience he had walking up the hill outside of Oslo, seeing what you see in that painting, hearing the nature scream.So in a way, it’s a self-biographical painting, but the radicality of that painting — it’s hard to get a grip on now, I think. SUJATHA GIDLA ON BEING AN ANT AMONGST THE ELEPHANTS (EP Sujatha Gidla was an untouchable in India, but moved to the United States at the age of 26 and is now the first Indian woman to be employed as a conductor on the New York City Subway. ERIC KAUFMANN ON IMMIGRATION, IDENTITY, AND THE LIMITS OFSEE MORE ON CONVERSATIONSWITHTYLER.COM ANNIE DUKE ON POKER, PROBABILITIES, AND HOW WE MAKE You can also watch a video of the conversation here.. Read the full conversation. TYLER COWEN: And how does one introduce Annie Duke?I would say, most of all, she is a force of nature, a best-selling author in multiple books, a very famous poker player, an expert in decision theory, and she has a new book coming out this September, called How to Decide: Simple Tools for Making Better Choices. SHADI BARTSCH ON THE CLASSICS AND CHINA (EP. 120SEE MORE ON CONVERSATIONSWITHTYLER.COM CONVERSATIONS WITH TYLER You can’t imitate a worldview. But you can form your own by listening and learning (and learning how to listen). On the Conversations with Tyler podcast, produced by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, celebrated polymath and academic economist Tyler Cowen explores the minds and methods of today’s top thinkers. Tyler’s intense research leads to stimulating and surprisingALL EPISODES
John McWhorter on Linguistics, Music, and Race (Ep. 89 - Live at Mason) Who can you ask about the Great American Songbook, the finer Jell-O flavors, and peculiar languages like Saramaccan all while expecting the same kind of fast, thoughtful, and energetic response? DANIEL CARPENTER ON SMART REGULATION (EP. 121 Daniel Carpenter is one of the world’s leading experts on regulation and the foremost expert on the US Food and Drug Administration. A professor of Government at Harvard University, he’s conducted extensive research on regulation and government organizations, as well as on the development of political institutions in the United States. DANA GIOIA ON BECOMING AN INFORMATION BILLIONAIRE (EP. 119 You can also watch a video of the conversation here.. Read the full transcript. TYLER COWEN: Hello, everyone.Welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.Today I have Dana Gioia.The way I think of Dana is he is the only guest I have ever had who can answer all of my questions, but he does have another biography: at the top of the biography it reads, “Dana Gioia is an internationally acclaimed MARK CARNEY ON CENTRAL BANKING AND SHARED VALUES (EP. 123 May 26, 2021 Mark Carney on Central Banking and Shared Values (Ep. 123 — BONUS) How shared objectives can flip risks into value creation. KARL OVE KNAUSGÅRD ON LITERARY FREEDOM (EP. 66 COWEN: Is The Scream a self-portrait of Munch?And is he wearing a mask or a death mask? KNAUSGÅRD: Yeah.The Scream is based upon an experience he had walking up the hill outside of Oslo, seeing what you see in that painting, hearing the nature scream.So in a way, it’s a self-biographical painting, but the radicality of that painting — it’s hard to get a grip on now, I think. SUJATHA GIDLA ON BEING AN ANT AMONGST THE ELEPHANTS (EP Sujatha Gidla was an untouchable in India, but moved to the United States at the age of 26 and is now the first Indian woman to be employed as a conductor on the New York City Subway. ERIC KAUFMANN ON IMMIGRATION, IDENTITY, AND THE LIMITS OFSEE MORE ON CONVERSATIONSWITHTYLER.COM ANNIE DUKE ON POKER, PROBABILITIES, AND HOW WE MAKE You can also watch a video of the conversation here.. Read the full conversation. TYLER COWEN: And how does one introduce Annie Duke?I would say, most of all, she is a force of nature, a best-selling author in multiple books, a very famous poker player, an expert in decision theory, and she has a new book coming out this September, called How to Decide: Simple Tools for Making Better Choices. SHADI BARTSCH ON THE CLASSICS AND CHINA (EP. 120SEE MORE ON CONVERSATIONSWITHTYLER.COMTOP FIVE EPISODES
If you’re new to Conversations with Tyler, welcome! Here are the five best episodes to start with: Peter Thiel on Stagnation, Innovation and What Not To Name Your Company (Ep. 1) JOHN MCWHORTER ON LINGUISTICS, MUSIC, AND RACE (EP. 89 March 11, 2020 John McWhorter on Linguistics, Music, and Race (Ep. 89 - Live at Mason) Who can you ask about the Great American Songbook, the finer Jell-O flavors, and peculiar languages like Saramaccan all while expecting the same kind of fast, thoughtful, and energeticresponse?
RUSS ROBERTS AND TYLER ON COVID-19 (EP. 90 Tyler and Russ Roberts joined forces for a special livestreamed conversation on COVID-19, including how both are adjusting to social isolation, private versus public responses to the pandemic, the challenge of reforming scrambled organization capital, the implications for Trump’s reelection, appropriate fiscal and monetary responses, bailouts, innovation prizes, and more. KARL OVE KNAUSGÅRD ON LITERARY FREEDOM (EP. 66 COWEN: Is The Scream a self-portrait of Munch?And is he wearing a mask or a death mask? KNAUSGÅRD: Yeah.The Scream is based upon an experience he had walking up the hill outside of Oslo, seeing what you see in that painting, hearing the nature scream.So in a way, it’s a self-biographical painting, but the radicality of that painting — it’s hard to get a grip on now, I think. AGNES CALLARD ON THE THEORY OF EVERYTHING (EP. 38 Read the full transcript. TYLER COWEN: Today, I’m here with Agnes Callard, who is a philosopher at the University of Chicago.She has a new book out called Aspiration: The Agency of Becoming, but like a true philosopher, she philosophizes about many things.. On Plato and Socrates. Let me start with a simple question. Why didn’t Plato just write what he meant? TIM HARFORD ON PERSUASION AND POPULAR ECONOMICS (EP. 87 Read the full transcript. Note: This conversation was recorded in November 2019 and thus took place before the UK’s general election in December, which secured Boris Johnson a Conservative majority and ensured the passage of his Brexit deal in January 2020. MICHELLE DAWSON ON AUTISM AND ATYPICALITY (EP. 46 MICHELLE DAWSON: I’m not an advocate. COWEN: She is arguing for science and ethics being brought into the autism discourse and discourse more generally. Would you accept that description of what you do? DAWSON: Good enough. COWEN: Good enough. Okay. COWEN: So let me start with a very general question. If you ask what would be the most underrated, nonaccountable, and mysterious ROBIN HANSON ON SIGNALING AND SELF-DECEPTION (EP. 35 Read the full transcript. This episode was recorded live at Mason for econ grad students. If you’re interested in learning economics with great professors like Robin and Tyler, check out these fellowships.. TYLER COWEN: Welcome back to Conversations with Tyler. Today, we have my colleague Robin Hanson.With Robin, we go meta.Robin, if politics is not about policy, medicine is not about PATRICK COLLISON HAS A FEW QUESTIONS FOR TYLER (EP. 21 Read the full transcript. This conversation was recorded at Stripe’s San Fransisco office in late January 2017. PATRICK COLLISON: Thank you all very much for coming. I would typically start out with a lengthy introduction of the speaker’s various accomplishments and NASSIM NICHOLAS TALEB ON SELF-EDUCATION AND DOING THE MATH Though what Nassim Nicholas Taleb was really after was a discussion with Bryan (read that here), the philosopher, mathematician, and author most recently of Skin in the Game also generously agreed to a conversation with Tyler.. They discuss the ancient Phoenicians and the Greco-Roman heritage of Lebanon, philology, genetics, the blockchain, driverless cars, the advantages of Twitter CONVERSATIONS WITH TYLER You can’t imitate a worldview. But you can form your own by listening and learning (and learning how to listen). On the Conversations with Tyler podcast, produced by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, celebrated polymath and academic economist Tyler Cowen explores the minds and methods of today’s top thinkers. Tyler’s intense research leads to stimulating and surprisingALL EPISODES
John McWhorter on Linguistics, Music, and Race (Ep. 89 - Live at Mason) Who can you ask about the Great American Songbook, the finer Jell-O flavors, and peculiar languages like Saramaccan all while expecting the same kind of fast, thoughtful, and energetic response? DANIEL CARPENTER ON SMART REGULATION (EP. 121 Daniel Carpenter is one of the world’s leading experts on regulation and the foremost expert on the US Food and Drug Administration. A professor of Government at Harvard University, he’s conducted extensive research on regulation and government organizations, as well as on the development of political institutions in the United States. JOHN COCHRANE ON ECONOMIC PUZZLES AND HABITS OF MIND (EP You can also watch a video of the conversation here.. Read the full transcript. TYLER COWEN: Hello, everyone.Welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.Today, I’m here with John Cochrane.I refer to John as a voice of sanity, but to the world as a whole, he’s known as a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, and he also blogs at Grumpy Economist.John, good morning. JOHN MCWHORTER ON LINGUISTICS, MUSIC, AND RACE (EP. 89 March 11, 2020 John McWhorter on Linguistics, Music, and Race (Ep. 89 - Live at Mason) Who can you ask about the Great American Songbook, the finer Jell-O flavors, and peculiar languages like Saramaccan all while expecting the same kind of fast, thoughtful, and energeticresponse?
MARK CARNEY ON CENTRAL BANKING AND SHARED VALUES (EP. 123 May 26, 2021 Mark Carney on Central Banking and Shared Values (Ep. 123 — BONUS) How shared objectives can flip risks into value creation. DANA GIOIA ON BECOMING AN INFORMATION BILLIONAIRE (EP. 119 You can also watch a video of the conversation here.. Read the full transcript. TYLER COWEN: Hello, everyone.Welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.Today I have Dana Gioia.The way I think of Dana is he is the only guest I have ever had who can answer all of my questions, but he does have another biography: at the top of the biography it reads, “Dana Gioia is an internationally acclaimed BENJAMIN FRIEDMAN ON THE ORIGINS OF ECONOMIC BELIEF (EP Benjamin Friedman has been a leading macroeconomist since the 1970s, whose accomplishments include writing 150 papers, producing more than dozen books, and teaching Tyler Cowen graduate macroeconomics atHarvard in 1985.
SUJATHA GIDLA ON BEING AN ANT AMONGST THE ELEPHANTS (EP Sujatha Gidla was an untouchable in India, but moved to the United States at the age of 26 and is now the first Indian woman to be employed as a conductor on the New York City Subway. SHADI BARTSCH ON THE CLASSICS AND CHINA (EP. 120SEE MORE ON CONVERSATIONSWITHTYLER.COM CONVERSATIONS WITH TYLER You can’t imitate a worldview. But you can form your own by listening and learning (and learning how to listen). On the Conversations with Tyler podcast, produced by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, celebrated polymath and academic economist Tyler Cowen explores the minds and methods of today’s top thinkers. Tyler’s intense research leads to stimulating and surprisingALL EPISODES
John McWhorter on Linguistics, Music, and Race (Ep. 89 - Live at Mason) Who can you ask about the Great American Songbook, the finer Jell-O flavors, and peculiar languages like Saramaccan all while expecting the same kind of fast, thoughtful, and energetic response? DANIEL CARPENTER ON SMART REGULATION (EP. 121 Daniel Carpenter is one of the world’s leading experts on regulation and the foremost expert on the US Food and Drug Administration. A professor of Government at Harvard University, he’s conducted extensive research on regulation and government organizations, as well as on the development of political institutions in the United States. JOHN COCHRANE ON ECONOMIC PUZZLES AND HABITS OF MIND (EP You can also watch a video of the conversation here.. Read the full transcript. TYLER COWEN: Hello, everyone.Welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.Today, I’m here with John Cochrane.I refer to John as a voice of sanity, but to the world as a whole, he’s known as a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, and he also blogs at Grumpy Economist.John, good morning. JOHN MCWHORTER ON LINGUISTICS, MUSIC, AND RACE (EP. 89 March 11, 2020 John McWhorter on Linguistics, Music, and Race (Ep. 89 - Live at Mason) Who can you ask about the Great American Songbook, the finer Jell-O flavors, and peculiar languages like Saramaccan all while expecting the same kind of fast, thoughtful, and energeticresponse?
MARK CARNEY ON CENTRAL BANKING AND SHARED VALUES (EP. 123 May 26, 2021 Mark Carney on Central Banking and Shared Values (Ep. 123 — BONUS) How shared objectives can flip risks into value creation. DANA GIOIA ON BECOMING AN INFORMATION BILLIONAIRE (EP. 119 You can also watch a video of the conversation here.. Read the full transcript. TYLER COWEN: Hello, everyone.Welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.Today I have Dana Gioia.The way I think of Dana is he is the only guest I have ever had who can answer all of my questions, but he does have another biography: at the top of the biography it reads, “Dana Gioia is an internationally acclaimed BENJAMIN FRIEDMAN ON THE ORIGINS OF ECONOMIC BELIEF (EP Benjamin Friedman has been a leading macroeconomist since the 1970s, whose accomplishments include writing 150 papers, producing more than dozen books, and teaching Tyler Cowen graduate macroeconomics atHarvard in 1985.
SUJATHA GIDLA ON BEING AN ANT AMONGST THE ELEPHANTS (EP Sujatha Gidla was an untouchable in India, but moved to the United States at the age of 26 and is now the first Indian woman to be employed as a conductor on the New York City Subway. SHADI BARTSCH ON THE CLASSICS AND CHINA (EP. 120SEE MORE ON CONVERSATIONSWITHTYLER.COM JOHN MCWHORTER ON LINGUISTICS, MUSIC, AND RACE (EP. 89 March 11, 2020 John McWhorter on Linguistics, Music, and Race (Ep. 89 - Live at Mason) Who can you ask about the Great American Songbook, the finer Jell-O flavors, and peculiar languages like Saramaccan all while expecting the same kind of fast, thoughtful, and energeticresponse?
NASSIM NICHOLAS TALEB ON SELF-EDUCATION AND DOING THE MATH Though what Nassim Nicholas Taleb was really after was a discussion with Bryan (read that here), the philosopher, mathematician, and author most recently of Skin in the Game also generously agreed to a conversation with Tyler.. They discuss the ancient Phoenicians and the Greco-Roman heritage of Lebanon, philology, genetics, the blockchain, driverless cars, the advantages of Twitter ANNIE DUKE ON POKER, PROBABILITIES, AND HOW WE MAKE You can also watch a video of the conversation here.. Read the full conversation. TYLER COWEN: And how does one introduce Annie Duke?I would say, most of all, she is a force of nature, a best-selling author in multiple books, a very famous poker player, an expert in decision theory, and she has a new book coming out this September, called How to Decide: Simple Tools for Making Better Choices. JORDAN PETERSON ON MYTHOLOGY, FAME, AND READING PEOPLE (EP Jordan Peterson joins Tyler to discuss collecting Soviet propaganda, why he’s so drawn to Jung, what the Exodus story can teach us about current events, his marriage and fame, what the Intellectual Dark Web gets wrong, immigration in America and Canada, his tendency towards depression, Tinder’s revolutionary nature, the lessons from The Lord of the Rings and Harry Potter, fixing ERIC KAUFMANN ON IMMIGRATION, IDENTITY, AND THE LIMITS OF Going back and forth between Canada and Japan during his childhood sparked Eric Kaufmann’s interest in the question of identity. As a foreigner in an international school, he encountered young individuals from at least 60 other countries, and this made him think more about national identity and how people affiliate and interact with oneanother.
PATRICIA FARA ON NEWTON, SCIENTIFIC PROGRESS, AND THE Patricia Fara is a historian of science at Cambridge University and well-known for her writings on women in science. Her forthcoming book, Life After Gravity: Isaac Newton’s London Career, details the life of the titan of the so-called Scientific Revolution after his famous (though perhaps mythological) discovery under the apple tree.Her work emphasizes science as a long, continuous DARON ACEMOGLU ON THE STRUGGLE BETWEEN STATE AND SOCIETY Read the full transcript. TYLER COWEN: Hello. Today I’m here with Daron Acemoglu, who, of course, is professor of economics at MIT.By some measures, Daron is the number-one most widely cited economist in the whole world, and he has a new book out with James A. Robinson called The Narrow Corridor: States, Societies, and the Fate of Liberty.Welcome, Daron. KARL OVE KNAUSGÅRD ON LITERARY FREEDOM (EP. 66 COWEN: Is The Scream a self-portrait of Munch?And is he wearing a mask or a death mask? KNAUSGÅRD: Yeah.The Scream is based upon an experience he had walking up the hill outside of Oslo, seeing what you see in that painting, hearing the nature scream.So in a way, it’s a self-biographical painting, but the radicality of that painting — it’s hard to get a grip on now, I think. HAL VARIAN ON TAKING THE ACADEMIC APPROACH TO BUSINESS (EP Read the full transcript. TYLER COWEN: Today, I’m very happy to be here with Hal Varian, who is chief economist at Google and emeritus professor at Berkeley.Hal, welcome. HAL VARIAN: Thank you.Good to see you. COWEN: Now, one of your most famous articles — it dates from 1980, and it’s about a theory of the economics of sales. One motive for sales is price discrimination. NOUBAR AFEYAN ON THE PERMISSION TO LEAP (EP. 113 “The world of innovation is very much one of toggling between survival and then thriving,” says Noubar Afeyan. Co-founder of Moderna and CEO of Flagship Pioneering, the biomedical innovator, philanthropist, and entrepreneur credits his successes to his “paranoid optimism” shaped by his experiences as anArmenian-American.
CONVERSATIONS WITH TYLER You can’t imitate a worldview. But you can form your own by listening and learning (and learning how to listen). On the Conversations with Tyler podcast, produced by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, celebrated polymath and academic economist Tyler Cowen explores the minds and methods of today’s top thinkers. Tyler’s intense research leads to stimulating and surprisingALL EPISODES
Three years after her first appearance, Chinese food expert Fuchsia Dunlop joins Tyler for a delicious homestyle Chinese meal. Tyler and Ted discuss the history and evolution of music, the role of music in political protests, new incentives in the music industry, how DANIEL CARPENTER ON SMART REGULATION (EP. 121 Daniel Carpenter is one of the world’s leading experts on regulation and the foremost expert on the US Food and Drug Administration. A professor of Government at Harvard University, he’s conducted extensive research on regulation and government organizations, as well as on the development of political institutions in the United States. DANA GIOIA ON BECOMING AN INFORMATION BILLIONAIRE (EP. 119 You can also watch a video of the conversation here.. Read the full transcript. TYLER COWEN: Hello, everyone.Welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.Today I have Dana Gioia.The way I think of Dana is he is the only guest I have ever had who can answer all of my questions, but he does have another biography: at the top of the biography it reads, “Dana Gioia is an internationally acclaimed JOHN MCWHORTER ON LINGUISTICS, MUSIC, AND RACE (EP. 89 John McWhorter on Linguistics, Music, and Race (Ep. 89 - Live at Mason) Who can you ask about the Great American Songbook, the finer Jell-O flavors, and peculiar languages like Saramaccan all while expecting the same kind of fast, thoughtful, and energetic response? Listeners of Lexicon Valley might hazard a guess. MARGARET ATWOOD ON CANADA, WRITING, AND INVENTION (EP. 65 Read the full transcript. TYLER COWEN: We’re very honored to have Margaret Atwood with us here tonight. Just to be clear, this is the conversation with Margaret Atwood I want to have, not the one you want to have.. Just to start with some basic questions about Canada, which you’ve written on for decades — what defines the Canadian sense ofhumor?
DANIEL KAHNEMAN ON CUTTING THROUGH THE NOISE (EP. 56SEE MORE ON CONVERSATIONSWITHTYLER.COMDANIEL KAHNEMAN PDFDANIEL KAHNEMAN THEORYDANIEL KAHNEMAN ARTICLESDANIEL KAHNEMAN BOOKDANIEL KAHNEMANDANIEL KAHNEMAN COGNITIVE BIAS TIM HARFORD ON PERSUASION AND POPULAR ECONOMICS (EP. 87SEE MORE ON CONVERSATIONSWITHTYLER.COM NASSIM NICHOLAS TALEB ON SELF-EDUCATION AND DOING THE MATHNASSIM NICHOLAS TALEB S WEBSITENASSIM NICHOLAS TALEB TWITTERNASSIM TALEB ON TRUMPNASSIM NICHOLAS TALEB NET WORTHNASSIM NICHOLAS TALEB WRITTEN WORKSNASSIM TALEB BLACK SWAN Though what Nassim Nicholas Taleb was really after was a discussion with Bryan (read that here), the philosopher, mathematician, and author most recently of Skin in the Game also generously agreed to a conversation with Tyler.. They discuss the ancient Phoenicians and the Greco-Roman heritage of Lebanon, philology, genetics, the blockchain, driverless cars, the advantages of Twitter MARY ROACH ON DISGUST, DEATH, AND DANGER (EP. 29 50. Bruno Maçães. Legal writing was never Mary Roach’s thing. She describes that short-lived stint as an inscrutable “bringing forth of multisyllabic words.”. Instead, she’s forged a career by letting curiosity lead the way. The result has been a series of successful books — Grunt, Gulp, Spook, Stiff, and Bonk among them— that
CONVERSATIONS WITH TYLER You can’t imitate a worldview. But you can form your own by listening and learning (and learning how to listen). On the Conversations with Tyler podcast, produced by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, celebrated polymath and academic economist Tyler Cowen explores the minds and methods of today’s top thinkers. Tyler’s intense research leads to stimulating and surprisingALL EPISODES
Three years after her first appearance, Chinese food expert Fuchsia Dunlop joins Tyler for a delicious homestyle Chinese meal. Tyler and Ted discuss the history and evolution of music, the role of music in political protests, new incentives in the music industry, how DANIEL CARPENTER ON SMART REGULATION (EP. 121 Daniel Carpenter is one of the world’s leading experts on regulation and the foremost expert on the US Food and Drug Administration. A professor of Government at Harvard University, he’s conducted extensive research on regulation and government organizations, as well as on the development of political institutions in the United States. DANA GIOIA ON BECOMING AN INFORMATION BILLIONAIRE (EP. 119 You can also watch a video of the conversation here.. Read the full transcript. TYLER COWEN: Hello, everyone.Welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.Today I have Dana Gioia.The way I think of Dana is he is the only guest I have ever had who can answer all of my questions, but he does have another biography: at the top of the biography it reads, “Dana Gioia is an internationally acclaimed JOHN MCWHORTER ON LINGUISTICS, MUSIC, AND RACE (EP. 89 John McWhorter on Linguistics, Music, and Race (Ep. 89 - Live at Mason) Who can you ask about the Great American Songbook, the finer Jell-O flavors, and peculiar languages like Saramaccan all while expecting the same kind of fast, thoughtful, and energetic response? Listeners of Lexicon Valley might hazard a guess. MARGARET ATWOOD ON CANADA, WRITING, AND INVENTION (EP. 65 Read the full transcript. TYLER COWEN: We’re very honored to have Margaret Atwood with us here tonight. Just to be clear, this is the conversation with Margaret Atwood I want to have, not the one you want to have.. Just to start with some basic questions about Canada, which you’ve written on for decades — what defines the Canadian sense ofhumor?
DANIEL KAHNEMAN ON CUTTING THROUGH THE NOISE (EP. 56SEE MORE ON CONVERSATIONSWITHTYLER.COMDANIEL KAHNEMAN PDFDANIEL KAHNEMAN THEORYDANIEL KAHNEMAN ARTICLESDANIEL KAHNEMAN BOOKDANIEL KAHNEMANDANIEL KAHNEMAN COGNITIVE BIAS TIM HARFORD ON PERSUASION AND POPULAR ECONOMICS (EP. 87SEE MORE ON CONVERSATIONSWITHTYLER.COM NASSIM NICHOLAS TALEB ON SELF-EDUCATION AND DOING THE MATHNASSIM NICHOLAS TALEB S WEBSITENASSIM NICHOLAS TALEB TWITTERNASSIM TALEB ON TRUMPNASSIM NICHOLAS TALEB NET WORTHNASSIM NICHOLAS TALEB WRITTEN WORKSNASSIM TALEB BLACK SWAN Though what Nassim Nicholas Taleb was really after was a discussion with Bryan (read that here), the philosopher, mathematician, and author most recently of Skin in the Game also generously agreed to a conversation with Tyler.. They discuss the ancient Phoenicians and the Greco-Roman heritage of Lebanon, philology, genetics, the blockchain, driverless cars, the advantages of Twitter MARY ROACH ON DISGUST, DEATH, AND DANGER (EP. 29 50. Bruno Maçães. Legal writing was never Mary Roach’s thing. She describes that short-lived stint as an inscrutable “bringing forth of multisyllabic words.”. Instead, she’s forged a career by letting curiosity lead the way. The result has been a series of successful books — Grunt, Gulp, Spook, Stiff, and Bonk among them— that
DAVID DEUTSCH ON MULTIPLE WORLDS AND OUR PLACE IN THEM (EP Tyler describes Oxford professor and theoretical physicist David Deutsch as a “maximum philosopher of freedom” with no rival. A pioneer in the field of quantum computing, Deutsch subscribes to the multiple-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics. JOHN MCWHORTER ON LINGUISTICS, MUSIC, AND RACE (EP. 89 John McWhorter on Linguistics, Music, and Race (Ep. 89 - Live at Mason) Who can you ask about the Great American Songbook, the finer Jell-O flavors, and peculiar languages like Saramaccan all while expecting the same kind of fast, thoughtful, and energetic response? Listeners of Lexicon Valley might hazard a guess. MARK CARNEY ON CENTRAL BANKING AND SHARED VALUES (EP. 123 May 26, 2021 Mark Carney on Central Banking and Shared Values (Ep. 123 — BONUS) How shared objectives can flip risks into value creation. KARL OVE KNAUSGÅRD ON LITERARY FREEDOM (EP. 66 Emily Wilson. What is Karl Ove Knausgård’s struggle, exactly? The answer is simple: achieving total freedom in his writing. “It’s a space where I can be free in every sense, where I can say whatever, go wherever I want to. And for me, literature is almost the only place you could think that that is HAL VARIAN ON TAKING THE ACADEMIC APPROACH TO BUSINESS (EP Read the full transcript. TYLER COWEN: Today, I’m very happy to be here with Hal Varian, who is chief economist at Google and emeritus professor at Berkeley.Hal, welcome. HAL VARIAN: Thank you.Good to see you. COWEN: Now, one of your most famous articles — it dates from 1980, and it’s about a theory of the economics of sales. One motive for sales is price discrimination. VITALIK BUTERIN ON CRYPTOECONOMICS AND MARKETS IN Tyler sat down with Vitalik to discuss the many things he’s thinking about and working on, including the nascent field of cryptoeconomics, the best analogy for understanding the blockchain, his desire for more social science fiction, why belief in progress is our most useful delusion, best places to visit in time and space, how he picks up languages, why centralization’s not all bad, the BRYAN CAPLAN ON LEARNING ACROSS DISCIPLINES (EP. 40 Read the full transcript. TYLER COWEN: I’m here today with Bryan Caplan, professor of economics at George Mason University, a very good friend of mine, a moral man.Each of his last three books has made a major impact, most recently, the best-selling The Case against Education.Welcome, Bryan. BRYAN CAPLAN: Thanks so much for having me, buddy. On writing papers and books SUJATHA GIDLA ON BEING AN ANT AMONGST THE ELEPHANTS (EP Sujatha Gidla was an untouchable in India, but moved to the United States at the age of 26 and is now the first Indian woman to be employed as a conductor on the New York City Subway. In her memoir Ants Among Elephants, she explores the antiquities of her mother, her uncles, and other members of her family against modern India’slandscape.
PATRICK COLLISON HAS A FEW QUESTIONS FOR TYLER (EP. 21 The Stripe CEO flips the script for a special Conversations with Tyler. A few months ago, Tyler asked Patrick Collison, CEO of Stripe, to be on the show. Patrick agreed, but only under the condition that he would do the interviewing. Thus, what follows is the conversation Patrick wanted to have with Tyler, not the one you wanted to have. FUCHSIA DUNLOP ON HOMESTYLE CHINESE COOKING (BONUS Mark Miller. Episode. 15. Fuchsia Dunlop. Three years after her first appearance, Chinese food expert Fuchsia Dunlop joins Tyler to celebrate the release of her latest cookbook and talk all things food and China. This time the conversation was held over a special homestyle meal at Mama Chang, the newest restaurant from Chef Peterand Lisa Chang.
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