Month: October 2015

“He’s a politician, so within two minutes he’s your best friend,” Blanchard said.

“Perhaps most fundamentally, the crisis raised serious doubts about the ambitious project that Blanchard and others macroeconomists had been working on for close to 50 years: developing a single, scientifically based model that could be used at all times for all circumstances. To skeptics inside and outside the profession, it was becoming clear that, despite all the gains in computing power and mathematical technique, economies were so complex that the search for one big model was quixotic. As economist Dani Rodrik suggests in a new book, “Economics Rules,” perhaps the best that can be hoped for is for a good set of smaller models — along with economists such as Blanchard who have the experience and intuition to know which ones to use in any particular situation. ”

The tyranny of bad ideas

For an academic who had spent a career searching for economic truth, having to reconcile the supposedly scientific insights of economics with political and bureaucratic realities proved even more challenging than Blanchard had anticipated. What he found most surprising, he said during a relaxing moment on Re, was how quickly a consensus can develop around some question on the basis of what decision-makers read in the press or hear over dinner. People on the outside, he said, have no idea how much time and energy is spent responding to or anticipating the reaction of the media and critics.

There’s a big risk of people agreeing on something without thinking about it or doing the hard analysis,” he said. In the face of incomplete information and genuine uncertainty, he said, it was disquieting “how easily bad ideas become entrenched.”

“It’s a strange process,” he mused, but one he is likely to miss.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/the-smartest-economist-youve-never-heard-of/2015/10/02/8659bcf2-6786-11e5-8325-a42b5a459b1e_story.html

How Roger Ebert gave Oprah Winfrey her start…


“At about this time, Oprah and I went out on a date. Well, actually two dates, but the one that made history began when we went to the movies. Afterward, we went to the Hamburger Hamlet for dinner, my treat.


“I don’t know what to do,” she told me. “The ABC stations want to syndicate my show. So does King World. The problem with syndication is that if your show isn’t successful, you’re off the air in three months. The ABC stations own themselves, so they can keep you on. Which way do you think I should go?”


I took a napkin and a ballpoint pen, and made some simple calculations.


Line 1: How much I made in a year for doing a syndicated television show.


Line 2: Times 2, because Siskel made the same.


Line 3: Times 2, because Oprah would be on for an hour, instead of half an hour.


Line 4: Times 5, because she would be on five days a week.


Line 5: Times 2, because her ratings would be at least twice as big as “Siskel & Ebert.”


I pushed the napkin across the table. Oprah studied it for 10 seconds.


“Rog, I’m going with King World,” she said.

http://www.rogerebert.com/rogers-journal/how-i-gave-oprah-her-start

“…Researchers at Syracuse University and State University of New York discovered that television programs almost never advocate reading books and lend the impression that one can get all the knowledge one needs from watching TV. They theorize this might be responsible for the finding that “young people who view greater amounts of television are more likely to have a decidedly low opinion of book reading as an activity.””

“Perhaps the medium itself, regardless of content, does damage.

Achievement and Intelligence Japanese researchers conducted some of the earliest research on the relationship between television and impaired academic achievement. In 1962, they published findings that reading skills declined among Japanese fifth to seventh graders as soon as their family acquired a television set.”

“… Across the board, even small amounts of television viewing hurt academic achievement.”

“In the famous 1854 debate between Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas, Douglas led off with a three-hour opening statement, which Lincoln took four hours to rebut. During the televised presidential debates of 1987, each candidate took five minutes to address questions like “What is your policy in Central America?” before his opponent launched into a sixty-second rebuttal.(83) This sort of parody is as intellectually taxing a presentation as anyone will see on television.”

http://www.simpletoremember.com/articles/a/dangers-of-television/

“If the pile of unread books on the bedside table is a graveyard of good intentions, the list of unread books on a Kindle is a black hole of fleeting intentions”

“The smartphone coupled with the open web creates a near-perfect container for distributing journalism at a grand scale.”

“Once bought by a reader, a book moves through a routine. It is read and underlined, dog-eared and scuffed and, most importantly, reread. To read a book once is to know it in passing. To read it over and over is to become confidants. The relationship between a reader and a book is measured not in hours or minutes but, ideally, in months and years.”


“To return to a book is to return not just to the text but also to a past self. We are embedded in our libraries. To reread is to remember who we once were, which can be equal parts scary and intoxicating. Other services such as Timehop offer ways to return to past photos or past tweets. They, too, are unexpectedly evocative. Far more so than you might think. They allow us to measure and remeasure ourselves. And if a resurfaced tweet has an emotional resonance of x, than a passage in a book by which you were once moved must resonate at 100x.”

http://aeon.co/magazine/technology/why-have-digital-books-stopped-evolving/

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