Recommend road trip podcasts! Ṁ100 for each episode we listen to.
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Going on a cumulative 8 hour road trip with one other person who isn't too engineering/math focused (I am very STEM), but our intersection of interests includes travel, history, trivia, linguistics, literature, psychology, child development, food, economics.

If you recommend jordan peterson, joe rogan, or lex fridman you are instantly disqualified for payout. Spamming the name of a million podcasts is also not useful so i retain the right to dq someone for obvious spam.

In general, going for a lighthearted and fun vibe where we feel like we are learning things. Feel free to also recommend individual episodes of the podcast that are particularly good to help persuade.

The podcasts in this image are ones that will not pay out (as I already know about them). But also may serve as an indicator for what we might like.

If we don't end up listening to 10 recommended podcasts on the trip, the remainder will pay out based on what I personally listen to on my own later! Road trip concludes on 8/15

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+Ṁ100

I love “No Such Thing as a Fish” - fact researchers/comedy writers from QI talk about their favourite fun facts they’ve learned in the past week. Perfect mix of intellectually interesting and lighthearted easy listening.

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One of my favorite episodes of EconTalk by Russ Roberts. Not sure what form you prefer your podcast links but you can always search for the title in your podcast app.

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Hello Internet, a two dudes talking podcast with @CGPGrey as cohost. Grey talks about his life as a robot, Brady is a caveman, they’re chalk and cheese and they have a fun time.

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Because Language (the successor to Talk the Talk), a linguistics podcast with some really charismatic hosts. Wife and I are both STEM people and so it's neat to hear how folks are applying the scientific method to language.

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Dan Carlin’s Hardcore History is great for road trips. Very long, engaging storytelling.

The Rest is History is also excellent, hosted by historians Tom Holland and Dominic Sandbrook as they discuss episodes and people from history with a fair amount of whimsy and entertainment that keeps me engaged and amiable on my commute.

+Ṁ100

Maintenance Phase is a podcast where two cohosts, Aubrey and Michael, talk about food, nutrition, and wellness trends. It's humorous, easily digestible, and educational. Each episode is 45 minutes to an hour in length. I highly recommend their 2 part episode on Oprah vs Beef farmers.

+Ṁ100

Worlds Greatest Con. Season 1 is one big story. Season 2 is one story per episode. The order does not matter, so pick what you prefer.

+Ṁ100

Is fiction acceptable?

If so, I cannot recommend the BBC's Cabin Pressure with John Finnemore and young Benedict Cumberbatch strongly enough. It has the perfect roadtrip vibe of a small cabin crew killing time while in the air.

+Ṁ100

Reply All. Don't start at the most recent ones. IIRC they were not as good as some of the earlier ones, but I don't have specific episode recommendations.

The closest analogue among my faves is Oh No with Ross & Carrie. Basically, 2 journalists join dubious-sounding spiritual groups & tell you about their experience.

https://open.spotify.com/episode/4PWQqpcO42GD3LCSQAG8Tv

The Natural Lottery
Listen to this episode from Loud Numbers on Spotify. Every spring since 1916, the residents of Nenana, Alaska, have placed a tripod on the frozen Tanana river and placed bets on when the ice will melt, pulling it over. The measurement method has stayed the same over a century, making the competition records a valuable source of data for climatologists studying how the planet - and particularly the polar regions - are changing. The Natural Lottery turns this climate data into a techno track. The higher the pitch of the chords in the track, the earlier the ice melted that year (using a 10-year moving average). These chords go up and down in pitch, but on the whole they get higher as the music progresses, showing the ice melting earlier and earlier as climate change in Nenana takes hold. Two other data layers can be heard in the track. During the winter, the aurora borealis swirls through the skies of Alaska and its strength rises and falls in eleven-year sunspot cycles. These are sonified as an ethereal shimmer in the background, based on real data from the Royal Observatory of Belgium - the louder the sound, the more sunspots heard in a given month. Then there’s CO2. In the background of the track, faint at first and louder and louder over time, you’ll hear a siren. The pitch of the siren represents carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere, measured by the observatory at Mauna Loa in Hawaii. They rise and fall each year as forests grow and die back in the northern hemisphere, which has more land. That’s why the pitch of the siren wobbles a little. But they also increase over time and rise to a worrying climax near the end of the track. Finally, there are a whole lot of other musical elements that don’t represent any data. They’re just there to make the track sound good. Data The track covers the time period from January 1917 to December 2020 inclusive. Annual tripod data comes from the Nenana Book of Guesses, with data for the last few years gathered from news reports and appended manually. https://www.nenanaakiceclassic.com/2018%20Book_recovered.pdf Monthly sunspot data comes from the Royal Observatory of Belgium. http://www.sidc.be/silso/datafiles Monthly CO2 data for 1917-2014 comes from the Institute for Atmospheric and Climate Science (IAC) at the Eidgenössische Technische Hochschule in Zürich, Switzerland. https://www.co2.earth/historical-co2-datasets Monthly CO2 data for 2015-2020 comes from the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) https://gml.noaa.gov/webdata/ccgg/trends/co2/co2_mm_gl.txt