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5 episodes reviewed
The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett · Mar 6
This 27-minute clip from Steven Bartlett's show tackles a question that haunts millions: why does financial stress persist regardless of how much you earn? Nischa Shah, an ex-banker turned financial educator, promises a practical framework to break the paycheque-to-paycheque cycle. If you're tired of feeling behind financially despite a decent income, this episode is directly for you.
Freakonomics Radio · Mar 6
Economic historian Joel Mokyr sits down with Stephen Dubner to explain why he won the Nobel Prize for arguing something heretical in economics: that culture — not just institutions — drives prosperity. If you've ever wondered why some societies innovate while others stagnate, or why the Industrial Revolution happened in Europe rather than China, this conversation spans a millennium to answer those questions. Essential listening for anyone interested in economic history, innovation, or the cultural forces shaping our future.
How I Built This with Guy Raz · Mar 6
Miguel McKelvey, WeWork's co-founder, returns to Guy Raz's Advice Line to counsel three small business owners grappling with growth challenges. If you're wrestling with customer acquisition costs or scaling decisions, this episode offers hard-won wisdom from someone who learned these lessons at massive scale. Worth a listen for any founder navigating the messy middle of business growth.
The Tim Ferriss Show · Mar 6
Jim Collins, author of the 11-million-copy-selling 'Good to Great,' sits down with Tim Ferriss for an almost three-hour conversation centered on his new book about self-knowledge and life design. For anyone who's followed Collins' meticulous business research over the decades, this episode promises a rare look at how he applies his frameworks to the ultimate question: what to make of your own life. At 169 minutes, it's a commitment — but given Collins' track record and the depth he brings to every topic, this conversation likely rewards patience.
The Indicator from Planet Money · Mar 6
This 9-minute episode tackles a labor market shift hiding in plain sight: fewer Americans are working overnight than at any point in recent decades. If you're curious about changing worker preferences or wondering why businesses struggle to staff late hours, this brief but focused episode offers economic insight into a trend that affects everything from hospital staffing to 24-hour diners. Worth your commute time.