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< 2015

December 2015

Day: 3 | 4 | 10 | 11 | 16 | 18 | 25

  • To Your Health! December 25, 2015

    The dodgy world of health news...from scary studies to celebrity-endorsed&nbsp;miracle cures. (episode)

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    • Breaking News Consumer's Handbook: Health News Edition December 25, 2015

      A bogus study about chocolate and weight loss fooled&nbsp;several news outlets. Here, we present a thorough debunking of health news misreporting.

    • Breaking News Consumer's Handbook: Celebrity Expert Edition December 25, 2015

      Toxins, gluten,&nbsp;fad&nbsp;diets, cleanses...and how to separate fact from fiction. &nbsp;

    • What Does a Body Good? December 25, 2015

      "Food Babe" Vani Hari has petitioned to get the&nbsp;"yoga mat" out of Subway sandwiches and the synthetic coloring out of Kraft's macaroni &amp; cheese. But her logic might be flawed.

    • Munchausen by Internet December 25, 2015

      Taryn Harper Wright&nbsp;spends her spare time unraveling the efforts of people who fake illnesses online.&nbsp;

    • Get Your Health Awareness! December 25, 2015

      The country&rsquo;s health observances calendar is slated with more than 200 awareness days and weeks and months to satisfy even the choosiest of hypochondriacs.

  • Politically Correct December 18, 2015

    What you hear about the Paris climate agreement depends on whom you ask. Plus, how to spot an accurate election poll as the primaries edge closer.&nbsp; (episode)

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    • On Political Correctness December 18, 2015

      GOP candidates squared off against the real enemy during&nbsp;Tuesday's foreign policy-themed debate: political correctness.

    • Breaking News Consumer's Handbook: Election Polls Edition December 18, 2015

      How can you tell important polling headlines from bad ones? Our partnership with FiveThirtyEight continues with this look at&nbsp;how to interpret&nbsp;polling data as the primaries get closer.

    • Polling & Democracy: An Uneasy Relationship December 18, 2015

      What if the problem with polling isn't bad polls but polls in general? The New Yorker's Jill Lepore on the history of polling and why skepticism is, and has always been,&nbsp;necessary.

    • "Landmark" or "Fraud"? December 18, 2015

      The&nbsp;Paris climate change deal has been called both &ldquo;landmark&rdquo; and &ldquo;a fraud". We search for clarity amid all the conflicting commentary.&nbsp;

    • The Guardian Goes Positive December 18, 2015

      Eight months after The Guardian launched its "Keep It In The Ground" climate change&nbsp;campaign, it has shifted its focus from divestment to a&nbsp;less tangible but more optimistic goal: hope.&nbsp;

  • A Very Semi-Serious Conversation December 16, 2015

    Bob sits down with Bob Mankoff, cartoon editor of the New Yorker, to talk about life, cartoons, and much more.&nbsp; (article)

  • Take Responsibility December 11, 2015

    Diagnosing a demagogue; breaking down a media feeding frenzy in San Bernardino; and the life and death of New York Times reporter and AIDS victim Jeffrey Schmalz. (episode)

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    • So You've Got a Demagogue December 11, 2015

      Donald Trump may be breaking the current political mold, but history has always anticipated characters like him. Here's what we can learn from&nbsp;the rise and fall of demagogues past.

    • "Vultures, Jackals, and Hyenas" December 11, 2015

      Bob reports from Redlands, CA on the media maelstrom that invaded the alleged San Bernardino shooters' condo.

    • Dying Words December 11, 2015

      New York Times reporter Jeffrey Schmalz was diagnosed with AIDS 25 years ago. The disease changed the way he and others reported on the lives of gay men and women.

  • Plaintiff Shopping December 10, 2015

    Plaintiffs who come to symbolize major supreme court cases are&nbsp;often&nbsp;carefully cast by&nbsp;advocates and public-interest lawyers. (article)

  • Lies, Lies, Lies December 4, 2015

    A brief history of political lies;&nbsp;a psychological look at why and how we lie; and whether&nbsp;we're really as divided as we think.&nbsp; (episode)

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    • A Taxonomy of Political Lies December 4, 2015

      Kicking off our deep dive into deception with a taxonomy of the political lie.

    • Our Lies, Our Selves December 4, 2015

      Our relationship with lying in our own lives has a lot to do with how we judge the lies of politicians.&nbsp;

    • A Recent History of Political Lies December 4, 2015

      Though this election season feels particularly falsity-filled, we've been on this road for a long time. Here's a brief history of political lies&nbsp;and how Trump has broken&nbsp;the mold.

    • Politifact-Checking the Politicians December 4, 2015

      If fact-checking is meant to chasten politicians who lie, why isn't it more chaste out there? We speak to Politifact about educating the public&nbsp;and the definition of a "half-truth."

    • The Mechanism of Blind Belief December 4, 2015

      Why people&nbsp;believe what they&nbsp;want to believe, despite&nbsp;the facts.&nbsp;

    • When Polls Obscure The Truth December 4, 2015

      Nate Silver of FiveThirtyEight explains why Donald Trump's position in the polls isn't everything he makes it out to be, and how polls can also obscure the truth.

    • Elitist Traitors vs Fascist Morons December 4, 2015

      For many on the Left,&nbsp;Trump's popularity merely&nbsp;confirms&nbsp;their&nbsp;assumptions about&nbsp;those&nbsp;other people in America. And this may be the most dangerous lie of all.

  • On San Bernardino December 4, 2015

    In the wake of the mass shooting in San Bernardino, a look at the ban on CDC research into gun violence and how the families of victims&nbsp;manage the media.&nbsp; (article)