Category: podcast

EP 958 Pickleball is All the Rage in America

EP 958 Pickleball is All the Rage in America

When one of your friends tells you that pickleball is now the all-consuming passion in their life, what do you say?  Every day, thousands and thousands more people pick up a paddle and get hooked on the fastest growing sport in the land. What’s all the fuss about?  As a long-time tennis guy, I had to find out so I turned to Clare Frank, former firefighter turned pickleball obsessive.  She is the author of the new book, “Just One More Game.”  In it she describes why she’s fallen in love with the sport, its many health benefits, the types of players you will meet when you wander onto a court, the gear you’ll need, the injuries you should try to avoid and the hold it will have on your life.  We also discuss the growing sense that this sport may one day become part of the Olympics as its unfettered rise, among all age groups, continues.

EP 957 America’s Federal Government is Broke: Does Anyone Care?

EP 957 America’s Federal Government is Broke: Does Anyone Care?

 It’s true.  The headline in Fortune on-line screamed “The Treasury Just Declared the U.S. insolvent. The media missed it.” Well maybe the media missed it, but Congress and the President also have been asleep at the nation’s wheel on this issue for a very long time. The Treasury’s own consolidated financial statements for fiscal year 2025, released just a few weeks ago, show $6.06 trillion in total assets against $47.78 trillion in total liabilities as of September 30, 2025.  And, folks, that’s just the public debt which you can see above the waterline.  When you add about the implied obligations to citizens going forward, like Social Security and Medicare obligations, the roughly $41 trillion in debt rises to around $100 trillion.  It is mind blowing.  So, what can the federal government do?  Simply put, it could curb spending, raise taxes or hope that economic growth can grow our way out of this mess.  Or you can look away, keep printing money and continue borrowing, until the interest payments on the debt wreck the economy or borrowers scatter to the hills.  We’re on the verge.  Our guest today, the Honorable David Walker is the former Comptroller General of the United States and CEO of the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO).  His words are clear and provocative as to the hole we have dug for ourselves. He thinks we need a good old talking to, as the citizenry, about our problem.  Will anyone listen?  You can begin today with this podcast.

EP 956 Chromebooks Prevalent in Schools: What’s the Impact?

EP 956 Chromebooks Prevalent in Schools: What’s the Impact?

 The test scores for 4th and 8th graders in math and reading have not been great lately.  The lag may be due to the time lost during the pandemic, but there may be another remnant of that time that is affecting things.  As teachers hurried to adopt EdTech practices in that time, much gave way to the computer becoming a dominant force in the classroom, not just in computer labs. The Chromebook was the symbol of this change.  This Google portable laptop option with cloud-based applications promised future-readiness, engagement and innovation for students. A few years down the road, there are crusader parents who sense different impacts on their children, including six-minute attention spans, normalizing the need for constant stimulation and academic mediocrity.  Not to mention that these devices track students’ personal data.  Julie Frumin, one such mom, founder of HealthierTech and a licensed family and marriage therapist, joins us to discuss.

EP 955 Should We Be Making It Harder or Easier to Vote?

EP 955 Should We Be Making It Harder or Easier to Vote?

While some states are making it easier to vote, with automatic registration when you renew a driver’s license, or aggressive campaigns to bring voter registration to you, other states are working aggressively to restrict voting by requiring proof of citizenship, which goes beyond basic voter identification.  And President Trump and the GOP-proposed SAVE Act is considered by many to be a solution for a problem that does not exist. It is not a Voter ID bill but rather a ‘show me your papers’ bill with the government seeking your birth certificate or passport to vote.  Birth certificates will often not include a woman’s married name, those born outside a hospital may not have one and only about fifty percent of Americans do not have a passport.  C’mon, this is a burden meant to suppress voting by some. The big concern raised by those who are attempting to put more restrictions in place is non-citizen voting.  Even conservative groups who’ve studies that issue find it to be a red herring, representing at most .004 percent over a sweep of time.  In this conversation with Anjali Enjeti, author of “Ballot,” I share my greater concern–that too few people go out and vote.  In fact, the numbers in municipal elections, which used to be in the 70-80 percent range in many places have dwindled to about 25 percent.  And presidential elections now hover in the 60-70 percent range. How do we really know the will of the people when a dwindling share decides to participate? I believe we should be making it easier, not harder, to vote.  At the end of the conversation, I mention that Australia has mandatory voting or you are fined.  Would that work in America?  We discuss it today on this podcast.

EP 954 AI’s Coming Disruption Will Change More Than We Can Imagine

EP 954 AI’s Coming Disruption Will Change More Than We Can Imagine

 At the moment many of us see and use AI as a quicker and more comprehensive search engine. Truth is, it really is a game changer.  So much so that our guest, Fred Voccola, author of “The Coming Disruption: How AI Will Force Organizations to Change Everything or Face Destruction,” says, (are you sitting down), AI is the single most important development in the history of our species.  He posits that it will have more impact than the steam engine, electricity, penicillin, and the Internet itself.  Recently, Elon Musk said that AI is good enough TODAY to replace half of white-collar jobs, and he argues that it’s ‘pointless’ to go to medical school except for social reasons.  He suggests that robots will being doing surgery at scale within three years.  Is all of this imaginable? Or remotely possible? And talk about societal dislocation.  All this change based on something that doesn’t require huge investments in new infrastructure but simply changes in leadership and adoption of what is available to us.  And it’s all coming at breakneck speed.  Are you ready?  Find out today on this podcast.

EP 953 Should We Be Concerned About the Reliability of the Electrical Grid?

EP 953 Should We Be Concerned About the Reliability of the Electrical Grid?

 Do you think very often, if at all, how it is that when you turn on a light switch in your home, instantly there is light.  Given that there are so many factors upstream from your home–generating the power, transmitting it, distributing it and, finally, consuming it, the whole thing is pretty miraculous. And we’ve heard time and again that there is always a fragility to it.  We have aging infrastructure, increasing demand (never more so than now with the oncoming data centers for AI), cybersecurity threats, climate change impacts and the integration of renewable energy sources.  And it’s all driven by 11,000 power plants, 3,000 utilities, and more than 2 million miles of power lines.  In 2016, a great book which I’ve kept on my shelf at home, came out.  It was titled “The Grid: The Fraying Wires Between Americans and Our Energy Future” and was written by Gretchen Bakke, PhD, explaining the history and current (no pun intended) status of the grid.  I interviewed her ten years ago on radio and thought it was time to update that important discussion.  So here it is.

EP 952 Have Our Solutions to the Climate Crisis Been Misguided?

EP 952 Have Our Solutions to the Climate Crisis Been Misguided?

 Have you ever started working on a puzzle and realized you had the whole picture wrong and needed to start over again?  Well, our guest thinks that we’ve been so focused on ‘managing tons’ of emissions, with regulatory and accounting nightmares like offsets, that we’ve lost sight of the goal of developing a new economic system built on a different energy platform.  Given the political muscle of the oil, now energy, companies, the desire to move incrementally into more green energy alternatives may be understandable.  This moment, though, may be the time, with the numbers getting even worse, to jettison the old model of multilateral agreements and start putting green energy asset holders in the driver’s seat.  It’s not an easy assignment, but Jessica Green, our guest, a Professor in the Department of Political Science and in the School of the Environment at the University of Toronto and the author of “Existential Politics: Why Global Climate Institutions are Failing and How to Fix Them,” explains why the transition in thinking is critical at this stage.

EP 951 Diverse Schools and Workplaces Perform Better. There’s Science Behind It.

EP 951 Diverse Schools and Workplaces Perform Better. There’s Science Behind It.

 There was a time when our guest was a diversity skeptic.  He actually believed that Justice Clarence Thomas’s thinking on the matter had some validity.  Then he began to explore the history of the concept and became a true admirer of the benefits that diversity brings to academic settings, the workplace, science laboratories and all manner of activity.  From that he began a thoughtful examination of the science behind the benefits of having previously excluded groups as part of the conversation and decision-making process.  And while some argued that simply by using the Socratic Method of challenging convention you could get enough diverse opinions, he began to recognize, as other scholars like Wilhelm von Humboldt and John Stuart Mill did in the 19th century and Charles Eliot, Archibald Cox and Lewis Powell did in the 20th century, that you actually needed people with different backgrounds and life experiences to provide the rich diversity of thought that resulted in better scholarship and outcomes.  America’s adaption of diversity in action over the last 50 years seemed to suggest we understood that, so now why the backsliding?  We discuss this all today with Berkeley law professor, David Oppenheimer.  He is the author of the new book, “The Diversity Principle: The Story of a Transformative Idea.”

EP 950 Your Digital Life Lives on Long After You’re Gone

EP 950 Your Digital Life Lives on Long After You’re Gone

Here’s a podcast subject I bet you’ve never thought about. It did briefly occur to me as I continue to get birthday reminders from Facebook about friends I know who have died.  What happens to your digital life when you pass away?  Unlike previous technologies to preserve the dead–cemeteries, archives, photo albums, home movies–the internet is no longer something you visit and leave.  Many people will leave behind a daily account of who they were and what they were thinking. The vast necropolis is being built daily and the number of dead, say Facebook, accounts will over the next several decades outnumber social media accounts of the living.  This fact poses previously unconsidered concerns: who owns this material? what policies dictate its use and maintenance? will an ad-sponsored service have as an interest in maintaining those accounts when they are the digital record of people who no longer can buy products?  In 2019, then Twitter announced it would purge those accounts that had been inactive for more than six months.  What followed was an outcry by grieving relatives and friends and the company rescinded the policy.  Our guest, Carl Ohman, a digital ethicist at Uppsala University and the author of “The Afterlife of Data: What Happens to Your Information When You Die and Why You Should Care” joins us for a fascinating topic which goes beyond most checklists people have set up in preparation for death.

EP 949 Have the Pandemic and Social Media Crushed Our Sense of Awe?

EP 949 Have the Pandemic and Social Media Crushed Our Sense of Awe?

Step out your front door and feast on images of the natural world that when studied provide us with such great joy and wonder that our spirits rise and all of our self-doubts and social anxiety melt away. Yet, since the pandemic when we became inert and homebound and relied on our small screens for connection.  The lag from that moment, coupled with the many choices for entertainment in-home and the fear of confrontation with others about our partisan divide, make the safe choice the one many of us choose.  And, of course, that results in the loneliness epidemic that a past Surgeon General said was a major health problem in the country.  How do we cure it?  Referring to the opening sentence in this podcast description, step out your front door and watch and appreciate birds, smell the ocean air, lose yourself in the wonders that abound.  Feel small.  Lose a sense of time.  Get the chills.  To discuss all of this with us is Val Walker, author of her newest book, “Healing Through Wonder: How Aw Restores Us After Trauma and Loss.”