Fridays are all about podcast links here at Abnormal Returns. You can check out last week’s links including a look at the case for effective altruism.
Work
- Ezra Klein talks the new world of work with Anne Helen Petersen and Charlie Warzel authors of “Out of Office: The Big Problem and Bigger Promise of Working From Home.” (nytimes.com)
- Russ Roberts talks with Tyler Cowen, co-author of "Talent: How to Identify Energizers, Creatives, and Winners Around the World." (econtalk.org)
- Brett McKay talks with Melody Warnick author of "If You Could Live Anywhere: The Surprising Importance of Place in a Work-From-Anywhere World." (artofmanliness.com)
Business
- Ben & David with a very deep dive into the business of Amazon ($AMZN). (acquired.fm)
- Patrick O'Shaughnessy talks American dynamism with a16z partner Katherine Boyle. (joincolossus.com)
- Jesse Pujji talks with Mark Tomasovic about the business of ChargePoint. (joincolossus.com)
- Joe Weisenthal and Tracy Alloway talk the grid with Rob Gramlich, the Founder and President of Grid Strategies. (bloomberg.com)
Finance
- Meb Faber talks with Edward Chancellor about his new book "The Price of Time: The Real Story of Interest." (mebfaber.com)
- Barry Ritholtz talks with Kenneth Tropin, chairman and founder of Graham Capital Management, a multi-strategy quantitative hedge fund. (ritholtz.com)
- Anthony Pompliano talks with Adam Kurkiewicz is the Managing Director of Investments for the Washington University In St. Louis Endowment. (podcasts.apple.com)
- Ted Seides talks long-short investing with Paul Enright of Krainos Capital. (capitalallocators.com)
- Jeff Benjamin talks single-stock ETFs with Nate Geraci (investmentnews.com)
Non-finance
- Jordan Harbinger talks food science with Marion Nestle author of "Unsavory Truth: How Food Companies Skew the Science of What We Eat." (jordanharbinger.com)
- Jim O'Shaughnessy talks about the power of writing with David Perell. (infiniteloopspodcast.com)
- Derek Thompson talks with Chuck Klosterman about how “hating things” became a mainstream personality trait and a political position. (theringer.com)