North Star Podcast
Rob Henderson is one of my favorite up-and-coming writers. I like him because he's one of those people who doesn't fit into a category. He's a Ph.D. candidate in psychology, but I met him in a book club about technological stagnation. He's spent years in the academy, first at Yale and now at Cambridge, but most of his influence comes from his online writing. Most of all, he's interested in human nature. In particular, psychology, status, and social class.
info_outline Chrisman Frank and Ana Lorena Fabrega: How Childhood Education Will ChangeNorth Star Podcast
This week, I have two guests. Both are affiliated with Synthesis, a new kind of online school where kids learn through games and simulations. One is Chrisman Frank, the CEO of Synthesis. The other is Ana Lorena Fabrega, who is their Chief Evangelist.
info_outline Ash Fontana: Building Artificial IntelligenceNorth Star Podcast
Ash Fontana is an entrepreneur, investor, and author. As an entrepreneur, he was only of the early employees at an online investing platform called AngelList. From there, he became the Managing Director at Zetta, the first investment fund focused on artificial intelligence. Now, he's the author of the AI-First Company.
info_outline Li Jin: Creating the Creator EconomyNorth Star Podcast
My guest today is Li Jin, the founder and managing partner at an early-stage venture capital firm called Atelier.
info_outline Zena Hitz: Liberal Arts ThinkingNorth Star Podcast
My guest today is Zena Hitz, a tutor at St John’s and the author of an excellent book called Lost in Thought: The Hidden Pleasures of an Intellectual Life. Her book explores the meaning and the value of learning for its own sake, through images and stories of bookworms, philosophers, scientists, and other learners, both fictional and historical.
info_outline Tiago Forte and Will Mannon: Building Cohort-Based CoursesNorth Star Podcast
I have two guests today: Tiago Forte and Will Mannon.
info_outline Gagan Biyani: Building Silicon Valley StartupsNorth Star Podcast
My guest today is Gagan Biyani, the current CEO of an education startup that helps teachers run Cohort-Based Courses on the Internet and has students from around the world. Gagan also founded a multi-billion dollar online education platform called Udemy. Afterward, he founded Sprig, a food delivery platform that grew to a nine-digit valuation but eventually failed. So today, he has the distinct pleasure of being both the founder of a unicorn and the founder of a massive failure.
info_outline Trevor Bauer: Playing Professional BaseballNorth Star Podcast
My guest today is Trevor Bauer, who is arguably the very best pitcher in Major League Baseball. I wanted to interview Trevor not only because he's an excellent pitcher, but because he takes a radical approach to the game. He's a physicist and a scientist. A scholar and an entrepreneur. And you don't find that combination very often.
info_outline Nik Sharma: Building DTC CompaniesNorth Star Podcast
My guest today is Nik Sharma, the founder of Sharma Brands and an advisor to companies like Judy and Cha Cha Matcha. Nik is one of my very best friends, and my go-to person for all things commerce. Since we first met, we've spent hours exploring the future of marketing and commerce together, and recorded this podcast to give you a window into what our conversations are like.
info_outline Kevin Kelly: Seeing the FutureNorth Star Podcast
My guest today is Kevin Kelly, who co-founded Wired Magazine in 1993 and served as its Executive Editor for the first seven years. As one of the most important futurists of our generation, he's published a number of books including The Inevitable, What Technology Wants, and New Rules for the New Economy which is my favorite one. Coolest of all, he's also a founding member of the board of the Long Now Foundation, a non-profit devoted to encouraging long-term thinking.
info_outlineMy guest today is Claire Lehmann, the founder and editor-in-chief of Quillette, a for-profit online magazine that publishes essays on topics like politics, science, and academia. We started our conversation talking about Quilette's business model and the niche it occupies on the Internet. Then, we moved on to societal topics like the longevity of bureaucracies, the pros and cons of standardized tests, and what Claire would change about childhood education.
____________________________
Show Notes
1:31 - Why Claire believes being a for-profit instead of a non-profit gives her and her company more freedom.
5:32 - What Quillette has learned through publishing so many submitted articles over the years.
10:15 - The relationship between free speech and innovation.
13:12 - What we can learn from how Russia handled scientific experimentation and their lack of freedom to critique it.
15:08 - Why one of the biggest flaws Claire sees with higher education is that it seems necessary for people to go.
20:17 - How higher education is only creating academics and not lifelong students.
23:32 - Why organizations may have a lifecycle and how it plays into the problems that come with their extended growth.
29:45 - Why Claire believes literacy in subjects like psychology and statistics is massively underrated.
34:55 - What Enlightenment-era values are justly held in high regard, and which we may need to reconsider in the modern age.
40:54 - The historical reasons why intellectualism is not a strong value in Australia.
43:46 - What Claire has learned about childhood education through her time at Quillette, and why she believes younger children need to spend most of their time learning facts.
51:04 - Why standardized testing is beneficial for children from underprivileged families.
55:37 - What Claire believes to be her strengths in both her personal and business life.
58:12 - What about the book "The Custom And The Country" makes Claire love it so much.
1:01:42 - What it may mean for our brains as we possibly move into a "post-literate" society.
1:05:03 - Claire's favorite articles she's ever hosted on Quillette.