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What Comes to Mind When Picking a President Hurts THIS Much

Pop Trends Price Culture

Release Date: 10/16/2016

Part II: Jane vs Goliath - Only in America show art Part II: Jane vs Goliath - Only in America

Pop Trends Price Culture

Jane Jacobs saw a solution when nobody else even saw a problem. The problem she saw was, planners and architects and master builders of her day held fatally flawed assumptions about human behavior -- that the way people in cities live is perfectly rational and efficient and chaos-free. And that is why their urban renewal projects were destructive. Their model was all wrong. Does this sound familiar? It should for anyone who took economics 101...

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Jane vs Goliath: Only in America show art Jane vs Goliath: Only in America

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One of the greatest and most influential "David vs. Goliath" stories in 20th century America is all but unknown these days. An obscure, apparently ill-equipped female went up against the man who may be history's most prolific developer. This is episode one of a two-episode story about their decade-long battle.

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Upholding Presidential Tradition, Abnormally show art Upholding Presidential Tradition, Abnormally

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We are watching the past become the present right before our eyes. It may not LOOK that way, but make no mistake: It's happening. Pop Trends, Price Culture shows three ways Donald Trump is upholding presidential tradition, abnormally.

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Vaccinations, Opioids and the Health Risks of Linear Thinking show art Vaccinations, Opioids and the Health Risks of Linear Thinking

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What was the most successful medical program in human history? Here's a hint: It began with a counterintuitive, non-linear solution. Yet, social mood at present suggests that counterintuitive thinking is short supply, in helping to solve a current, huge health crisis.

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Also in This Week's News: Are Also in This Week's News: Are "Facts" Evidence of Partisanship?

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This past week in the news has been like 40 gallons of crazy compressed into a 20-gallon tank. It's too much to keep up with. It's like you want to slap the next person who says "I've never seen this before," except … you keep hearing yourself say that. Consider the role of social mood, and the idea that "extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence."

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Do Real Vigilantes Ever Really Wear White Hats? show art Do Real Vigilantes Ever Really Wear White Hats?

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The public loves portrayals of vigilante justice. Memorable vigilantes are sometimes a ‘good guy,’ other times they are … something else. Why? Where did those characters come from? Are there ever ‘good guy’ vigilantes in the real world? These great questions get great answers in this episode of Pop Trends, Prices Culture.

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"Rational Man," or, Real Humans in the Real World

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It's easy to ignore information that contradicts what you think you know. Yet it's hard later on to find out that the information was right -- and that you were mistaken. We've all been there, and most of us try to learn from our mistakes. But: you can't say that you're "learning from a mistake" if you have information you know is correct and choose to ignore it…

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On Mr. Trump: What I Knew THEN Is What I Know NOW show art On Mr. Trump: What I Knew THEN Is What I Know NOW

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In February 2004, Robert Folsom wrote a column that was published by a major news site. Yes that was 13 years ago, but, in recent months, the subject of that column has become more relevant than ever. For this episode of Pop Trends, Price Culture, Folsom reads that old column, word for word, exactly as published in 2004. It still speaks for itself.

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Presidential Scandals -- How Much Damage Do They Do? show art Presidential Scandals -- How Much Damage Do They Do?

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Some Presidential scandals change history. Others are minor & don't involve the White House directly. But whether large or small, when the scandal s**t hits the fan, the president ends up 'wearing it' in some way. The real question is: "How much political and/or personal damage does it do to the president?"

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Why a Why a "Nation of Immigrants" Can't Agree On Immigration

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Immigration policy has been an epic contradiction all thru U.S. history. America is “a nation of immigrants,” yet major political trends in American frequently include outbursts of anti-immigration sentiment. Pop Trends, Price Culture offers a way to un-puzzle this issue – including recent-cases-in-point – via the clarity that comes with understanding social mood.

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"My fellow Americans, our long national nightmare is over."

Well, almost over. That comment is from Gerald Ford on August 9, 1974, after he was sworn in as President upon the resignation of Richard Nixon.

At the risk of melodrama, I invoke that famous quote because Ford meant to capture the emotional toll on America that attended the ouster of a sitting president.

In 2016, we've suffered through a trauma simply to get a president elected.

In other news, please listen on to hear mood at work in Zika guidelines, the Battle for Mosul, and, of course, in various other themes from the 2016 election cycle.