Avsnitt
-
This month, SpaceX had the largest IPO in all of human history. In a mission to understand a bewildering moment, we trace the story of the stock market itself. From its very beginnings in the Netherlands, to its supersizing in America, through the prism of crypto and widespread speculation that has led to this moment with SpaceX. What happened?
The World's First Stock Exchange by Lodewijk Petram
The Wisdom of Finance by Mihir Desai
Liftoff and Reentry by Eric Berger
Search Engine's earlier reporting on Elon Musk’s controversial data centers: Colossus 1 & Colossus 2
Sign up to be a premium subscriber!
-
Claire Haber-Harris has a question. When she sends out an invitation, why does she get a tidal wave of excuses and no's? How could someone claim to have had the same stomach virus three times in a row? Search Engine investigates why a random American mom might be annoying people in her community.
Cartoons Hate Her on Substack
Become a premium member!
-
Saknas det avsnitt?
-
An investigation into a mysterious room. A room that the most famous family in England apparently does not want you to see.
Support the show!
-
The President has created a 1.776 billion dollar fund of taxpayer money he can direct to whoever he wants. Huh? How did this happen, and what might happen next? We talk to Pro Publica’s Jesse Eisinger, an investigative reporter who has played a strange role in this whole story.
Listen to our series with Jesse: Why is it so hard to tax billionaires? (Part 1) and (Part 2)
Check out the new ProPublica podcast Paper Trail.
Support the show!
-
Presenting an episode of Family Lore, a new show on the Audacy network. The granddaughter of a prolific Jewish art collector who fled Europe during World War II embarks on a quest to recover the looted art.
-
We go deep into the story of Taiwan. How a tiny island escaped demise, chartered a course from colonial subjugation through mass Barbie production and into the technological powerhouse it is today.
The Tiger Leading the Dragon: How Taiwan Propelled China's Economic Rise by Shelley Rigger
Get tickets to hear PJ read live! Friends With Words at Roulette
-
Nuclear energy was a taboo for decades, but it’s coming back, it’ll power AI data centers for Google and Microsoft. What does new nuclear technology look like, and why do the nuclear optimists believe this new tech is superior? Meltdowns, reactors that can fit in your backyard, and one podcaster’s heroic attempt to describe nuclear fission.
Rachel Slaybaugh
Rebecca Tuhus-Dubrow (check out her book Atomic Dreams)
Adam Stein
Search Engine’s episodes on data centers: Colossus 1 & Colossus 2
Support the show!
-
We're supposed to be buried there forever, right? Right?? Answers this week from writer David Sloane, who grew up in a cemetery and spent his adult life studying them. The surprising history of the place we go where we die and an answer to what happens when it runs out of money.
Is the Cemetery Dead? by David Charles Sloane
Support the show at searchengine.show
-
An enterprising reporter goes on a quest to find the restaurant serving the absolute best free bread in this country, and finds it. She returns to Search Engine with her results.
Read Caity Weaver’s story.
Support the show!
-
The United States has begun a conflict with Iran that two thirds of the American public does not understand. One question we can try to answer: how much is this conflict costing us? The surprising story of how the government learned to hide the costs of war, and how someone learned to get to the bottom of those costs anyway.
Check out Professor Bilmes’ work.
Additional listening: our episode on ballooning national debt and why it's a big deal
Support the show!
-
Search Engine is breaking its cowardly three-year silence on GLP-1s. We have been curious about them. We have been afraid of getting in trouble. We are no longer afraid. A conversation with Dr. Rachael Bedard about the many mistakes in how the media covered these drugs and what the research shows about their surprising effects.
Dr. Bedard’s story on the rise of Ozempic
Support the show!
-
In blue cities throughout the country, unions and politicians are fighting to ban driverless cars. We travel to Boston, where the fight has reached a fever pitch, and where the cars themselves will create some very unusual political alliances.
(This is part two of a two part series, listen to the beginning here.)
Support Search Engine!
-
The story of how a secret project at Google led to driverless cars on American roads. And, an answer to the question: are the robots actually safer drivers than we are?
Driven: The Race to Create the Autonomous Car , Alex Davies
Support Search Engine!
-
This week, we’re sharing an episode from Odd Lots. An interview with The Economist's Mike Bird about how Chinese real estate became the biggest bubble in history.
You can find more episodes from Odd Lots here.
-
Anthropic hired philosophers to teach its AI to be good. In their tests, the AI blackmailed a human to keep itself alive. Writer Gideon Lewis-Kraus went inside the company to figure out what's going on with Claude, and whether anyone can actually control it.
Read Gideon's story here
Support Search Engine!
-
A question from a four-year-old tips us into an investigation of one of our most fundamental taboos: cannibalism. With help from New Yorker food critic Hannah Goldfield and writer Kelefa Sanneh.
-
Two decades ago, bodybuilders on niche internet forums started injecting peptides. Now they're in the secret mini-fridges of some teenage boys. How did they get there? We track their crooked path from Silicon Valley to jaw-smashing influencers.
Check out Jasmine Sun's work (and her piece on peptides)
Check out Ezra Marcus' work (and his piece on peptides)
Support Search Engine!
-
A simple question leads us on a journey from the bowels of New York City through the courtrooms of South Carolina to the disgusting truth.
Support Search Engine!
-
The conclusion to our story about Venezuela. How a country goes from a prosperous democracy to a poverty-ravaged dictatorship.
The End (our 2022 episode on Greenland)
The Many Faces of Chavismo - Alejandro Velasco
Things Are Never So Bad That They Can't Get Worse - William Neuman
-
For the past year, there's been a steady drumbeat of headlines about Venezuela. Now the US has invaded, arrested its president, and installed itself in charge. To understand how we got here, we talked to Venezuelan historian Alejandro Velasco, who grew up there and has spent years trying to understand why a country with so much promise has proven so difficult to govern.
The Many Faces of Chavismo - Alejandro Velasco
Hard Fork with Casey Newton and Kevin Roose
- Visa fler