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A library of interviews with the world’s biggest thinkers.
5mins
Once the paper begins charging for online content in January, the question will be: What does the New York Times become without its readers?
1mins
“I can’t imagine why anyone would want to work for this guy,” says Michael Wolff of the Apple CEO.
3mins
His first internet company tanked. So was Wolff nervous about launching Newser?
2mins
The writer had a feeling of “immense relief that this quixotic enterprise of buying the magazine would not end up as my terrible fate.”
4mins
Michael Wolff remembers his first time walking into the “depressing, smoke-filled” newsroom after he was hired—and knowing it wasn’t a place where he wanted to work.
6mins
The billionaire media mogul was surprised that Wolff’s biography of him was so “personal.”
29mins
A conversation with the Vanity Fair columnist, author of The Biography of Rupert Murdoch and founder of Newser.
3mins
Technological solutions may help increase some of the limits of memory, but we should also simply be aware that our intuitions might be wrong.
2mins
The psychologist demonstrates the “lowest technology” form of memory test.
5mins
We are more likely to believe the veracity of intense “flash-bulb memories”—yet these are just as likely as normal memories to be distorted over time.
3mins
We are seduced by the forecasters who seem the most confident. When we follow their advice, we often believe we’re making better decisions than we are.
2mins
There’s a whole category of intuitions that are systematically wrong in very dangerous ways—those we have about how our own minds work.
5mins
The psychologist’s “invisible gorilla” experiment demonstrates how we often miss major details when we’re concentrating on something else.
23mins
A conversation with the Assistant Professor of Psychology at Union College.
4mins
Because of William Phillips’ work in laser cooling, atomic clocks are almost a thousand times better than they used to be.
3mins
For half of American high school students, college should start when they are 16 years old.
8mins
Leon Botstein became the president of Bard at 23, when the college was in a situation of “complete desperation.”
4mins
No, says the Jerusalem Symphony Orchestra conductor; the most music can offer is common ground.
4mins
Engaging the next generation will be like re-introducing a child to vegetables they hated when they were children.
4mins
Leon Botstein explains why his “Classics Declassified” is akin to discovering a new city by wandering around.