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El Podcast

El Podcast

著者: El Podcast Media
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In El Podcast, anything and everything is up for discussion. Grab a drink and join us in this epic virtual happy hour!2022 El Podcast Media マネジメント・リーダーシップ リーダーシップ 政治・政府 社会科学 経済学
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  • E143: From Student-Athlete to Employee: The NCAA’s New Era
    2025/07/16

    Indiana University professor John T. Holden explains how lawsuits, NIL deals, and direct payments are transforming college sports—and why athletes may soon be recognized as employees.

    👤 Guest Bio

    John T. Holden is a business professor at Indiana University specializing in sports betting, gambling regulation, and legal issues in college athletics. His research focuses on the intersection of sports, law, and policy.

    📚 Topics Discussed
    • The 2021 Alston Supreme Court ruling and its ripple effects
    • Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) law and state competition
    • The 2025 House v. NCAA settlement and direct athlete payments
    • Roster caps and the future of walk-ons
    • Legal risks, employee classification, and collective bargaining
    • Winners and losers of the new system
    • Impact on coaching, recruiting, and smaller programs
    • The future of academics for paid athletes
    📌 Main Points
    • Alston & House Cases: These opened the door for athlete compensation and more antitrust litigation.
    • Direct Payments Begin: Starting in 2025, schools can pay athletes up to $20.5M—but they must fund it themselves.
    • Rising Inequality: Star players in football and men’s basketball will benefit most; walk-ons and niche sports may disappear.
    • Legal Uncertainty: The NCAA is resisting employee classification, but labor peace likely requires unionization and collective bargaining.
    • College Sports Will Survive: Holden believes the system is evolving, not collapsing, and employee recognition may stabilize it long-term.
    💬 Top 3 Quotes
    • “The NCAA is basically providing all the benefits of employment—minus actually calling them employees.”
    • “No one's tuning in to watch university presidents in skyboxes—it's the players on the field who create the value.”
    • “This is not the end of college sports—it’s just the end of pretending it’s still amateur.”

    🎙 The Pod is hosted by Jesse Wright
    💬 For guest suggestions, questions, or media inquiries, reach out at https://elpodcast.media/
    📬 Never miss an episode – subscribe and follow wherever you get your podcasts.
    ⭐️ If you enjoyed this episode, please rate and review the show. It helps others find us.

    Thanks for listening!

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    54 分
  • E142: How to Lie With Research (Even If You’re Not Trying) - Alex Edmans
    2025/07/11

    Finance professor Alex Edmans joins to expose how research, statistics, and stories are often weaponized to mislead us—and what we can do to resist confirmation bias in a post-truth world.

    👤 Guest Bio

    Alex Edmans is a Professor of Finance at London Business School, a former investment banker, TED speaker, and the author of May Contain Lies: How Stories, Statistics, and Studies Exploit Our Biases—and What We Can Do About It.

    🧠 Topics Discussed
    • CEO pay, testimony before UK Parliament, and research misrepresentation
    • The problem with cherry-picked or manipulated studies
    • Diversity, ESG, and performance: what research really shows
    • Why “smart” people still fall for bad ideas (e.g., Theranos)
    • How confirmation bias affects policymakers, businesses, and parents
    • The myth of breastfeeding and IQ
    • Using ChatGPT and AI tools more critically
    • Why post-truth thinking is dangerous—and how to fight back
    📌 Main Points
    • Misquoting research is rampant—even in government policymaking.
    • Studies can be cherry-picked or selectively framed to “prove” anything.
    • Diversity and ESG don’t always lead to better performance, especially when oversimplified.
    • Smart investors, policymakers, and academics are just as vulnerable to bias.
    • AI tools like ChatGPT can reinforce misinformation unless prompted with skepticism.
    • It's not about learning statistics—it’s about applying common sense and open-mindedness.
    • Be as skeptical of studies you like as those you dislike.
    💬 Top 3 Quotes
    • “Even if a statistic is 100% correct, the interpretation of it can still be completely misleading.”
    • “We know how to poke holes in studies we disagree with. The challenge is doing the same when we agree with the findings.”
    • “AI can’t fix misinformation—it reflects it. You need to know how to interrogate it.”

    🎙 The Pod is hosted by Jesse Wright
    💬 For guest suggestions, questions, or media inquiries, reach out at https://elpodcast.media/
    📬 Never miss an episode – subscribe and follow wherever you get your podcasts.
    ⭐️ If you enjoyed this episode, please rate and review the show. It helps others find us.

    Thanks for listening!

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    34 分
  • E141: Alcohol Is Good for You – And Science Backs It
    2025/07/01

    Tony Edwards, author of The Good News About Booze, argues that moderate alcohol consumption—especially wine—offers significant health benefits that public health authorities deliberately downplay.

    Guest Bio:
    Tony Edwards is a medical research journalist and author of The Good News About Booze and The Very Good News About Wine. A self-described "research nerd," he draws from hundreds of peer-reviewed studies to argue that moderate alcohol consumption—especially red wine—has significant health benefits, including reduced risk of heart disease, dementia, and arthritis.

    Topics Discussed:

    • The “J-curve” relationship between alcohol and health outcomes
    • WHO’s anti-alcohol messaging and comparisons to tobacco
    • Obesity, processed food, and deflection from real public health issues
    • Alcohol’s impact on the liver, heart, cholesterol, and weight
    • Wine vs. beer vs. spirits: What’s healthiest?
    • Alcohol and the microbiome (“second brain”)
    • Historical and social roots of alcohol demonization
    • Alcohol’s role in aging, community, and social bonding
    • Publishing censorship around “positive” alcohol science

    Main Points:

    • Moderate drinking is associated with better health outcomes than abstaining, especially regarding cardiovascular disease, dementia, and longevity.
    • Health authorities suppress or ignore nuanced evidence, promoting a binary “alcohol is poison” message similar to tobacco fear campaigns.
    • Red wine is particularly beneficial due to its high polyphenol content and synergistic effects with alcohol.
    • Social drinking strengthens community bonds and psychological well-being through endorphin activation and routine social rituals.
    • The real health threats—processed foods, pharmaceutical overuse, and poor lifestyle habits—are often overshadowed by anti-alcohol messaging.

    3 Best Quotes:

    • “Alcohol is actually good for your health—up to a certain level. It’s a paradoxical substance.”
    • “You will die five years earlier if you drink nothing but water compared to people who drink wine.”
    • “They won’t tell you the truth because they think people are too stupid to understand that a little of something is good for you—and a lot is not.”

    🎙 The Pod is hosted by Jesse Wright
    💬 For guest suggestions, questions, or media inquiries, reach out at https://elpodcast.media/
    📬 Never miss an episode – subscribe and follow wherever you get your podcasts.
    ⭐️ If you enjoyed this episode, please rate and review the show. It helps others find us.

    Thanks for listening!

    続きを読む 一部表示
    54 分

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