668. Do Taylor Swift and Bad Bunny Have Blood on Their Hands?

泰勒·斯威夫特和巴德·布尼是否手上沾有血腥?

Freakonomics Radio

2026-03-27

53 分钟
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单集简介 ...

As one researcher told us: “We’ve engineered a world where the most distracting device ever made is also the one we use to listen to music in the car." A new study tries to measure the cost.   SOURCES: Bapu Jena, economist, physician, and professor at Harvard Medical School. Chris Worsham, pulmonary and critical-care physician at Mass General Hospital, health-policy and public-health researcher at Harvard Medical School. Vishal Patel, surgery resident at Brigham and Women's Hospital, researcher at Harvard Medical School.   RESOURCES: "Smartphones, Online Music Streaming, and Traffic Fatalities," by Vishal Patel, Christopher Worsham, Michael Liu, and Bapu Jena (NBER, 2026). Random Acts of Medicine: The Hidden Forces That Sway Doctors, Impact Patients, and Shape Our Health, by Anupam Jena and Christopher Worsham (2023). "Mortality and treatment patterns among patients hospitalized with acute cardiovascular conditions during dates of national cardiology meetings," by Bapu Jena, Vinay Prasad, Dana Goldman, and John Romley (JAMA Internal Medicine, 2015). "Road Crash Fatalities on US Income Tax Days," by Donald Redelmeier and Christopher Yarnell (JAMA, 2012). "Memories of colonoscopy: a randomized trial," by Donald Redelmeier, Joel Katz, and Daniel Kahneman (PAIN, 2003).   EXTRAS: "Why Is There So Much Fraud in Academia?" by Freakonomics Radio (2024). "Why Is Flying Safer Than Driving?" by Freakonomics Radio (2023). "Why Is the U.S. So Good at Killing Pedestrians?" by Freakonomics Radio (2023). Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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  • Hey there, it's Stephen Dubner with a quick announcement.

  • We've just published an audiobook called Making Messiah, how Handel got his mojo back and created a masterpiece.

  • The publisher is Simon & Schuster, and the audiobook is adapted from our recent Freakonomics radio series

  • about the history, legacy, and economics of George Frederick Handel's Messiah.

  • You can buy Making Messiah now wherever you get your audiobooks.

  • For more information, go to makingmessiah. com.

  • Over the years, we 've made a bunch of Freakonomics Radio episodes about the risk

  • that comes with an activity that billions of us do every day.

  • Get in a car.

  • Those risks have fallen over time.

  • But because more people drive more miles than ever,

  • the number of deaths from traffic crashes is very high, more than a million people per year globally.

  • And that's just deaths.

  • There are many more injuries and the financial costs are massive.

  • Traffic deaths are more likely in low-income countries.

  • But among high-income countries, the U.S.

  • Is an outlier with more than 40,000 deaths.

  • That works out to roughly one death by car crash every 13 minutes in the U.S.

  • Why so many?

  • Well, it's complicated.