Favorite EconTalk Episodes of 2022 Question Title * 1. Your Five Favorite Episodes of 2022 (no more than five, sorry!) Judge Glock on Zoning and Local Government Arnold Kling on Twitter, FTX, and ChatGPT Monica Guzman on Curiosity and Conversation in Contentious Times Patrick House on Consciousness Annie Duke on the Power of Quitting Johnathan Bi on Mimesis and René Girard Agnes Callard on Meaning, the Human Quest, and the Aims of Education Jessica Todd Harper on Beauty, Family, and Photography Michael Munger on Industrial Policy Ryan Holiday on Discipline Is Destiny Devon Zuegel on Inflation, Argentina, and Crypto Roland Fryer on Educational Reform Sonat Birnecker Hart on Whiskey Erik Hoel on Effective Altruism, Utilitarianism, and the Repugnant Conclusion Kieran Setiya on Midlife David McRaney on How Minds Change Will MacAskill on Longtermism and What We Owe the Future Amor Towles on A Gentleman in Moscow and the Writer's Craft Raj Chetty on Economic Mobility Tyler Cowen on Talent Russ Roberts and Mike Munger on Wild Problems Gerd Gigerenzer on How to Stay Smart in a Smart World John List on Scale, Uber, and the Voltage Effect Vinay Prasad on the Pandemic Nassim Nicholas Taleb on the Nations, States, and Scale Ran Abramitzky and Leah Boustan on Immigration Then and Now A.J. Jacobs on Solving Life's Puzzles Roosevelt Montás on Rescuing Socrates Sridhar Ramaswamy on Google, Search, and Neeva Matti Friedman on Leonard Cohen and the Yom Kippur War Ian Leslie on Curiosity Diane Coyle on Cogs, Monsters, and Better Economics Marc Andreessen on Software, Immortality, and Bitcoin Chris Blattman on Why We Fight Dwayne Betts on Ellison, Levi, and Human Suffering Michael Munger on Antitrust Tyler Cowen on Reading Russ Roberts on Education Richard Gunderman on Greed, Adam Smith, and Leo Tolstoy Pano Kanelos on Education and UATX Robert Pindyck on Averting and Adapting to Climate Change Maxine Clark on Building the Build-a-Bear Workshop Angela Duckworth on Character Tamar Haspel on First-Hand Food Luca Dellanna on Compulsion, Self-deception, and the Brain Michael Eisenberg on the Start-Up Nation, Storytelling, and the Power of Technology John Taylor on Inflation, the Fed, and the Taylor Rule Moshe Koppel on Norms, Tradition, and Resilient Societies Penny Lane on Loving and Loathing Kenny G Tyler Cowen and Russ Roberts on Nation, Immigration, and Israel Gregory Zuckerman on the Crazy Race to Create the COVID Vaccine Lorne Buchman on Creativity, Leadership, and Art Question Title * 2. What is the highest level of education you have completed? Some high school Graduated from high school Some college Graduated from college Some graduate school Completed graduate school Question Title * 3. How often do you listen to EconTalk? Every week Almost every week Occasionally Rarely Question Title * 4. How often do you listen to an EconTalk episode more than once? Always Almost always Occasionally Rarely Never Question Title * 5. How often do you go to the website EconTalk.org? Every episode Almost every episode Occasionally Rarely Never Question Title * 6. How often during this past year did you access episodes and/or clips via our YouTube channel? For every episode Almost every episode Occasionally Rarely Never I did not know EconTalk has a YouTube channel. Question Title * 7. Most of the time I listen to EconTalk while Commuting Exercising Walking the dog Doing household chores At work In bed before going to sleep Doing nothing other than listening to EconTalk There is no "most of the time"--many of the above Other (please specify) Question Title * 8. When did you start listening to EconTalk? In the last year or so In the last 2-5 years In the last 5-10 years or so From the beginning Question Title * 9. What proportion of the episodes from this past year, 2022, do you think you listened to: Less than half of them A little more than half, maybe Almost all of them All of them Question Title * 10. If you are a regular listener to EconTalk please list other podcasts that you listen to regularly: Question Title * 11. Please add any suggestions here to improve EconTalk or provide general feedback for the EconTalk team. Feel free to leave an email address at the end of your comment in case I want to respond. Done