Favorite EconTalk Episodes of 2014 Question Title * 1. Are you male or female? Male Female Question Title * 2. How Old Are You Less than 18 years old 18-24 years old 25-34 years old 35-44 years old 45-54 years old 55-64 years old 65-74 years old More than 75 years old Question Title * 3. Education PhD Masters College Grad Some college High School Grad Some high school Question Title * 4. Where do you currently live? United States Canada UK Australia India China Sweden Other (please specify) Question Title * 5. How often do you listen to EconTalk Every week Almost every week Occasionally Rarely Question Title * 6. Your Five Favorite Episodes of 2014 (no more than five, sorry!) James Tooley on Private Schools for the Poor and the Beautiful Tree Joshua Angrist on Econometrics and Causation Gary Marcus on the Future of Artificial Intelligence and the Brain James Otteson on the End of Socialism Nick Bostrom on Superintelligence Emily Oster on Infant Mortality Vernon Smith on Adam Smith and the Human Enterprise Becky Liddicoat Yamarik on Palliative Care and End-of-Life Medical Issues Daron Acemoglu on Inequality, Institutions, and Piketty Robert Solow on Growth and the State of Economics Luigi Zingales on Incentives and the Potential Capture of Economists by Special Interests Russ Roberts and Mike Munger on How Adam Smith Can Change Your Life David Autor on the Future of Work and Polanyi's Paradox Martha Nussbaum on Creating Capabilities and GDP Thomas Piketty on Inequality and Capital in the 21st Century Elizabeth Green on Education and Building a Better Teacher Paul Pfleiderer on the Misuse of Economic Models Nathan Blecharczyk on Airbnb and the Sharing Economy Daphne Koller on Education, Coursera, and MOOCs Terry Anderson on the Environment and Property Rights Barry Weingast on Law Reid Hoffman and Ben Casnocha on LinkedIn and The Alliance Sam Altman on Start-ups, Venture Capital, and the Y Combinator Chris Blattman on Cash, Poverty, and Development D. G. Myers on Cancer, Dying, and Living Michael Munger on the Sharing Economy Lars Hansen on Risk, Ambiguity, and Measurement Gregory Zuckerman on the Frackers and the Energy Revolution Wiiliam Easterly on the Tyranny of Experts Edward Lazear on Becker McAfee, McArdle, and Ohanian on the Future of Work Yuval Levin on Burke, Paine, and the Great Debate Marc Andreessen on Venture Capital and the Digital Future Charles Marohn on Strong Towns, Urban Development, and the Future of American Cities Gavin Andresen on the Present and Future of Bitcoin Diane Coyle on GDP Megan McArdle on Failure, Success, and the Up Side of Down Steven Teles on Kludgeocracy Bryan Caplan on College, Signaling and Human Capital Cochrane on Education and MOOCs John Christy and Kerry Emanuel on Climate Change with John Christy and Kerry Emanuel (28 comments) Jeffrey Sachs on the Millennium Villages Project Richard Epstein on Classical Liberalism, Libertarianism, and Lochner Velasquez-Manoff on Autoimmune Disease, Parasites, and Complexity Robert Frank on Coase Calomiris and Haber on Fragile by Design Paul Sabin on Ehrlich, Simon and the Bet Brynjolfsson on the Second Machine Age Nina Munk on Poverty, Development, and the Idealist Jonathan Haidt on the Righteous Mind Laurence Kotlikoff on Debt, Default, and the Federal Government's Finances Anthony Gill on Religion Question Title * 7. How often do you go to the website EconTalk.org? Almost every episode Occasionally Rarely Never Question Title * 8. How often do you use or read the Highlights for an episode? Almost every episode Occasionally Rarely Never Question Title * 9. How often do you read or respond to the Extras feature following-up on an episode? Almost every episode Occasionally Rarely Never Question Title * 10. Most of the time I listen to EconTalk while Commuting Exercising Walking the dog Doing household chores At work Other (please specify) Question Title * 11. Please add any suggestions here to improve EconTalk or provide general feedback for the EconTalk team Done