It Turns Out

Miami, Mamdani, and the War over Wealth

38 min · Eilen
jakson Miami, Mamdani, and the War over Wealth kansikuva

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Are the ultra-wealthy playing a high-stakes game of dodgeball with American cities? As states float the idea of heavy wealth taxes, billionaires are increasingly moving their addresses—and their yachts—to tax havens like Miami. But does this wealth migration spell doom for blue cities? In this episode of It Turns Out, Kara sits down with renowned urban scholar Richard Florida to decode the new geography of extreme wealth. And Florida explains why politicians like NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani - who famously picked a fight with billionaire Ken Griffin - may herald a new progressivism, an era in which the pendulum swings against the Trumpian embrace of mega fortunes. Did you know you can also watch the show? Subscribe to the show on YouTube! [https://www.youtube.com/@ItTurnsOutPodcast] Subscribe to our Substack! [https://substack.com/@itturnsoutwithkara]

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jakson Miami, Mamdani, and the War over Wealth kansikuva

Miami, Mamdani, and the War over Wealth

Are the ultra-wealthy playing a high-stakes game of dodgeball with American cities? As states float the idea of heavy wealth taxes, billionaires are increasingly moving their addresses—and their yachts—to tax havens like Miami. But does this wealth migration spell doom for blue cities? In this episode of It Turns Out, Kara sits down with renowned urban scholar Richard Florida to decode the new geography of extreme wealth. And Florida explains why politicians like NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani - who famously picked a fight with billionaire Ken Griffin - may herald a new progressivism, an era in which the pendulum swings against the Trumpian embrace of mega fortunes. Did you know you can also watch the show? Subscribe to the show on YouTube! [https://www.youtube.com/@ItTurnsOutPodcast] Subscribe to our Substack! [https://substack.com/@itturnsoutwithkara]

Eilen38 min
jakson Why have kids left public school? kansikuva

Why have kids left public school?

Since 2020, more than a million kids have left American public schools. Meanwhile, enrollment in private schools and homeschooling has risen. What's going on? Have parents lost faith in public schools? And which sorts of kids are most likely to leave? Kara speaks with Thomas Dee, a professor at Stanford Graduate School of Education, who has tracked students' movement out of public schools. How do fights over advanced math - and challenging content - affect schools' ability to retain students? How will a fast-growing school choice movement further reshape schools? Did you know you can also watch the show? Subscribe to the show on YouTube! [https://www.youtube.com/@ItTurnsOutPodcast] Subscribe to our Substack! [https://itturnsoutwithkara.substack.com/]

26. kesä 202639 min
jakson Longevity: What we get wrong kansikuva

Longevity: What we get wrong

For two decades, the global phenomenon of "Blue Zones" has shaped how we eat, live, and invest in our health. But what if the data behind these longevity hotspots doesn't quite stack up? In this episode of It Turns Out, Kara Miller sits down with Dr. Saul Justin Newman, a senior research fellow at Oxford and University College London and author of Morbid [https://mitpress.mit.edu/9780262052719/morbid/] (MIT Press). Dr. Newman exposes the staggering reality behind world-famous longevity claims—from pension fraud and missing records that inflated centenarian counts in Japan, Greece, and Italy, to the commercial conflicts driving the industry. Tune in as we talk about purple sweet potatoes and anti-aging supplements to reveal what medical science actually says about living a longer, healthier life. Did you know you can also watch the show? Subscribe to the show on YouTube! [https://www.youtube.com/@ItTurnsOutPodcast] Sign up for our newsletter on Substack! [https://itturnsoutwithkara.substack.com/]

12. kesä 202635 min
jakson Being social scares us. It also makes us happier. kansikuva

Being social scares us. It also makes us happier.

What if being more social could change your life? University of Chicago behavioral scientist Nicholas Epley talks with Kara about the surprising bump in happiness we get from being a little more social. Being less lonely also has huge health benefits that often go unrecognized. But, as Epley points out, people routinely overestimate how unpleasant it will be to reach out to others. And they almost always underestimate how enjoyable the discussions will be. Why do we put up these barriers to our own happiness? And how can introverts and extroverts effectively change their behavior? Epley is the author, most recently, of A Little More Social (Knopf). Subscribe to our Substack [https://itturnsoutwithkara.substack.com/] for Kara's take on each show! Did you know you can also watch the show? Subscribe to the show on YouTube! [https://www.youtube.com/@ItTurnsOutPodcast]

29. touko 202639 min