Bill Gates and Rashida Jones Ask Big Questions Gates Notes
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- Society & Culture
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Bill Gates and Rashida Jones Ask Big Questions pairs Bill Gates with actress and writer Rashida Jones to tackle some of the biggest questions facing us today: Is it too late to solve climate change? Does everybody lie? Is inequality inevitable? Join them for deep dives into these questions and even a few answers.
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EP 5: Can people really change?
2020 has been a year of change. From the pandemic to the presidential election, it’s clear that the world will never be the same after this year – and neither will all of us who experienced it. In the season finale, Bill and Rashida explore how progress hinges on society’s ability to evolve, how our view of the world shifts as we get older, and whether it’s actually possible to change someone’s mind. Then they’re joined by two people who are using their positions as artists to change the world for the better: Bono and Kerry Washington.
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EP 4: Is it too late to stop climate change?
Climate change is the most daunting challenge of our time. Tackling it will require unprecedented amounts of innovation, investment, and global cooperation. Are we actually making progress yet? Can we really stop the worst effects of climate change? In this week’s episode, Bill and Rashida take on perhaps their biggest question yet with an assist from Pulitzer Prize-winning author Elizabeth Kolbert.
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EP 3: Why do we believe lies?
Honesty is a core value in most cultures. But humanity has always been obsessed with untruths, from little white lies to vast conspiracy theories. Bill and Rashida are joined by Sapiens author and historian Yuval Noah Harari to talk about why we’re so willing to believe falsehoods and what these lies tell us about ourselves—both as individuals and as a society.
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EP 2: Is inequality inevitable?
2020 has brought to light a lot of issues, including growing inequality in the United States. We're seeing huge gaps in income, access to healthcare, and quality of education across the country. Economist Raj Chetty joins the podcast to talk about his groundbreaking research on opportunity in America. Then Mayor Aja Brown joins the conversation to talk about how she’s leveling the playing field in Compton.
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EP 1: What will the world look like after COVID-19?
Ever since the pandemic started, we’ve heard the same refrain: we need to get back to normal. But what does “normal” even mean after such a history-changing event? Bill and Rashida discuss how COVID-19 will forever change our workplaces, our schools, and even our social lives. They also get real with NIAID director Dr. Anthony Fauci about what we can expect in the months ahead.
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Introducing: Bill Gates and Rashida Jones Ask Big Questions | Trailer
Bill Gates and Rashida Jones Ask Big Questions pairs Bill Gates with actress and writer Rashida Jones to tackle some of the biggest questions facing us today: Is it too late to solve climate change? Does everybody lie? Is inequality inevitable? Join them for deep dives into these questions and even a few answers.
Customer Reviews
Important topics discussed with important thought leaders
Love the quality of guests and Gates’ sage opinions. Could improve via a host that has more intellectual depth to stimulate more of an organic discussion between Gates and the guests than a predetermined Q&A.
Where have the new episodes gone?
I love this show…. I was just getting into it and it disappeared!?
Very Interesting
This is an important discussion. Rashida’s question of whether capitalism works is slightly avoided by Bill Gates and when pressed refers to the Nordic countries. There is no doubt the reason why Universal healthcare or Large scale Public Housing for instance has not been tackled in the US is because the US is the extreme capitalism country vs the Nordic countries on the opposite end and the likes of the UK in the middle.
Of course the podcast is US focused understandably but having lived in the US and European countries I would say there would be value in deep diving into Healthcare and Public Housing across other “rich countries”.