Raising Parents with Emily Oster
Poseidon is the god of the sea, Dionysus of wine and merrymaking, and Emily Oster? She’s the god of parenting. An economics professor at Brown University, Oster has built a massive and loyal audience by providing overwhelmed parents with the information and data they need to make solid and sound parenting decisions in a very confusing world. Her first book, Expecting Better: Why the Conventional Pregnancy Wisdom Is Wrong—and What You Really Need to Know, sold over a million copies and was translated into 19 languages, unseating the classic What to Expect When You’re Expecting as a fixture on many pregnant mothers’ bedtime tables. In this new series with The Free Press, Oster tackles the deep, difficult, existential, and often controversial questions facing parents today: Are we too soft on kids these days? How do I raise an independent child in an era of overprotection and helicopter parenting? Why are so many teen girls unhappy and anxious, and how can we make them happy again? Why are boys being left behind? Are kids overdiagnosed? What to do about the phones!? Is marriage important for raising kids? Should you even have kids at all? These questions are more urgent than ever. That’s because, by many measures, kids are worse off today than 30 years ago. They are more anxious than ever. They’re more depressed. They have more diagnoses than ever before. They’re more medicated. More kids are being raised without two parents in the home today. Kids’ reading and math scores haven’t recovered since their decline during the Covid pandemic. Childhood obesity has risen to 19.7 percent. Kids spend on average 7.5 hours in front of a screen for entertainment each day, and the average teen spends around 9 hours a day on their phone. What’s going on with kids today? How worried should we be about our kids? And what should we be doing, as parents, to change course, before it’s too late? How do we raise good people—which starts with raising good, informed parents—in this strange, new world? Over eight episodes, Oster speaks with over 50 of the world’s best parenting experts, journalists, doctors, psychologists, researchers, and more including: Dr. Becky, Jonathan Haidt, Pamela Druckerman, Richard Reeves, Hanna Rosin, Abigail Shrier, Bryan Caplan, Christine Emba, Johann Hari, Sami Timimi, Melissa Kearney, Ross Douthat, and many, many more. Oster brings her trusted voice—with its sobriety, wisdom, and humor—to the most challenging parenting questions of the day. The best way to support this podcast is to become a Free Press subscriber today at TheFP.com/subscribe
Season 1
Excellent and balanced
Jan 15
In today’s biased world it’s hard to find a sober non partisan voice. Emily oster is that voice. If you’re ready to hear a variety of views on parenting this is the podcast for you.
Love it
12/06/2024
I’ve been a fan of Emily for quite a while, and this podcast is just what I was looking for. I love that she presents different opinions and interviews people she doesn’t agree with, all while sharing the data that’s available so listeners can decide. This format will certainly be polarizing for those who don’t care to hear all sides.
Not much data
Jan 13
While Oster and her team attempt to show a broad spectrum of approaches and viewpoints in this podcast, the work lacks her her usual objective and fact based tone. There are more anecdotes and interviews with opinionated people some of whom aren’t even experts who present their opinions as fact. Very unlike her other work. Disappointing.
Liked the books, not the podcasts
12/19/2024
The podcasts just seem lacking on data overall and… is just down right disappointing. The episode on ADHD in particular. Clearly Emily has not personally experienced a child who is on the spectrum and had a neurodivergence, as this episode basically downplays NEUROLOGICAL differences and instead blames parenting styles and society for the increase in ADHD diagnosis’s. Really turned me off as there seems to be a narrative in place that’s personally driven instead of using data to medical literature to guide the narrative.
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