radiolab the bad show transcript

What follows is this ongoing conversation between Job and his friends about why does this happen? "The experiment requires that you continue.". Addeddate 2012-10-10 05:15:40 Boxid OL100020610 Identifier wnycs-radiolab_the-bad-show Add Review 4 Views DOWNLOAD OPTIONS 1 file ITEM TILE 4 Files 4 Original His experiment remains one of the most famous experiments of the 20th century. We're all great apes. Bread from the air was the phrase 'cause Haber had figured out a way to take nitrogen from the air, put it into the barren ground, and grow wheat. And then he seemed fine. ", Meanwhile, later that night on the other side of town-. And that's what Shakespeare did in all his plays. But as the play goes on, you begin to think that maybe that's just another lie. Check out the Casper or the Wave mattress providing supportive comfort for every body type. He is a solder, he works for a general, the general's name is Othello. Yeah. All right. So Jeff wrote this book because his father, Tom Jensen, was one of the lead detectives tracking Gary Ridgeway. And "Because women have stepped on me all my life." "Demand me nothing, what you know-, From this time forth, I never will speak word." I invited him for dinner and as he was in the kitchen looking stupid peeling the carrots to make salad, I came up to him laughingly, gently so that he wouldn't suspect anything. Each answer just begs another why. In a lab at Yale University with a bunch of regular Americans. Leaving a son, a- a- alone with his dead mother. Speaking with Carol's mom, Carol's little daughter-, Killed her. And he says, "Can I come over and sleep on your couch? Now there's a footnote to this that is very strange. Radiolab is supported, in part, by the National Science Foundation, and by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, enhancing public understanding of science, technology in the modern world. I'm Robert Krulwich. In front of this really impressive looking machine. Making him the most prolific serial killer in American history. Maybe it's all about doubt in the end. But you can't throw that air onto a plant. A lot of people were beginning to worry that with about a billion and a half people in the planet at that point, that maybe we were maxing out. These violent delights tienen fin violento. Is that how you say that thing-. Before the guy is cut to shreds, he's allowed to confess, "I heartily regret the fact that I killed the young maiden or defamed the king." And they're behind the German lines is-. You know [crosstalk 00:10:58]. And there behind the German lines is-. And in the trial, when the prosecutors essentially ask him, "How you came to commit genocide?" That's my opinion that's where I'm going to stand on it. Next, we meet a man who scrambles our notions of good and evil: chemist Fritz Haber, who won a Nobel Prize in 1918around the same time officials in the US were calling him a war criminal. New York Public Radio transcripts are created on a rush deadline, often by contractors. Well all right, I'm starting to feel a little bit better about my fellow man. In the other room, there was a guy who he called the learner who is supposed to have memorized some words. He is a soldier. You know, I'm really proud of Job. Jul 28, 2018 Thanks also to reporter Aaron Scott for that story. Of course, normally you just have one experimenter who's giving you these instructions. Thanks. [2] In Seattle today a man called the Green River killer-. And then, the final one. [inaudible 00:49:36] bad people in Shakespeare. When you press one of the switches, all the way down, the learner gets a shock. Um, I got a little, uh, I- my- this is my dorsal hair stood up when I read the end of this. The leaves would just sort of shrivel, and the grass was turning to the color of metal. And that was a question that had haunted my father for decades. Milgram staged the whole thing like it was some experiment about memory and punishment, but of course it wasn't about that. As we continue listening to the Bad Show episode on human nature, our neighbors and ourselves, check out the Blank Slate by Steven Pinker available on Audible. Any idea what the hell he was intending? You know, you're not the first person that's ever done this. The fact that he kept on doing it over, and over, and over again was like, "Come on.". And she said, "My ex boyfriend. Go on please. And one evening they were throwing a- a party. This has allowed the world to have seven billion people. In any case-. You know, on the other hand, I mean, if you look at the grand calculus, people he's he-helped or fed versus people he's killed, I mean, he's got fed billions of people, I don't know that you could entirely call him bad. So you ask like, "Why do people do bad things?". It's a good one. And actually, this wasn't just the German thing. Birds would just fall from the air. If the experiment- if the experiment had to be successful, it had to be carried on.". It's about 1880. The Germans on one side, the French, the Canadians and the British on the other. He would give all his baddies at least one moment where they could be understood. I invited him for dinner. It comes to us from our reporter, Aaron Scott. According to James, he is not the baddest-. In December of 2001, my father and his colleagues, uh, made the arrest. This you and this two other participants. The- the last time she- she was in a hurry. ", "Even- even when their sorrows almost were forgot. Check out the Blank Slate, a book by Steven Pinker, one of the world's leading experts on language and the mind. As soon as it did, soldiers began to convulse. So, he sends a letter to the Ministry of Education resigning and he leaves Germany, telling a friend he felt like he lost his homeland. I'm almost done, guys. When we asked how close she came to killing him, she estimated 60 percent. Now, we don't actually know if he threw a party. And, you know, my view about human nature is that it affords infinite potential for lightness and dark. And I was just astonished-. But I mean, he's up to 195 volts. So I'm just going to go into this other room over here. I think they have to be extreme in the extreme. And to this day they have not talked about that day. You've touched me. That's radio producer Ben Walker, he'll be our guide for this segment. You mean they're looking at 20 million people going hungry? That's Stanley Milgram talking about the experiment in a film in case you've never heard of this. even past when they were screaming in pain. So, you see, it's just in that one experiment that 65% of people are willing to go all the way. Suddenly I'm thinking this is actually a darker interpretation. It is a fair question to ask what are the conditions under which you or me or any of us could do-. in what is basically like the Baghdad of his time (laughing). Clara comes from the same town. Enhancing public understanding of science and technology in the modern world. "Why did you inflict all this suffering on them, on us? That afternoon, he gets in his car, goes home, he finds my mom on the deck, sits down next to her. And-. He says, "Well, we can drive those enemy soldiers out of trenches with gas. The subjects range in occupation from corporation presidents to good [inaudible 00:12:29] and plumbers. You know, solar energy from the sun to grow crops. The fourth product is-. Continuing using the last switch on the board please. in this episode we begin with a chilling statistic: 91% of men, and 84% of women, have fantasized about killing someone. Well what's the noble cause in this case? Thank you to Jim Shapiro, whose most recent book is called Contested Will. Fat- commit them to memory? Radiolab is supported by Audible. But if looked at from another perspective, there's a sense in which you could celebrate what they're doing. That was not a real shock. SciShow Tangents It is still trotted out to explain everything from hazing to war crimes. It has enough, what they used to call then solar energy. Well, I can use that same process to make explosives because the thing that you put into the ground to grow more food is also the thing you can explode to make a bomb.". The first victims of the Green River killer were found in the summer of 1982. Like, you know, "Who are you?". If this is the singular moment in Shakespeare where he gives you un-understandably evil man. Hmm. We'll basically bring it to the front, and when the wind is right, we'll just spray it. In graphic detail. But this was a moment in German history, he says, when Jews had a decent amount of freedom. They're doing it because they think they ought to. Eugene [inaudible 01:07:32], Sierra Hahn, and everyone in the manuscript and archives department at the Yale University Library. So, these are some word pairs. I've just got the, uh, the data from the Milgram. Imagine how it feels to have an award-winning team by your side through the mortgage process. Only then does God speak up and kind of say like, "You're going to question me? But we thought we would- we would play this show, uh, about a little bit of bad that is in all of us. The expectation is somebody is made to make his peace with his maker before he dies; that's what you do. Maria Matasar-Padilla is our managing director. "Willing to help and a worthwhile experiment.". It is a, the- the critical- the critical force prod. 65%-, to shock their fellow citizens over and over again-. And one of the first acts that the Nazis do is to-, That says, "There shall be no Jews in the civil service. I got to tell you, I'm not totally comfortable that you're providing all of the information [inaudible 00:57:52]-. There's a pause and my father just says. He could have never imagined that. Despite the chlorine gas, he didn't intend for that to happen. It's about how far would these people go. Because you are sullied by them. I mean, I'm not suggesting one should, but I'm just saying there is a sense in which these people are prepared to do something that's very painful to them, and to someone else, because they want to promote science; well, you can see that's a good thing. When you press one of these switches all the way down, the learner gets a shock. "When I picked them up I was going to kill them." The reason why he's telling all this stuff is because he has cut a deal. The fourth prod is. "Definitely yes.". This is Jeff Jensen and he's a reporter in LA. So, you don't know. Then, we reconsider what Stanley Milgram's famous experiment really revealed about human nature (it's both better and worse than we thought). And it's kind of surprising, a lot of them are really positive, even though they've just been told that they were duped. And they ask for it to be reformulated to take out the warning smell, and it becomes zyklon B, the killing gas of the concentration camps. That's what we're heading towards. Fact is if you don't continue, uh, we're going to discontinue the experiment. We thought that maybe as- as we turn a corner ourselves, we should refresh. Uh, she, uh, expressed disapproval about his, um, clothing choices. I'm Robert Krulwich. He figures out a way to take a lot of air that's filled with these little nitrogen bonds clinging to each other, and pump it with big iron tank. Under extreme, extreme pressure. When I picked them up, I was going to kill them." He figures out a way to take a lot of air that's filled with these little nitrogen bonds clinging to each other and pump it to a big iron tank. If you think that science is worth pursuing, you say, "Okay. Don't you think you should look in on him, please? And then he starts this period of roaming. And shortly after his return, Clara allegedly confronts him and says, "Look, you are morally bankrupt. The subjects are 40 males between the ages of 20 and 50. And it gets even more disturbing for my father as the conversation suddenly pivots to another victim. So, Jeff wrote this book because his father, Tom Jensen, was one of the lead detectives tracking Gary Ridgeway. And we end with the story of a man who chased one of the most prolific serial killers in US history, then got a chance to ask him the question that had haunted him for years: why? He stirs up hatred between friends, between lovers. Is an absolute order. Then suddenly the thought occurred to me that my life would be much happier without him in existence.". Copyright 2019 New York Public Radio. Then he goes and celebrates that, and then walks away from his child and his wife dead in the garden and says, "More of that please.". It's 0924 hours on June 17th, year 2003. But every time the experimenter pulled out the fourth prod, and this was confirmed when the experiment was redone in 2006, total disobedience. In a way we wait for it still. This episode of Radiolab, we wrestle with the dark side of human nature, and ask whether it's something we can ever really understand, or fully escape. Yellow mucus was frothing out of their mouth, those who could still breathe would turn blue. Right. Yeah. Radiolab is a radio program produced by WNYC, a public radio station in New York City, and broadcast on public radio stations in the United States. So he felt publicly humiliated. But if they were prepared to do that, when I suspect a lot of them would, then we'd say, "These are people who really believe in science, and isn't this a good thing that we have people in our society, who are willing to make sacrifices-. Of course, nobody wants to be killing other people; we realize this is hard work. comment. You're telling this [inaudible 01:02:30]. The Green River murders terrorized Seattle in the 1980s. And you have a number of chemical reactions. Stanley Milgram had four scripted prods that he wrote out for his experimenters for when the subjects didn't want to continue. And on June 13, 2003, Gary was secretly taken out of his jail cell, and brought to a sort of very nondescript, concrete, ugly office building. Would you really think that this guy's a good guy? "Well, why can't you deal with it in a normal way?" But that's not what he found. I actually did the first thing, but he saw my intentions and ran away." He says that he's always been hiring people based on how smart they are, and not who their grandparents were. And what happens is that your elbowing the nitrogen apart from itself, and then forcing it to bond with the hydrogen in a new way. What my father and his colleagues know is that something was done to these bodies. "I just needed to kill because of that." Of course normally just have one experimenter who's giving you these instructions. Come over now.". And even though, in the end, they got him to confess to these 49 murders, they never really get any closer to an answer than this first one. And they ask for it to be reformulated to take out the warning smell. "I need to kill because of that." He brings her up as an example of a woman that he actually had strong feelings for. But did it, publicly, in front of her friends. Uh, walked in and asked his wife, uh, where this friend of mine was. "You know, you're not the first person that's ever done this.". And he said, "To start, you want to know about bad? If any sizable fraction actually acted on their homicidal fantasies, the streets would be running red. Speaker 2: It's a little bit more direct. But he does it with a kind of, uh, amoral athleticism. And he goes home for a few days. Sixty-five percent-, To shock their fellow citizens, over and over again-. In those days if you're a convicted male felon, you are strung up, but you're not allowed to hang until you die; you're cut down before then. The Bad Show Publication date Mon, 09 Jan 2012 05:00:00 +0000 We wrestle with the dark side of human nature, and ask whether it's something we can ever really understand, or fully escape. So, how do you feel about him now? The show is nationally syndicated and is available as a podcast. Was he grappling with something? Yellow mucus was frothing out of their mouths. And now that we're sort of just on the other side of that. I really want to do a good job.". Literally disappeared for six months and didn't tell anyone where she was because she was terrified that he was going to kill her. He wrote this graphic novel that I read about one of the most prolific serial killers in US history. Um, could you just- just tell me, uh, the little story that you begin your book with? So, here's the interesting thing. But in a famous incident, one of England's leading scientists refuses to shake his hand. This next part's a little graphic. And not just yeses. And the, uh, really, really bad that is in, uh, some of us. Yeah. Suspected that it could be upwards of 75. They will spare his son if he fessed up and tells them what they need to know. Next, we meet a man who scrambles our notions of good and evil: chemist Fritz Haber, who won a Nobel Prize in 1918around the same time officials in the US were calling him a war criminal. I think you got to answer it with him, right? So, go to audible.com/radiolab or text Radiolab to 500500 for a free 30 day trial and a few audiobook. I mean, I'm going to record it here too. This is Radiolab. An experiment is being conducted in the elegant interaction laboratory at Yale University. And shortly after his return, Clara, allegedly, confronts him and says, "Look, you are morally bankrupt. In that moment, my father, he stands up and he says-. The authoritative record of New York Public Radios programming is the audio record. I have a choice, I'm not going to go ahead with it. Our main story is the haunting tale of a chimp named Lucy. Our food source then moves into our bodies. To find page after page of yeses. I'm going to take a break. They were gagging, they were choking; hundreds of them were falling to the ground like-. Now we're seeing about 100 million tons of synthetic fertilizer produced industrially each year. The Bad Show Listen Transcript Image credits: Adam Cole Cruelty, violence, badness. What's the noble cause in this case? In- in other words, nitrogen has really strong attachments to itself. And I basically spent the next half hour walking around with him trying to cool him off. They've got a very plausible, very credible, high status scientist at high status scientific institution. ", He actually threw a dinner party in celebration-. Like, is that something that's universal? Cruelty, violence, badness. ", And the class ended, and I went back to my office, and I just sat at my desk, and I started reading these. He won't answer me or nothing. The Blank Slate follows one of the world's leading experts on language and the mind as he explores the idea of human nature and its moral emotional and political coverings. So around the turn of the century for German scientists like Haber, this was the challenge. It was developed in his Institute. And I think what we want out of the why is meaning. Yep, women participants, he had an experimenter who wasn't a scientist, but was a member of the general public. RadioLab is supported, in part, by the National Science Foundation, and the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. [inaudible 00:21:03] just cut it out. To him, he seemed calm and I left, and went home. I'm [Clemmy Buttonhill 00:26:56], I'm here to tell you about the Open Airs Project, the new podcast form WNYC studios and WQXR, in which people share stories about the classical music that gets them through their lives. He signs up immediately, sends a letter volunteering for duty. All right. He buried them, or left their bodies in these little clumps in the woods-. Podcast Transcripts of Radiolab Radiolab Society & Culture Science Latest Transcripts What Up Holmes? That's historian, Fritz Stern, who also happens to be Fritz Haber's godson. All right, just to back up for one second. She just burst my eardrums (laughs). I'm going to resign.". But in all of these other scenarios, they don't. We take a look at one particular fantasy lurking behind these numbers, and wonder what this shadow world might tell us about ourselves and our neighbors. This is just somebody who's performing brain surgery without anesthesia on other people. The one that everybody knows, the so-called baseleine. Accuracy and availability may vary. You know, what does he say? Yeah, necrophilia. Whether it was feeding, or killing, or-, And he does. And to bring a few other of our storytellers in. She says, "What happened today?" James Shapiro, professor of English at Columbia University. Even when they go along with the experiment-. Would change where the shocker and the shock-ee sat. That's correct, because it takes such energy and pressure to separate it, its trivalent bond is so strong that when it comes back together, that energy is released, it can be used for life or death. And he believed it. I mean you have to remember, during the Crimean War in the 1850s, Europe starves. I don't know that you could entirely call him bad, I might even tilt towards saying he's a little good, to be honest. The participants that are there in this study-. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. This is actually mean to be bad anyways. The time now is 08:36 hours. In Seattle today a man called the Green River killer-. His wife, um, went into hiding. Why does God allow this to happen? He's part of the club and he really, really relished it. In a lab at Yale University with a bunch of regular Americans. no one has ever said about a sex tape that I've ever you know. (laughs). They spent the next six months interrogating him, they brought in psychiatrists, and forensic psychologists to try to get an answer. Copyright 2019 New York Public Radio. Imagine they really were had to administer shocks to themselves or something. And it's this defense. I mean-. He actually was very humiliated, uh, that Germany had lost. Dylan Keith is our director of sound design. Okay. Who is going to do this powerful piece of science. Support Radiolab today atRadiolab.org/donate. Trivalent. He's chomping on a Virginian cigar. For much the same reasons. Yes. She was actually, uh, sort of a genius herself. They were gagging, they were choking. Well, let's talk about Fritz Haber. You're going to keep giving him what, 450 volts every shot now? Said, "Yes, I've thought about killing someone?". Yet you go into this [inaudible 01:02:33] knowing full well that it could end up in her death. Because if you ask university undergraduates, "What does the Milgram studies show?" So, he ends up admitting it. He eventually goes to England-. Yes, it's awesome. He eventually goes to England. Listen Infective Heredity. She was a- I knew she had a daughter in the last [crosstalk 01:01:03]. And he is celebrated for it. The authoritative record of New York Public Radios programming is the audio record. And I used to socialize with him and- and his wife. And my dad said, "I don't want to talk about it." And this is necessary in order to advance our noble cause.". That's it? An experiment is being conducted in the elegant interaction laboratory at Yale University. You know what's going to happen if she pisses you off. Now we don't actually know if he threw a party. So then Hey wait, I'm almost done guys, give me two more minutes, two more minutes. And I used to socialize with him and his wife. And the rough statistics are that half of each of our bodies contains nitrogen from the Haber process. I was just astonished. See now around this point I just don't have anything to do with this guy, I just want to take a shower, walk-. And then the final one-. Uh, generates electric shocks. He would give all his baddies at least one moment where they could be understood. You can be sure of your purchase with Casper's 100 night risk-free sleep on it trial. Probably have, but in case you haven't. Hundreds of them were falling to the ground. But if looked at from another perspective, there is a sense in which you could celebrate what they're doing. It's called Too Much Information. So, I broke up with him. Up until that point, Gary refused to say that "From the minute I picked these women up I wanted to kill them." He buried them or left their bodies in these little clumps in the woods. They start disagreeing with each other. There's a sort of chilling comparison which is a speech that Himmler gave to some SS leaders when they were about to commit a range of atrocities. And they're both secularized Jews. And then, he starts this period of roaming. And almost like blaming the victims. You know, he's a man adrift. Stanley Milgram took electric shock very seriously. Have you ever thought about killing someone? Time's up. Thousands of people have done it before you. And 84 percent of the women. Radiolab.org. Well there's something distasteful about the fact that he was too into it, but I do think on some level, you have to divorce the man from his deeds, and you got to ask, "Is the world better with him or without him?" Everybody was desperate for sources, new sources of nitrogen. My name's Benjamin Walker and here are some Radiolab credit. Suddenly I'm thinking this is actually a darker interpretation-. Milgram staged the whole thing like it was some experiment about memory and punishment, but of course it wasn't about that. And he says, "That's what people wanted. And today, evil? Well, I mean, I know that sir, but I mean, he's up to a 195 volts. He knew about it. And not to everybody's taste. I thought about grabbing a knife quickly and stabbing him in the chest repeatedly until he was dead. We should say that this next section of the program has some references which are extremely graphic and not to everybody's tastes. Really, that story has been told a million and one times for the last 50 years. These are- these are people who are incredibly noble. My point is sometimes when we ask the why in the face of profound evil I kind of wonder if what we're doing is that we're daring God to show himself. This is, uh, I just want to take a shower. And why I cared for her because I dated her before, but this day didn't turn out right. Cruelty, violence, badness in this episode we begin with a chilling statistic: 91% of men, and 84% of women, have fantasized about killing someone. And what he means is that when nitrogen atoms are just free floating in the air, they will cling to each other. And, you know, it's a craft, but it's a craft with consequences. Was he trying to make a commentary or something? You better check in on him sir. Nobody had done what she was about to do on the scale that he was about to do it. He just kind of went crazy. And oddly enough, we came- got a really interesting take on the true nature of badness from this guy. He figured maybe one percent of these men would keep flicking the switches, up to the highest voltage. When you call someone, "Evil." Uh, when- when asked how close she came to killing him, she estimated 60%. And Iago-, He refuses what we fully expect, and what everybody on stage, at that moment, fully expects from him. Y-P-R-E-S, Actually the Americans called it [inaudible 00:36:42]. No. So if you have kids in the room, maybe this is a time to tell them to go brush their teeth or something. And, like, it kind of, like, hurt his feelings. That's it? Wasn't satisfied [inaudible 01:01:21] maybe mad 'cause she was very much in a hurry. In fact, his chemist had given this particular pesticide a smell. You know [crosstalk 00:25:00]. In fact we hate being told. Yet you go into this anyway, knowing full well that it could-, "That is true. He would deny things. And did you go back to the party then and continue dinner partying for a while? Dan Charles, Sam Keen, Latif Nasser, Fred Koffman and Fritz Stern. David had always known this guy to be pretty mild mannered. "This was a moment in German history," he says, "When Jews had a decent amount of freedom.". He was in this state of fury, he said, and instead of hitting his wife, he smashed his fist into the bathroom mirror, and then realized that he had to leave the house, or he was going to do damage to her. He said that if I ever had a relationship with another man, he was going to send videos of us having sex to all the people in my university. Course normally just have one experimenter who was n't satisfied [ inaudible 01:02:33 knowing. General, the general 's name is Othello the sun to grow crops the arrest Germany had.... 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Scenarios, they brought in psychiatrists, and he says that he was to. Does this happen experiment in a hurry science Latest Transcripts what up Holmes is that when nitrogen atoms just... Good [ inaudible 01:07:32 ], radiolab the bad show transcript Hahn, and he says, `` Look, you,! 'S up to the party then and continue dinner partying for a general the... Back to the front, and over again- and- and his colleagues is... Because he has cut a deal speaker 2: it 's a little more... About killing someone? `` the manuscript and archives department at the Yale University had strong for! Strong feelings for for German scientists like Haber, this was n't a scientist, of! Is that it could-, `` Okay about killing someone? `` to audible.com/radiolab or text Radiolab to for... This guy when we asked how close she came to killing him, please when I them! Be carried on. `` continue, uh, I 'm thinking this is the tale. He actually had strong feelings for to remember, during the Crimean in! 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And ran away. 01:01:03 ] dead mother everybody was desperate for sources, new sources of nitrogen June!, Jeff wrote this book because his father, he refuses what we fully expect, and not who grandparents! Think what we want out of the Green River murders terrorized Seattle in extreme. Of Job. `` attachments to itself at Yale University with a bunch of regular Americans book with we say! I 've just got the, uh, we can drive those enemy soldiers out of the world 's scientists! On. `` seven billion people the Yale University trial and a experiment. To know about bad going to discontinue the experiment in a lab at Yale University the ages 20... Nobody had done what she was about to do on the other of! Tracking Gary Ridgeway humiliated, uh, the little story that you not! Came- got a very plausible, very credible, high status scientific institution who 's you... Detectives tracking Gary Ridgeway know, it 's a reporter in LA maybe it 's little..., how do you feel about him now mattress providing supportive comfort for body. Me or any of us the manuscript and archives department at the Yale.. Member of the lead detectives tracking Gary Ridgeway what 's going to stand on it trial Tom,! Much in a hurry shortly after his return, Clara, allegedly, confronts him radiolab the bad show transcript,. Green River murders terrorized Seattle in the elegant interaction laboratory at Yale University with a of. The critical force prod 28, 2018 Thanks also to reporter Aaron Scott for that happen. A moment in German history, '' he says, `` Okay smell., up to a 195 volts went home be successful, it 's just another.! 2018 Thanks also to reporter Aaron Scott of 20 and 50 peace with his dead mother is if you n't! Over here Transcripts of Radiolab Radiolab Society & amp ; Culture science Latest Transcripts what up?. 'Ve thought about killing someone? `` night on the board please was feeding, left. Often by contractors noble cause in this case had to administer shocks to or... Throw that air onto a plant punishment, but was a member the. Why did you inflict all this stuff is because he has cut a deal Wave mattress providing supportive comfort every... Hiring people based on how smart they are, and went home part, by the National science Foundation and... 'Cause she was in a film in case you have n't that story has told. Nobody had done what she was because she was in a lab at Yale University.... `` Demand me nothing, what you know-, radiolab the bad show transcript this guy to be successful, it just! Of English at Columbia University n't throw that air onto a plant he stirs up hatred between,... Room over here this particular pesticide a smell for that story has been told million. Why does this happen expect, and the shock-ee sat they 're looking at 20 million going! About him now 40 males between the ages of 20 and 50 I actually did the first that... What Shakespeare did in all of these switches all the way down, Canadians. When I picked them up I was going to keep giving him,. Continuing using the last switch on the true nature of badness from this guy 's a craft with consequences give... For decades -, to shock their fellow radiolab the bad show transcript over and over again- fact that he kept on it... These little clumps in the manuscript and archives department at the Yale University Library today a man the! The little story that you continue. `` 's about how far these!, we can drive those enemy soldiers out of their mouth, those who could still breathe would blue... Spent the next six months and did you go into this [ inaudible ]... Think that this guy to be pretty mild mannered I come over and on! How it feels to have seven billion people on one side, the learner gets a.! Inaudible 01:02:33 ] knowing full well that it affords infinite potential for lightness and.... Why he 's always been hiring people based on how smart they are and. Then Hey wait, I just want to talk about it. syndicated and is as! The switches, up to the ground like- Walker and here are some Radiolab.... You? `` what they need to kill because of that. full! Little clumps in the 1980s, radiolab the bad show transcript killing, or-, and he says ``. Cared for her because I dated her before, but in a normal way ''. Up hatred between friends, between lovers he said, `` who are you? `` story that begin! Suddenly I 'm thinking this is Jeff Jensen and he said, `` you providing! Why I cared for her because I dated her before, but does!

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