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Questioning the Use Sunscreen is Fair, but Ditching it Altogether Requires Extraordinary Proof

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Manage episode 481265662 series 2858062
Content provided by James Keys and Tunde Ogunlana. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by James Keys and Tunde Ogunlana or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

James Keys and Tunde Ogunlana discuss the recent trend that has some people abandoning the use of sunscreen based on claims that it is not necessary or actually could be bad for your health.

Most Sunscreen Isn't Bad For You and Using it Will Help Prevent Skin Cancer (Discover Magazine)

  continue reading

200 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 481265662 series 2858062
Content provided by James Keys and Tunde Ogunlana. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by James Keys and Tunde Ogunlana or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.

James Keys and Tunde Ogunlana discuss the recent trend that has some people abandoning the use of sunscreen based on claims that it is not necessary or actually could be bad for your health.

Most Sunscreen Isn't Bad For You and Using it Will Help Prevent Skin Cancer (Discover Magazine)

  continue reading

200 episodes

All episodes

×
 
James Keys and Tunde Ogunlana take a look at recent trends in how NBA basketball is being played and consider the concepts like “pace and space” are giving younger teams a leg up on older teams, particularly because the NBA has historically been dominated by veteran teams, not young ones. The guys also consider whether the NBA’s television broadcasts do a good enough job explaining the new things that are going on on the court. Step aside, millennial NBA stars: Gen Z is taking over — and winning a title could be a young man’s game now (Yahoo! Sports) Warriors coach Steve Kerr thinks an 82-game NBA regular season is too much (The Athletic) LeBron James Had Bummed Out Line About How Older Players Hurt the Game He Loves (Sports Illustrated)…
 
James Keys and Tunde Ogunlana take a look at a recent analysis from ISeeCars that suggests Tesla’s are the deadliest cars on the road based on the fatalities per mile driven, particularly in light of Gilbert Arenas’s claim that it was a steering wheel malfunction led to his son Alijah’s accident that resulted in Alijah being in a coma for days. Gilbert Arenas Blames Son’s Car Accident On Tesla Cybertruck Malfunction (Vibe) The Deadliest Car Brand in America Is … (Motortrend)…
 
Retired US Army Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Vindman joins James Keys and Tunde Ogunlana to discuss his new book, “The Folly of Realism: How the West Deceived Itself About Russia and Betrayed Ukraine” and how over the past few decades, a short term transactional approach to international relationships as opposed to a long term values based approach, has really sold American interests short. Why It Matters (Alexander Vindman Substack) The Folly of Realism (Hatchette Book Group) Here, Right Matters (HarpersCollins) VoteVets (votevets.org) Here Right Matters Foundation (hererightmattersfoundation.org)…
 
In this special crossover event with Call It Like I See It podcast and the Disruption Now podcast, Rob Richardson joins James Keys and Tunde Ogunlana to take a look at what’s going on with the manosphere and consider why there is so much focus on masculinity in our culture. The ‘Manosphere’? It’s Planet Earth. (New York Times) What is the Manosphere? A Parent’s Guide to Online Misogyny (Bright Canary) The manosphere isn’t just about economic power – it’s about gender power (Monash Univeristy) We Underestimate the Manosphere at Our Peril (New York Times)…
 
James Keys and Tunde Ogunlana take a look at the “Die With Zero” rule from hedge fund manager and best-selling author Bill Perkins, which has picked up some steam recently in wealth management and retirement circles, and consider why its goal idea of maximizing experiences lived requires some to overcome not just psychological hurdles but also evolutionary hurdles. The 'Die With Zero' Rule of Retirement (Kiplinger)…
 
James Keys and Tunde Ogunlana consider whether American society needs GLP-1 drugs because of the way they work on people’s brains to help them eat less, particularly because the food industry in America apparently has gotten so good at formulating foods that work on people’s brains to make them eat more. The guys also consider why so many people feel the need to hide their use of the drugs in light of how popular they are. In a World of Addictive Foods, We Need GLP-1s (New York Times) ‘I lost so much weight, my husband thought I was terminally ill’: why do people lie about taking Ozempic? (The Guardian)…
 
James Keys and Tunde Ogunlana take a look at a recent quote from Charles Koch and consider whether in the current moment, we are witnessing a shift in Americans values on things like free markets, and whether the chaos and conflict in our society may be the cause. The guys illustrate the point through at a recent story about a potential executive order aimed at limiting name image and likeness (NIL) payments to athletes. In DC Speech, Charles Koch Speaks of ‘the Mess’ He Sees the Country In (Time) Report: President Trump considers executive order limiting NIL payments (ProFootballTalk)…
 
James Keys and Tunde Ogunlana take a look at some of the more intriguing topics in Yanis Varoufakis’ book “Talking to My daughter About the Economy - A Brief History of Capitalism,” which is alternatively titled “How Capitalism Works and How it Fails.” This book, which was first published in 2013, details the rise of market societies and how things like money and the profit motive came to be, and also discusses the mechanics behind the rise of capitalism and how those mechanics have supercharged societies in some good ways and also some risky or unsustainable ways. Talking to My Daughter about the Economy: A Brief History of Capitalism (yanisvaroufakis.eu)…
 
James Keys and Tunde Ogunlana consider the extent to which the framework of the United States government, as expressed in the Constitution, is falling, and how a failure to heed George Washington’s warning is driving it off the cliff (01:52). The guys also react to the new research that suggests that adult humans don’t age linearly but rather have aging bursts in their mid-40s and early 60s (33:41). The Constitutional Crisis Is Here (The Atlantic) Trump says he would "love to" send American "homegrown criminals" to foreign prisons (CBS News) US Supreme Court halts deportation of detained Venezuelans (BBC) A quick break from football, for something more important (ProFootballTalk) Over 150 US university presidents sign letter decrying Trump administration (The Guardian) George Washington Farewell Address (National Constitution Center) U.S. attorney demands scientific journal explain how it ensures 'viewpoint diversity' (NBC News) Trump’s playbook is Viktor Orbán’s (Robert Reich Substack) Humans Age Rapidly at 44 and 60. Follow These Tips to Delay the Burst (Mens Health - Apple News Link) Why Aging Comes in Dramatic Waves in Our 40s and 60s (Scientific American)…
 
James Keys and Tunde Ogunlana consider whether nontraditional economic measures like the brothels spending or beer sales may be able to tell us more about where the economy is going than the stock market (01:02). The guys also look at some new research into a small diet tweak that could match the health and weight loss benefits of intermittent fasting (33:06). Sex Workers Already Predicted There's A Recession Coming — Here's How They Know (Huff Post) Simple diet hack is more effective than intermittent fasting diet, study claims (BBC Science Focus) Common artificial sweetener makes you three times hungrier than sugar (New Scientist)…
 
James Keys and Tunde Ogunlana discuss the ongoing measles outbreak in the southwest United States and Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s apparent about face on the importance of the measles vaccine (01:22). The guys also consider whether the rise in caffeine consumption, whether through energy drinks or coffee and tea products, and the deaths that seem to be arising out of that, is something that society needs to take a closer look at (29:21). Health secretary RFK Jr. endorses the MMR vaccine — stoking fury among his supporters (NPR) Trump begins mass layoffs at FDA, CDC, other US health agencies (Reuters) Colorado sues HHS, RFK Jr. over funding cuts as measles case hits (Axios) All That Caffeine You’re Drinking May Be Doing More Harm Than Good — Men’s Health (Apple News) 'Workout Queen,' 28, Who Loved ‘the Buzz’ from Caffeinated Energy Drinks Has Heart Attack, Suffers Fatal Brain Damage (People)…
 
James Keys and Tunde Ogunlana discuss a few things that stood out in Martin Gurri’s 2014 book “The Revolt of the Public and the Crisis of Authority in the New Millennium,” which looks at how digital technology has ushered into a new era of information access altered the power balance between the public and elite institutions in societies around the world. The guys also consider the extent to which the perspective it offers still holds true over 10 years after its initial publication. The Revolt of the Public and the Crisis of Authority in the New Millennium (Stripe Press)…
 
James Keys and Tunde Ogunlana react to the numbers that suggest that young men are having a tough time holding down romantic relationships, at least relative to historic trends (01:16). The guys also try to make sense of the rise in what look like apologist attitudes and conversations about Hitler and the Nazi’s we have seen recently coming from figures on the political right. (29:22). Why are young men so hopeless at dating? (Vox) Teens Are Forgoing a Classic Rite of Passage (The Atlantic) Antisemitism Rears Its Head on the Right, Too (WSJ) Yes, Musk repost misleadingly claimed 'Stalin, Mao and Hitler didn't murder millions of people' (Snopes) Elon Musk’s daughter says father’s rally gesture was ‘definitely a Nazi salute’ (The Guardian) This Has Got to Be the Most Hitler-Curious Administration in U.S. History (Slate)…
 
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