The Next Big Idea

Next Big Idea Club

The Next Big Idea is a weekly series of in-depth interviews with the world’s leading thinkers. Join our host, Rufus Griscom — along with our curators, Malcolm Gladwell, Adam Grant, Susan Cain, and Daniel Pink — for conversations that might just change the way you see the world. New episodes every Thursday. read less

Our Editor's Take

Looking for a new podcast that combines insightful interviews with thought-provoking ideas on business, culture, health, and science? Look no further than LinkedIn's The Next Big Idea podcast, available on Amazon Music. This podcast aired in 2019 with the host Rufus Griscom's idea to cut through the noise. The Next Big Idea brings together four of the world's most original and brilliant thinkers to explore how people work and live.

From thinking about what drives people to exploring where humans want to live, The Next Big Idea dives deep into the concepts that shape our culture and future. Ideal for fans of TED talks, this audio miniseries gives listeners access to life-changing insights from the best new books. Read by best-selling authors like Annie Murphy Paul, Katy Milkman (professor at The Wharton School), and Stefanie Stahl.

Add the latest episodes of The Next Big Idea to your podcast queue now and get ready to think of your next big idea.

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EducationEducation
Society & CultureSociety & Culture
Self-ImprovementSelf-Improvement

Episodes

GOING INFINITE: Michael Lewis Wants to Change Your Mind About Sam Bankman-Fried
05-09-2024
GOING INFINITE: Michael Lewis Wants to Change Your Mind About Sam Bankman-Fried
In March, when Sam Bankman-Fried, the disgraced founder of FTX, was sentenced to 25 years behind bars for stealing $8 billion from customers, many people saw it as just punishment for a two-faced poser who had spouted a lot of rot about altruism just to mask the rank odor of his relentless greed. Michael Lewis, the famed author of Moneyball and The Big Short, was not one of those people. Through his eyes, Sam didn’t look like a con man. He looked like an awkward but well-meaning kid who meant what he said about wanting to save the world and was undone not by avarice but by his “pathological ability to foist risk upon other people without asking their permission.” Michael is in a unique position to draw these conclusions. He spent the months leading up to and immediately following Sam’s downfall hovering over his shoulder, watching him operate, learning how he thought. Michael wrote a book about it, Going Infinite, published last fall, right as the crypto wunderkind-turned-pariah began his trial. Now that it’s out in paperback and the dust has settled, we invited Michael onto the show to talk about why he was drawn to Sam in the first place, what he thinks of the critics who say he was too soft on him, and how we should reconcile our primal desire for simple narratives with the complexity of real life. 🎟️ Join us for a live taping of this show on Sept. 11 with Yuval Noah Harari. More details at https://nextbigideaclub.com/events 🏛️ Check out “The Canary,” Michael’s installment in the Washington Post’s new series “Who is government?” 🎁 Get 25% off a Next Big Idea Club subscription when you use the code PODCAST at https://nextbigideaclub.com/