by Erica Hohn    
    Stuff You Should Know is one of the five most popular podcasts on iTunes,  and with good reason.  The world is full of fascinating things (exploding  lakes, face transplants) you don't know about, and other things (health  care reform, economic policy) you feel like you should know about  but seem complicated, boring and impenetrable.  Stuff You Should Know  introduces the first kind and demystifies the second with in-depth research  and engaging delivery.  Whether it's cannibalism, credit default swaps,  toxoplasmosis or Delta Force, this is the place to begin the search  for your next embarrassing obsession.
    What makes the show a success is not so much the material - though  it is, with a few exceptions, really interesting - but the hosts.  Josh  Clark and Chuck Bryant exude great enthusiasm for their subjects without  coming off as pretentious or preachy.  They mention every so often that  they're working from notes, but the tone of the show is conversational  and easygoing, with natural, genuine banter - there's no attempt to  make the hosts or the show seem artificially cool.  You learn a lot,  but the content is actually fun and interesting, exactly the kind of  stuff that you like knowing so you can impress your friends or your  date with how knowledgeable and appealing you are.  It also helps that  the topics are so varied; regardless of your interests, there's a good  mix of familiar and unfamiliar information, serious material and fun  material, often in the same episode.
    The show's earliest episodes suffer a bit in comparison to the later  ones, due to both the rotating cast of co-hosts preceding the current  Golden Age of Josh and Chuck's epic, nerdy bromance, and a significantly  shorter running time.  Early episodes are generally under six minutes  long, which is hardly enough time to give a comprehensive or truly entertaining  examination of most subjects.  While five minutes is long enough to give  listeners a pretty good overview of the world's most expensive toilet,  it's not sufficient to do more than scratch the surface of topics like  abandoned cities, the CIA's torture manual, or the field of Ripperology.   So unless you're the completist type or curious about a specific show,  I wouldn't really bother with most of the episodes from before August  2008.  (Also worth skipping is the more recent discussion of "tinnovators,"  unless you really, really care about Altoid-tin craft projects.)
    In summary, this show is totally awesome.  Why are you still reading  this instead of listening to the one about Muppets?
Free Arts & Culture Events: July 27-Aug. 23
15 years ago
 
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