This is planet money from NPR.
Just a heads up for parents.
A part of this episode talks quite mathematically about contraception.
There are two sides to Professor Linda Ghent.
There is the side that worries about social norms, and then there is the side that is an economist.
I always joke with my students about wanting to pay the person who sits in front of me on an airplane to not lean back their seat if I want to work on my computer.
Linda teaches economics at Eastern Illinois University.
But I'm always worried to make that offer because they might look at me like I'm absolutely crazy and I've never done it because I'm just always worried about what reaction I would get even though, as an economist, I know it's the right way to deal with that situation.
And do you know what show that scenario would be right at home on?
I can think of one.
Seinfeld.
Absolutely.
Seinfeld.
Seinfeld.
There is a case to be made that the very popular nineties sitcom was actually full of economics.
Yeah, yeah.
Hear us out here.
So Seinfeld was famously called a show about nothing because it's about comedian Jerry Seinfeld and his three friends, George, Elaine and Kramer.
They're just living in New York City dealing with the dilemmas of everyday life.
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