November 1, 2017

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Join KEXP At 2017 Iceland Airwaves Music Festival

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Join KEXP as the Seattle public radio station returns to the land of fire and ice, broadcasting live from KEX Hostel (no, that’s not a typo) in Reykjavik for the Iceland Airwaves Music Festival.

KEXP’s international broadcast will feature 16 exclusive performances live on air on Wednesday through Saturday from 6 a.m. to 2 p.m. PST.

Sets on Wednesday through Friday can be heard live on KEXP at 90.3 FM in Seattle and worldwide at KEXP.org. Sets from all days will be streamed with live video on KEXP’s Facebook page. Click on the names of the artists below to view past performances.


Tuesday, Oct. 31

1 p.m. PST/ 4 p.m. EST – Bangoura Band

2 p.m. PST/ 5 p.m. EST – Kiasmos

Wednesday, Nov. 1

6 a.m. PST/ 9 a.m. EST – Between Mountains

8:30 a.m PST/ 11:30 a.m. EST – Sóley

11 a.m. PST/ 2 p.m. EST – GusGus

1:30 p.m. PST/ 4:30 p.m. EST – Hatari

Thursday, Nov. 2

6 a.m. PST/ 9 a.m. EST – JFDR

8:30 a.m PST/ 11:30 a.m. EST – Par-Ðar

11 a.m. PST/ 2 p.m. EST – Glintshake

1:30 p.m. PST/ 4:30 p.m. EST – Hórmónar

Friday, Nov. 3

6 a.m. PST/ 9 a.m. EST – Mikko Joensuu

8:30 a.m PST/ 11:30 a.m. EST – Gordi

11 a.m. PST/ 2 p.m. EST – Fai Baba

1:30 p.m. PST/ 4:30 p.m. EST – Högni

Saturday, Nov. 4

6 a.m. PST/ 9 a.m. EST – Megas

8 a.m PST/ 11:30 a.m. EST – Lido Pimienta

10 a.m. PST/ 2 p.m. EST – GlerAkur

12 p.m. PST/ 4:30 p.m. EST – HAM

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Houston Astros Are World Series Champions, Beating Los Angeles Dodgers

George Springer’s double and later his two-run homer helped the Houston Astros to build up an early lead over the Los Angeles Dodgers in Game 7 of the World Series.

Ezra Shaw/Getty Images

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Ezra Shaw/Getty Images

Updated 12:01 a.m. ET

The Houston Astros beat the Los Angeles Dodgers 5-1 in Game 7 of the World Series, winning their first championship crown in the franchise’s 56-year history.

The Astros jumped out to a 5-0 lead after two innings and held on for the rest of the game watching the Dodgers squander multiple opportunities to score.

“We held down a really tough lineup,” said Astros pitcher Charlie Morton who pitched four innings in relief, giving up the Dodgers only run. He struck out, walked one batter and earned the win.

The losing pitcher was the Dodgers Yu Darvish who lasted only 1 2/3 innings, giving up four runs.

Unlike other games in this best-of-seven series which featured dramatic home runs and multiple lead changes, Game 7 was a relative sleeper.

The Astros got off to a fast start in the top of the first inning taking a 2-0 lead on a leadoff double by center fielder George Springer. He scored when third baseman Alex Bregman was safe at second on a throwing error by Dodgers first baseman Cody Bellinger. Bregman then scored on second baseman Jose Altuve’s RBI ground out.

The Dodgers responded immediately in the bottom of the first with their own leadoff double by center fielder Chris Taylor. An out later, third baseman Justin Turner was hit by a pitch from Astros starter Lance McCullers. With two runners on and two out, McCullers then hit right fielder Yasiel Puig, loading the bases. But L.A. didn’t score.

In the top of the second, the Astros increased their lead, starting with a lead-off walk by catcher Brian McCann and a double by left fielder Marwin Gonzalez. McCann scored on McCullers’ RBI ground out and then Springer homered to center. It was the fourth straight game in which he hit a homerun. The Astros led 5-0.

The Dodgers put their leadoff hitter, second baseman Logan Forsythe, on base with a single. And when pinchhitter Enrique Hernandez was hit by yet another McCullers pitch it looked like the Dodgers could strike. But Chris Taylor hit into a double play, killing another opportunity to score.

Los Angeles Dodgers’ starting pitcher Yu Darvish watches from the dugout during the eighth inning after being pulled for a reliever early in the game.

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Matt Slocum/AP

In the bottom of the third, the Dodgers had two runners on and no outs after a single by shortstop Corey Seager and McCullers hit Turner for the second time. But for the third consecutive inning, the Dodgers came up empty.

In the Dodgers fifth inning, the Angelenos threatened yet again with a leadoff walk by Seager and a single by Turner. But, Astros relievers Francisco Liriano and Chris Devenski snuffed out the Dodgers chances.

Los Angeles finally got on the scoreboard in the bottom of the sixth inning. The Dodgers had runners on first and second with no outs, on a single by left fielder Joc Pederson and a walk by second baseman Logan Forsythe. But they managed to get only one run on pinch-hit single by Andre Ethier Pederson.

By game’s end, the Dodgers had left 10 runners on base.

The champion Astros never scored after the second inning, in part because Dodger ace Clayton Kershawn was brought in as a reliever in the third inning and pitched four frames, giving up only two hits.

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Episode 803: Nudge, Nudge, Nobel

NPR's Weekend in Washington session at the Willard InterContinental Hotel in Washington, D.C., on Oct. 31, 2015.

Allison Shelley/for NPR

Economists used to assume that people were, overall, rational. They may make mistakes now and then, but, if reasonably informed, they do the right thing. Then came Richard Thaler, who, in October, was awarded the Nobel Prize in Economics.

While Thaler was teaching at the University of Rochester, he had a side gig. Not a lot of people knew about it or took it seriously. He would catalog ways people behaved irrationally. And Thaler though, there must be a way to make sense of this behavior, to understand it and to predict it. This list lead him to psychologists Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky.

Inspired by Kahneman and Tversky, Richard Thaler started running experiments on his classrooms. Once, he gave half of his class coffee mugs, and allowed those with mugs to sell to those without. People with mugs (mugs they got for free, that had no sentimental value) would value them at twice the rate of those without mugs. Thaler found a name for this phenomenon: the endowment effect. This trio, Kahneman, Tversky and Thaler, did more and more of these studies. Thaler’s field of study finally gets a name: behavioral economics.

Today on the show, how Thaler’s work went from a side hustle to winning a Nobel Prize.

Music: “Roof Top Pre-Game,” “Flinging About” and “After Surf Chill.” Find us: Twitter/ Facebook.

Subscribe to our show on Apple Podcasts, PocketCasts and NPR One.

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A Look At The Effectiveness Of Anti-Drug Ad Campaigns

NPR’s Ari Shapiro discusses anti-drug campaigns with Keith Humphreys a professor of psychiatry at Stanford University and a former drug policy adviser to presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama.

ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:

When President Trump officially declared the opioid crisis a public health emergency last week, he promised a massive campaign to discourage drug use.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP: Really tough, really big, really great advertising so we get to people before they start.

SHAPIRO: For people alive in the ’80s and early ’90s, that might bring back some memories.

(SOUNDBITE OF AD MONTAGE)

UNIDENTIFIED ACTOR #1: (As character) Parents, I’m here to talk to you about a very difficult subject.

UNIDENTIFIED ACTOR #2: (As character) Nine out of 10 laboratory rats will use it until dead.

UNIDENTIFIED ACTOR #3: (As character) You, all right? I learned it by watching you.

UNIDENTIFIED ACTOR #4: (As character) This is your brain on drugs. Any questions?

SHAPIRO: Anti-drug campaigns started in the early 1980s with Nancy Reagan’s message of Just Say No. So researchers have had a lot of time to study whether these messages work. Keith Humphreys is a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Stanford University, and he’s a former drug policy adviser to presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama. Welcome to the program.

KEITH HUMPHREYS: Great to be here.

SHAPIRO: I gather your research shows that these anti-drug ads from the ’80s were not very effective.

HUMPHREYS: Yeah. I can’t take personal credit for the research, which has been done by many, many groups, but despite billions of dollars spent from the late ’80s up through the ’90s, the general conclusion is these ads either had no effect or in some cases maybe even a perverse effect that some of the kids who saw the most ads actually said they were more likely to try marijuana rather than less.

SHAPIRO: As a teenager who saw these ads growing up, I can kind of appreciate why that might have been, but explain why these ads intended to deter people from using drugs might have actually had the opposite effect?

HUMPHREYS: Well, partly there was a problem of political economy. I mean, I remember watching one of the – I thought the silliest – ad where somebody smashed an egg and smashed up a whole kitchen with a frying pan being shown to a bunch of members of Congress, and they all jumped up and clapped, but America’s youth thought it was ridiculous. And the problem that the ads had was they’re trying to please the congressional audience, a 60-year-old white man or woman in a suit. That’s not what’s going to resonate with kids. In fact, for the kind of kids who are a bit rebellious, it was a signal that, hey, you know, if you really want to irritate your elders, this is the way to do it.

SHAPIRO: So if you do want to deter kids from using recreational, illegal drugs, what might work?

HUMPHREYS: Well, the campaign was dramatically redesigned into something called Above the Influence in about 2006 or so, and it copied more what had been done with tobacco. They – you know, they said to kids, look, you know, the tobacco industry is run by people your parents age you think you’re a sucker, and they want to addict you. If you want to really, you know, show that you’re free, don’t smoke. And that seems to work a little better. What you’re saying to young people is if you want to be a cool, independent, free kid, you have the power to choose something else. And that resonates more.

SHAPIRO: The particular challenge today seems to be different from the past because so many people who are addicted to opioids got their first prescription from a doctor who told them to take it for medical reasons.

HUMPHREYS: That’s exactly right, and that’s another reason I don’t think these campaigns work very well. Most of the time, when you get an opioid, someone in a white coat who you trust and are told to trust from a very early age is handing it to you. So it would be strange then to say to your doctor, well, no, I’ve learned just to say no, doc. I’m not going to follow your instructions.

SHAPIRO: If you had a pot of money to spend on prevention, what do you think would be the most useful way to spend it?

HUMPHREYS: Well, there are really terrific programs that invest in kids, and they don’t necessarily focus that much on drugs. They focus on things like teaching kids emotional regulation skills, helping them connect with other people socially and also connecting them with other things that are fun. It’s a competition out there, and drugs produce, in the short term, rewards. In the long term, they’re destructive. So you want to have other things for kids to do, community events, religious events, anything that will engage them and make them sort of happy, full of life without drugs.

SHAPIRO: That’s Keith Humphreys, professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Stanford University. He was a drug policy adviser to presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama. Thanks for speaking with us.

HUMPHREYS: Thank you.

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