The Charles C. W. Cooke Podcast

Episode 21: Uncle Louie's Latest Idea

Episode Summary

Tired as a result of Daylight Savings Time, and of being chased around the room by a harp, Charles talks to John H. Cochrane about what happened to Silicon Valley Bank, and to Henry Oliver about whether literature students have suddenly become unable to read.

Episode Notes

In the wake of the second largest bank failure in American history, Charles eschews his monologue in order to chat to someone who knows what he's talking about: the economist, John H. Cochrane, who is the Rose-Marie and Jack Anderson Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, a co-host of the show Goodfellows, and the author of the Grumpy Economist blog, and, most recently, of the book, The Fiscal Theory of the Price Level.

After that, Charles talks to Henry Oliver, of The Common Reader, about whether literature students at Harvard are capable of reading, whether it's a problem that people want to shave the edges off Shakespeare, and how long copyright terms should be for authors.

The dial-up tone in the introduction was recorded by lintphishx and is used under a CC 3.0 License.