We vertellen onze kinderen enge sprookjes om hen waardevolle lessen te leren, maar deze verhalen zijn voor de educatie van volwassenen – en ze zijn allemaal waargebeurd. Tim Harford (bekend van de Financial Times en de BBC, en auteur van “De Data Detective”) brengt verhalen over menselijke fouten, tragische rampen en hilarische blunders. Ze zullen je amuseren, je angst aanjagen en je ook wijzer maken. Elke andere vrijdag verschijnen er nieuwe afleveringen.
We tell our children unsettling fairy tales to teach them valuable lessons, but these Cautionary Tales are for the education of the grown ups – and they are all true. Tim Harford (Financial Times, BBC, author of “The Data Detective”) brings you stories of awful human error, tragic catastrophes, and hilarious fiascos. They’ll delight you, scare you, but also make you wiser. New episodes every other Friday.
Paul Starrett has just won a major building contract. If everything goes according to plan, this will be the tallest building in the world. But will everything go according to plan?
This prestigious new project will have Starrett’s biggest workforce yet. Everyone will need to pull together, but labour relations in the United States have been rough. There have been tens of thousands of strikes in recent years, many ending in shootings and arbitrary mass arrests.
Something else is bothering Starrett too: enormous steel-framed buildings normally take three or four years to complete. The deadline on this one? Just thirteen months.
This is the second episode in a four-part series about how to succeed without being a jerk. It’s based on David Bodanis’ excellent book The Art of Fairness: The Power of Decency in a World Turned Mean.
For a full list of sources, see the show notes at timharford.com.
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