No Stupid Questions - 128. How Can You Give Better Gifts?
Episode Date: December 25, 2022How many bottles of wine are regifted? What’s wrong with giving cash? And should Angela give her husband a subscription to the Sausage of the Month Club? ...
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I've always wanted a one-eyed doll.
I'm Angela Duckworth.
I'm Stephen Dubner.
And you're listening to No Stupid Questions.
Today on the show, how can you improve your gift-giving game?
I love getting wine so that I can then give it to someone else.
How many bottles of wine are re-gifted?
I think it's got to be over 100%.
regifted. I think it's got to be over 100%. Angela, a question today from one Juliana Bonner,
who writes to say that she is a senior economics major at Lehigh University. Which is close to my hometown here, Philadelphia, that is.
She writes that her dad, whose name is Neil Bonner, is who, quote, got me into your podcast.
She writes that her dad has undergraduate and
master's degrees in economics. He also has an MBA and he now works for Nielsen. She writes,
he inspired me to read all the Freakonomics books and he was the reason I wanted to major
in economics. But then she says, don't worry, Angela, I am also minoring in psychology.
I get the silver medal.
Juliana continues, my dad and I FaceTime every other week
to talk about your show. And it is one of the things I look forward to the most, unfortunately.
So that was all great news up till there. But now, unfortunately, he might be the hardest person
to shop for during the holidays. She says, I've gotten him Freakonomics books the last three
years, poor fella, and vice versa. Oh, poor Juliana. And that
is about the only thing he has actually enjoyed. And now she says, I am at a complete loss. I'm
reaching out to you to see if one, you have any suggestions for economists. And two, could you do
a segment about why gift giving can be so difficult for some people. So, Angela, let's start with Julian's second
question. Why can gift giving be so difficult for some people? Do you have any opening thoughts?
You know, I have thoughts both on a kind of personal basis, because I would not categorize
myself as a world-class gift giver, but also professionally as somebody who has looked at
the literature a little bit, partly because I am such a terrible gift giver and I'm looking for research that would help me be better.
Wait, you looked at the research because you're a terrible gift giver or because you are a nerd?
Probably both.
But I'll just say that, you know, whereas some people Google the answers to their life problems, I always Google scholar.
It's a little more efficient for me, may not be for most, but there have been research studies, also theoretical papers on this human tradition,
right? I think we are the only species that gives and receives gifts.
Oh, come on. That can't be so.
Well, what is a gift, right? That's the question.
Well, you tell me.
I think that the definition of a gift, I'm sure there's research on that, which I haven't looked at.
But in terms of the psychology of it, I think a gift is not simply a transaction.
So if you go and take your car to Jiffy Lube and you pay your bill, we would not consider that a gift.
But why not?
You gave value to another person.
The reason, I think, is that at least implicitly what a gift is,
is like an unnecessary payment. It might be expected, but it's optional and it's not in
exchange for some other thing that I'm getting back. Although, again, there's some expectation
that you'll probably give me a gift in the future. Right. So who am I to disagree with how you just defined gift giving? But sticking with the only
animal that gives gifts, does a gift have to be, let's say, wrapped? Because I could imagine that
most other animals would have a hard time wrapping their gifts.
I don't think it's the gift giving wrapping, because of course, we give gifts all the time
without wrapping, right? Like you can send somebody an e-gift certificate.
You can, you know, buy somebody something off of a registry and I guess choose not to have it wrapped.
I always find that interesting, you know, when somebody registers for a wedding gift
from Macy's or Williams-Sonoma or wherever, and then you have that option as the gift giver to
like pay $3.99 to have it wrapped. The wrapping itself, I think, is perhaps indicative
though of like what this thing really is doing, right? And what it is, is surprise. I think that's
why we wrap gifts, that we are trying to prolong the suspense. I mean, if you just like hand
somebody, I don't know, like an Alexa or whatever it is, you have zero surprise because like as soon
as they see it, they know what it is. What if you're giving someone a car? Do you need to wrap that?
Well, they do have those like huge car bows, actually. I think only on TV commercials. Have
you ever seen one in real life? My stepbrother-in-law is a car salesman and they have them.
And you'll be happy to know because I've always wondered, they reuse them. So you can like basically rent a bow.
Now, that, of course, does not have the surprise thing because you're not like, gee, I wonder what's under this bow.
Because it's pretty obvious that it's a car.
Unless you're pretty unperceptive.
But I think it's just like a vestige of this thing that we do.
Gift giving is probably, I think, a pretty complex human interaction,
but there's part of it, which is the moment of receipt. And some psychologists have suggested that gift givers think almost entirely about that moment of the gift exchange. Like when Stephen
unwraps this, what is he going to feel and think? Whereas we kind of neglect, I guess, the rest of the
transaction, which is like Stephen takes it home and then Stephen's going to use it or not use it
for the rest of his life. And so the mistake that, again, some psychologists have argued is that the
gift giver frequently errs in only thinking about that very first stage and not thinking about
the rest of life.
Well, this explains, A, why Juliana is so concerned about getting something for her
father that he will like, and B, why we are generally so bad at giving gifts.
I would also add to the list that it is okay to ask someone.
I mean, Juliana could ask her dad.
I think that's a really interesting research point you make about essentially the gift
givers thinking short term versus long term.
We're thinking about the moment versus the actual use or appreciation of the thing.
Because that's the only part we're around for.
Like, what else, you know, would we care about?
Well, theoretically, but a lot of times you give a gift to someone that you spend time
with.
Oh, that's true.
So it could be a friend, could be a family member. And so you actually get to see them
use it or not use it. I mean, I've given my wife a lot of gifts over the years,
some of which have landed well, a couple of which landed amazingly, most of which
didn't land very well. And sometimes I'll give her a piece of art, maybe by an artist that we both know, hoping that she will love it.
Those pieces of art usually end up in my office, I will say.
So you gave yourself a piece of art.
Yeah. But, you know, if you look at the data on gift recipients happiness about the gifts that they get, let's look at holidays.
It's pretty bad. So I'm looking at one survey here, which doesn't feel super scientific.
But this one survey notes that 52% of Americans surveyed admit to getting at least one unwanted gift over the holidays.
I think that's probably absurdly low.
I think it probably should be 98%.
I know.
It's like a lower bound estimate.
Here's a little bit different data.
This is from Statista, which might be a little bit more robust.
It lists the gifts that people dislike receiving for Christmas.
I have to say, some of these really surprised me.
What would you guess would be among the categories that people most dislike receiving for Christmas?
This is like family feud.
I'm going to go with clothing.
No, clothing is actually right up there among the favorites.
What? Among other favorites are household items and electronics. Tech gears, does that say?
Electronics and tech gears. I don't even know what that's supposed to mean.
Very Radio Shack. Wait, I want to make sure I'm reading this right.
Yeah. Do you have this list wrong? Because how can clothing, there's the, you know, don't just think about the moment of opening.
Think about the lifetime usage.
But I think the other thing we're getting to here is, like, you have to predict what that person really wants.
You have to have empathy.
And I think that is no small feat.
I think it's very hard to have empathy about the clothing.
that is no small feat. I think it's very hard to have empathy about the clothing. I do have this one horrible gift-giving story, but I don't know if I'm allowed to tell it. I feel like I can't be
the person to give you permission, but let's pretend I am. Yes, it's okay to tell the story.
So one year, I think it was for my birthday, Jason goes down to the local department store, I guess, Nordstrom or whatever.
And he goes to the dress section for women and he seeks out a salesperson and he describes me,
his new wife. Can I just say everything about this is setting off alarm bells in my mind?
I know, right? It's like a horror movie. You're walking backwards.
And Jason, I'm sure you? It's like a horror movie. You're walking backwards. And Jason,
I'm sure you meant well, but okay, proceed. It was tragic. It was catastrophic. So,
you know, let's say it's my birthday. Maybe it was like Valentine's Day. It was like a
appropriately terrible kind of like setting for this because expectations, I think, are another
nuance of gift giving, right? Like, what do I think I'm going to get? So we're newly in love.
I feel like my husband really knows me. I get this huge, beautifully wrapped box with a bow
on it, Stephen. And I open it up and inside is like the teeniest little dress I've ever seen.
I mean, I couldn't fit my pinky into it. I tried it on and then I wept. In front of him? Like while
you're trying it on? I'm not sure whether he was there for the trying on or not. I do remember,
though, feeling and again, I can't believe I'm saying this because now I'm a much wiser 52 year
old, but I was like, oh, my God, I'm a whale. I felt the way many women feel when they are given a piece of clothing,
which is like four sizes too small, which is you feel four sizes too big.
Can I just say in Jason's defense for a moment?
Yeah.
Men don't understand women's clothing sizes.
This is why I think that list has to have it wrong. Like,
who gives clothing and feels confident that it's going to land well?
Well, first of all, there are many items of clothing that aren't a small dress.
Yes, facts.
I'm sorry it didn't work out for you and Jason, but all I can tell you is that clothing are among the least disliked categories of gifts that people receive for Christmas, according to Statista, which now that I look at the data, is only a little over a thousand respondents.
That's not bad.
But listen, I want to get to the gifts that people most dislike.
So clothing, household items, and electronics people like.
I have to say the top three surprise me.
Number one, flowers and plants.
Oh.
People don't want them.
Yeah, I don't really like them.
Okay, good.
I'm in that group.
Number two, beauty products. Oh, like moisturizer? I don't know like them. Okay, good Because I may think that you might like a certain category of something. But if I don't know enough about the items in that category, I can imagine the mismatch
being quite large. Well, give me the third one and we'll see if we can make a pattern out of this.
Liquor or drinks, which again surprises me because I've very rarely been ungrateful.
Right. For like a nice bottle of wine. I don't drink wine, but I love
getting wine so that I can then give it to someone else. How many bottles of wine are regifted?
I think it's got to be over 100 percent. Well, let me ask you this. When receiving a gift that
you don't like, should you lie? You know, there is this developmental psychology task that you
use to test kids' self-control.
And most people think like, oh, the marshmallow task.
Well, there's another task that is sometimes used for little kids.
And that is you give them a gift that you know they won't like.
And how do you know?
Well, at phase one in this task, you show kids all different kinds of toys.
And sometimes they rig this because like some of the toys are brand new
and the other ones are like broken or missing parts.
And you ask the like four-year-old,
which of these is your very, very, very favorite?
And they point to the brand new whatever it is.
And then you say, well, which is the worst one?
And of course, they point to the doll that has one eye or whatever,
like this thing that they don't want.
I've always wanted a one-eyed doll, I have to say.
Wow, that is so disturbing. Because I never liked dolls because they seemed too perfect and perky. But if you'd given me a one-eyed doll, man, oh man, friends for life. I'll keep that in
mind. I'm going to make a note of that. Appreciate it. But in this task, Stephen, the unwanted gift
is what the experimenter then wraps up all nice and fine, probably with a bow.
And then, you know, after the kid's kind of like forgotten about this, which doesn't take too long, they're four, you hand them this gift.
And they're excited and they unwrap it.
And then they get this thing they don't want.
And the question is, how self-controlled are you?
What do you do?
There's, I think, a pretty reasonable gender difference here, which you can probably guess at.
Like, which kids smile politely and thank the gift giver?
Definitely the boys, because we boys are raised to be conformist, polite, and kind to everyone.
Stephen, but no, it's reasonably well established that girls pass this test with flying colors relative anyway to boys.
But my point is that when we receive gifts, it is also part of human custom to express gratitude, whether or not we really want the bottle of wine, the, you know, size zero dress.
It's part of the ritual.
And if part of the ritual is charade, as some people say,
then so be it. So I would also love to know from our listeners, what's the best gift you ever
received? Who gave it to you? Why was it so great? If you have an answer to that question,
make a voice memo, use your phone, just talk nice and directly into the phone in a quiet place.
Use your phone. Just talk nice and directly into the phone in a quiet place.
Tell us your name and send it to NSQ at Freakonomics.com and we may play it on a future show.
Still to come on No Stupid Questions, Stephen and Angela debate when cash is an appropriate gift.
I have to say that my kids would vastly prefer Venmo to any other form of gift giving, and they have increasingly gotten their way.
Now, back to Stephen and Angela's conversation about gift giving. So let's go back to Julianne for a minute. She mentioned her dad
is an economist or, you know, studied econ. She herself, she says she's a senior econ major at
Lehigh. So she probably does know about what economists call deadweight loss. Are you familiar
with this notion of gift giving? Why don't you give me a little tutorial? So for those who wish to know more, you could search for deadweight loss,
deadweight one word, and Joel Waldfogel, W-A-L-D-F-O-G-E-L.
And he is an economist.
I want to say he's at the University of Minnesota.
And this was a paper from a long time ago.
And Joel subsequently wrote a book that revolved around this.
It was called Scroogenomics.
And it made the point that economists look at gift giving a little bit differently than most
people might. And what he focused on, what he calls deadweight loss, is essentially
a measurement of the gap between what a gift costs the giver in dollars and how
the recipient values it in dollars.
It's like destroying value, right?
Yeah.
An example would be your grandmother buys you a sweater for $100 and you, if in your
deepest, most honest moment could admit what you would, let's say, buy it for and that
price is $10, then the deadweight loss is $90.
It's the difference.
You can see why this is a fairly tricky subject because so much of our culture and economy
are built around the notion of buying stuff for other people.
And so if an economist comes along and says, hey, a great deal of the stuff that you buy
for other people is just wasted.
You'd be better off not giving them a gift or maybe you just want to give them cash,
which is something that most humans don't really like.
Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait.
You think that most human beings don't want to get a cash gift?
I didn't say get.
I think many people would be really happy to get money. But I think
our gift giving culture has conspired against the comfort of being able to give cash. That's why
gift cards exist. It's like almost as good, but it's not really as good. Gift cards are fascinating
because it's like basically cash, but worse because you can only use it at the gap or something.
Way worse. Let me just quibble a bit, though, about our custom of gift giving.
I'm Chinese.
Like, we almost only give cash at my wedding.
We did register.
But the cash part at a Chinese wedding, there are red envelopes.
And those red envelopes don't contain gift cards.
It's like cold, hard cash.
And sometimes, like, they'll write a check that's very modern.
But I think in my family tradition, there is not only cash received and given at weddings.
There's also cash given and received at Chinese New Year.
And we don't celebrate Christmas or Hanukkah.
So this idea that it's not customary to exchange cold hard cash, it's certainly not universal.
So do you and Jason give your kids cash gifts?
I have to say that my kids would vastly prefer Venmo to any other form of gift giving, and
they have increasingly gotten their way. I think we had the years where they were too young,
increasingly gotten their way. I think we had the years where they were too young. So we were,
of course, giving them like actual things. Now they're like 19 and 21 and it's almost all cash.
Do you think it would be appropriate or even a good idea for Juliana just to give her dad,
the economist, some cash? Well, I mean, she could print out the Joel Waldfogel article,
Deadweight Loss of Christmas.
That's the present, just printing out an academic paper.
Right. Like, Dad, Merry Christmas. You'll be happy to know there's no deadweight lost with this gift. I'm not going to mispredict what you want. She might get a good laugh out of that,
actually. I think gift giving has all these different nuances and facets. And I think one
is just this like transaction where you're trying to guess what the person really will find useful.
That's just a part of it. I would say, for example, Stephen, like I around Thanksgiving
make a list of all the people that professionally I have some gratitude for. And then there's this column, which is like
how much cash to give them. Like the mailman, we usually just tape an envelope to the mailbox.
The legal limit, by the way, is $20. I looked it up.
By the way, I think you should give your mailman a copy of the deadweight loss paper. Just see
what happens.
See what happens. But, you know, if I can't Venmo them and I can't send them a check or I can't give them cash, then I send them get somebody that gift that's just perfect for them,
then, you know, there's more utility, as economists would say, than even if they had
bought it themselves. But since the probability is that I'm going to get it wrong for this list
of professional acquaintances, yeah, I just do that. Now, what do you think about that? Because I feel like it is both
efficient for me. And also, since I don't know these people super well, personally,
since I'm likely to get it wrong, I feel like it's like the perfect gift solution.
So I think that is a very viable solution you've come upon. I'm not sure I would call
it gift giving, however.
You don't think it's a gift?
I mean, you can call it a gift if you want, but it's not what I think of as gift giving.
If we think about gift giving as an action of intimacy or love or friendship, which includes reciprocity often, maybe not in the moment.
Maybe you give me something for my birthday and I give you something later for your birthday.
later for your birthday. But what you're describing now, which sounds very nice,
but it sounds to me like a cross between a professional bonus and a kind of thank you payment, all of which are lovely. I'm sure people are grateful for it. I have my set of
things like that in New York City. We call it tipping culture, though, not gift giving culture
around Christmas, which is you tip all the people who work in your
building. Same thing if you park your car in a garage in New York. You are expected to have an
envelope for each of them, too. So, yes, I definitely engage in that sort of prescribed.
And that's not a gift for you.
When I think of gift-giving of the type that Julianne is talking about,
it's a relationship in a family where there are a variety of circumstances
that make it quite different from what you were talking about, what I was talking about just now.
And those are, there is a reciprocity or an expectation of reciprocity. There is a relationship
and it's a continuing relationship. And there's also, I guess I would describe it as love, right? So when I think about the kinds of gifts that are wonderful or terrible, I guess,
to give or receive, I think of how they sort of change or even improve the calculus of the
relationship between the people. In other words, I can think of a couple of gifts that Ellen,
my wife, has given me over the years. Yeah, I want to hear the highlights and the lowlights from the Dubner family.
So first of all, she's just good.
That does not surprise me.
I think she does a lot of things that the people who give advice about gift giving prescribe.
I saw an article just recently in Vox called How to Become a Truly Excellent Gift Giver. And it advises you
ask three questions. Number one, can I introduce someone to something they might not otherwise know
about? Number two, can I get them a nicer version of something than they would buy for themselves?
And number three, can I make them feel seen? I'm not sure really what that means.
Oh, God, that's the best one. Oh, really?
To make you feel seen? Why is that the best one? I think this actually does get to the heart of
this like empathy problem. And the empathy game is like, can I guess what you really are and who you
really think of yourself as and what you really want and need. I mean, some of the best gifts I
ever got were from my aunt. In Chinese, it's Xiao Yi, which means like little auntie, like my mom's
little sister. My parents would regularly get me no gift. They were not world-class gift givers.
I'm their daughter. But my aunt somehow would get me the perfect gift. I'm thinking about when I was
like a really little
girl. She got me this little yellow safe once with a little red dial. I just loved it so much.
There was a store called Woolworths and there was this little lipstick holder. It was so grown up
and it was so perfect. And she really made me feel seen. Like she hands me this gift and the gift essentially says like, I know you, I see you.
So I love that third criterion. I love that your little aunt gave you these great gifts and it
sounds as though she understood you and yeah, saw you and appreciated you and had really great
empathic skills. It's also a little surprising to me to hear you talk about these gifts so positively when you just got done telling us that, nah, I'm Chinese, we just do
cash. But if I were as good as Ellen. But maybe you have a comfort in resorting to cash and saying
that I'm particularly comfortable with this in part because I've got a cultural association with
it because I'm Chinese. Whereas in fact, what you really,
really want, what Angela, Angela, Angela really, really, really wants is just to be a little bit better at gift giving. And maybe you resort to cash because it's so darn hard. And it sounds
like Juliana is having that same problem. I think it's really, really hard, especially
when you're giving gifts every year, a couple times a year, maybe
to the same people over and over again.
On the other hand, I would posit that there is great value in this.
And even if you fail most of the time, that the times that you succeed really do make
up for it.
For instance, the most amazing gift I ever got was from Elle
and my wife. She commissioned an artist we both know, this was a while ago when our kids were
pretty young, to paint a family portrait. And it was done through photographs and voluminous emails
and a lot of drafts of the painting in order that the portrait really reflected all four of us who were painted in a style that felt
so true to us individually and as a family. We each had one item in our possession that was
kind of subtly painted, but it was like the perfect item. And it was an amazing gift. And
every time I see it on the wall in our home, every single time I think of how much I love it and how much
I love her for it.
So I would argue that you who sound a little pro-cash, but also sound like you are in touch
with at least that little girl, Angela, who loves to get that yellow safe with the red
knob or the little lipstick case.
I think even you can sense that when it's done right, there is an emotional
payoff that is worth pursuing, even if the rate of failure can be really high.
Even if there's a deadweight loss on average. Okay, look, Stephen, I will concede a lot of
this ground to you. I agree that if I could nail it, I would. But I like having this kind of like fallback, which probably is, you know, culturally the
script that I was raised on.
Well, can I borrow from my friend Angela Duckworth?
And let's say both and instead of either or.
I'm not saying you need to give people cash and some handpicked gift, but both are fine.
You've established that giving cash really works.
It's useful. People
like getting it. But also, you are someone who truly has a growth mindset. And if you truly do,
I could imagine that you could set a goal for yourself of becoming a slightly better gift
giver over the next several years. I think there are a lot of ways to go about doing that. I mean,
the best advice I've ever heard is simply don't start thinking about giving a gift
when it's almost time to give the gift
because that's really hard.
If it's someone that you know and spend time around,
just always be on the lookout.
So I find that there's a lot of fungibility
in how we think about gift giving, good and bad.
And I think that you have all the skills to become excellent at it if you apply yourself. I feel like this is like a pep talk.
This is like Stephen Dubner trying to convince Angela Duckworth that she can
move beyond Venmo this holiday season. Look, I'm not saying there's anything wrong with Venmo. Can
I share one other thing with you here, though? This is an article published in the Journal of Business Research.
This is from 2020. This article says that gift givers do not repeat gifts nearly as often as
recipients prefer because givers perceive the act of giving a repeat gift to be less thoughtful and
more boring than do recipients.
So that I found really interesting.
And it makes sense because if someone likes something once, they'll probably like it again.
So I'm going to take that to heart.
And last year, I gave Ellen for some birthday or whatever, a monthly subscription to flowers delivered.
What, like flowers of the month?
It's a company called Urban Stems.
I thought that gift was a little bit cliche,
maybe a little bit tacky.
Flowers and plants are number one
on the list of gifts that people don't want.
There you go.
But it turns out every month we get a new bouquet.
It is seasonally appropriate and Ellen likes it.
And so I might get her something else in addition,
but I'm definitely going to repeat that because, oh my goodness, once you find something that
someone likes, why on earth do you not just want to get it again? Okay, look, this is an infinitely
complex topic. Like, yes, I agree. If something works, like they really liked the sausage of the
month club. I'm just going to like click on the button again this year. And, you know, joking aside.
Wait a minute. Are you joking? Because Sausage of the Month Club sounds kind of fantastic.
Actually, that would be a really good gift for Jason because he would feel seen.
Look at you. I'm so proud of you. You have evolved so much in the course of this conversation.
I know, so much progress.
I think there's another option here.
In addition to sausage of the month, you know, commissioned painting as ideas for Juliana.
I have the suggestion that I used with my own dad, who was also hard to give gifts to.
I wrote him a letter, actually, every Christmas.
And it always hit. In a way, it's like the opposite of
cash. It's not exchangeable. It's unique. And I think there's an element of gift giving that we
haven't quite gotten to yet, Stephen. And that is what emotion do you think is usually the emotion
that one has when one receives a gift? I would say it would be gratitude.
The emotion that one has when one receives a gift.
I would say it would be gratitude.
That is right.
So gratitude is experienced most when we feel like we have gotten something from someone else and... And it's fully refundable?
No, good guess.
But that they've made some sacrifice.
That it took something of their effort that they sacrificed, their time that they sacrificed, or their resources.
There has to have been a price to it.
So when you write a letter to your dad, Juliana, you're going to show that you have put in effort.
So look, it's a complex issue, but I do think that when you have somebody that you really love,
and it's personal and it's
not professional, what else is there than a letter that could kind of like hit all those notes pretty
reliably? That is a lovely and great point. I will say in this case, this is an odd one because
Juliana somehow conned you and me into talking about her giving her dad a gift for the past
half hour. And so she can now just send him the link to
this episode. So Neil, Juliana is a crafty person and I applaud her craftiness. I feel like we
should just say, Mr. Bonner, that you have a wonderful daughter. And I hope that this conversation
has been a surprise. I hope it's something that you didn't already have. I hope it was a nicer version of a podcast
than you might have indulged yourself in.
And I hope it makes you feel seen.
So, Angela, do you think anything we've discussed today
changes your approach at all?
I would say this.
I think that you have to ask yourself,
like, how much of a risk taker am I?
Am I going to go for the glory
and try to guess at something that they don't have? It's nicer than they would buy for themselves.
They're going to feel seen. I think I've got it. Or do I want to play the safe option and give the
equivalent of a red envelope filled with cash? I think I'm going to make a case by case call,
Stephen. But when I doubt myself, you know, given the deadweight loss issue and given how many times I really have gotten things where I was like, oh, my gosh, not only do I not want this, now I have to recycle it or whatever.
It's a burden.
I'm going to be pretty risk-averse.
I don't know if that makes you feel like you've done your work as a coach, but I'm still going to be risk-averse this year as I have been in holidays past. You know, I have faith in you. We'll see how
you do this year. Maybe we'll check in next year and see if you've grown a little bit,
because I have massive belief in your potential to just keep growing.
I would like to just add one thing. First of all, I think it's very uncomfortable for many people to
ask for a gift. And I am within that category, but I am about to
break my discomfort level. And I am about to say to all our listeners, it is really lovely.
Many of you write to us with all kinds of words, kind words, inquisitive words, and so on.
And a lot of people write to say that they want to do something for us. I will say there is something that people can do that would be a really nice gift, which
is tell your friends and family to listen to the show.
In the world of podcasting, the single best way to grow an audience is word of mouth.
And so if you like this show, feel free to tell your friends and family.
And so if you like this show, feel free to tell your friends and family. If you feel really committed, you can go on to your podcast app and leave a rating or review. If you don't like this show very much and you do want to leave a rating or review, go leave your crappy rating on This American Life or Armchair Expert, whatever. Save your five-star feelings for us.
No Stupid Questions is produced by me, Rebecca Lee Douglas.
And now, here's a fact check of today's conversation.
In the first half of the show,
Angela says she thinks that humans are the only species that practice gift-giving.
This is incorrect.
Certain other animals give gifts as well,
although admittedly not wrapped.
For example, University of Washington ornithologist John Marsluff has spent years
researching how crows give presents to each other and to humans. People who feed wild crows
might be rewarded with found objects. A 2015 BBC profile of a young girl who befriended a crow in her garden
reported that the girl had been given dozens of small objects, including a miniature silver ball,
a pearl-colored heart, and a yellow bead. She also received a rotting crab claw,
which demonstrates that what makes a good gift is subjective. Later, Stephen doubts that attaching giant bows to cars
is a phenomenon that exists outside of television commercials.
But Angela insists that the company her salesman brother-in-law works for
allows customers to rent bows.
Websites like CarBows.com, King Size Bow, and, of course, Amazon,
offer a multitude of purchasable options,
from gigantic Christmas-themed bows
to massive ribbons that read Sweet 16.
The concept was popularized
by Lexus' December to Remember campaign,
which launched in 1998.
Today, King Size Bows,
the company responsible for the bows in Lexus ads, reportedly sells thousands of car bows a year that are shipped all over the world.
Clients can customize the color, sheen, size, and number of loops.
Finally, Angela shares that because of her Chinese background, she often feels more comfortable giving money than physical presents. While Angela chooses to Venmo her colleagues to show appreciation,
gift-giving does occur in Chinese workplaces.
It's relatively common to bring physical gifts to important business meetings.
Presents that have strong associations with the giver's local identity are appreciated.
Gifts are usually quickly reciprocated with a present of equal value.
That's it for the fact check. Before we wrap today's show, let's hear some of your thoughts
on our recent episode on how to be a better communicator. Here's what you said.
Hi, Stephen and Angela. I was a broadcast meteorologist in local TV for over a dozen
years, so I've done a lot of communicating, especially taking complex information and making it meaningful. My advice? Don't try to impress a general audience by using
stuff like jargon. To paraphrase the movie Anchorman, 60% of the time, it backfires every
time. Hey, Angela and Steven, this is Jeff from Philly. Great communicators start with the answer
and work back from there. Getting quickly to what you think the answer is before spending time on why you think that's the answer and what data backs up your conclusion is a great
way to hook your audience. And it also hopefully avoids them checking out because it's otherwise
taking too long to get to the point. Thanks again for all the work you put into your weekly podcast.
That was, respectively, Justin Gertz and Jeff Bladen. Thanks so much to them and to everyone who sent us their thoughts.
And remember, we'd still love to hear your stories about the best gift you've ever received.
Send a voice memo to nsq at Freakonomics.com.
Let us know your name, and if you'd like to remain anonymous, you might hear your voice on the show.
Coming up on No Stupid Questions, Stephen and Angela hear from a young
listener who admits that he's been cheating at school for years. Aiden goes on to say,
even in my favorite classes, I can't help myself but cheat on virtually every assignment. I have
spent far longer learning how to cheat than the time it takes to actually do the assignment.
learning how to cheat than the time it takes to actually do the assignment.
No Stupid Questions is part of the Freakonomics Radio Network,
which also includes Freakonomics Radio, People I Mostly Admire, and Freakonomics MD.
All our shows are produced by Stitcher and Renbud Radio.
This episode was mixed by Eleanor Osborne with help from Jeremy Johnston.
Catherine Moncure is our associate producer.
Our executive team
is Neil Carruth,
Gabriel Roth,
and Stephen Dubner.
Our theme song is
And She Was by Talking Heads.
Special thanks to David Byrne
and Warner Chapel Music.
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To learn more or to read episode transcripts,
visit Freakonomics.com slash NSQ.
Thanks for listening.
visit Freakonomics.com slash NSQ.
Thanks for listening.
I've seen that painting.
It's gorgeous.
Even for me, who's not in your family.
Even for you who actively dislikes my family,
you find it to be a meaningful portrait.
Even me, who finds each and every one of you are pregnant. The Freakonomics Radio Network network the hidden side of everything
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