No Stupid Questions - 79. Why Do We Root for Underdogs?
Episode Date: December 26, 2021Also: Angela proposes an upgrade to the show. Â ...
Transcript
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This is going to work out great.
I'm Angela Duckworth.
I'm Stephen Dubner.
And you're listening to No Stupid Questions.
Today on the show, why do we love to root for underdogs?
Dubner, I got to tell you, you don't have what it takes.
You're right, coach. I'm leaving now.
Also, Angela and Stephen wonder whether it would be better to answer one question each week instead of two.
Two can be as bad as one.
It's the loneliest number since the number one.
Angela, we have an email here from one Kristen Calloway from Chicago.
Okay.
Who writes to say, I was reading the morning newsletter from the New York Times this
morning and it features the results of a new kind of poll. The author of the newsletter says,
nothing produced a more positive response from poll respondents than hearing that a political
candidate was a small business owner. It offered a bigger lift than any political position or
demographic feature and it was popular across or demographic feature, and it was
popular across Black, Latino, and white respondents.
Kristen goes on to say, I have been working in the tech industry for a long time, and
a few companies I've worked for loved helping small businesses.
I work for a Fortune 100 company now, and they too love helping small businesses.
I love small businesses, she writes. they too love helping small businesses. I love small businesses,
she writes. Everyone I know loves small businesses. We all want to support small
businesses and really appreciate them. So here's my question. Why does everybody love small
businesses and small business owners? Is there something psychological to that? Is the love of
small business universal and not just American? Fascinating. The flip side of this, by the way, is that people do not love big businesses.
No, they don't.
So I think what her question is really about is why do we root for underdogs?
I think that is the question.
There's a little research on this.
When you ask people, hey, there's this hypothetical match.
It's a soccer match.
Do you want to vote for the favored team?
Or do you want to vote for the team that is expected to lose?
And the disproportionate number of people will want to root for the underdog.
I very much identify with that.
I love underdogs and rooting for them.
But I've never really thought about why.
And if you think about it, it's kind of crazy.
Because wouldn't you want to root for the winners? Yeah, don't you want
to bask in the reflected glory of the winners? I don't think people rooting for underdogs necessarily
means that they like to lose. What seems like irrationality, when you actually break it down,
there is usually a why. If you are rooting for the dominant team and they win, it's great, but it hasn't violated expectations.
The payoff is not that large necessarily. It's like investing in IBM in 1958.
unexpectedly. All these lovely parts of the brain seem to light up. I think you could say like,
hey, if I root for the underdog and they win, then I really get to enjoy the fruits of the victory.
And the fact is, you don't really pay that much for rooting for an underdog when they lose because they were expected to lose anyway. So it doesn't really cost you that much.
Exactly. So on one hand, you win big. And then on the other hand, it's kind of neutral. I don't think that's the only thing that's going on, though. I think about this with movies, too. Very often, I think the hero or the heroine is an underdog, somebody who is not expected by their family history or by some other plot feature to prevail what they do. And I think that we identify more with the underdogs for the simple statistical fact
that most of us are underdogs. Like, we're not Beyonce, okay? We are not Jay-Z. We are not
at the very top of a pyramid. We're somewhere in the masses below. And so, of course, we're
going to identify more with that sort of character than we will with the unusually successful one.
I think also, however, you've identified that there can be a resentment against the big
or the successful.
In fact, when I looked at the newsletter that prompted this question, there's actually a
nuance that makes the result maybe a little bit less surprising than it appeared.
Here, I'll read a little bit more from the newsletter. It said, this morning, a creative new poll exploring these
issues, and the issues were, what kind of political candidate is most attractive to voters?
The newsletter continues, it asks working class respondents, defined as people without a bachelor's degree to choose between two
hypothetical candidates.
So it may be a little bit less surprising that that demographic would opt in favor of
the small business candidate, right?
That a lower income or maybe more working class person would identify with a small business
much more than big business. If that's the case, though,
is that, do you think, a philosophical identification? Is it mirroring? In other
words, that small business person is more like me than a big business person? Is it familiarity,
perhaps? I know the person who runs the shop down the street versus I don't know
Larry Page who runs Google? I the street versus I don't know, Larry Page, who runs Google?
I think those would all be good, completely speculative possibilities.
All of those things might be at play.
I have noted when my husband and I are, you know, in need of buying something,
he is always encouraging me to buy it from a small business.
I do a lot of Amazon one-click shopping,
and my husband's always like, but we could go down the street to the Joseph Fox, and I was like,
and put in an order? Go down the street to the what? Sorry. The Joseph Fox bookstore. That's
a small business in Philadelphia where we have a running tab. We try to go there for all of our
literary needs. And I'm sorry to say that the Joseph Fox bookstore doesn't always have all of the titles
that I'm interested in purchasing.
And you can't buy from there
in your pajamas and slippers, presumably.
Not at four in the morning either.
But my husband is adamant
and really, really, really doesn't want to buy anything
off of the internet from larger businesses
that we can buy
from local business owners. And that's because why? Because he fears that the very presence of
the Goliath will ultimately kill the Davids and that the Davids provide some values that are
irreplaceable. Is that his big reason? Well, I wondered about the psychology of this and I
wondered whether he himself identified more as a David than a Goliath. And it wasn't even that complicated. Jason says that he wants to live in the kind of neighborhood where there are small
businesses because they enrich our lives. And he pointed out that if he and I and a lot of other
people go to one-click shopping for all of our needs, then we're going to be living in a neighborhood
with nothing, like nowhere to buy a gallon of milk, nowhere to buy a book. And indeed, that's something to
consider. And I do some click shopping nevertheless, but I do try to shop locally.
So do you feel conflicted? Do you ever, for instance, obscure or hide your Amazon behavior from Jason? Do you ask Amazon to deliver packages in Joseph
Fox bookstore bags so that you can pretend that you're not violating your marital oath toward
independent bookstores? I haven't gone to covert one-click shopping. Maybe I should feel a little
guiltier than I do. I feel like I'm on the noble
side of the ledger because I'm making any effort at all. You know, in the beginning, Amazon was
seen as a threat to independent bookstores, but they were also seen, even by a lot of people in
publishing, as like, whoa, here's a company that could be selling anything and they're selling
books? That is awesome. And then the perception began to change quite rapidly.
I saw the same arc with Google. Back in the day when Google started, it was this little
quirky search engine. Feisty startup. Feisty little startup by a couple of kids,
computer scientists from Stanford. And I remember when the New York Times,
where I was working at the time,
installed the Google search engine on its computers and we were all, oh, what's this
little box? What can we do with it? Oh, they're a search company. They're so cute. They don't
do anything except help us to do our jobs better. And so the coverage of Google in the New York Times in the early years.
Absolutely evangelistic. And then you could see it begin to change because Google became,
in some ways, a big threat to the New York Times. They started as a David and they became a Goliath.
And a Goliath that the New York Times used to be.
Exactly. I have to say,
I do not have this kind of anti-big business feeling. I really don't. Yeah, you don't seem
like a big underdog rooter to me. Well, it's interesting that in my research, I find that
there are a lot of people who are really gritty, who have an underdog identity. I mean, Tom Brady
is famously somebody who, I mean, who is more of an overdog than Tom Brady, right?
But he still treats himself like an underdog who is not drafted in a high round, who is considered not athletic enough.
Chip on your shoulder, like something to prove.
And I think in a way there's probably some metacognitive trickery going on because you know you're not the underdog.
You know you've won almost a countless number of Super Bowl rings, but you also know that it's effective. So I have
some appreciation for underdog mentality at Wharton where I have an appointment. There's a
professor whom I adore. His name is Samir Nurmuhamed. He came to Wharton with this research
program on underdogs. One of the things that he's done in the field is
to define what it is to have these underdog expectations and when we have them. So I'll
refer to his research here. When I say that underdog expectations are essentially the perception
that other people view us as unlikely to succeed. And his discovery is that they motivate us,
to succeed. And his discovery is that they motivate us, especially when we want to prove another person wrong and we think there's some question about their credibility. Say, for example,
a coach says to you, Dubner, I got to tell you, you don't have what it takes.
You're right, coach. I'm leaving now.
Yes. Well, see, this is the thing. If you think the coach knows what they're doing, you're like,
oh, that's terrible. I guess I'll pack up. But if you have some reason to question their credibility, then it can double or triple your motivation. 100% silently. I tend to not respond at all because I don't want to give them any satisfaction,
but I definitely use it as motivation. And I know in the sports realm particularly,
I think almost every athlete I've ever known has done some form of that.
Intentionally, right?
Yeah, absolutely.
You know, when Katie Milkman and I were told that we should apply for this $100 million prize,
the MacArthur Foundation was giving this historic award out to like any team around the world to
solve an urgent social problem. At first, I had very little interest. What really got me motivated
was when I was told how difficult it would be. I was like, oh, Harvard's applying. Oh,
even the United Nations might be applying.
And that got your competitive juices flowing.
Exactly. People were like, it's probably not worth applying because why would they pick you?
And I was like, oh, now I'm in the game.
So that's interesting because that's in a zero-sum scenario, right? There could only be one winner.
Our year, there was just one winner. It was Sesame Street for doing
programming for Syrian refugee children, which,
by the way, it's pretty hard to argue against. I could argue against it if you're competing
against Angela Duckworth, damn it. So that's a zero-sum situation. But you could imagine where
there's a group of 10 people, it's possible for all of them to do much better than someone is
assuming that they're going to do. So in that case, underdog motivation
might be a purely good thing for all those people,
don't you think?
I mean, I think underdog motivation is pretty terrific,
even in zero-sum situations,
in part because people do often underestimate
themselves and others.
And unlocking that potential
through this particular motivational trickery, you know,
great. I think that is totally true, except for the people who overestimate themselves.
Because I think there's a lot of that going on, too. There's a lot of people, I think,
who assume that they should win or prosper because they are who they are.
Or they overestimate their own ability. Yeah.
Optimistic bias, et cetera.
Yeah, absolutely.
That is clearly the case.
But so often, I don't know,
maybe this is from being a former high school teacher,
there is such a danger of counting yourself out and having a bad day and thinking
you don't deserve to be somewhere.
So we can be overconfident,
but I see a lot of underconfidence too. So Kristen wondered how strong this effect was in America versus elsewhere.
I do see here an interview with two historians, Ed Ayers from the University of Richmond and Brian
Below from the University of Virginia. And they make some really interesting points about the
American embrace of underdogness,
particularly in the political realm. So Ayers said, I think ever since 13 scrappy colonies
went up against the largest empire in the world, America has been pretty fond of the underdog.
And the American dream, he says, is that everybody has a chance. And if you find that the underdogs don't
have a chance, it sort of pokes holes in that dream. I find that to be an interesting argument.
It doesn't totally persuade me that the rest of the world doesn't love underdogs, but it's
interesting. That's the thing I was wondering about. I'm sure every country can point to some
underdog moment in their narrative. Yeah. The other historian below made this point. He said,
we have people like Harry S. Truman, who really came from an impoverished background,
was pretty unsuccessful himself in his business, and absolutely was not expected to win in the
election. Now, we should say the vast majority of American presidents have come from families where
they did have some significant advantage. But he goes on to make a point about Donald Trump.
He says, on the other hand, we have people like Donald Trump who has styled himself
as an underdog. I'm not sure I would take underdog as the best word there, maybe outsider.
But he makes the point that those who voted for Trump came from counties that are essentially
underrepresented in America's economy. And I think most political
observers and political scientists have noted that one of Trump's great accomplishments was to
tap into that sentiment that really hadn't been addressed by most politicians before.
Yeah, I'm not sure whether the underrepresented are the same as the underdogs, but there's
obviously something there. In a way, I think Trump was the underdog.
I don't know that he was expected to win, right?
And he did.
He certainly was the underdog as a political candidate.
But this newsletter was asking people
whether the political candidate they would prefer
would be a small business person versus not.
Yeah, what's the line between small and, say, medium business?
I've looked this up.
There is a thing called the U.S. Small Business Administration.
What classifies you as a small business will vary from industry to industry.
For full-service restaurants, for example,
if your revenue is under $8 million a year, you are considered a small business.
For a department store, if you have under 500 employees, you are considered a small business. For a department store, if you have under 500 employees,
you are considered a small business. Whoa, that's a lot of employees.
But check this one out. For radio networks, if your annual revenue is under $35 million,
you are considered a small business. Stephen, we should run for office.
This is going to work out great. I think
we could win pretty much any election we would run for. You could take your pick of all the elected
offices in all the land. You know, I can't think of anyone who'd be worse in elected office than me.
Oh, you're talking to him. Come on. Well, we're going to have to race to the bottom here
because I think that sometimes underdog psychology is great because it unleashes your potential, doubles your motivation.
And sometimes you probably shouldn't be a dog in the fight at all.
And I think with elected politics, as advantageous as our small business administration identity could be, Stephen, that's a fight that I have no desire to be in.
could be, Stephen, that's a fight that I have no desire to be in.
Can I just say, I know you don't want to run for anything,
but I would love to have a president with insomnia.
I do have that.
Because I feel like I'm getting a lot for my money. You're going to be awake 22 hours a day solving problems, taking names, kicking butt.
I mean, come on, let's get her into office immediately.
Still to come on No Stupid Questions,
Stephen and Angela debate whether the podcast needs an upgrade.
Would you rather have two hamburgers or one steak?
Stephen, I have been thinking about a change.
We're going to do this show in French?
Oui, c'est vrai. On va faire le show en français.
Stephen, I've been thinking that ever since we started this show, about, I guess, a year and a half ago, it's had these two acts. And I've observed that these two questions generally have nothing to do with
each other. Have you made this observation? Yes. So I recently was talking to my husband, Jason,
about his pretty loyal listenership to No Stupid Questions. He did point out to me,
though, that by the time he's done listening to the second question, he's usually completely forgotten what the first question was.
So I have a question for you today, which is, should we think about having only
one question in each episode? Oh, my goodness.
It's a big one. It is truly an existential question.
I do know that the show has gotten longer.
Have we? Oh my gosh, we've gotten like fat?
Yeah.
We have muffin top?
I mean, we have no shortage of things to say, you and I. A lot of people do exercise when they
listen to episodes. And I've had people say that they've had to run an extra half mile
as our show's gotten longer.
I'll tell you, when we first started thinking about this show, I liked the notion of it
being short and sweet because Freakonomics Radio is this big baggy monster.
That's the longer workout.
That's your intense gym day.
I mean, truth be told, the average Freakonomics radio episode these days is not that much
longer than the average.
How long is it?
I would say average is probably in the 47 minute range.
That's what it's always been, right?
For Freakonomics?
No, it started much shorter.
It's gotten a little chubby over the years, too, because I think part of the problem is
the ambitions of that show got larger.
We used to not do episodes like, let's make a show about
the state of child poverty and what the US is doing about it. It used to be more like,
why don't sports teams advertise on their jerseys? A smaller, less monumental question.
With this show, I conceived of it originally as short and sweet, but also more, I generally think, is better for the listener.
But then you get into this idea of, you know, too much of a good thing.
I'm always like less, less, less. I like short sentences.
Like this one? Did you like that? How about this one?
I'm going to beat you. Yeah. That's not really a sentence. It's just, yeah. But yes,
I like short sentences. I like short paragraphs. I prefer shorter books to long ones. I would be a listener who would want a
shorter versus a longer No Stupid Questions. I hear you, but I don't think it's the shortness
so much that should be the goal. I like the notion that there are two questions because it feels a
little bit like a play. There's an act one, there's a break,
an intermission, and then there's a second act. Yeah, but Stephen, we're not connecting the two acts, right? Like in a real play, there's act one, there's intermission, but you don't come back
and have a completely different play. This is more like a play and then an intermission and
then another play. You make an excellent point. And I will say this, Hamlet has five acts,
which I've always felt was at least one or two acts,
too many.
Yes.
Truth be told, I love one-act plays.
I love those Chekhov plays that are short.
I love short stories also, maybe more than novels.
Interesting.
I did recently listen to one of our episodes.
I don't always listen
because of course we're here in conversation, But I also, like Jason, kind of forgot what the first conversation was by the
second one. Now, maybe that doesn't matter. Forgetting has some benefits, but I don't really
think it's a great thing to have completely erased the memory of something that you might want to
talk about at dinner or, you know, relay to a friend.
I guess I could imagine that a listener could get confused about what a given episode is
about, which is understandable because it's literally about two unrelated things.
Where does this forgetting fall in terms of the primacy and recency effects that we've
discussed on this show?
Well, there are primacy and recency effects that we've discussed on this show? Well, there are primacy and recency effects that are well established in the research on memory.
Primacy is you hear lots of things in an episode. Possibly you'll remember the first things better
than anything else. There's also this research on Super Bowl ads where there are these very
expensive ad slots all throughout the Super Bowl. And you could ask the question,
what are the best slots? Should you be in the middle? Should be at the end? Or
because of primacy, maybe in the beginning, research is that earlier is better. So maybe
people are sort of like replaying them in their head throughout the rest of the game.
There's also recency effects, which are when we have a list of things to remember.
There are some cases where you would
remember the last thing that you saw better. And why is that? Completely different mechanism. You're
not rehearsing it for longer. You're actually rehearsing it for less. But it's just like there
in the buffer of your working memory. So there are some advantages for being early. There's some
advantages that are different for being late. I think what's pretty clear from the research is that there are not a lot of benefits for being in the middle. In terms of our, you know, episodes,
I guess Act 1 has a primacy benefit, Act 2 has a recency benefit.
So you're coming around, it sounds like, to having two.
No, no, no. I was just saying that there'd be some primacy and some recency. But I really
think the more relevant research is actually on goal setting and planning, because I think a lot of things that
we talk about would give people an idea for something they might do or think about differently.
And the research on goal setting and planning is, is it better to have two plans or one?
I'm going to be an aerospace engineer. I'm going to be a cowboy.
Well, if you can do both of them, great.
But there's some research studies suggesting that when you make two different plans, you're actually less likely to do either of them.
Oh, that's so interesting.
And I do wonder whether you listen to something, it gives you an idea, like, oh, I'm going to go talk to my best friend Sue about this.
And then you keep listening and there's the second conversation that gives you a totally different idea.
Talk to somebody else about something else.
And, you know, if you're working out or not taking careful notes, you could forget.
So I'm not saying this is a clear cut case, but I think that's relevant research.
Look at you using science against me in your argument. I can see how if there were just one question per episode that we could probably discuss it in a little bit more depth and come at it at
more angles, which I think both you and I would enjoy and maybe would be better for listeners,
too. On the other hand, can you persuade me of the power of one of something versus two?
Because look, I'm a simple person.
I think of a peanut butter and jelly sandwich.
What would a peanut butter and jelly sandwich be without the peanut butter or without the
jelly?
Well, okay.
Those are compliments in the economic sense, right?
Especially jelly.
Who eats jelly without something else?
Oh, Huck Finn, Tom Sawyer.
He ate jelly sandwiches?
Well, they ate jam right out of the jar.
Did they really?
Maybe not, but that's how I remember it. I also eat peanut butter by itself. Now that I think
about it, I do enjoy both peanut butter and jelly on their own, out of the jar.
By themselves? You never eat jelly on its own.
I do.
You do not.
I don't really eat dessert
because I'm not a dessert person,
but sometimes after dinner,
I do want something a little bit sweet
and I'll go get a jar of jam or jelly or preserves,
have a couple spoonfuls.
What?
I'm making an argument against myself, though,
in the two-question argument, aren't I?
I can't even remember what you're talking about, but I'm just horrified.
Okay, since we're digressing, what about that menu item in diners that's the jelly omelet?
Have you ever ordered that?
You know what I'm talking about?
Good question.
I've also wondered who gets the jelly omelet.
All I know is it's not me, and it's apparently not you either.
But I kind of want to try it.
Look, my point is that peanut butter and jelly are complementary goods in the economic sense. The value of peanut butter is enhanced by the jelly. The value of jelly is
enhanced by the peanut butter. Let's look at pop music, though. Okay. Two is better than one.
Marvin Gaye and Kim Weston, one of the best songs from Motown, It Takes Two. Do you know It Takes
Two? One can have a dream, baby. Two can make that dream so real. It takes two, baby.
It's the two of us.
There you go.
We can make it if we try.
It's the two.
Okay.
All right.
Yeah.
This is incredibly persuasive.
Also, an argument against one as Three Dog Night, I believe it was, once sang,
one is the loneliest number.
Oh, is that Three Dog Night?
Can you give me a little jingle from it, Stephen?
It's a sad song.
Oh, and actually, now that I think about the lyric,
it doesn't really help my argument because it is anti-one,
but I believe it's also anti-two.
It goes,
One is the loneliest number that you'll ever do.
But then listen to this. Two can be as bad as one.
It's the loneliest number since the number one. What does that even mean?
There were a lot of drugs being taken.
Do you know where the name Three Dog Night comes from?
No, I know nothing.
I believe that the phrase Three Dog Night refers to a night that is very cold.
Because when it's chilly, you bring one dog in the bed to warm you up.
This cannot be what three dog night means.
And also, I doubt that three dog night is itself a phrase.
I think we should have a little wager on that and Rebecca can settle.
Okay, fact check wager.
What are you willing to wager?
Five bucks.
I take it.
All right, here's an argument.
Declining marginal utility. Okay.
Coming at me with the science again. This is really like, hey, after we give people the peanut
butter and jelly sandwich, do you think they would want another peanut butter and jelly sandwich?
And the answer is yes, but there's less value in the second peanut butter and jelly sandwich than there was in the first.
I hear you. And I guess, theoretically, the quality of each question could be better.
If we only need to come up with one good question per episode, it's kind of like,
would you rather have two hamburgers or one steak? On the other hand, I love hamburgers. I think it's like two hamburgers
or one slightly larger,
but not too big,
delicious cheeseburger.
I've never really understood
even the fact that
there's hamburgers without cheese.
Well, it's not kosher,
just so you know.
Fair enough.
Anywho,
we would have to up our game, Stephen. We would have
to have a meteor, as it were, conversation. You know, as pro-two and anti-one as I am in this
context, I can think of one historical precedent that convinces me that one is way better than two.
What is it? The story of King Solomon in the Bible. Solomon was a
young man when he inherited the throne from his daddy, David, and he was eager to show that he
was wise. And he had his chance, according to the Bible, when these two women came to him with a
dilemma. They lived in the same house, and within the space of a couple days,
they'd each had a baby boy. And the first woman told Solomon that the second woman's baby had
died and that she woke up in the middle of the night and took the living baby and swapped him.
So there's two women, two babies, one dead, one living. What's Solomon supposed to do? So, Solomon says,
servant, fetch me a sword. We are going to cut the living baby in half and we'll give half to
each of the women. And the first woman begs King Solomon, no, no, no, please don't do it. Just give
it to the other woman. And the second woman was like, okay, yeah, fine. Cut it in half.
Seems fair.
Great idea, Sali. And so, King Solomon promptly rules in favor of the first woman, says,
give her the baby. She's plainly the mother. And according to the Bible, all Israel heard of the judgment and they saw that the wisdom of God was in Solomon and he would do justice. So how did he know who was the true
mother? Because a true mother would never want their baby cut in two just to go out on a limb
there. Right. The true mother would rather give up her child than see it die. Probably any woman
would want to give up any child. I'm just saying. But I get what Solomon was going for there.
To be fair, this story has been dissected by game theorists who argued that it's not
really very good as a piece of game theory because it's just not believable in that way.
That said, it's a nice story.
And what I take away from the story is that one living baby is way better than two halves of a dead baby.
And so you're calling no stupid questions.
Two halves of a dead baby?
Essentially. And my feelings are a little bit hurt, but I'm going to say this,
considering the Solomon effect, and I guess considering the fact that you're
a lot smarter than me, and also there's some common sense in here, I submit to your wish.
And I would suggest that maybe we take advantage of the fresh start effect that we've discussed on this show.
And after the new year, we go to the single question format.
What do you think?
You know what?
Nothing ventured, nothing gained.
Why don't we try it out?
And if it's stinky potamus, we'll go back to two.
So this question may be the very last second question we'll ever answer.
I think it's going to be great, but we shall see.
And if not, we'll super glue that baby right back together.
No Stupid Questions is produced by me, Rebecca Lee Douglas. And now,
here's a fact check of today's conversations. In the first half of the show, Stephen quotes from a piece about America's love for underdogs. He refers to one of the historians interviewed as
Brian Ballow, but the University of Virginia professor's name
is actually pronounced Ballow. Then, during the conversation about peanut butter and jelly
sandwiches, Stephen recalls that Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn enjoy eating jam straight out
of the jar. It's true that in the beginning of Mark Twain's 1876 story, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, Aunt Polly finds Tom hiding in a closet
covered in jam. She says, quote, it's jam, that's what it is. Forty times I've said if you didn't
let that jam alone, I'd skin you. Huckleberry Finn doesn't appear to have quite the same affinity
for the condiment, although he does briefly mention eating donuts and jam in Twain's 1885 novel
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Later, Angela misremembers the lyrics to Grover Washington
Jr.'s 1980 hit song, Just the Two of Us, when she incorrectly sings It's the Two of Us.
Also, Stephen attributes the song One to the band Three Dog Night.
It's true that they released a version of the song in 1969, but the piece was originally written and recorded a year earlier by Harry Nielsen.
Finally, Stephen and Angela place a bet about the meaning of the phrase Three Dog Night.
Sorry, Angela, but you owe Stephen $5.
The phrase is actually an Australian expression for a cold evening.
Actress June Fairchild supposedly suggested the name to her boyfriend Danny Hutton,
the lead singer of Three Dog Night,
after reading that Australian Aborigines gauged the coldness of a night
by the number of dogs they needed to curl up with to keep warm.
That's it for the Fact Check.
No Stupid Questions is part of the Freakonomics Radio Network, which also includes Freakonomics
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