No Stupid Questions - 99. Do You Mind if I Borrow Your Personality?
Episode Date: May 15, 2022Are there downsides to “personality plagiarism”? Why did no one buy the Crayola Crayon Carver? And should Stephen feel bad for copying Angela’s email signature? ...
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I have bad habits too, like interrupting people and eating off of other people's plates.
I'm Angela Duckworth.
I'm Stephen Dubner.
And you're listening to No Stupid Questions.
Today on the show, is it wrong to plagiarize someone else's personality?
Somebody wrote to me to say, I heard you ask this question and you stole it from those guys.
I was like, first of all.
Bucko.
Angela, we recently discussed on the show your email signature, which I admired so much that I started using it myself.
So at the end of every email I now send from my work email address, at least, the signature reads, my work hours may not be your work hours.
Reply if you want, when you want.
So I wrote to you and I asked whether you wanted me to attribute this signature to you because I did steal it.
Like a citation.
Duckworth, comma, 2022.
Because I did steal it.
Like a citation, Duckworth comma 2022.
And you wrote back to say, no, no need to attribute and that you were flattered that I was using it, which made me happy.
But then you also said that you and your colleague, Katie Milkman, have in fact studied and totally
believe in and practice what you call personality plagiarism.
I was very taken with this notion of personality plagiarism.
I want to know much, much more.
So what is it exactly?
How far should I take it?
And if I start stealing the best parts of someone else's personality, do I stop being
myself?
I want to give you the origin story, but I want to begin by saying that
when we published our paper on this, the lead author was a graduate student named Katie Muir.
We called it something else. We called it copy-paste prompts. You know, I saw that and I was
a little bit disappointed, I have to tell you. Because you like personality plagiarism. It's not only alliterative, but it's evocative. Now, copy paste prompts. And I read your paper and I'll be honest
with you, you didn't really even define it that well or early at least. Well, I'm sure we didn't.
And so this is good feedback, although I guess it's too late because it's already published.
I will say that I argued vigorously for personality plagiarism. Let the record show not only that Angela was right, but that she lost
the vote. I'm always arguing for alliteration. I think the idea, though, is very simple. You see
somebody like their email signature. You like the way they begin meetings. You admire the way that
they arrange the roast chicken at a dinner.
I mean, anything that somebody else does where you think, huh, that's pretty good and it's better than what I do.
Why not do it yourself?
Why not copy and paste into your life what other people are doing in their lives?
Why not plagiarize someone else's personality if there are features of that personality
that you like more?
So that's the basic idea.
I mean, what you're describing now, I think anyone can relate to that as adults, but we
should say this is what babies and children do.
This is how you learn to be a human, yes?
Yes.
In fact, so much of learning throughout the lifespan, but maybe most obviously in childhood,
is mimicry. You see
somebody do something, and then you do it, and it's a whole lot more efficient than somebody
telling you how to do it in words. And I remember thinking this when, as a graduate student in
psychology, you have to learn this thing called APA format. Now, you're a journalist. Do you know what APA format is?
I do remember it, but more from academia than journalism.
It was the footnoting bibliography style and stuff like that.
How to cite references.
I mean, that was one component of it.
Exactly.
And that's the component that most people are familiar with.
It's the American Psychological Association formatting rules.
And there's this manual where you can read all the rules. If it's a one-author paper, do it like this. If it's a newspaper
article, do it like this. So you can read all these rules and you could think, okay, if it's a
two-author paper, then you put a comma here. Or you can look up a PDF of a paper that's already in APA format, and it's so much easier just to see
the example and then to copy it. So that's the intuition behind this kind of learning through
mimicry, learning through imitation. You could read Julia Child's cookbook and next trust the
chicken, or you could watch Julia Child trust a chicken.
And it's so much easier to imitate Julia Child than to read what she says and then do it.
Okay, fair enough.
But the paper that you wrote with your colleagues, Katie Meir, Amanda Geiser, and Katie Milkman,
the full title is Copy Paste Prompts, A New Nudge to Promote Goal Achievement.
So can you back up and walk us through this?
What's the goal that you're trying to get people to achieve?
What's the actual experiment?
Okay, yeah.
And I will say that we also considered this copy-paste nudge or personality plagiarism
to be a strategy that people could apply to literally any form of goal achievement,
which motivated our title. The first study that we write about in the published article
is on exercise, something that Americans typically want to do more of and find ultimately good for
them. But in the moment, for a lot of people, there's a lot of dread and loathing or inertia anyway.
In this study, if you're assigned to the treatment condition, you as an adult who were recruited to the study after saying you would like to exercise more and you report how much exercise you had done in the prior week, you're given this prompt.
week, you're given this prompt, quote, in this study, we want to help you learn about an effective hack or strategy that someone you know uses as motivation to exercise. Over the next two days,
we'd like you to pay attention to how people you know get themselves to work out. If you want,
you can ask them directly for their motivational tips and strategies. And that's essentially the whole nudge. You just
look around and you try to notice whether somebody's doing something clever to get themselves
to work out more. And then you're supposed to copy paste that technique or plagiarize that
technique for your own benefit. Now, we should say there's a control condition, but then there's
also something called a quasi-yoked control condition.
Is that worth getting into or no?
Well, the basic idea is like in any research experiment, you have to have a control condition to compare to.
That's the whole genius of the scientific method.
So in the quasi-controls, it kind of means like sort of quasi, like sort of control.
I'll read you what the prompt was.
In this study, we're hoping to help you learn about an effective hack or strategy
that motivates people to exercise. Over the next two days, we'd like you to get ready to learn a
new strategy to motivate you to exercise. And essentially, we took that list of tips that
people in the treatment condition generated and we gave them to the participants in the quasi control.
In other words, I didn't have to go up to strangers or other people I might know and ask them, hey, how do you get yourself to come to the gym so often?
How do you get yourself to go so strenuously for so long?
Right.
That's exactly right.
So therefore, you have in
some ways the same amount of information as the treatment. So we can isolate what's the effect of
you hunting down this information from somebody in your own life. And I think that's actually
useful to say, because the kinds of things that you might copy paste, like, you know,
you liked my email signature. But if you had just Googled what's a really respectful way to
send your emails, it would have come up because I copy pasted it from someone else. liked my email signature. But if you had just Googled what's a really respectful way to send
your emails, it would have come up because I copy pasted it from someone else. It's fundamentally a
social form of learning. So, yeah, you can get this stuff by looking it up on the Internet.
But this is really learning through imitation of people that we know, even if it's just an
acquaintance at the gym. Now, getting back to the motivation in the paper that you wrote about, did it work?
Does copy-paste prompting actually encourage people to exercise more?
Yes, we found statistically significant benefits of the copy-paste prompts.
We don't know enough about why it works, but one suggestion from our research is that
when you copy out of somebody else's life, you are more committed yourself to using it.
You have a sense of agency and ownership and you're like, I've decided to do this.
There's also some social interaction that happened that you are then going to be more motivated.
There's research, for example, that shows that when you declare your goal socially, like if people post on Facebook that they're going to do something, that's more likely. So maybe there's an element of social interaction or you may be mentioned to your friend like, oh, I'm going to do that now. the exercise nudges incorporates something that Katie Milkman
has written about, which I thought was really clever, what she calls temptation bundling.
So for instance, there was one nudge in this study that for every hour that you exercise,
you allow yourself 15 minutes on social media. Was that a typical kind of nudge here? Can you give a few
more examples of the types of things that I am copy pasting from other people? When you ask people
like, hey, what are things that you've learned from other people who want to exercise more?
They do name things that scientists have independently studied, like temptation bundling.
They also said things that have been studied
that I would call situation modification.
People said, I put my sneakers by the door
to make it a little easier.
One person said, oh, I learned from my friend
to sleep in my workout clothes,
which, by the way, I don't recommend.
Isn't that incredibly uncomfortable?
Maybe because I have problems sleeping.
I was like, no, I don't want to do that. They say things like, just make sure that you like your exercise.
That's also been studied by Ayelet Fischbach at University of Chicago.
So when you hear some of these strategies, you think, oh, I would never want to do that.
Other strategies, you're like, wow, that sounds great. I think there's something else going on
in this personality plagiarism approach that's
helpful, which is that we tend to hang out with people who are like us. In romantic relationships,
this is often called assortative mating. Like if you're high in conscientiousness,
they're also high in conscientiousness. Or if they're really into fitness, you're into fitness.
I think this is a benefit here because the people that you're going to be friends with are like you.
Therefore, their own strategies and tactics ought to be, on average, more beneficial for you than tactics picked at random.
Although when I think about you and me, for instance, and you just said some strategies I might want to copy, whereas others sound terrible.
Your email signature, I loved.
I copied it.
But then I think of the fact that you say that you swim an hour a day, like no chance.
Not every day, but I used to swim an hour a day.
I'll swim for five minutes if it's really hot out, but that's the extent of my swim
appetite.
But that doesn't take away from the fact that I appreciate very much
your email signatures. So yeah, you and I may have a fair amount in common, but one must be free to
pick the items of the menu that really resonate for me. And just because we are engaged in the
same activity, you and I make a show together, other people may go to the gym together, obviously
it doesn't mean that person A is going to want to do
everything that person B is doing. This is the great thing about curating.
You get to decide and you only plagiarize the things that you like. Like I have bad habits too,
like interrupting people and eating off of other people's plates.
Also very closely linked, I think.
I know it makes me sound like an incredibly impulsive person. In fact, Katie Milkman, Also very closely linked, I think. Let me actually get to the origin story. It goes back to when Katie and I first started to work together.
We used to walk to campus.
We live in a pretty similar part of Center City, and we would meet, and then we would walk the rest of the way.
And when we were walking together, we would, first of all, just observe each other doing certain things.
I was like, oh, you know, I'm going to put my AirPods away.
She's like, why do you wear AirPods?
certain things, I was like, oh, you know, I'm going to put my AirPods away. She's like, why do you wear AirPods? And I was like, well, that annoying sound of the wired microphone, like
hitting your jacket over and over again. That's why I wear AirPods. And so she took that into
consideration and decided not to copy paste that into her life. She's a wired headset gal. But then
there would be other things like I would be approaching her and I'd be finishing a conversation and then I would meet her. She would notice that I would have a conversation
that's just ending a lot. And she's like, what are you doing? And I was like, oh,
I almost always have a scheduled call for times that I'm walking, even if it's five minutes to
meet you, because that's really efficient. She liked that one and she actually started doing
it herself. She ended up taking
phone calls for a lot of the walks that she had, of course, the ones that were not with me.
Although you could walk side by side and have separate conversations with two other people.
Yeah.
We have done that too, by the way. So we copy paste each other all the time. I mean,
once Katie came over and we had literally 15 minutes to write an entire grant proposal.
And I thought that was silly.
You cannot write an entire grant proposal in 15 minutes.
But Katie comes over and she has a document open and it's her last grant proposal.
She never really starts from scratch.
She always starts from something.
And it's so much more efficient.
And we took her last grant proposal and we made
all these edits to it. And sure enough, we had a draft of an entire grant proposal in 15 minutes.
So I've copy pasted innumerable things from Katie Milkman's life. And it's given me a sort of
broader understanding of how to live a successful life. Like, Stephen, I teach an undergraduate class. And before I give any assignment, I make the TAs in my class, the
teaching assistants, do the assignment so that my students have 10 models of what the assignment
looks like. Now, you could say, like, why are you coddling these Ivy League students? But I would
just say I'm facilitating learning. That's just how human beings learn.
And why should I ask them to like blindly try to figure out what Angela Duckworth,
their professor wants? Why don't I just show them 10 examples of what I want and then have them go
and try to do the 11th example, which is their assignment. There's also something though that I
have been wondering about. Have you ever heard of Frank Kyle at Yale University? I have not.
He is so amazing. He studies young children and he studies wonder and curiosity and learning.
He has this study that he did where he actually took some toy that he found. It's like a Crayola
crayon engraver. Apparently one of the Crayola products that did not make the big time.
Have you ever heard of the Crayola Crayon Engraver product?
I have heard of neither Frank Kyle nor the Crayola Crayon Engraver product. I apologize.
Well, so much in store for you, Stephen.
Can't wait.
So Frank was looking for a toy that was such a market failure that other children would never have played with it.
So Crayola for a time manufactured this contraption where like you stick your crayon in.
I'm imagining burnt sienna, the best possible Crayola crayon color.
And you have this little gizmo where basically you can engrave letters into the side of it.
Like you could engrave Angela or like you can engrave Stephen.
I guess personalize your crayon.
This is an anti-theft measure then.
Also, here's the other thing.
It was incredibly hard to use without the instructions.
And what he did was he wanted to see whether kids could figure out how to use this toy.
But in particular, he wanted to know whether they could understand
that they needed to ask somebody else how to use it.
And basically what he found is that when you try to use this toy on your own, it's damn near impossible.
But when you watch somebody else use it, even like once or twice, you're like, oh, I get it.
These children really needed a lot of scaffolding or they needed a model to show them
how to use this toy. But also, a lot of these kids, I think the majority of these children,
didn't think they needed that assistance. So what this study tells me is we learn through imitation,
but we don't always recognize that we need to learn through imitation. So we often think we can do it on our own or by
some other means, but having a model is surprisingly effective.
Here's what's curious to me about what you just said. You write in the paper that copy-paste
prompts may increase perceived autonomy. And I was thinking, how can that possibly be true? I've literally just copied
somebody. I've literally taken their idea or method for doing something and made it my own.
And now I feel like I have more autonomy. How do you reconcile those two?
Autonomy is the feeling like you decided that you're the boss of you, Stephen. You decided
what to eat for breakfast, when to have this conversation, when to end this conversation. That's what autonomy is. And all human beings
have a need for autonomy. Now, this doesn't mean that what you've decided to do had to come from
your own life. If you say, I've decided to change my email signature to Angela's email signature,
you can still be 10 out of 10 on feelings of autonomy. And I think the contrast that we were looking at is when people try to improve their lives,
oftentimes other people give us advice unbidden.
Like, hey, Stephen, looks like you're having trouble working out.
Let me give you some advice on how I work out.
Let me show you how to engrave your initials into that crayon that you're carrying around for the past 40 years.
And I think this happens all the time in public health.
They're like, let's tell people they need to eat more fruits and vegetables.
None of that actually helps you with feelings of autonomy
because you didn't decide that you wanted that advice or information.
So this nudge that we wrote was designed to not diminish feelings of autonomy,
which undermine motivation to do anything
different. And that's why very gently we were like, over the next two days, we'd like you to
pay attention to how people, you know, get themselves to work out if you want. Right.
That's autonomy language. If you want, you can ask them directly for their motivational tips
and strategies. What kind of effect does this have
on the person being copied? Well, I don't know that we can say definitively based on this study.
Separate research, though, on people who feel flattered, you know, there's this famous adage
that imitation is the highest form of flattery. I'm going to attribute that to Mark Twain because
I don't know who really to attribute that to. Do you know who said that, by the way?
Oscar Wilde and Mark Twain and God said everything.
And Winston Churchill. Don't forget Winston Churchill.
Shakespeare had a couple also.
So anyway, there is separate research that shows that like, at least when we feel flattered,
we feel great. And then to the extent people feel like being imitated is flattery,
then yeah, it should make you feel pretty good. I mean, I feel good when you emailed me. I've gotten a lot of emails from people who asked me
if it was okay if they also used it. And I was like, yeah, go ahead. And plus, I copied it from
somebody else. Still to come on No Stupid Questions, what are the downsides to personality
plagiarism? I tell them over and over again, you cannot plagiarize. You cannot plagiarize.
Before we return to Stephen and Angela's conversation about personality plagiarism,
let's hear some of your thoughts on the subject. We asked listeners to let us know how copying
others has worked for them.
Here's what you said.
I am a person who hates carrying purses.
And so I was always putting my ID
and my debit and credit cards into my wallet
when I went out drinking
and obviously and subsequently losing said cards.
And my best friend got one of those iPhones
with a wallet case on the back.
And I watched it and I wanted it. And I got one and those iPhones with a wallet case on the back. And I watched it, and I wanted it.
And I got one, and I have not lost an ID or credit or debit card since then.
This is Dan Radlauer in Los Angeles, California.
As a professional composer for media,
I'm often asked to copy the feel, tempo, or emotion of an existing piece of music.
While this can limit creativity,
it also offers boundaries and direction for what musical effect is desired. We all stand on the shoulders of those who came before us, so what better way
to learn about an art than by imitating or being inspired by what has succeeded before? Am I a
copycat? In some ways, yes, but there's always some of myself and even the most derivative work I produce.
One of my first jobs out of college, one of my colleagues showed me that in her email inbox,
she kept a folder of her wins.
And in it, she would save nice things people said to her or accomplishments or things she was proud of.
And so when she had a bad day or wanted to quit, she could look at the folder and think about, OK, I've done something right.
I probably copied and implemented it.
And it's something that has helped me on many a dark day.
That was, respectively, Whitney Mello, Dan Radlauer,
and Alison Grossman. Thanks to them and to everyone who sent us their thoughts.
Now, back to Stephen and Angela's conversation about copy-paste prompts
and Stephen's theft of Angela's email signature.
I have to say, people really noticed my new signature on my work email.
Oh, really?
Did you get feedback?
I got a lot of feedback.
And a lot of it was, I think, from the people who knew me well.
And again, this is only my work email.
It's not my personal email.
I think they were a little of the opinion that, oh, have you been sending even more
4.30 or 5 a.m. emails out and
you're just trying to bank some penance? You want cover?
So I don't think it was seen as a totally altruistic endeavor. I think it was seen as
a little bit of creating a space for my continued early morning emailing. But let me ask you this,
what about the downsides or even pitfalls of copy paste? Because we know that
social contagion can be real. Suicide is a classic example. Now we're getting into maybe
what you call copycat behavior more broadly rather than personality plagiarism per se.
But even with personality plagiarism, can you see downsides where you start to feel perhaps
like you're surrendering who you are? You know, the famous thought experiment of Theseus' ship?
No, I don't know it. Tell me.
Theseus sailed his ship home from Crete, and it was sitting in the port, maybe in Athens or
somewhere. And the planks of the ship start to rot. And as each plank would rot, someone would replace it with a new plank.
And eventually all the original planks are gone and all the planks are new.
So the question is, is this still Theseus's ship or is this an entirely new ship?
If it's a new one, when did it become a new one?
What about me?
If I've replaced 51% of my email signatures with Angela Duckworth's
email signatures, am I now somewhat less me and more her? I think this comes back to autonomy.
For example, when I use a labor-saving device, like, should I hack this steak with my hands,
or should I use a knife? Well, the knife is a labor-saving device. Try the knife. But then
the question is like, yeah, but did I really cut the steak myself?
Because I used a knife.
I took the easy way out.
To me, the question is,
who made the decision?
If you made the decision to end your emails
the way I end my emails,
then that to me is fully Stephen Dubner's.
If I make the decision to use a knife
or to copy something out of your life into mine,
I think that's still me.
But it's interesting that you originally use the word plagiarism because plagiarism
obviously has a negative connotation. And in both of our fields, academia and journalism,
plagiarism is like the cardinal sin. If you copy and paste a phrase that's more than,
let's say, three words and it's not in quotes, that's considered
essentially plagiarism. I remember I came up with a list of what we called frequently asked questions
when we were just starting out Freakonomics Radio. I get it, freak. And one of the questions that I
think I came up with originally, although I'm sure I channeled it from a long, long, long list of things I'd read
and so on, was tell me something you once thought or knew to be true until you found out you were
wrong. In other words, essentially tell me something you changed your mind about. Then later,
there's another podcast made by people I know and like, actually, I believe they ask a very similar question.
And then somebody wrote to me to say, I heard you ask this question and you stole it from those guys.
First of all, let's do some time date stamping because I was pretty sure I was there ahead of
time. I can just imagine your reaction. The hair on the back of your neck is standing up and
you're getting all lathered in the mouth.
I was getting a little lathered.
So there is maybe a fine line between good plagiarism and bad plagiarism, let's call it.
Because when you're telling me, hey, Stephen, it's okay.
Take my email signature.
Use it.
Use whatever else you can of mine.
If you want to yell at your kids about leaving coffee rings
on the white counter, you can do that too. But at a certain point, isn't it a little creepy
if I just start to do everything that you do? Well, the email signature is actually not even
the best example to give people as a starter for personality plagiarism, because we know that
plagiarism of words, like I cannot take a
paragraph out of Freakonomics, copy it and paste it into my next book, call it my own,
and have it be anything other than plagiarism, plagiarism. So the fact that you copy pasted
a signature, that's in a way a confusing place to begin. I say to my students, you can plagiarize
form, but not content. So when
I'm writing a paper with a student, I tell them over and over again, you cannot plagiarize,
you cannot plagiarize. They, of course, need no retelling because they know you're not supposed
to plagiarize. But I say, if you see another paper for the same journal, and they start with
an inspiring quote, and they have a really short first paragraph, and then at the end of the first
paragraph, they say what their study's about. You can open a document, start your own paper,
start with an inspiring quote, a different quote, have a really short paragraph, and have the last
sentence of that paragraph talk about what you're going to do. That's plagiarizing form, not content.
I think, you tell me if you think otherwise, I think that's fine. You can like
look at Ernest Hemingway and be like, huh, short sentences. I can do that. What's wrong with that?
I would generally agree, although every medium or every idiom is a little bit different.
I've always thought it was interesting that in writing, which I did study,
I've always thought it was interesting that in writing, which I did study, it was thought to be kind of bad to copy form like that.
Raymond Carver was a writer who wrote kind of Hemingway-ish, very short, direct sentences.
And there were a lot of Raymond Carver fans and imitators when I was in graduate school.
And that was considered to be, you know, a little bit tacky.
On the other hand, in music, which I also did a lot,
it was considered great form to cite or copy, literally sample music that you like. But that
came with a weird history as well, because, you know, a big part of the early years of rock and
roll in particular was about white musicians copying black musicians and getting famous and accolades for it.
Some of this was cover music, like the Rolling Stones, who I loved. They played a lot of songs
by Chuck Berry and Slim Harpo and Muddy Waters. And that was allowed within the idiom. They were
literally doing, quote, a cover song. And in music, it's generally pretty
accepted. But the economics of it were bizarre because Chuck Berry wrote all these amazing
songs that the Rolling Stones and the Beatles and many other people copied. And he was theoretically
supposed to get a few pennies per record that was made. Who knows if he ever got it? I think
he didn't even own his songwriting.
But there's plainly a lot of inequity there. I think that's a good warning. Not only should we not plagiarize content unless it's with permission and it's with attribution and it's
with compensation, that in general, we shouldn't be passing things off as not our own. You know,
if you say, hey, Angela, where'd you get the idea of starting your papers with quotes? I'll say like,
oh, George Valiant does that a lot. You know, I copied this out of Walter Mischel. I'll tell as
many people as I can get to listen to me that I think looking for inspiration has been the only
way that I've done anything.
And then if you say, well, then nothing you do is original, then I'll say like, okay.
You know, the great choreographer Balanchine said that there were no new dance moves.
There were only old dance moves that we forgot and then remember. And he was famous for taking inspiration from other choreographers.
for taking inspiration from other choreographers.
As it has been said, although I have no idea by whom,
borrow from the good, steal from the great.
And I stole my email signature from you.
That makes you great.
Thanks for letting me steal it, Angela.
I think Mark Twain said that.
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 discusses Yale psychologist Frank
Kiles' experiment with a Crayola crayon engraver. The product is actually called a Crayola crayon
carver. Angela will appreciate the alliteration. Also, Stephen and Angela express
their confusion about the origin of quite a few quotes in this episode. Angela thinks that Mark
Twain may be responsible for the adage, imitation is the highest form of flattery. Stephen says that
Irish poet Oscar Wilde is often credited with famous aphorisms, and in this case, he was spot
on. Wilde is quoted as saying,
imitation is the sincerest form of flattery that mediocrity can pay to greatness. However,
according to the Oxford Dictionary of Proverbs, a version of the idea originated with second
century Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius, who in Meditations wrote, you should consider that
imitation is the most acceptable part of worship,
and that the gods had much rather mankind should resemble than flatter them.
Angela then says that ballet choreographer George Balanchine said, There are no new dance moves. There are only old dance moves that we forgot.
I can't find evidence of Balanchine using this specific language.
However, he is quoted as saying,
God creates, I do not create. I assemble and I steal everywhere to do it. From what I see,
from what the dancers can do, from what others do. Later, Stephen wonders about the origin of
borrow from the good, steal from the great. It is not, in fact, from Mark Twain, as Angela suggests.
Many artists have written versions of the expression, including T.S. Eliot, not, in fact, from Mark Twain, as Angela suggests. Many artists have written
versions of the expression, including T.S. Eliot, Igor Stravinsky, William Faulkner,
and Pablo Picasso. However, the original author was apparently English writer and journalist
W.H. Davenport Adams. In an 1892 publication of The Gentleman's Magazine, he wrote,
quote,
Great poets imitate and improve, whereas small ones steal and spoil.
Finally, Stephen and Angela wonder if American rock and roll musician Chuck Berry was ever
properly reimbursed for his songwriting. According to Berry's 1987 memoir, Chuck Berry,
the Autobiography, he felt taken advantage of early on in his music career. But he quickly
learned from that experience
and became savvy about publishing arrangements.
At the time of his death in 2017,
his estate was worth an estimated $50 million.
That's it for the Fact Check.
Coming up next week on No Stupid Questions,
can adults have imaginary friends too?
I remember when Princess Diana died
and there was such an outpouring
of grief around the world.
I was like, holy schmoly,
what is going on with these people
who are grieving like it were
a brother or a sister?
That's next week on No Stupid Questions.
For that episode,
we want to hear about
how your relationship with a celebrity,
a fictional character, or even a podcast host has affected your life. Maybe you feel particularly
connected to Hamlet or Oprah or even the Spice Girls. How real does the relationship feel to you
and what do you get from it? To share your thoughts, send a voice memo to nsq at freakonomics.com
with the subject line, one-sided friendship.
Make sure to record someplace quiet and please keep your thoughts to under a minute.
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
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This show was mixed by Eleanor Osborne.
Our staff also includes Allison Craiglow, Greg Rippin, Gabriel Roth, Morgan Levy,
Zach Lipinski, Julie Canfor, Ryan Kelly, Jasmine Klinger, Emma Terrell,
Lyric Bowditch, Jacob Clemente, and Alina Coleman.
We had help this week from Anya Dubner.
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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.
It's called copycat behavior, but the weird thing is that there are animals that do mimic, monkeys mimic, parrots mimic, but cats actually are like anti-mimic.
So the fact that we call it copycat is weird.
And either paradoxical, ironic, contradictory, or hypocritical, one of those things.
I think I had a cat named paradoxical once.
No, we had a cat named doxology.
Or you could have named it Schrodinger.
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