Review: This Young Podcaster Is Channeling Adam Smith
A locked-down high schooler started asking libertarian thinkers what people in her generation should know.

"Science is the great antidote," wrote Adam Smith, "to the poison of enthusiasm and superstition." Juliette Sellgren began recording episodes of her Smith-infused podcast, The Great Antidote, as a locked-down high school student in 2020, when neither enthusiasm nor superstition were in short supply. Early on, she gathered an impressive collection of economists and other public intellectuals, including Matt Ridley, John Stossel, Vernon Smith, Deirdre McCloskey, Lenore Skenazy, and Russ Roberts—plus quite a few Reason staffers.
Over the years, Sellgren has matured and the podcast, now sponsored by Liberty Fund, has become more polished. But in a move that is both strategically flattering and genuinely illuminating, she still asks the same disarming question to all of her guests: "What is the most important thing that people my age or in my generation should know that we don't?"
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "The Great Antidote."
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Juliette is an amazingly good interviewer. Her list of guests is even more amazing. How she does this while attending college is the most amazing thing of all.
I still want her to have Veronique as a guest. Probably not going to happen.
I suppose I'll have to seek this out.
Well, with this generation, it needs to be on a webpage. With links and pictures. And in easy-to-digest bits (at least the bullet points or page titles), and "Click here to see the next one!" And a great teaser like “Here are the most important things that people our age or our my generation should know but we don’t –the eighth one will shock you!”
(Just because government does X, it isn’t automatically okay. Let’s start there.)