๐๏ธ PODCAST: Ben Cohen, Wall Street Journal Sports Reporter: The Hot Hand in Sports & Life
My guest today is Ben Cohen, the sports reporter for the Wall Street Journal and author of The Hot Hand: The Mystery and Science of Streaks.
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The book is a fantastic read on humansโ ability to get in the โzoneโ and our ability, or lack of ability, to decipher patterns from data. He also explains how the hot hand applies to areas of life besides sports, including artists, scientists, and directors, and how even Shakespeare experienced a hot streak when he was living during the plague, very similar to the situation we are living in now. This is a wide-ranging conversation around cognitive biases, streaks, and our limitations to see patterns and I couldnโt recommend the book more.
Show Notes
(1:15) โBen explains what the hot hand is
(3:22)โโโWhy humans are evolutionarily made to be bad at deciphering patterns
(4:40)โโโWhat led to the hot hand being proven true after 40 years of studies showing otherwise
(14:45)โโโWhy Spotify and Apple were forced to handle customers not believing in their โshuffle modeโ since we are so bad at deciphering patterns
(19:15)โโโThe difference between the hot hand and the gamblerโs fallacy
(24:10)โโโHow Shakespeare experienced the hot hand when living through the plague
(26:33)โโโThereโs no way to determine when youโll experience the hot hand
(32:15)โโโEnd of episode questions
End of Episode Questions:
1.Whatโs 1 book every coach should read?
2. Who is one person youโd want to hear as a guest on this podcast?
Jason Gay
3. What advice do you have for young coaches who are listening to this?
Take advantage of your own perspective
4. Whatโs the darkest moment you experienced professionally and how did you overcome it?
After there was an issue with how an article he wrote was shared, Twitter was relentlessly harassing him about it.