Aziz Ansari Needs Another Toothbrush (Ep. 213)

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Our latest Freakonomics Radio episode is  “Aziz Ansari Needs Another Toothbrush,” in which the comedian, actor — and now, author — answers our FREAK-quently Asked Questions. (You can subscribe to the podcast at iTunes or elsewhere, get the RSS feed, or listen via the media player above. You can also read the transcript, which includes credits for the music you’ll hear in the episode.)

Aziz Ansari, modern romanticist. (photo: Ruvan Wijesooriya)

Aziz Ansari, modern romanticist. (photo: Ruvan Wijesooriya)

Aziz Ansari is best known for playing Tom Haverford on Parks and Recreation, the NBC sitcom starring Amy Poehler. The show was never a huge hit, but it was beloved — In part because it was smart but also because (IMHO) the show was, at its core, sweet. Although Ansari’s Haverford was perhaps the most selfish and hustle-y character on the show – and yet he too was pretty sweet, deep down.

After listening to this podcast, I’ll be surprised if you don’t think the same thing about Ansari himself. He grew up in Bennettsville, South Carolina, to parents who immigrated from India. His dad worked as a gastroenterologist; and his mom worked in his dad’s office. Aziz came to New York after high school, studied marketing at NYU, but then got into stand-up comedy and stayed in it.

He’s been a comedian and actor for fifteen years now. Which made it time to write a book. But not just your standard book by a stand-up comic. “I’d been offered book deals in the past,” he tells us, “and usually for a comedian a book deal is kind of a cash grab. You basically just write down a version of your act as a book and I didn’t want to do that.”

Instead, he teamed up with the NYU sociologist Eric Klinenberg to write Modern Romance, an interesting book full of interesting research about how people meet, and mate, in the modern world. (Here’s a Times review; and here’s a 2010 New Yorker profile of Ansari.)

In the podcast, we talk about the book, and about the shift from “companionate” marriage to “soul-mate” marriage:

ANSARI:  To me the craziest statistic in the book, the craziest one that blows my mind the most, is in 1967 there was this study … where they found seventy-six percent of women said they would marry someone that they are not romantically in love with. And you know now, just the idea that like now we have all these options of what to do with our lives and our goal of who we want to find is not like oh a decent person to settle down with and start a family with. It’s no, we’re trying to find the love of our lives. We’re trying to find this amazing, elusive thing. That just wasn’t a thing people had the luxury to look for.

Ansari also answers our FREAK-quently Asked Questions (the same ones we’ve put to Boris Johnson, Nate Silver and Kevin Kelly), which is how we learn about his toothbrush problems. He also tells us about the new TV show he’s making for Netflix — and the fact that he doesn’t yet have a title for the show. So he needs your help with this. In the podcast, you’ll hear what the show is about; if you come up with a good title, please leave it in the comments section below. If Ansari picks yours, maybe he will buy a toothbrush for you too.


Doug Vanhooren

idea for name for netflix show.... EAT YOUR WORDS!

Love the podcast!

Doug

Lee

Suggestions for Ansari’s new show:

Glutton for Punishment
Glutton for Nourishment

RJ

Suggestion for Ansari's new show:

Dev in Development

Mark

How about "Hot Plate" for the title of Aziz Ansari's new show? It seems like it would work given the description he provided earlier. Great episode, by the way.

Dave

'Naan Sequitor'

Don

"Oh geez, I'm sorry w/ Aziz Ansari"

Kristen

Show name: Aziz Ansari #notsorry

(A play on his last name. It sounds like "I'm sorry.")

John

Funny, because I'm of course listening to this on the web. I don't have to imagine what it would be like if Freakonomics were a book.

Dalton Tarver

"New Deli"

Derek

Who doesn't buy their toothbrushes in bulk?!

tunie

Regarding senseless internet addiction/surfing, there is an article out there somewhere I read a year or two ago about how surfing the internet is a substitute for the being in 'the zone'. It's addictive because it lures us into this similar place - only without the payback or expenses of creative input and output. There's NO reward for being in the zone. It's like filling up on empty calories.

It requires maturity and genuine willpower to choose the nutritious meal/turn off the internet because you're up against an entire corporation/machine, literally, each of whom has spent billions of dollars to engage your attention/dollars with intriguing flavors or stimuli. That's a lot for an overstimulated individual to transcend.

Conar

Azizus

Kal

Sorry folks, the show has a name "Master of None".
http://www.ew.com/article/2015/07/28/aziz-ansari-master-none-netflix-claire-danes

tina

This interview was very cringe-worthy. Are you just a super big fan, Stephen? And you were just fan-boying? Some of these questions came off as condescending and I can't help but hear a certain strain in Aziz Ansari's voice in his responses.
At the top of the interview there was an insinuation that writing a book that is largely based on research isn't worthwhile to him...because he's what? A successful actor? Comedian? This came off as a bit insulting. "Tell us something nobody else knows," is a question that should be reserved for precocious 14-year old journalist-hopefuls.

I was really excited for this episode, but my spouse who hasn't been listening regularly was taken aback at this episode and the patronizing tone of the questions.
Perhaps reviewing celebrity interviews and questions would be of great use to you for future non-economist interviews.

Freakonomics has a lot of great qualities and while I occasionally find the "being contrary for the sake of being contrary" quality of the show tiresome, I appreciate your willingness to go there. Thanks for all your hard work!

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pete

delicious

John

The social media bit was too long. I got it the first time. He was just repeating himself and using bad examples. And this is coming from someone who has no Facebook, Twitter or Instagram. I get it. I agree. But you really should have edited that down. I just skipped after a while.

Daniel

WTF, Dubner??!!! If I wanted to know about Hollywood and Airheads, I would listen to "Fresh Air", people like me who find an oasis in podcasts such as this, and some of us pay a year contribution, do want to hear from Scientists, Anthropologists, Economists, Investigative Reporters ... as I said, we come here as an alternative to the E! Channel! You did not even talk about the contents of Ansari's book!!! Get Dr; Levitt back on, he might not be a rock star or a stand up comedian, but he has done more or real value than Ansari ever will ...

Connie

....or maybe he could brush his teeth in the sink everytime and stop wasting water!! :)

Allie

Title for Aziz's show:
Food for Thought

Tom Crowley

Mr. Ansari was looking for a title for his show? His description was "Aziz Ansari plays Dev, a gentleman that loves delicious food and gets into humorous-slash-thought-provoking situations"

How about "Breakfast Epiphanies"?