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Bill Gates Launches New Podcast, Tells Seth Rogen About Smoking Pot

Thursday Bill Gates launched a new podcast called “Unconfuse Me.” (“What do you do when you can’t solve a problem? I like to talk to smart people who can help me understand the subject better…”)
Join me on my learning journey as I talk to brilliant guests about Alzheimer’s, artificial intelligence, the future of education, plant-based meat, the evolution of language, marijuana, and more.
The first words of the first episode are a clip of Seth Rogen saying “Edibles? I don’t mess with that. Snoop Dogg doesn’t eat edibles. Like, that’s how wild the variation on edibles is, and I do not recommend this.”
Then Bill Gates’ voice says “I love learning, even if a topic’s complex, I like to see if I can figure it out…” People reports that the 67-year-old Microsoft co-founder and former CEO also spoke to Rogen and his wife Lauren Miller about the future of Alzheimer’s research:

With studies showing that “40% of cases” are preventable, according to Rogen, the “five brain healthy habits” in their framework are important: sleep, exercise, nutrition, mental fitness and emotional well-being.
He even confessed that his being a celebrity encourages people to better care for themselves. “I taught this coursework of brain health, and we’ve also had a neurologist teach the coursework, and we scientifically proved that people retain information better from celebrities than doctors, which is it’s a heavy burden,” he joked, adding that this information “was published…”

Miller also shared that she goes to a neurologist and the pair are both “open” with their doctors about their habits, and “no one” in the medical world has told them that smoking weed is bad for their brain health. They even believe its benefits of boosting hunger and relieving stress might be good for preventing Alzheimer’s. “It’s not federally legal, so there isn’t money to fund research,” Miller said.

Gates later concluded the podcast with his own funny anecdote, laughing about his first time he ever smoked weed — back when it was a “rebellious” thing to do. “In school out of the, say 105 people in my class I think, there were three or four who didn’t smoke,” he said. “Because it was kind of a, ‘Hey, I’m an adult! Hey I can break the rules!’ But I will say, sometimes it’s like, I guess I’m doing this to be cool. It wasn’t so much smoking for pot’s sake.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Thursday Bill Gates launched a new podcast called “Unconfuse Me.” (“What do you do when you can’t solve a problem? I like to talk to smart people who can help me understand the subject better…”)
Join me on my learning journey as I talk to brilliant guests about Alzheimer’s, artificial intelligence, the future of education, plant-based meat, the evolution of language, marijuana, and more.
The first words of the first episode are a clip of Seth Rogen saying “Edibles? I don’t mess with that. Snoop Dogg doesn’t eat edibles. Like, that’s how wild the variation on edibles is, and I do not recommend this.”
Then Bill Gates’ voice says “I love learning, even if a topic’s complex, I like to see if I can figure it out…” People reports that the 67-year-old Microsoft co-founder and former CEO also spoke to Rogen and his wife Lauren Miller about the future of Alzheimer’s research:

With studies showing that “40% of cases” are preventable, according to Rogen, the “five brain healthy habits” in their framework are important: sleep, exercise, nutrition, mental fitness and emotional well-being.
He even confessed that his being a celebrity encourages people to better care for themselves. “I taught this coursework of brain health, and we’ve also had a neurologist teach the coursework, and we scientifically proved that people retain information better from celebrities than doctors, which is it’s a heavy burden,” he joked, adding that this information “was published…”

Miller also shared that she goes to a neurologist and the pair are both “open” with their doctors about their habits, and “no one” in the medical world has told them that smoking weed is bad for their brain health. They even believe its benefits of boosting hunger and relieving stress might be good for preventing Alzheimer’s. “It’s not federally legal, so there isn’t money to fund research,” Miller said.

Gates later concluded the podcast with his own funny anecdote, laughing about his first time he ever smoked weed — back when it was a “rebellious” thing to do. “In school out of the, say 105 people in my class I think, there were three or four who didn’t smoke,” he said. “Because it was kind of a, ‘Hey, I’m an adult! Hey I can break the rules!’ But I will say, sometimes it’s like, I guess I’m doing this to be cool. It wasn’t so much smoking for pot’s sake.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

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