Jochen Metzger | Psychologie Heute
Aug 2019
Adam Ruins Everything 7th February 2018 When it comes to gambling, there's a perception people get addicted because there's always that glimmer of hope they can hit the big jackpot. Gambling; Recommended online casinos. Page 1 of 2; 1; 2. Now 'Adam ruins everything' will say 'it's illegal to change the radio station while driving in.
Richard Seymour | The Guardian
Aug 2019
Jason Grotto, Sandhya Kambhampati, Dan Mihalopoulos | ProPublica Illinois and WBEZ Chicago
20 Feb 2019
Antti Tiainen | Helsingin Sanomat
2 Feb 2019
Kevin Litman-Navarro | The Outline
13 Aug 2018
伊藤亜紗 | 読売新聞 Yomiuri
13 Aug 2018
渡辺靖 | 日本経済新聞 Nikkei
5 Aug 2018
Mattha Busby | The Guardian
8 May 2018
Fabien Soyez | CNET France
9 Oct 2017
Ellen Lee | Huffington Post
5 Apr 2017
Adam Alter | The Guardian
28 Feb 2017
Adriana Barton | The Globe & Mail
23 Feb 2017
Oliver Lovatt | Gambling Insider
20 Jan 2017
Simon Parkin | Nautilus
12 Jan 2017
Russell Wangersky | The Telegram
9 Jan 2017
John Rosengren | The Atlantic
1 Dec 2016
Leon Dische Becker | Vice
25 Nov 2016
Diana Mesesan | Balkan Insight
20 Nov 2016
Daniel Zender | New York Times
19 Nov 2016
Ian Leslie | Australian Financial Review
7 Oct 2016
Nereida Carrillo | Ara
25 Sep 2016
Maia Szalavitz | Nautilus
15 Sep 2016
Marco Dari Mattiacci | Altreconomia
8 Sep 2016
Facundo Manes | Clarín.com
26 Jul 2016
Tristan Harris | Huffington Post
27 May 2016
Leah Libresco | Commonweal
24 Mar 2016
Sean Murphy | Boston Globe
23 Mar 2016
Sophie Wilkinson | The Debrief
18 Feb 2016
Aziz Ansari & Eric Klinenberg | Nautilus
11 Feb 2016
Natasha Singer | The New York Times
5 Dec 2015
Michael Schulson | Aeon
24 Nov 2015
Michael Thomsen | Forbes
31 Oct 2015
George Johnson | The New York Times
18 Oct 2015
Michael Safi | The Guardian
17 Oct 2015
Mackenzie Cummings-Grady | Boston Globe
11 Jul 2015
Evan Selinger | Christian Science Monitor
3 Jun 2015
Hubert Guillaud | Internetactu.net
12 May 2015
Ian Hardy | BBC News
8 May 2015
Andrew Thompson | The Verge
6 May 2015
Natasha Singer | The New York Times
19 Apr 2015
David Cox | Vice
11 Apr 2015
Antony Funnell | ABC Australia
18 Mar 2015
Rachelle Annechino | Ethnography Matters
9 Feb 2015
Anne Helen Petersen | BuzzFeed News
1 Jan 2015
Julia Belluz | Vox
10 Sep 2014
Brad Plumer | Vox
7 Aug 2014
Barbara Dafoe Whitehead | Opinionator - The New York Times
21 Jun 2014
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
9 Jun 2014
Douglas Heaven | New Scientist
28 May 2014
Ian Leslie | New Statesman
6 Mar 2014
Tom Vanderbilt | Nautilus
23 Jan 2014
Tim Harford | Financial Times
2 Jan 2014
Alexis Madrigal | The Atlantic
9 Dec 2013
Robert H Frank | The New York Times
2 Nov 2013
Natasha D. Schull | The New York Times
10 Oct 2013 Crazy monkey slots online.
Alexis Madrigal | The Atlantic
31 Jul 2013
Tom Vanderbilt | The Guardian
8 Jun 2013
Madhumita Venkataramanan | WIRED UK
9 May 2013
Natasha Schull | GEL conference
13 Jan 2013
Randall Stross | The New York Times
12 Jan 2013
Karen Weintraub | BBC Future
3 Jan 2013
David Wescott | The Chronicle of Higher Education
12 Nov 2012
Christopher Caldwell | Financial Times
12 Oct 2012
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
17 Sep 2012
Brenda Jubin | Reading the Markets
14 Sep 2012
Laura Norén | Public Books
5 Sep 2012
Peter Dizikes | MIT News
4 Sep 2012
Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
1 Sep 2012
Christopher Caldwell | Financial Times
12 Mar 2010
Liz Benston | Las Vegas Sun
24 Nov 2009
Hans Breiter & Natasha Schull
29 Oct 2009
Dan P. Blake | Chicago Tribune
29 May 2009
Joseph Ryan | Chicago Daily Herald
29 May 2009
Stephanie Schorow | MIT News
20 May 2009
Carey Goldberg | The Boston Globe
7 Mar 2009
Isaiah Thompson | Philadelphia Citypaper
7 Jan 2009
Natasha Schull | The Washington Post
6 Jul 2008
Eliza Strickland | Salon.com
16 Jun 2008
Liz Karagianis | MIT Spectrum
9 Jan 2008
Tony Batt | Las Vegas Review-Journal
13 Oct 2007
Michael Walsh | Southern Maryland Online
12 Oct 2007
RETRO REPORT | PBS
Oct 2019
Ali Rae | Al Jazeera
Jul 2019
Your Undivided Attention Podcast | Center for Humane Technology
2019
Dir. Cosima Dannoritzer | Polar Star Films (Espagne)
2018
ABC The Money
3 May 2018
Trailblazers with Walter Isaacson
1 May 2018
Tricky: A Podcast with Heather Chaplin
13 Feb 2018
The Fifth Estate | CBC-TV
8 Dec 2017
The Digital Human Series | BBC Radio 4
30 Oct 2017
Adams Ruins Everything | Maximum Fun
20 Sep 2017
Adam Ruins Everything | TruTV
17 Sep 2017
Spark | CBC radio
14 May 2017
Explorer | National Geographic
17 Apr 2017
On Contact with Chris Hedges | RT America
26 Mar 2017
The Inquiry | BBC world service
25 Feb 2017
The Agenda with Steve Paikin | TV Ontario
26 Jan 2017
Mike Walsh Podcast | Next Institute Limited
2 Oct 2016
Tegenlicht | Netherlands Public Television VPRO
25 Sep 2016
Note to Self | WNYC
16 Mar 2016
Wisconsin Public Radio
26 Feb 2016
Looking Glass Pictures | TVF International
20 Oct 2015
Future Tense | ABC Australia
15 Mar 2015
Codes and Conspiracies | American Heroes Channel
8 Mar 2015
Spark with Nora Young | CBC Radio
6 Nov 2014
Innovation Hub | WGHB
15 Aug 2014
All Tech Considered | NPR
7 Jun 2014
The Global Mail
27 Jan 2014
Adam Ruins Everything Gambling
99% Invisible with Roman Mars | Public Radio Exchange
29 Apr 2013
The Leonard Lopate Show | WNYC
1 Feb 2013
State of Nevada | KNPR
3 Oct 2012
60 Minutes | CBS
7 Jan 2011
Studio 360 | WNYC
13 Mar 2009
Weddings. Cars. Food drives. Sex. Dogs. Yes, if it's a thing you like, Adam Conover has likely ruined it.
The comedian's now signature approach of 'take a commonly regarded good thing or popular truth .. and entertainingly and informatively pummel it into the dirt with facts and reality' originally grew up on the popular comedy site CollegeHumor with a funny series of smartly crafted, smartly dressed and smartly researched video vignettes. And in a pleasantly surprising turn, people loved the awful truth so much, Conover's videos grew into their own television show (appropriately titled 'Adam Ruins Everything' on TruTV) and now a stand-up comedy tour, bringing endearing ruin to cities across the nation – including Milwaukee's Turner Hall on Sunday, Oct. 2.
But is Conover really ruining anything? We chatted with the comedian and television star before Sunday's show, and during our (gratefully not sabotaged) conversation, he talked about why his approach is more appreciation than destruction, if there's any topic off-limits and his delightfully ruinous plans for Milwaukee.
OnMilwaukee: As one who grew up through high school watching it religiously, I must ask: What was it like working at CollegeHumor? Judging by the videos, it seemed like the coolest place on Earth. Was that how it was in reality?
Adam Conover: (laughs) CollegeHumor definitely, especially in the early days, had this image of the coolest, chillest place to work. It really was a dream job as a comedy writer, because I could do whatever I wanted. As a comedy writer, I was really encouraged just to follow what you found funny. Not everything gets made, but you don't have to sort of make schlock. It really was decided by what the six people in the writers room found the funniest. But we got to be in them, and it was really a wonderful place to do comedy and find your voice. And after a couple of years working there, we moved out to L.A. to try and make TV shows – and we got lucky and made one. I couldn't be happier about it.
Where did the idea for 'Adam Ruins Everything' come from?
Well, I've always been an information sponge in my regular life. The kind of stuff I talk about in my show is the kind of stuff that I like to know in my real life. It's just sort of been my hobby to read magazine articles and listen to podcasts – in my car, instead of listening to music, I listen to audiobooks and podcasts and things like that – that's just always been how I am. So I started trying to put that together with the comedy that I did.
I first did it as a stand-up comic. I did the diamond rings bit in stand-up, and I noticed that it not only made people laugh, it made people perk up and think and come up to me afterwards and go, 'Oh my god; is that actually true? That's crazy!'
So then we did it as a CollegeHumor sketch, and what I did for the sketch was I was worried about – look, I've always gotten this reaction when I talk about this stuff in person of 'Oh my god, shut up; you're annoying.' So I was worried about the writers having that reaction, so I just wrote them into the script having that reaction in order to get ahead of them. They couldn't make fun of me in the writers room because I had just written it into the script for our read-through of them having the same reaction. And that ended up being the comedy engine of the whole series.
What's the topic that's gotten you the most outrage, between the CollegeHumor videos and the TV show?
So far it's only a web video, but we're doing it again on the TV show this year: the one about purebred dog breeding. You'd be surprised at about how many people got so angry based on that, because people who are in the dog-breeding world or dog world are so committed to their breeds, they're pretty fanatical about it. So that was the one I got the most people tweeting at me, 'You don't know what you're talking about,' and 'Any reputable breeder wouldn't allow these kind of genetic defects to happen.'
But the fact is – and we talk about it in the episode – that purebred dog breeding, because it restricts the gene pool, it necessarily leads to genetic disease. There's no whittling out genetic disease; it's always going to pop up again. So those people, when they do that, they're mitigating the problem they caused by pure-breeding the dogs in the first place.
But people really don't want to see that. They really don't want to confront it, because they love breeds and the variety of dogs so much. And that's a really hard one to get away from. I think even in my daily life, it's hard not to think of dogs in terms of dog breeds, even though I know from my research that dog breeds are things that people made up that don't really correspond to anything in nature and that the definitions have shifted over time and the existence of the concept at all is harmful to dogs.
Is there a topic that you refuse to do, that you don't want to ruin for yourself?
No, not at all. There definitely isn't. One of the things that's most dear to me is video games. I love video games so much – especially when I'm working really hard on a show; that's the main way I retreat and wind down. But we did an episode on video games. There's nothing that's off limits.
The pleasure of learning this stuff is my greatest pleasure in life, so I would never hold back from anything. And frankly, the thesis of the show is that it's always better to know more, that whatever the topic is, your pleasure in it is deepened by knowing more. Any sports fan knows this: The more you know about your sport, the more fun it is – even if you know the unsavory stuff. It's true of everything in life. Even though, superficially, it's presented on the show as 'ruining' and puncturing people's bubble and upsetting them, at the end, we try to show why you're always better off for knowing.
Adam Ruins Everything Gambling
What are your plans for the show in Milwaukee? Are there any specific local things you'll 'ruin'?
What I'm really excited about is that I am a stand-up comic, so, for me, when you're making a TV show, you're kind of like, 'This means I get to tour, right?' It's almost like touring is the prize at the end of making the show. That's why you do it: so you can go do some awesome tour shows.
What we're going to do is bring the flavor of 'Adam Ruins Everything' to the live stage. I'm going to be touring with this giant video screen, and I'm going to be projecting stats, facts, images, punchlines, original video. So it's going to be like a really fast-moving, entertaining comedy TED Talk all about our nation's election history: the history of our democracy, brief presidential facts, stuff like that. So I hope people leave with a 180-degree different view of what our nation's democracy is.
Adam Ruins Everything Gambling Episode
As for Milwaukee specifically, I've never been to Milwaukee before, so I'm really excited to just check out the city. I've heard amazing things about it. It seems like the unsung hero among American cities.