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What if the scariest things aren’t the most dangerous, just the most invisible? We dive into the strange life cycle of collective fears—how each decade crowns a new monster, from quicksand and acid rain to terrorism, aliens, and AI—and why those worries feel all‑consuming before fading into nostalgia. Our throughline is control: when threats can’t be seen or easily predicted, our brains lean into catastrophising, and the media (plus a tidal wave of social clips) turns rare risks into daily dread.
We dig into the psychology that drives this, from loss of agency to the way story frequency beats statistics in our minds. A single plane crash dominates memory while countless safe flights vanish; sharks feel deadly while cows, which kill more people, stay loveable. Culture plays its part too. Think Jaws: the less you saw, the more you feared. That same grammar powers today’s viral rumours, auditors with drones, and conspiracy content that rewards outrage over nuance. It’s easier than ever to look like an expert—and harder than ever to separate signal from noise.
Still, fear isn’t only corrosive; it can unite. Humans are tribal, stacking identities from club to country, but a shared threat can bring us together fast. We touch on Ulrich Beck’s “risk society,” where modern anxieties stem from systems we’ve built—pollution, nuclear waste, pandemics, microplastics, AI—and how to respond without spiralling. Our take: name the mechanism, check the base rates, choose better stories, and keep a sense of humour. Some panics become punchlines; others need policy, not panic.
If this conversation made you think—or laugh—share it with a friend, hit follow, and leave a quick review so more people can find the show. What fear from your childhood seems absurd now, and which modern worry do you think we’re underestimating?
Support the show
By Bonus Dad Bonus DaughterSend us a Comment, Question or Request, we'd love to hear from you
What if the scariest things aren’t the most dangerous, just the most invisible? We dive into the strange life cycle of collective fears—how each decade crowns a new monster, from quicksand and acid rain to terrorism, aliens, and AI—and why those worries feel all‑consuming before fading into nostalgia. Our throughline is control: when threats can’t be seen or easily predicted, our brains lean into catastrophising, and the media (plus a tidal wave of social clips) turns rare risks into daily dread.
We dig into the psychology that drives this, from loss of agency to the way story frequency beats statistics in our minds. A single plane crash dominates memory while countless safe flights vanish; sharks feel deadly while cows, which kill more people, stay loveable. Culture plays its part too. Think Jaws: the less you saw, the more you feared. That same grammar powers today’s viral rumours, auditors with drones, and conspiracy content that rewards outrage over nuance. It’s easier than ever to look like an expert—and harder than ever to separate signal from noise.
Still, fear isn’t only corrosive; it can unite. Humans are tribal, stacking identities from club to country, but a shared threat can bring us together fast. We touch on Ulrich Beck’s “risk society,” where modern anxieties stem from systems we’ve built—pollution, nuclear waste, pandemics, microplastics, AI—and how to respond without spiralling. Our take: name the mechanism, check the base rates, choose better stories, and keep a sense of humour. Some panics become punchlines; others need policy, not panic.
If this conversation made you think—or laugh—share it with a friend, hit follow, and leave a quick review so more people can find the show. What fear from your childhood seems absurd now, and which modern worry do you think we’re underestimating?
Support the show