<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><?xml-stylesheet href="https://feeds.captivate.fm/style.xsl" type="text/xsl"?><rss xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" version="2.0" xmlns:googleplay="http://www.google.com/schemas/play-podcasts/1.0" xmlns:itunes="http://www.itunes.com/dtds/podcast-1.0.dtd" xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/" xmlns:podcast="https://podcastindex.org/namespace/1.0"><channel><atom:link href="https://feeds.captivate.fm/unknown-variables/" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><title><![CDATA[Unknown Variables]]></title><podcast:guid>d7b52da4-3c1f-5b50-bd61-5cf43ca406a8</podcast:guid><lastBuildDate>Mon, 26 Jan 2026 11:02:33 +0000</lastBuildDate><generator>Captivate.fm</generator><language><![CDATA[en]]></language><copyright><![CDATA[Copyright 2026 Anthony Rojas]]></copyright><managingEditor>Anthony Rojas</managingEditor><itunes:summary><![CDATA[Hosted by Dr. Anthony J. Rojas, Ph.D., an MIT-trained chemist and educator, Unknown Variables goes beyond accomplishments to explore the experiences, decisions, and defining moments behind them.  Each episode features candid conversations with scientists, entrepreneurs, and innovators across disciplines — uncovering the unknown variables that drive discovery, creativity, and success.  If you’re curious about how great minds think, fail, and ultimately persevere, this podcast is for you.  🎧 Listen for:  Conversations with world-class experts and creators  Honest stories of challenge and transformation  Insights connecting science, innovation, and the human experience  Subscribe and explore the unknown variables that shape our world.]]></itunes:summary><image><url>https://artwork.captivate.fm/c79b7bc4-7805-442e-93a6-27b5d1f4718b/IMG-8899.jpg</url><title>Unknown Variables</title><link><![CDATA[https://unknownvariablespodcast.com/]]></link></image><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/c79b7bc4-7805-442e-93a6-27b5d1f4718b/IMG-8899.jpg"/><itunes:owner><itunes:name>Anthony Rojas</itunes:name></itunes:owner><itunes:author>Anthony Rojas</itunes:author><description>Hosted by Dr. Anthony J. Rojas, Ph.D., an MIT-trained chemist and educator, Unknown Variables goes beyond accomplishments to explore the experiences, decisions, and defining moments behind them.  Each episode features candid conversations with scientists, entrepreneurs, and innovators across disciplines — uncovering the unknown variables that drive discovery, creativity, and success.  If you’re curious about how great minds think, fail, and ultimately persevere, this podcast is for you.  🎧 Listen for:  Conversations with world-class experts and creators  Honest stories of challenge and transformation  Insights connecting science, innovation, and the human experience  Subscribe and explore the unknown variables that shape our world.</description><link>https://unknownvariablespodcast.com/</link><atom:link href="https://pubsubhubbub.appspot.com" rel="hub"/><itunes:subtitle><![CDATA[Experts shaping our world — and the stories that shaped them.]]></itunes:subtitle><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:type>episodic</itunes:type><itunes:category text="Science"></itunes:category><itunes:category text="Education"></itunes:category><itunes:category text="Technology"></itunes:category><podcast:locked>no</podcast:locked><podcast:medium>podcast</podcast:medium><item><title>Trying for a Baby? Watch This Before Your Next Drink!</title><itunes:title>Trying for a Baby? Watch This Before Your Next Drink!</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p>Is there <em>any</em> safe amount of alcohol during pregnancy?</p><p>In this episode of <strong>Unknown Variables</strong>, I sit down with <strong>Dr. Alexandra Perez, PsyD</strong>, a licensed clinical psychologist and Assistant Professor at Emory University, to unpack one of the most misunderstood—and rarely discussed—topics in public health: <strong>prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE)</strong>.</p><p>Despite what many people hear from friends, social media, or even doctors, the science tells a more complicated story. Dr. Perez explains why <strong>no amount of alcohol has been proven safe during pregnancy</strong>, how prenatal alcohol exposure affects brain development, and why many children and adults are impacted <strong>without obvious physical signs</strong>.</p><p>We explore:</p><ol><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Why doctors sometimes say “one glass is fine” — and what the evidence actually shows</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>What <strong>Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD)</strong> really are (and why most cases go undiagnosed)</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>How prenatal exposure can increase risk for <strong>ADHD, anxiety, depression, and behavioral challenges</strong> later in life</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>The role of <strong>adverse childhood experiences (ACEs)</strong> and environment — not just biology</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Why many kids are misdiagnosed when underlying neurodevelopmental differences go untested</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>How <strong>Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT)</strong> helps repair parent–child relationships and reduce disruptive behavior</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>The unique barriers faced by <strong>Spanish-speaking and Latine families</strong> in healthcare and research</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Why simply “translating materials into Spanish” is not enough</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>How to talk about alcohol and pregnancy <strong>without shame or stigma</strong></li></ol><br/><p>This conversation is not about blame — it’s about education, prevention, compassion, and better systems of care.</p><p>If you’re pregnant, trying to conceive, a parent, clinician, educator, or simply someone who wants to better understand how early life experiences shape mental health, this episode is for you.</p>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Is there <em>any</em> safe amount of alcohol during pregnancy?</p><p>In this episode of <strong>Unknown Variables</strong>, I sit down with <strong>Dr. Alexandra Perez, PsyD</strong>, a licensed clinical psychologist and Assistant Professor at Emory University, to unpack one of the most misunderstood—and rarely discussed—topics in public health: <strong>prenatal alcohol exposure (PAE)</strong>.</p><p>Despite what many people hear from friends, social media, or even doctors, the science tells a more complicated story. Dr. Perez explains why <strong>no amount of alcohol has been proven safe during pregnancy</strong>, how prenatal alcohol exposure affects brain development, and why many children and adults are impacted <strong>without obvious physical signs</strong>.</p><p>We explore:</p><ol><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Why doctors sometimes say “one glass is fine” — and what the evidence actually shows</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>What <strong>Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD)</strong> really are (and why most cases go undiagnosed)</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>How prenatal exposure can increase risk for <strong>ADHD, anxiety, depression, and behavioral challenges</strong> later in life</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>The role of <strong>adverse childhood experiences (ACEs)</strong> and environment — not just biology</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Why many kids are misdiagnosed when underlying neurodevelopmental differences go untested</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>How <strong>Parent-Child Interaction Therapy (PCIT)</strong> helps repair parent–child relationships and reduce disruptive behavior</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>The unique barriers faced by <strong>Spanish-speaking and Latine families</strong> in healthcare and research</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Why simply “translating materials into Spanish” is not enough</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>How to talk about alcohol and pregnancy <strong>without shame or stigma</strong></li></ol><br/><p>This conversation is not about blame — it’s about education, prevention, compassion, and better systems of care.</p><p>If you’re pregnant, trying to conceive, a parent, clinician, educator, or simply someone who wants to better understand how early life experiences shape mental health, this episode is for you.</p>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://unknown-variables.captivate.fm/episode/trying-for-a-baby-watch-this-before-your-next-drink]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">5fa304f3-a866-457d-95d3-53172af6532f</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/c79b7bc4-7805-442e-93a6-27b5d1f4718b/IMG-8899.jpg"/><pubDate>Mon, 26 Jan 2026 06:00:00 -0500</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/5fa304f3-a866-457d-95d3-53172af6532f.mp3" length="94410872" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>49:10</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType><itunes:episode>10</itunes:episode><podcast:episode>10</podcast:episode></item><item><title>Become Financially Independent and Own Your Time with Andy Hill!</title><itunes:title>Become Financially Independent and Own Your Time with Andy Hill!</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p>What if the real goal of money isn’t wealth—but time?</p><p>In this episode of <em>Unknown Variables</em>, I sit down with <strong>Andy Hill</strong>, creator of <em>Marriage Kids and Money</em> and author of <em>Own Your Time</em>, to talk about financial independence, Coast FIRE, and why so many people feel stuck even when they’re “doing everything right.”</p><p>Andy shares how he and his wife went from a <strong>negative $50,000 net worth to nearly $2 million</strong>, paid off their home in under five years, and ultimately designed a life around <strong>time freedom—not just money</strong>. We talk honestly about motivation, marriage, stress, side hustles, gambling culture, index fund investing, and what it really takes to build financial independence with a family.</p><p>This conversation isn’t about get-rich-quick schemes, crypto hype, or gambling apps—it’s about building margin, reclaiming your time, and designing a life you don’t want to escape from.</p><h3>In this episode, we cover:</h3><ol><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Why most people don’t have a money problem—they have a <strong>time problem</strong></li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>How motivation (not discipline) drives long-term financial change</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Paying off a mortgage early vs. investing: what Andy would do differently</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>What <strong>Coast FIRE</strong> is and why it works for parents</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>How to build financial independence starting from debt</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Why gambling and “quick money” are destroying wealth for young people</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>How couples can get on the same page about money</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>The role of side hustles, income growth, and index fund investing</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Why time—not net worth—is the ultimate measure of wealth</li></ol><br/><p>Andy also shares the personal moments behind the numbers: marriage counseling, burnout, quitting a stable corporate job, and the realization that there are only <strong>168 hours in a week</strong>—and how you use them matters.</p><p>📘 <strong>Andy Hill’s book, <em>Own Your Time</em>, is available now</strong></p><p> Learn more at 👉 <a href="https://marriagekidsandmoney.com?utm_source=chatgpt.com" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">https://marriagekidsandmoney.com</a></p><p>🎧 <strong>Listen to Andy’s podcast &amp; YouTube channel:</strong></p><p>https://www.youtube.com/@MarriageKidsandMoney</p>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What if the real goal of money isn’t wealth—but time?</p><p>In this episode of <em>Unknown Variables</em>, I sit down with <strong>Andy Hill</strong>, creator of <em>Marriage Kids and Money</em> and author of <em>Own Your Time</em>, to talk about financial independence, Coast FIRE, and why so many people feel stuck even when they’re “doing everything right.”</p><p>Andy shares how he and his wife went from a <strong>negative $50,000 net worth to nearly $2 million</strong>, paid off their home in under five years, and ultimately designed a life around <strong>time freedom—not just money</strong>. We talk honestly about motivation, marriage, stress, side hustles, gambling culture, index fund investing, and what it really takes to build financial independence with a family.</p><p>This conversation isn’t about get-rich-quick schemes, crypto hype, or gambling apps—it’s about building margin, reclaiming your time, and designing a life you don’t want to escape from.</p><h3>In this episode, we cover:</h3><ol><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Why most people don’t have a money problem—they have a <strong>time problem</strong></li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>How motivation (not discipline) drives long-term financial change</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Paying off a mortgage early vs. investing: what Andy would do differently</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>What <strong>Coast FIRE</strong> is and why it works for parents</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>How to build financial independence starting from debt</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Why gambling and “quick money” are destroying wealth for young people</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>How couples can get on the same page about money</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>The role of side hustles, income growth, and index fund investing</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Why time—not net worth—is the ultimate measure of wealth</li></ol><br/><p>Andy also shares the personal moments behind the numbers: marriage counseling, burnout, quitting a stable corporate job, and the realization that there are only <strong>168 hours in a week</strong>—and how you use them matters.</p><p>📘 <strong>Andy Hill’s book, <em>Own Your Time</em>, is available now</strong></p><p> Learn more at 👉 <a href="https://marriagekidsandmoney.com?utm_source=chatgpt.com" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">https://marriagekidsandmoney.com</a></p><p>🎧 <strong>Listen to Andy’s podcast &amp; YouTube channel:</strong></p><p>https://www.youtube.com/@MarriageKidsandMoney</p>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://unknown-variables.captivate.fm/episode/become-financially-independent-and-own-your-time-with-andy-hill]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">9f634257-7482-44bb-a00f-25a4f73c17b3</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/c79b7bc4-7805-442e-93a6-27b5d1f4718b/IMG-8899.jpg"/><pubDate>Mon, 19 Jan 2026 06:00:00 -0500</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/9f634257-7482-44bb-a00f-25a4f73c17b3.mp3" length="106066928" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>55:15</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType><itunes:episode>9</itunes:episode><podcast:episode>9</podcast:episode></item><item><title>Why Do Drugs Cost So Much?!</title><itunes:title>Why Do Drugs Cost So Much?!</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p>Most people assume the answer is simple: greed. But the real story is far more complicated — and far more surprising.</p><p>In this episode, I sit down with <strong>Sam Kazer, PhD</strong>, a scientist who has worked across academia, global health, and the pharmaceutical industry, to break down what it actually takes to turn an idea into a real medicine. We talk about why drug development takes <strong>10+ years</strong>, why clinical trials are so expensive, and why most drug ideas fail long before they ever reach patients.</p><p>We also explore:</p><ol><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Why “Big Pharma” isn’t a single villain</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>How academic research and industry depend on each other</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Why biologic drugs cost more than small-molecule drugs</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>How public funding quietly enables many of the medicines we rely on</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>What people misunderstand most about drug pricing and regulation</li></ol><br/><p>This isn’t a defense of the pharmaceutical industry — it’s an explanation of the system we all rely on, and why simple answers don’t capture the full picture.</p>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Most people assume the answer is simple: greed. But the real story is far more complicated — and far more surprising.</p><p>In this episode, I sit down with <strong>Sam Kazer, PhD</strong>, a scientist who has worked across academia, global health, and the pharmaceutical industry, to break down what it actually takes to turn an idea into a real medicine. We talk about why drug development takes <strong>10+ years</strong>, why clinical trials are so expensive, and why most drug ideas fail long before they ever reach patients.</p><p>We also explore:</p><ol><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Why “Big Pharma” isn’t a single villain</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>How academic research and industry depend on each other</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Why biologic drugs cost more than small-molecule drugs</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>How public funding quietly enables many of the medicines we rely on</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>What people misunderstand most about drug pricing and regulation</li></ol><br/><p>This isn’t a defense of the pharmaceutical industry — it’s an explanation of the system we all rely on, and why simple answers don’t capture the full picture.</p>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://unknown-variables.captivate.fm/episode/why-do-drugs-cost-so-much]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">cdd73e68-97e6-4d51-8b03-acf8673c6be4</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/c79b7bc4-7805-442e-93a6-27b5d1f4718b/IMG-8899.jpg"/><pubDate>Mon, 12 Jan 2026 06:00:00 -0500</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/cdd73e68-97e6-4d51-8b03-acf8673c6be4.mp3" length="102210824" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>53:14</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType><itunes:episode>8</itunes:episode><podcast:episode>8</podcast:episode></item><item><title>Rebuilding a Face, Restoring a Life</title><itunes:title>Rebuilding a Face, Restoring a Life</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p> <strong>Is the medical system broken? And what does plastic surgery <em>really</em> do?</strong></p><p>In this episode of the <strong>Unknown Variables Podcast</strong>, Dr. Anthony Rojas speaks with <strong>Dr. Kianna Jackson, MD</strong>, Chief Resident in Plastic &amp; Reconstructive Surgery at Vanderbilt University, MIT graduate, and founder who challenged the residency application system itself.</p><p>Most people think plastic surgery is about Botox, breast implants, or celebrity aesthetics. Dr. Jackson explains why that’s wrong—how plastic surgery is about <strong>form and function</strong>, restoring faces after trauma, burns, and cancer, and helping patients reclaim their identity when their ability to speak, smile, or be recognized has been taken from them.</p><p>Dr. Jackson also shares her experience as a <strong>Black woman in surgery</strong>, confronting imposter syndrome and the “DEI hire” narrative despite graduating first in her medical school class and becoming the first Black student to win Vanderbilt’s highest academic honor. She offers a nuanced, honest discussion of affirmative action, equity vs equality, and why diversity in medicine leads to better patient outcomes.</p><p>The conversation goes deeper into the <strong>broken medical training pipeline</strong>. Dr. Jackson recounts spending thousands of dollars applying to residency, uncovering a system that extracts over $100 million annually from medical students, and building <strong>CentralApp</strong>, a platform that disrupted the residency application process nationwide—forcing ERAS to lower its fees. She also shares hard-earned lessons from founding a startup while working 80-hour weeks as a surgical resident.</p><p>This episode explores:</p><ol><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>What plastic surgery really is (beyond aesthetics)</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Facial reconstruction and restoring identity</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Burn, cancer, and trauma reconstruction</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Being a Black woman in surgery</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>DEI, affirmative action, and imposter syndrome</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Why residency and medical school admissions are broken</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>The true cost of becoming a doctor</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Lessons from building (and losing) a medical startup</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Mentorship, medicine, and choosing the right path</li></ol><br/><p>Whether you’re a <strong>premed student, medical trainee, physician, healthcare professional, or simply curious about how medicine actually works</strong>, this conversation will change how you see plastic surgery—and the system behind it.</p><p>🎧 <strong>Listen to the full episode on the Unknown Variables Podcast</strong></p><p> 🔔 Subscribe for conversations on science, medicine, entrepreneurship, and the unseen forces shaping success.</p>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> <strong>Is the medical system broken? And what does plastic surgery <em>really</em> do?</strong></p><p>In this episode of the <strong>Unknown Variables Podcast</strong>, Dr. Anthony Rojas speaks with <strong>Dr. Kianna Jackson, MD</strong>, Chief Resident in Plastic &amp; Reconstructive Surgery at Vanderbilt University, MIT graduate, and founder who challenged the residency application system itself.</p><p>Most people think plastic surgery is about Botox, breast implants, or celebrity aesthetics. Dr. Jackson explains why that’s wrong—how plastic surgery is about <strong>form and function</strong>, restoring faces after trauma, burns, and cancer, and helping patients reclaim their identity when their ability to speak, smile, or be recognized has been taken from them.</p><p>Dr. Jackson also shares her experience as a <strong>Black woman in surgery</strong>, confronting imposter syndrome and the “DEI hire” narrative despite graduating first in her medical school class and becoming the first Black student to win Vanderbilt’s highest academic honor. She offers a nuanced, honest discussion of affirmative action, equity vs equality, and why diversity in medicine leads to better patient outcomes.</p><p>The conversation goes deeper into the <strong>broken medical training pipeline</strong>. Dr. Jackson recounts spending thousands of dollars applying to residency, uncovering a system that extracts over $100 million annually from medical students, and building <strong>CentralApp</strong>, a platform that disrupted the residency application process nationwide—forcing ERAS to lower its fees. She also shares hard-earned lessons from founding a startup while working 80-hour weeks as a surgical resident.</p><p>This episode explores:</p><ol><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>What plastic surgery really is (beyond aesthetics)</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Facial reconstruction and restoring identity</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Burn, cancer, and trauma reconstruction</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Being a Black woman in surgery</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>DEI, affirmative action, and imposter syndrome</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Why residency and medical school admissions are broken</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>The true cost of becoming a doctor</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Lessons from building (and losing) a medical startup</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Mentorship, medicine, and choosing the right path</li></ol><br/><p>Whether you’re a <strong>premed student, medical trainee, physician, healthcare professional, or simply curious about how medicine actually works</strong>, this conversation will change how you see plastic surgery—and the system behind it.</p><p>🎧 <strong>Listen to the full episode on the Unknown Variables Podcast</strong></p><p> 🔔 Subscribe for conversations on science, medicine, entrepreneurship, and the unseen forces shaping success.</p>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://unknown-variables.captivate.fm/episode/rebuilding-a-face-restoring-a-life]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">03516bd2-5249-48ae-abae-156df30e75d3</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/c79b7bc4-7805-442e-93a6-27b5d1f4718b/IMG-8899.jpg"/><pubDate>Mon, 05 Jan 2026 06:00:00 -0500</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/03516bd2-5249-48ae-abae-156df30e75d3.mp3" length="86820734" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>45:13</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType><itunes:episode>7</itunes:episode><podcast:episode>7</podcast:episode></item><item><title>What Working at the CDC Is Really Like (From the Inside)!</title><itunes:title>What Working at the CDC Is Really Like (From the Inside)!</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p>What is it <em>actually</em> like to work at the CDC?</p><p>In this episode of the <strong>Unknown Variables Podcast</strong>, I sit down with <strong>Dr. Erin Thomas — a sociologist at the CDC</strong> — to unpack the side of public health most people never see: <strong>systems, behavior, trust, and the human factors</strong> that determine whether good science turns into real-world outcomes.</p><p>We talk about:</p><ol><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Why “CDC work” is so much more than labs and vaccines</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>How bias and structural barriers show up in lactation support and breastfeeding care</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>What the U.S. Ebola response revealed (and why COVID exposed it at scale)</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Why changing guidance can destabilize the public — even when it’s scientifically correct</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>How CDC work shifts across roles: research → evaluation → tuberculosis (TB) programs</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Why TB still matters in the U.S. (and who it impacts most)</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>What it takes for evidence to actually change practice in a massive organization</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>And what still gives her hope about the future of public health</li></ol><br/><p>If this conversation helped you see public health differently, <strong>subscribe/follow</strong> — it tells me to keep making episodes like this.</p><p><strong>Guest:</strong> Dr. Erin Thomas (CDC)</p><p><em>Note: Views expressed are the guest’s own and do not necessarily represent the CDC.</em></p><p><strong>Host:</strong> Anthony J. Rojas, Ph.D.</p>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What is it <em>actually</em> like to work at the CDC?</p><p>In this episode of the <strong>Unknown Variables Podcast</strong>, I sit down with <strong>Dr. Erin Thomas — a sociologist at the CDC</strong> — to unpack the side of public health most people never see: <strong>systems, behavior, trust, and the human factors</strong> that determine whether good science turns into real-world outcomes.</p><p>We talk about:</p><ol><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Why “CDC work” is so much more than labs and vaccines</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>How bias and structural barriers show up in lactation support and breastfeeding care</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>What the U.S. Ebola response revealed (and why COVID exposed it at scale)</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Why changing guidance can destabilize the public — even when it’s scientifically correct</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>How CDC work shifts across roles: research → evaluation → tuberculosis (TB) programs</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>Why TB still matters in the U.S. (and who it impacts most)</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>What it takes for evidence to actually change practice in a massive organization</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>And what still gives her hope about the future of public health</li></ol><br/><p>If this conversation helped you see public health differently, <strong>subscribe/follow</strong> — it tells me to keep making episodes like this.</p><p><strong>Guest:</strong> Dr. Erin Thomas (CDC)</p><p><em>Note: Views expressed are the guest’s own and do not necessarily represent the CDC.</em></p><p><strong>Host:</strong> Anthony J. Rojas, Ph.D.</p>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://unknown-variables.captivate.fm/episode/what-working-at-the-cdc-is-really-like-from-the-inside]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">0ec48a78-1ad7-4a09-a532-855410959e4d</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/c79b7bc4-7805-442e-93a6-27b5d1f4718b/IMG-8899.jpg"/><pubDate>Mon, 29 Dec 2025 06:00:00 -0500</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/0ec48a78-1ad7-4a09-a532-855410959e4d.mp3" length="82234031" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>42:50</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType><itunes:episode>6</itunes:episode><podcast:episode>6</podcast:episode></item><item><title>How to Become a College Professor (According to REAL Professors)</title><itunes:title>How to Become a College Professor (According to REAL Professors)</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p><strong>How do you <em>actually</em> become a college professor — and who really makes it?</strong></p><p>In this episode of <em>Unknown Variables</em>, I talk with four professors who recently landed faculty positions across a range of institutions — from teaching-focused universities to research-active campuses — to unpack what the path to academia really looks like.</p><p>You’ll hear from:</p><ol><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>A first-generation scholar who didn’t even realize “professor” was a career option (Yale University)</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>A biologist who transitioned from the humanities into science (Georgia College)</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>A faculty member who bypassed the traditional postdoc route (Towson University)</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>A professor who applied to <strong>dozens of schools</strong> to land their position (Appalachian State University)</li></ol><br/><p>Together, we break down the real decisions that shape academic careers: choosing advisors, navigating impostor syndrome, R1 vs R2 vs teaching-focused roles, geographic constraints, mentorship, burnout, and the advice they wish they’d been given earlier.</p><p>If you’re an undergraduate, graduate student, postdoc, or early-career researcher wondering whether academia is for you — or how to survive the path if it is — this conversation pulls back the curtain on the many hidden routes to becoming a professor.</p>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>How do you <em>actually</em> become a college professor — and who really makes it?</strong></p><p>In this episode of <em>Unknown Variables</em>, I talk with four professors who recently landed faculty positions across a range of institutions — from teaching-focused universities to research-active campuses — to unpack what the path to academia really looks like.</p><p>You’ll hear from:</p><ol><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>A first-generation scholar who didn’t even realize “professor” was a career option (Yale University)</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>A biologist who transitioned from the humanities into science (Georgia College)</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>A faculty member who bypassed the traditional postdoc route (Towson University)</li><li data-list="bullet"><span class="ql-ui" contenteditable="false"></span>A professor who applied to <strong>dozens of schools</strong> to land their position (Appalachian State University)</li></ol><br/><p>Together, we break down the real decisions that shape academic careers: choosing advisors, navigating impostor syndrome, R1 vs R2 vs teaching-focused roles, geographic constraints, mentorship, burnout, and the advice they wish they’d been given earlier.</p><p>If you’re an undergraduate, graduate student, postdoc, or early-career researcher wondering whether academia is for you — or how to survive the path if it is — this conversation pulls back the curtain on the many hidden routes to becoming a professor.</p>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://unknown-variables.captivate.fm/episode/how-to-become-a-college-professor-according-to-real-professors]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">2f500a2b-bd04-47e8-8461-51ce102d7315</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/c79b7bc4-7805-442e-93a6-27b5d1f4718b/IMG-8899.jpg"/><pubDate>Mon, 22 Dec 2025 06:00:00 -0500</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/2f500a2b-bd04-47e8-8461-51ce102d7315.mp3" length="154463231" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>01:20:27</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType><itunes:episode>5</itunes:episode><podcast:episode>5</podcast:episode></item><item><title>MIT Engineer Turned Apple Insider Exposes What Americans Get Wrong About China</title><itunes:title>MIT Engineer Turned Apple Insider Exposes What Americans Get Wrong About China</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p>What do Americans consistently misunderstand about China — its people, its politics, and how it quietly became the world’s manufacturing powerhouse?</p><p>This week, I sit down with <strong>Joshua Woodward</strong>, a South Side Chicago native turned <strong>MIT mechanical engineer</strong> who spent <strong>four years inside Apple’s camera supply chain in Shenzhen</strong> before founding a manufacturing consultancy based in China.</p><p>Josh didn’t just visit China — he <strong>lived through three and a half years of COVID lockdown</strong>, worked daily on factory floors, spoke fluent Mandarin to stunned locals, and built relationships inside the manufacturing ecosystem that produces the world’s most complex consumer electronics.</p><p>In this conversation, he exposes:</p><p>• Why <strong>America has engineering talent — but China has the ecosystem</strong></p><p>• What Americans get wrong about <strong>work culture, surveillance, and freedom</strong></p><p>• How <strong>Apple accidentally accelerated China’s tech dominance</strong></p><p>• Why <strong>tariffs don’t work and end up hurting Americans</strong></p><p>• What it’s like to be <strong>Black in China</strong>, and how language breaks barriers</p><p>• Why <strong>China and the U.S. are more alike than we think</strong></p><p>Josh’s story moves from <strong>surviving Chicago</strong>, to <strong>obsessing over MIT at age 12</strong>, to becoming an Apple insider shaping devices billions of people use — and shows how much of what we assume about China collapses under firsthand experience.</p><p>If you think you understand China — this episode will challenge you.</p><h2><strong>About the Guest</strong></h2><p>Joshua Charles Woodward</p><p>• MIT Mechanical Engineering</p><p>• Former Apple Engineering Project Manager in Shenzhen</p><p>• Founder, <em>The Sparrows</em> — a China-based manufacturing consultancy</p>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>What do Americans consistently misunderstand about China — its people, its politics, and how it quietly became the world’s manufacturing powerhouse?</p><p>This week, I sit down with <strong>Joshua Woodward</strong>, a South Side Chicago native turned <strong>MIT mechanical engineer</strong> who spent <strong>four years inside Apple’s camera supply chain in Shenzhen</strong> before founding a manufacturing consultancy based in China.</p><p>Josh didn’t just visit China — he <strong>lived through three and a half years of COVID lockdown</strong>, worked daily on factory floors, spoke fluent Mandarin to stunned locals, and built relationships inside the manufacturing ecosystem that produces the world’s most complex consumer electronics.</p><p>In this conversation, he exposes:</p><p>• Why <strong>America has engineering talent — but China has the ecosystem</strong></p><p>• What Americans get wrong about <strong>work culture, surveillance, and freedom</strong></p><p>• How <strong>Apple accidentally accelerated China’s tech dominance</strong></p><p>• Why <strong>tariffs don’t work and end up hurting Americans</strong></p><p>• What it’s like to be <strong>Black in China</strong>, and how language breaks barriers</p><p>• Why <strong>China and the U.S. are more alike than we think</strong></p><p>Josh’s story moves from <strong>surviving Chicago</strong>, to <strong>obsessing over MIT at age 12</strong>, to becoming an Apple insider shaping devices billions of people use — and shows how much of what we assume about China collapses under firsthand experience.</p><p>If you think you understand China — this episode will challenge you.</p><h2><strong>About the Guest</strong></h2><p>Joshua Charles Woodward</p><p>• MIT Mechanical Engineering</p><p>• Former Apple Engineering Project Manager in Shenzhen</p><p>• Founder, <em>The Sparrows</em> — a China-based manufacturing consultancy</p>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://unknown-variables.captivate.fm/episode/mit-engineer-turned-apple-insider-exposes-what-americans-get-wrong-about-china]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">1368180b-9f41-4817-b6a0-fc55de00c0cf</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/c79b7bc4-7805-442e-93a6-27b5d1f4718b/IMG-8899.jpg"/><pubDate>Mon, 15 Dec 2025 06:00:00 -0500</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/1368180b-9f41-4817-b6a0-fc55de00c0cf.mp3" length="103933642" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>54:08</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType><itunes:episode>4</itunes:episode><podcast:episode>4</podcast:episode></item><item><title>This Viral Lawyer Is Democratizing the Law — One Conversation at a Time</title><itunes:title>This Viral Lawyer Is Democratizing the Law — One Conversation at a Time</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p><strong>This week on <em>Unknown Variables</em>, I sit down with Atlanta’s viral lawyer, Cody Randall — better known online as <em>ATL Cody</em> — whose mission is to democratize legal knowledge one sidewalk conversation at a time.</strong></p><p>With more than 1,000,000 followers across TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube, Cody has become a nationally recognized voice for people who can’t afford traditional legal help. From giving free advice on the Atlanta BeltLine with his dog, Reba, to confronting the brutal reality that justice often depends on wealth, Cody is redefining what it means to serve the public.</p><p>In this episode, we explore:</p><ul><li>Why legal help is so expensive — and who pays the real price</li><li>How social media can level the playing field for people in crisis</li><li>The surprising questions people ask him on the streets</li><li>When a lawyer should tell someone, “This might be a <em>you</em> problem”</li><li>How socioeconomic status shapes legal outcomes in America</li><li>The emotional labor of being both attorney <em>and</em> therapist</li><li>Why he believes free information can shift the power dynamic</li><li>His most meaningful BeltLine moments — and his biggest red flags</li></ul><br/><p>Cody’s honesty, humor, and pragmatism make this episode one of the most illuminating conversations we’ve had yet.</p><p><strong>The full episode is streaming now on all platforms.</strong></p><p>Watch the video version on YouTube or listen wherever you get your podcasts.</p>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>This week on <em>Unknown Variables</em>, I sit down with Atlanta’s viral lawyer, Cody Randall — better known online as <em>ATL Cody</em> — whose mission is to democratize legal knowledge one sidewalk conversation at a time.</strong></p><p>With more than 1,000,000 followers across TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube, Cody has become a nationally recognized voice for people who can’t afford traditional legal help. From giving free advice on the Atlanta BeltLine with his dog, Reba, to confronting the brutal reality that justice often depends on wealth, Cody is redefining what it means to serve the public.</p><p>In this episode, we explore:</p><ul><li>Why legal help is so expensive — and who pays the real price</li><li>How social media can level the playing field for people in crisis</li><li>The surprising questions people ask him on the streets</li><li>When a lawyer should tell someone, “This might be a <em>you</em> problem”</li><li>How socioeconomic status shapes legal outcomes in America</li><li>The emotional labor of being both attorney <em>and</em> therapist</li><li>Why he believes free information can shift the power dynamic</li><li>His most meaningful BeltLine moments — and his biggest red flags</li></ul><br/><p>Cody’s honesty, humor, and pragmatism make this episode one of the most illuminating conversations we’ve had yet.</p><p><strong>The full episode is streaming now on all platforms.</strong></p><p>Watch the video version on YouTube or listen wherever you get your podcasts.</p>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://unknown-variables.captivate.fm/episode/this-viral-lawyer-is-democratizing-the-law-one-conversation-at-a-time]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">10b2e631-8048-4f13-a330-6ea07fd3186d</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/c79b7bc4-7805-442e-93a6-27b5d1f4718b/IMG-8899.jpg"/><pubDate>Mon, 08 Dec 2025 06:00:00 -0500</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/10b2e631-8048-4f13-a330-6ea07fd3186d.mp3" length="141366054" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>01:13:38</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType><itunes:episode>3</itunes:episode><podcast:episode>3</podcast:episode></item><item><title>Professor Dave Explains The Biggest Lies on the Internet!</title><itunes:title>Professor Dave Explains The Biggest Lies on the Internet!</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p>In this episode, Anthony sits down with <strong>Dave Farina</strong>, better known as <strong>Professor Dave Explains</strong>, the science educator with over <strong>4 million subscribers</strong> who has taught more chemistry students than any professor on Earth — literally.</p><p>Together, they dive deep into:</p><h3><strong>🔥 Dave’s Origin Story</strong></h3><ul><li>How a touring rock drummer accidentally became one of the biggest science educators online</li><li>Why passive income for a struggling band turned into a global teaching mission</li><li>His “rock-star teacher” era and the unexpected aesthetic that shaped early O-Chem videos</li></ul><br/><h3><strong>📚 Building a Global Classroom</strong></h3><ul><li>The moment Dave realized he was reaching millions</li><li>Why students prefer YouTube to textbooks</li><li>How he balances tutorial content with hiring PhDs to write 101-level scripts in new fields</li><li>What makes a video <em>engaging</em> instead of just <em>accurate</em></li></ul><br/><h3><strong>⚔️ The Debunking Journey</strong></h3><ul><li>The inside story of Dave’s multi-year saga with <strong>James Tour</strong> and the debate at Rice</li><li>How Dave identifies charlatans, grifters, and bad actors</li><li>His two-tiered strategy: <strong>immunize the public</strong> + <strong>neutralize misinformation at the source</strong></li><li>The toll of daily online vitriol — and the rewarding messages from people who changed their minds</li></ul><br/><h3><strong>🦠 When Science Meets Family</strong></h3><ul><li>Anthony and Dave discuss navigating misinformation at family gatherings</li><li>Dave’s advice for Thanksgiving dinner:</li><li><strong>Ask gentle but probing questions — go full Socratic.</strong></li></ul><br/><h3><strong>🌎 Hope, Fear, and the Future of Science</strong></h3><ul><li>Why Dave is more pessimistic post-pandemic</li><li>The rise of institutionalized pseudoscience</li><li>A glimmer of hope: scientists finally stepping into the sci-comm arena</li><li>Why the next decade may determine whether truth survives online</li></ul><br/><h3><strong>🎶 Plus</strong></h3><ul><li>Dave’s long-delayed plan for a music comeback</li><li>The “Simulated Sun” project</li><li>What he hopes will happen by 2026</li></ul><br/>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In this episode, Anthony sits down with <strong>Dave Farina</strong>, better known as <strong>Professor Dave Explains</strong>, the science educator with over <strong>4 million subscribers</strong> who has taught more chemistry students than any professor on Earth — literally.</p><p>Together, they dive deep into:</p><h3><strong>🔥 Dave’s Origin Story</strong></h3><ul><li>How a touring rock drummer accidentally became one of the biggest science educators online</li><li>Why passive income for a struggling band turned into a global teaching mission</li><li>His “rock-star teacher” era and the unexpected aesthetic that shaped early O-Chem videos</li></ul><br/><h3><strong>📚 Building a Global Classroom</strong></h3><ul><li>The moment Dave realized he was reaching millions</li><li>Why students prefer YouTube to textbooks</li><li>How he balances tutorial content with hiring PhDs to write 101-level scripts in new fields</li><li>What makes a video <em>engaging</em> instead of just <em>accurate</em></li></ul><br/><h3><strong>⚔️ The Debunking Journey</strong></h3><ul><li>The inside story of Dave’s multi-year saga with <strong>James Tour</strong> and the debate at Rice</li><li>How Dave identifies charlatans, grifters, and bad actors</li><li>His two-tiered strategy: <strong>immunize the public</strong> + <strong>neutralize misinformation at the source</strong></li><li>The toll of daily online vitriol — and the rewarding messages from people who changed their minds</li></ul><br/><h3><strong>🦠 When Science Meets Family</strong></h3><ul><li>Anthony and Dave discuss navigating misinformation at family gatherings</li><li>Dave’s advice for Thanksgiving dinner:</li><li><strong>Ask gentle but probing questions — go full Socratic.</strong></li></ul><br/><h3><strong>🌎 Hope, Fear, and the Future of Science</strong></h3><ul><li>Why Dave is more pessimistic post-pandemic</li><li>The rise of institutionalized pseudoscience</li><li>A glimmer of hope: scientists finally stepping into the sci-comm arena</li><li>Why the next decade may determine whether truth survives online</li></ul><br/><h3><strong>🎶 Plus</strong></h3><ul><li>Dave’s long-delayed plan for a music comeback</li><li>The “Simulated Sun” project</li><li>What he hopes will happen by 2026</li></ul><br/>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://unknown-variables.captivate.fm/episode/professor-dave-explains-the-biggest-lies-on-the-internet]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">9ce37474-1280-4b6f-9306-8b5071b7133b</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/c79b7bc4-7805-442e-93a6-27b5d1f4718b/IMG-8899.jpg"/><pubDate>Mon, 01 Dec 2025 09:00:00 -0500</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/9ce37474-1280-4b6f-9306-8b5071b7133b.mp3" length="96815771" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>50:25</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType><itunes:episode>2</itunes:episode><podcast:episode>2</podcast:episode><podcast:alternateEnclosure type="video/youtube" title="Professor Dave Explains The Biggest Lies on the Internet!"><podcast:source uri="https://youtu.be/fT5Tla01OTE"/></podcast:alternateEnclosure></item><item><title>Why You Shouldn’t Blindly Trust Scientists — The System That Keeps Science Honest</title><itunes:title>Why You Shouldn’t Blindly Trust Scientists — The System That Keeps Science Honest</itunes:title><description><![CDATA[<p>Science is self-correcting — but that process can look messy from the outside. In this episode, Dr. Anthony Rojas sits down with <strong>Dr. Marshall Brennan</strong>, Editor-in-Chief of <em>Device</em> (Cell Press’s flagship applied science journal) and founding editor of <em>ChemRxiv</em>, to explore how scientific publishing really works.</p><p>They discuss what happens after a scientist hits “submit,” the role of peer review in maintaining integrity, and how the system handles mistakes, retractions, and even the rise of AI in research. From preprint servers to data falsification scandals, this is a behind-the-scenes look at how science polices itself — and why that’s a good thing.</p><h3>Topics Covered</h3><ul><li>Why you shouldn’t <em>blindly</em> trust scientists</li><li>How peer review protects the integrity of science</li><li>The purpose (and limits) of preprint servers</li><li>What actually happens when a paper gets retracted</li><li>How editors decide which papers get published</li><li>The impact of AI on research and peer review</li><li>Why trust in science depends on communication</li></ul><br/><p><strong>Dr. Marshall Brennan</strong></p><p>Editor-in-Chief, <em>Device</em> (Cell Press)</p><p>Founding Editor, <em>ChemRxiv</em></p><p>BlueSky: @organometallica</p><p>Hosted by <strong>Dr. Anthony Rojas</strong>, <em>Unknown Variables</em> explores the stories and ideas that shape science, innovation, and the people behind them.</p><p>Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts — and watch the full video version on YouTube</p>]]></description><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Science is self-correcting — but that process can look messy from the outside. In this episode, Dr. Anthony Rojas sits down with <strong>Dr. Marshall Brennan</strong>, Editor-in-Chief of <em>Device</em> (Cell Press’s flagship applied science journal) and founding editor of <em>ChemRxiv</em>, to explore how scientific publishing really works.</p><p>They discuss what happens after a scientist hits “submit,” the role of peer review in maintaining integrity, and how the system handles mistakes, retractions, and even the rise of AI in research. From preprint servers to data falsification scandals, this is a behind-the-scenes look at how science polices itself — and why that’s a good thing.</p><h3>Topics Covered</h3><ul><li>Why you shouldn’t <em>blindly</em> trust scientists</li><li>How peer review protects the integrity of science</li><li>The purpose (and limits) of preprint servers</li><li>What actually happens when a paper gets retracted</li><li>How editors decide which papers get published</li><li>The impact of AI on research and peer review</li><li>Why trust in science depends on communication</li></ul><br/><p><strong>Dr. Marshall Brennan</strong></p><p>Editor-in-Chief, <em>Device</em> (Cell Press)</p><p>Founding Editor, <em>ChemRxiv</em></p><p>BlueSky: @organometallica</p><p>Hosted by <strong>Dr. Anthony Rojas</strong>, <em>Unknown Variables</em> explores the stories and ideas that shape science, innovation, and the people behind them.</p><p>Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts — and watch the full video version on YouTube</p>]]></content:encoded><link><![CDATA[https://unknown-variables.captivate.fm/episode/why-you-shouldnt-blindly-trust-scientists-the-system-that-keeps-science-honest]]></link><guid isPermaLink="false">89a99904-d55c-42f2-b2bb-4b43acbeff96</guid><itunes:image href="https://artwork.captivate.fm/c79b7bc4-7805-442e-93a6-27b5d1f4718b/IMG-8899.jpg"/><pubDate>Mon, 01 Dec 2025 06:00:00 -0500</pubDate><enclosure url="https://episodes.captivate.fm/episode/89a99904-d55c-42f2-b2bb-4b43acbeff96.mp3" length="133187423" type="audio/mpeg"/><itunes:duration>01:09:22</itunes:duration><itunes:explicit>false</itunes:explicit><itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType><itunes:episode>1</itunes:episode><podcast:episode>1</podcast:episode><podcast:alternateEnclosure type="video/youtube" title="Should We Trust What Scientists Say?"><podcast:source uri="https://youtu.be/NlcIIVMAExA"/></podcast:alternateEnclosure></item></channel></rss>