Opinion



By Steven D. Levitt June 17, 2007, 12:17 am

Happy Father’s Day!

My dad claims he reads this blog. I guess now we will figure out whether he is telling the truth or not.

Here is an article from Discover magazine highlighting some of my father’s greatest contributions to science. (If you never click through anything on this blog, this is definitely the link to follow.)

Links to a few of his research papers are here, here, and here. (Proceed with caution.)

Happy Father’s Day, Dad.


11 Comments

  1. 1. June 17, 2007 12:44 am Link

    LOL!

    The date on the article is April 1st, so I read it thinking it was supposed to be a super geeky April Fools Trick.

    — nypragmatist
  2. 2. June 17, 2007 7:44 am Link

    LOL! “If you never click through anything on this blog… pull my finger?”

    A very witty read, indeed.

    Anyway, Happy Father’s Day to you, and he (and we!).

    — dbswinford
  3. 3. June 17, 2007 10:10 am Link

    Steven, you and your father look and smile really alike!;-)

    — Think_Thrice
  4. 4. June 17, 2007 3:08 pm Link

    Hi, Dad!

    Happy Father’s Day! : ))

    Linda

    — linda@yarnzilla
  5. 5. June 17, 2007 4:18 pm Link

    Hey Linda,

    Does your dad hang around on this blog that he will get the message? Maybe you should try a thing called telephone to be direct or if you are really keen on the internet maybe you can send an email. Get the message.

    Of course, I will be completely wrong if you happen to be Levitt’s sister. Then my sincere apologies for being rude cauz then your comment makes sense!

    — procrastinating_econ
  6. 6. June 17, 2007 4:21 pm Link

    Happy Father’s Day to Michael, Steve, Stephen and all the other dads who read this!

    — kah
  7. 7. June 17, 2007 4:35 pm Link

    I tried to read one of his papers, but then gave up before I reached the second paragraph. Instead I read this:

    http://www.heptune.com/farts.html

    — procrastinating_econ
  8. 8. June 17, 2007 4:37 pm Link

    That was a fascinating article! Thanks for posting it.

    (procrasting_econ: I’m pretty sure Linda is Levitt’s sister. He mentioned she ran a yarn store, and her email address was yarnzilla. Ergo, sister!)

    — scunning
  9. 9. June 18, 2007 9:22 am Link

    I always enjoy your posts and, as a father and grandfather, certainly this one.

    But, let me pick a small nit with you. “Whether OR NOT” is one of those expressions that really bothers me. In almost every case, you can leave out the “or not” and the idea is still clearly expressed. Try it.

    — Eagle
  10. 10. June 18, 2007 9:51 am Link

    Okay Steven can you crunch the numbers on this? What are the odds that I was walking randomly down the nonfiction aisle at the library and picked up your book Freakonomics this past week and the fact that my mother was just diagnosed this past weekend with Ulcerative Colitis and your Dad happens to be a gastroen-terologist? And I found this out by visiting your site because of my fascination with your book which I am almost done with :) Talk about Freaky! Happy Father’s Day to your Dad.

    — mtkiff
  11. 11. June 18, 2007 2:02 pm Link

    I do believe that Linda IS Steven’s sis. He has blogged about her on at least one occasion.

    — dschwartz

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Stephen J. Dubner is an author and journalist who lives in New York City.

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Steven D. Levitt is a professor of economics at the University of Chicago.

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Shopsin's (120 Essex Street) is a New York institution, a restaurant that began as a grocery store; its owner, Kenny Shopsin, is colorful, irascible, and talented. Shopsin's is famous for breakfast but also for its vast, unusual, common-sense menu. Shopsin has just written a book that is half cookbook and half memoir, entirely fascinating. I had never sat down and read a cookbook from cover to cover but that is what happened with Shopsin's book (co-written with Carolynn Carreno). It is called Eat Me. The introduction is a reprint of a New Yorker article by Calvin (Bud) Trillin, a Shopsin's regular. If you do go to the restaurant, do pay attention to Shopsin's idiosyncrasies, because he allegedly has a Soup-Nazi-like intolerance that may earn you permanent exile from his restaurant. (SJD)


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