
How to Make Your Own Luck (Update)
from Freakonomics Radio
by Freakonomics Radio + Stitcher
Published: Wed Jul 09 2025
Show Notes
Before she decided to become a poker pro, Maria Konnikova didn’t know how many cards are in a deck. But she did have a Ph.D. in psychology, a brilliant coach, and a burning desire to know whether life is driven more by skill or chance. She found some answers in poker — and she’s willing to tell us everything she learned.
- SOURCES:
- Maria Konnikova, author of The Biggest Bluff.
- RESOURCES:
- “Gender Differences in Performance Predictions: Evidence from the Cognitive Reflection Test,” by Patrick Ring, Levent Neyse, Tamas David-Barett, and Ulrich Schmidt (Frontiers in Psychology, 2016).
- “
The headwinds/tailwinds Asymmetry: An Availability Bias in Assessments of Barriers and Blessings,” by Shai Davidai and Thomas Gilovich (Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 2016). - “
TheTwo Settings of Kind and Wicked Learning Environments,” by Robin M. Hogarth, Tomás Lejarraga, and Emre Soyer (Current Directions in Psychological Science, 2015). - "
The Limits of Self-Control: Self-Control, Illusory Control, and Risky Financial Decision Making,” by Maria Konnikova (Columbia University, 2013). - “
Generalizedexpectancies for internal versus external control of reinforcement” by J.B. Rotter (Psychological Monographs: General and Applied, 1966).
- EXTRAS:
- TheBiggest Bluff: How I Learned to Pay Attention, Master Myself, and Win, by Maria Konnikova.
- Mastermind:How to Think Like Sherlock Holmes, by Maria Konnikova.
- TheConfidence Game, by Maria Konnikova.
- Theoryof Games and Economic Behavior, by John Von Neumann and Oskar Morgenstern.
- "ThisYear’s World Series Of Poker Is Different," by Risky Business with Nate Silver and Maria Konnikova (2025).