Tuesday, July 28, 2020

Nate Silver visits MIT (or, do witches exist in real life)

Nate Silver visits MIT (or, do witches exist in real life) I am what one might call a professional blogger, or what a liberal arts graduate might call an artiste, or what reality might call an unemployed college freshman.  And the best part of being a prufesssional riter besides the multi-dozen dollar salary, and the luxurious corner office dorm room, and the stubborn ExpressionEngine blogging platform with which I am currently wrestling is the freedom to work in my underpants. Im living the high life, man. But despite the fact that I am totally in denial about blogging not being a real job, some people are professional bloggers.  And famed statistician Nate Silver is one of them. Nate Silver needs no introduction, unless of course youve never heard of him before, in which case Ill attempt to do him justice in a few lines.  He is: a prediction wizard and the creator of FiveThirtyEight, the stunningly accurate statistical model that correctly called all 50 states in the 2012 presidential election.  In 2008, he got 49 right.  (and, of course, theres the other measure of his success on Election Day) the guy behind possibly the most important political blog in the world (his FiveThirtyEight model has been so influential that hes said  he might actually have to stop blogging in the future, for fear of skewing election results) a statistician who moved from consulting to poker to baseball to politics a sassy Twitter fiend not afraid to feud with political pundits who are full of hot air (*cough* Joe Scarborough) somewhat of an Internet phenomenon, with Nate Silver jokes sprouting all over the place (When Alexander Graham Bell invented the telephone, he had 3 missed calls from Nate Silver.  Nate Silvers samples have only a median and a mode; because no number would be mean to Nate Silver. Nate Silver doesnt call the election wrong; the wrong election was held.).  Even Obama got in on the fun. But its not just that FiveThirtyEight was so accurate; after all, other models during the election also did very well, within 2-3 points of Silvers.  Its that throughout his whole career, from baseball to Washington, he has stood strong in the face of not just criticism but also increasingly ridiculous homophobic attacks (he is gay).  Its that one unassuming man and his mathematical model predicting a 90.1% chance of an Obama victory beat the entire established political news media that clung to its storyline of the race being a tossup.  And by beating them in such an emphatic way, it wasnt just a triumph for Nate Silver; it was a public victory for scientific rationalism in a world that could use a lot more of it. Oh, and he might be a witch [source: IsNateSilverAWitch.com] All of this is a very long-winded way to say that Nate Silver is as close to a rock star as you can get in the world of statistics and politics, and he visited MIT today, and it was awesome.  It was also packed.  There were so many people that not only was the auditorium filled, but the overflow room where people watched the livestream of the event was also standing room only. Someone noted that more people showed up for this political statistician than for a movie star a few months ago.  Which, as my friend Isaac quipped, is totally MIT. Luckily, I was able to snag a seat near the front, right behind the real press. Some of my favorite lines of the night: His reaction to Obama winning: I didnt f this up!  Now I get to troll Politico! Empiricism. Its a lot better than trying to count yard signs. I’m very sympathetic to the academic viewpoint that it should be open source. But I don’t have a tenure track position. (on why he hasnt open-sourced FiveThirtyEight) Its easy to compete with stupid. (on why hes been able to beat the pundits so easily at their own game) Romney was an interesting experiment in what happens if you have no long term consistency at all in your policies. Q: Did your parents think you were insane when you quit your consulting job to go analyze baseball? A: Well, most of my income at the time anyways came from playing poker during work, so I dont think they were too worried. The New York Times is like the Yankees.  Lots of people hate them, but everyone pays attention to what they do. Someone already registered FiveThirtyNine, so Im really against Puerto Rico getting electoral votes. Ive been flying a lot lately, and Im really excited that tomorrows March 1st.  New in-flight magazines! All politicians bullsh from scant evidence. The professionalisation of politics means the average tenure of a senator is 18 years or something, on average. So you get people who are more sophisticated at manipulating public opinion. To some extent politics has become too efficient for its own good, and long term problems are getting neglected. (on the problems facing politics today) You get more vitriol from political people. People in sports don’t take themselves quite as seriously. People have a sense of humour. There’s not much sense in political news coverage about whether a story is important. There’s too much play by play. When you only have an election every four years, it’s difficult. (answering my question about what the transition from baseball to politics was like) If youre making a true prediction, youre putting your opinion on the line.  Youre testing if your perceptions have a correlation to reality. (on why pundits opinions arent worth very much) Also, I noticed that Nate likes to wave his arms a lot.  Either that, or he was casting a witch spell on the audience: So, the main takeaways from the event: If you want to be like Nate, you should probably play a lot of hooky during your day job and win money at online poker. Trust statistical analysis over gut feeling, and youll win a lot of bets. Dont listen to the pundits. Really, dont listen to them. To all the applicants awaiting decisions: May the odds be ever in your favor, if Nate Silver says they are.

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