Food & Drink

One Night in Seattle with Malcolm Gladwell

The author, public speaker, and staff writer for ‘The New Yorker’ discusses why we’re so bad at spotting liars at a sold-out show in Benaroya Hall

By Linda Morgan September 24, 2019

GLADWELL_Credit-Celeste-Sloman

Malcolm Gladwell—if you haven’t read any of his recent best-sellers, you know him from The Tipping Point and Blink—is not interested in rehashing the election of Donald Trump. At least that’s what he told everyone on Wednesday evening at Benaroya Hall. Gladwell, who famously claimed, in his book, Outliers, that it takes ten thousand hours of practice to achieve mastery in any field, and turned the term “tipping point” into an overused cliché, spoke to a sold-out audience as part of Seattle Arts and Lectures’ new season.

What Gladwell is currently interested in is discussing his latest book, Talking to Strangers: What We Should Know About the People We Don’t Know, which explains why we often misunderstand, miscommunicate with, and what’s even worse, are deceived by people we meet.

Drawing examples from well-known ripped-from-the-headlines stories, he noted that Bernie Madoff turned out to be a bad guy who nearly everyone thought was a good guy; that Larry Nassar fooled all the athletes’ parents, even a mom who’s an MD; and how years ago, Fidel Castro pulled a very big one over on the CIA.

Were these liars brilliant manipulators, or as he says, “evil geniuses?” Not so much. “Bernie Madoff is not that bright,” said Gladwell. “He’s just a pretty good actor.” You don’t need superpowers to deceive people, Gladwell said. “You just have to be brazen.”

The truth is, we are simply not great at spotting liars. “Evolution has not selected us for that,” he said, quoting his colleague, Timothy Levine, a researcher on deception and professor at the University of Alabama. “We evolved to trust people. Only when the evidence gets overwhelming do we question them.”

That’s not actually a bad thing, Gladwell said. If we didn’t fundamentally trust people, how would we be able to put our kids on the bus each morning? To walk down the street at night? “You want to have faith in your fellow man…That means you will sometimes be deceived.”

Ultimately, deception happens to all of us. But according to Gladwell, the fact that we are so readily duped comes from a good place. “It’s not because we’re doing something wrong, but because we’re doing something right.”

Follow Us

Finding Place in Pictures

Finding Place in Pictures

Artist Sky Hopinka’s first solo museum exhibit in the northwest showcases his creative approach to language and identity

“I had cassette tapes and workbooks, but it was hard because I was living in Washington, and my tribal language has roots in Wisconsin,” Sky Hopinka says. Learning alone, he could listen to prerecorded Hocak phrases and practice writing letters and words, but an essential component was missing — another person to speak with. Photo

Feeding Ghosts to Free Them

Feeding Ghosts to Free Them

Artist Tessa Hulls creates a revealing graphic novel to help her deal with childhood trauma

Seattle artist Tessa Hulls’ new graphic novel Feeding Ghosts is a deeply stirring narrative of loss, mental illness, and intergenerational trauma. She says that she wrote it to answer this question: What broke my family? Much of the book is about repetition, and how three generations of women in Hulls’ family were emotionally crippled by

Seattle Launches Public Poetry Campaign

Seattle Launches Public Poetry Campaign

Short poems on sustainability will crop up across the city in April

Poetry installations will appear across Seattle starting April 1 as part of the city’s Public Poetry campaign...

Beauty and Diversity in Art

Beauty and Diversity in Art

Seattle's art scene is embracing more voices and viewpoints than ever

Seattle has become something of a hot spot for diversity in the arts...