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Plain English with Derek Thompson

The Healthiest "Super-Agers" Have One Thing in Common, According to a 25-Year Study

Plain English with Derek Thompson

The Ringer

News Commentary, News

4.81.8K Ratings

🗓️ 27 August 2025

⏱️ 40 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Memory is the glue of life. Without it, our focus softens, our experience of the world blurs, and our identities melt away. But as people age, their memory declines. Many billions of dollars have been spent to understand the biological basis of dementia and to devise a cure. In most cases, they have failed spectacularly. But what if, rather than study the brains of people with advanced memory loss, we instead studied the brains of people with the opposite condition: extraordinary memory and brain health in old age? For the past few decades, Sandra Weintraub, a scientist at Northwestern University, has been part of a team studying the brains of "super-agers," people 80 and older who have the memory ability of people in their 50s. In a new paper published this year to considerable fanfare, she found that super-agers didn't have much in common. They didn't share a diet, or an exercise regimen, or a set of maladies or medications. One thing, however, united them: their social relationships. Today's guest is Sandra Weintraub. We talk about the science of memory and the brain and the protective benefit of social connection for our minds and ourselves. If you have questions, observations, or ideas for future episodes, email us at [email protected]. Host: Derek Thompson Guest: Dr. Sandra Weintraub Producer: Devon Baroldi Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

As the 21st century was getting underway, Hollywood released a series of films that were daring, entertaining, and absolutely unmissable.

0:09.0

Films like, 25th Hour, Bring It On, Zodiac, and No Country for Old Men.

0:15.0

They arrived during the George W. Bush era, a chaotic time in America.

0:19.0

Think 9-11, Katrina, the mortgage crisis. After the Bush era, a chaotic time in America. Think 9-11, Katrina, the mortgage crisis. After the Bush

0:24.5

years, the country would never be the same, and neither would Hollywood. I'm Brian Raftery,

0:31.9

and in my new limited series, Mission Accomplished, we're going to dive into some of the biggest

0:35.9

movies of the Bush years, and look at what they said about the state of the nation.

0:39.3

We'll go behind the scenes with filmmakers and experts

0:42.3

and relive some of your favorite movies from the early 2000s,

0:45.3

from Donnie Darko to Michael Clayton, from Anchorman to Iron Man.

0:49.3

So slip on your sketchers, dig out your old Nokia,

0:52.3

and join me from Mission Accomplished, starting August 12th on the big picture feed.

1:01.0

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1:12.0

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1:14.1

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1:19.7

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1:21.7

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1:26.7

managing vendor risk.

1:28.3

Banta makes it quick, easy, and scalable.

1:30.6

And I'm not to say that because I work here.

1:32.5

Get started today at banta.com.

1:35.0

Today, the science of superagers.

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