The Unpopular View with Michael Brown

Sixty years of winning. Four franchises. More championships than any city has a right to expect. But has Boston's run of dominance — from the Celtics of Russell to the Patriots of Brady — turned healthy pride into something the rest of the country finds insufferable?
CNBC senior correspondent Alex Sherman joins the conversation. He covers the business of sports and culture at the highest level, with sit-downs alongside figures like Tom Brady and Mariano Rivera. But this isn't just a professional booking — it's a conversation his father would have been in the room for.
Before we judge what Boston fans have become, we have to understand what they went through. The Bambino curse. Bucky Dent. Buckner. Decades of heartbreak before the dynasty. Does that history earn the arrogance — or does it just explain it?

Segment 1 of The Unpopular View.


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What is The Unpopular View with Michael Brown?

Are foreign aid, climate policy, and global governance actually working — or are they propping up a broken system? The Unpopular View cuts through partisan noise with evidence-based analysis on the politics and economics of international development, foreign aid reform, climate policy, natural resource governance, and global corruption.

Host Michael Brown is a social and environmental risk analyst and former NGO founder with three decades of field experience across more than 35 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the Pacific. He has worked on corruption investigations, community-led development, conservation, mining governance, and climate mitigation — on the ground, not from a think tank.

Each episode combines first-hand field stories with hard data to challenge policy myths from both left and right. Topics include USAID and foreign aid accountability, the Washington consensus, resource extraction in the Global South, Africa's demographic and economic future, climate finance, and why outsider-driven development keeps failing communities.

If you follow global affairs, international development, foreign policy, or geopolitics — and want analysis that goes beyond the headlines — this is the show for you. Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, or wherever you listen.