• Will It Last? Has Boston’s Sports Identity Drifted Too Far From Its Roots?
    Jun 10 2026

    Every dynasty eventually faces the same question: what was it actually built on?

    Boston's sports story is told as one of loyal suffering rewarded — decades of heartbreak, then a golden era earned by a faithful fan base. But look closer. Bill Russell won eleven titles in a half-empty Garden. Willie O'Ree endured two seasons of racial abuse before his number was retired sixty years later. Pumpsie Green and Earl Wilson integrated the last team in baseball while Fenway drew 306 people.

    The suffering was real. But who was doing the suffering — and who were the teams actually playing for?

    Drawing a sharp parallel to his work in remote Congolese forests, where top-down conservation failed and indigenous communities held the answers all along, the host asks CNBC's Alex Sherman the question Boston fans least want to sit with: has the city's proud sports identity ever really matched who showed up, who they showed up for — and has any of that genuinely changed?


    Segment 3 of The Unpopular View.

    Disclaimer:
    The Unpopular View with Michael Brown is independently owned and produced by Michael Brown. PulsePoint Media Atelier LLC serves solely as the distribution and promotional partner for this podcast. All content, opinions, and intellectual property rights remain the exclusive property of the creator(s).


    No part of this podcast may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.


    © 2026 Michael Brown & The Unpopular View. All rights reserved.

    Show More Show Less
    25 mins
  • The Hubris Question: Have Boston’s Sports Expectations Turned Into Entitlement?
    Jun 3 2026

    Hubris has toppled governments, derailed foreign policy, and wasted billions in development aid. So what happens when it takes over a sports city?

    For decades, Boston fans wore their suffering like a badge. The Curse. The heartbreak. The close calls. Then the wins started coming — and didn't stop. Russell. Orr. Brady. The 2004 Red Sox. At some point, expectation quietly became entitlement.

    CNBC's Alex Sherman and host dig into the question Boston fans don't want asked: have New England's most passionate supporters become exactly what they always despised — the Yankees fan, just with a different accent and a better origin story?

    The same top-down arrogance that failed in boardrooms and war rooms may have found a home in the bleachers. Winning changes cities. The question is whether Boston got changed for better or worse.


    Segment 2 of The Unpopular View.

    Disclaimer:
    The Unpopular View with Michael Brown is independently owned and produced by Michael Brown. PulsePoint Media Atelier LLC serves solely as the distribution and promotional partner for this podcast. All content, opinions, and intellectual property rights remain the exclusive property of the creator(s).


    No part of this podcast may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.


    © 2026 Michael Brown & The Unpopular View. All rights reserved.

    Show More Show Less
    22 mins
  • Sixty Years, Three Bostons: From Bambino Curse to Boston Sports Dynasties – Has It Made the City Arrogant?
    May 27 2026

    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.

    Disclaimer:
    The Unpopular View with Michael Brown is independently owned and produced by Michael Brown. PulsePoint Media Atelier LLC serves solely as the distribution and promotional partner for this podcast. All content, opinions, and intellectual property rights remain the exclusive property of the creator(s).


    No part of this podcast may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.


    © 2026 Michael Brown & The Unpopular View. All rights reserved.

    Show More Show Less
    23 mins
  • Moving From the Aid Industrial Complex to Localization That Works
    May 21 2026

    Every development program claims its goal is to leave. None of them do.


    In the 1960s, the Green Revolution turned India from a country facing famine into a food exporter — and then it ended, because it succeeded. Nothing since has come close. Not because the problems are harder, but because the system was never built for exit. It was built for continuation. Another proposal cycle. Another three-year project. Poverty nudged down enough to justify the next budget request.


    DOGE was wrong to destroy it. But the system it destroyed wasn't working either.


    The only development model worth funding is one designed to make itself unnecessary. That means communities negotiating their own terms, building their own capacity, and eventually not needing outside money at all. It means replacing three-year cycles with 15- to 20-year commitments. And it means replacing the hubris at the core — the assumption that outsiders know best — with the one thing that actually works: letting communities lead.


    Episode 3 of The Outsider's Hubris.


    Disclaimer:
    The Unpopular View with Michael Brown is independently owned and produced by Michael Brown. PulsePoint Media Atelier LLC serves solely as the distribution and promotional partner for this podcast. All content, opinions, and intellectual property rights remain the exclusive property of the creator(s).


    No part of this podcast may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.


    © 2026 Michael Brown & The Unpopular View. All rights reserved.

    Show More Show Less
    25 mins
  • Where International Development Has Succeeded or Failed
    May 20 2026

    AIDS arrested. Ebola contained. Malaria deaths cut in half. That wasn't charity — it was the international system protecting everyone, including Americans. You don't defund the firebreak while the forest is still burning.


    But if this system can deliver vaccines to millions of children, why can't it secure land tenure for a single farming community?


    Outside of health, the record is much harder to defend. Top-down agriculture programs that distorted markets. Governance efforts that may have made corruption worse. Conservation and Nature-based Solutions designed by outsiders, funded by outsiders — with communities displaced from their own land and promised trickle-down benefits that rarely materialize.


    The labels change. The paradigm doesn't. Same hubris — the assumption that Washington, London, and Geneva know best — just wearing a different suit. That doesn't build resilience. It builds dependency. By design.


    Episode 2 of The Outsider's Hubris.

    Disclaimer:
    The Unpopular View with Michael Brown is independently owned and produced by Michael Brown. PulsePoint Media Atelier LLC serves solely as the distribution and promotional partner for this podcast. All content, opinions, and intellectual property rights remain the exclusive property of the creator(s).


    No part of this podcast may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.


    © 2026 Michael Brown & The Unpopular View. All rights reserved.

    Show More Show Less
    18 mins
  • The Aid Industrial Complex - Benefit or Problem for the Global South?
    May 13 2026

    In 1953, the CIA overthrew Iran's elected government because outsiders decided they knew best. In 1961, Western intelligence helped assassinate Patrice Lumumba in the Congo — same logic, different method. The Cold War ended. The instinct didn't.


    Today, $200 billion a year flows into global poverty programs. Less than ten cents of every dollar reaches the grassroots organizations that actually know what their communities need. The rest feeds donors, NGOs, and contractors — a system built to reassure institutions in Washington and Geneva, not farmers and teachers on the ground.


    When DOGE shut down USAID, most Americans shrugged. But the people who dismantled it never asked what was worth saving. That's not reform. That's the same hubris wearing a different suit.


    This is Episode 1 of The Outsider's Hubris — a 3 part podcast with our guest Ali Mokdad we will discuss why the international development system keeps failing, and what it would take to actually fix it.


    Disclaimer:
    The Unpopular View with Michael Brown is independently owned and produced by Michael Brown. PulsePoint Media Atelier LLC serves solely as the distribution and promotional partner for this podcast. All content, opinions, and intellectual property rights remain the exclusive property of the creator(s).


    No part of this podcast may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.


    © 2026 Michael Brown & The Unpopular View. All rights reserved.

    Show More Show Less
    18 mins
  • Africa's Demographic Surge: Youth, Technology, and the Race Between Transformation and Instability
    Apr 29 2026

    Episode 9 of The Unpopular View, Michael Brown, is a the conclusion of this 3/3 sit down with longtime colleague Koffi Kouakou in a first “North–South dialogue” on African realities, American assumptions, and the China factor. They challenge the “single story” narrative about Africa, unpack what standard metrics miss about everyday life and informal economies, and explore how China’s visible infrastructure and technology investments are reshaping the West’s role on the continent.

    Disclaimer:
    The Unpopular View with Michael Brown is independently owned and produced by Michael Brown. PulsePoint Media Atelier LLC serves solely as the distribution and promotional partner for this podcast. All content, opinions, and intellectual property rights remain the exclusive property of the creator(s).


    No part of this podcast may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.


    © 2026 Michael Brown & The Unpopular View. All rights reserved.

    Show More Show Less
    21 mins
  • Critical Minerals and the New Resource Competition: Africa's Leverage or Another Extraction Cycle?
    Apr 23 2026

    Episode 8 of The Unpopular View, Michael Brown, is a part 2/3 of his sits down with longtime colleague Koffi Kouakou in a first “North–South dialogue” on African realities, American assumptions, and the China factor. They challenge the “single story” narrative about Africa, unpack what standard metrics miss about everyday life and informal economies, and explore how China’s visible infrastructure and technology investments are reshaping the West’s role on the continent.

    Disclaimer:
    The Unpopular View with Michael Brown is independently owned and produced by Michael Brown. PulsePoint Media Atelier LLC serves solely as the distribution and promotional partner for this podcast. All content, opinions, and intellectual property rights remain the exclusive property of the creator(s).


    No part of this podcast may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.


    © 2026 Michael Brown & The Unpopular View. All rights reserved.

    Show More Show Less
    25 mins