In this episode of 5 More Stocks to Feed the Next Bear and 5 Stocks The World Needs Right Now. Is the bear still hungry? Does the world still need them? Tune in to find out, Fools! To catch full episodes of all The Motley Fool's free podcasts, check out our podcast center. To get started investing, check out our quick-start guide to investing in stocks. A full transcript follows the video. This video was recorded on March 3, 2021. David Gardner: If you're going to pick stocks, particularly in public, but even in private, I highly suggest you keep score. It's a central tenet of this podcast and indeed of the company behind it, The Motley Fool, we pick stocks and we keep score, whether we liked the score or not. Because if we like the score, well, that's why we invest. There's nothing like the feeling of winning, consistent winning, sometimes spectacular winning, to bring a smile to your face and maybe some financial freedom to your life. That's why we win; but if you don't like the score, if you lost, what better wake-up call could you ask for? Because by keeping score, if you find you're not liking the score you're achieving, change things up. Maybe there's something as an investor you're not doing enough or maybe there's something sub-optimal that you're doing too often. In either case, you probably won't figure this out unless you're keeping score. Whether you won or whether you lost that game, that quarter, that year, that five-year period, you win by keeping score and learning. We need a score to learn. Without a score, the learning loop is broken. How many people out there, not just in the markets, but in society, are not learning all that they can because they're not holding themselves accountable? Dear Fools, let's not join their ranks -- and so we pick and we score. Then, one year later, two years later, three years later, even sometimes like this week's podcast, four years later, we check back in on the performance of the moves we made, the swings we took years ago to see how we did and what we can learn. Well, three Februaries ago, I picked