This is my second set of lectures by Professor Bart Ehrman on the New Testament, and I really preferred the first, which was just "The New Testament". Partly it's that there are fewer lectures, so subjects get shorter coverage (there's one lecture here on all four gospels - the other had one on each) but also I thought I'd learn more on how the New Testament came to be, and not just what it is. To some extent the later lectures covered that, but it's just not a lengthy story, and most of the time the best Ehrman could offer was that the books that were selected were selected because the people selecting them thought they were better theologically than the ones they didn't select. Oh, well, that clears things up. Anyway - get the first set - not this one (although Ehrman is funnier in this one).
I am working hard to actually finish these lectures, rather than just start a new one when I get bored, so at the moment I am down, in terms of started lectures to an introduction to Judaism, the American Mind (philosophy - incredibly boring to date), and decisionmaking (sort of interesting, but not by much). But there's a set of the history of London teed up next that I am really looking forward to. After that I'll be caught up (not counting the science one that I've never finished).