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by Alexi Horowitz-Ghazi on (#4CK99)
We follow the founder of f*ckjerry and comedian Jim Mendrinos into the world of comedy. Where a whole series of informal sanctions are deployed to protect jokes from theft.
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NPR: Planet Money
Link | https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=93559255 |
Feed | http://www.npr.org/rss/rss.php?id=93559255 |
Copyright | Copyright 2024 NPR - For Personal Use Only |
Updated | 2025-04-04 14:02 |
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by Stacey Vanek Smith on (#4CJPK)
Happy Jobs Friday! The economy is still adding jobs, unemployment remains low, and wage growth is fine. It's all good...right?
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by Cardiff Garcia on (#4CGC8)
A recent paper examines the motivations behind Xi Jinping's corruption crackdown and arrives at a surprising answer.
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by Alex Mayyasi on (#4CEE8)
Joe Bankman, professor at Stanford, figured out a way to make filing your taxes easy and painless. Then the tax lobby found out about it.
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by Stacey Vanek Smith on (#4CE2Q)
Global demand for hazelnuts is growing, thanks to the popularity of products like Nutella. So it should be a great time to be in the hazelnut business... but there's one big problem.
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by Stacey Vanek Smith on (#4CBB2)
Allison Schrager is an economist and journalist who visited a number of brothels to examine how we understand and deal with risk.
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on (#4CAA0)
We answer a timeless parenting question with hard numbers and a bizarro story about a sad, office-dwelling fairy.
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by Greg Rosalsky on (#4CA9Y)
Companies are increasingly using algorithms to set their prices, but is that giving them too much power over consumers?
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by Stacey Vanek Smith on (#4C950)
The Conference Board's Consumer Confidence Index is one of the indicators retailers, policy-makers and manufacturers use to gauge the health of the economy. But what is the index, exactly?
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by Stacey Vanek Smith on (#4C3XR)
On the one hand, you could say the economy's looking rocky; on the other hand you could argue it's in good health. We lay out both sides.
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by Kenny Malone on (#4C3XT)
Some colleges are offering students a new way to pay. It's not a scholarship. It's not a loan. It's called an income share agreement. It's like the students are selling stock in themselves.
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by Stacey Vanek Smith on (#4C1HP)
Today, answers to your questions on dry cleaner pricing, and the comparative investment virtues of the housing and stock markets.
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by Ramtin Arablouei on (#4BZM6)
The story behind two sneaky forces that drive us to buy more products, more often: Planned obsolescence and psychological obsolescence.
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by Stacey Vanek Smith on (#4BZ8J)
Gabriela Saade is a 27-year-old economist in Caracas, Venezuela. Yesterday, she walked us through Venezuela's staggering numbers. Today, we walk a mile in her shoes.
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by Stacey Vanek Smith on (#4BWRZ)
The crisis in Venezuela continues to deepen, with nationwide blackouts hitting the country again this week. Today, we talk to a Caracas-based economist about what's happening in her country.
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by Greg Rosalsky on (#4BVNE)
Recent studies suggest we're not witnessing the dawn of a new gig economy. What accounts for the resilience of traditional employment?
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by Pamela Boykoff on (#4BT88)
Spotify recently launched in India, but that path was long and complicated. We take the experience of Spotify and use it as a lens to look at why breaking into India is so difficult.
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by Karen Duffin on (#4BN2G)
There's an entire, powerful industry pushing behind the scenes for better police behavior--not with protests or picket signs, but spreadsheets and actuaries.
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by Stacey Vanek Smith on (#4BMT7)
The latest edition of "Overrated, Underrated" with economist Tyler Cowen.
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by Stacey Vanek Smith on (#4BJGG)
All shares of stock are not created equal. Stock can come in different classes now: Class A, Class B. Some of this stock comes with superpowers... and some of it comes with almost no power at all.
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by David Kestenbaum on (#4BGAE)
Today's show is about the fickle market for art. What makes a dead shark cost $12 million, and a photo of steel wool that looks like a tornado cost only $1,265?
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by Mariana Zuñiga on (#4BG3P)
Venezuelans are starving because there isn't enough food. But the country has so much fertile land, water, and sunshine — shouldn't it be a farmer's paradise?
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by Sally Herships on (#4BDPD)
Your average cup of coffee is getting more expensive — but the price for coffee beans is going down. How can that be?
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by Greg Rosalsky on (#4BCCE)
The renowned economist and former Obama adviser Alan Krueger died this past weekend. We look at his enormous legacy.
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by Stacey Vanek Smith on (#4BB7B)
Should you take out a student loan? Jill Schlesinger, author of "The Dumb Things Smart People Do With Their Money," does the math.
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by Stacey Vanek Smith on (#4B5T2)
The scandal that dominated the news this week involved parents paying hundreds of thousands of dollars to get their kids into the right college. But what is a college degree really worth?
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by Nick Fountain on (#4B5FE)
When an American company named ABRO learns their goods are being counterfeited in China, they pursue lawsuits, extraditions, sting operations and more to make it stop.
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by Sally Herships on (#4B368)
A lot of money is pouring into the global diamond industry, but demand for diamonds has been less than lustrous of late. But, at the same time, money has been pouring into the industry. Why?
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by Cardiff Garcia on (#4B0PY)
Economics looks at how we make decisions in a world of scarce resources. What happens when the scarce resource is our attention?
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by Stacey Vanek Smith on (#4AZYR)
The internet was supposed to get rid of middlemen--but instead there are more than ever. Today on the show, we look into how one sneaky strategy, dropship arbitrage, is taking over Amazon and Ebay.
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by Cardiff Garcia on (#4AXYW)
Dollar stores thrived during the economic downturn--opening thousands of locations across the country. They were recession-proof...but are they recovery-proof?
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by Greg Rosalsky on (#4AX77)
It's Match Week, when med students apply for residencies. An economist argues this residency system is a key reason why U.S. doctors are paid around twice much as doctors in other rich nations.
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on (#4AWRQ)
If vodka is by definition colorless, odorless and tasteless, then why are some vodkas so much more expensive than others?
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by Ethan Brooks on (#4AVHW)
Leaving the EU is unprecedented, but leaving a large trading bloc is not.
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by Jacob Goldstein on (#4AP7Q)
Cartels in Mexico aren't just trafficking in drugs anymore; they're also stealing fuel. The Mexican Government is taking action to cut them off. But it's costing a lot of money, and lives.
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by Cardiff Garcia on (#4AP2M)
The most common jobs for men and the most common jobs for women tend to be different — and this separation has big effects for everyone.
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by Stacey Vanek Smith on (#4AKH2)
Technology is bringing us closer together, but it's also making the world a more unequal place.
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by Kenny Malone on (#4AH91)
The Starbury shoe was affordable and endorsed by NBA All-Star Stephon Marbury. The big challenge was convincing the world that a cheap sneaker wasn't a crappy sneaker.
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by Stacey Vanek Smith on (#4AH2D)
Most states in the U.S. have a sales tax on menstrual products. Some states have repealed this so-called Tampon Tax, on the grounds that it's unfair to women. But the repeals come at a cost.
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by Stacey Vanek Smith on (#4AEJD)
Trade negotiators from China and the U.S. seem to be closing in on a deal. But it's not clear what the terms will be.
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by Greg Rosalsky on (#4AE9V)
Oregon just passed a rent control law. Economists have seen this movie before—and they are not eager to see the sequel.
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by Pamela Boykoff on (#4ABZS)
Five things that a lot of people get wrong about the world's second largest economy - and what robots and zombies have to do with it.
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by Kenny Malone on (#4A6VH)
How the Federal Reserve won its independence, and then held on during an attack—a physical attack—by the President of the United States.
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by Stacey Vanek Smith on (#4A6NY)
"Neoliberalism" has become a loaded term.
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by Cardiff Garcia on (#4A47B)
Tomorrow is the day the U.S. hits its debt limit. What happens if Congress doesn't raise the debt ceiling?
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by Tegan Wendland on (#4A29T)
New Orleans has become a battleground for Airbnb. Preservationists want to save the city. Landlords want to open it up. Can either win without destroying the other?
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by Paddy Hirsch on (#4A1PP)
Americans have more consumer debt, and they're also in better financial health. How can that be?
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by Stacey Vanek Smith on (#49Z63)
Both video games and television have radically improved in the past two decades. Have they also changed the way Americans spend their time?
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by Greg Rosalsky on (#49XWA)
Senator Elizabeth Warren proposes a new kind of U.S. tax policy: a wealth tax. But the policy faces serious hurdles, including lessons from a failed experiment in Europe and a constitutional challenge
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by Cardiff Garcia on (#49WP7)
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau announced payday regulations would be delayed. We look at the business of payday loans, and what it's like to get into a debt cycle with payday lenders.
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