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300 épisodes
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The Journal. The Wall Street Journal
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- Actualités
The most important stories about money, business and power. Hosted by Kate Linebaugh and Ryan Knutson, with Jessica Mendoza. The Journal is a co-production of Spotify and The Wall Street Journal.
Get show merch here: https://wsjshop.com/collections/clothing
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How Ukraine Built a Weapon to Control the Black Sea
Ukraine has sunk or damaged about two dozen Russian ships using a technical innovation: naval drones. WSJ’s James Marson unspools the story of the drones’ development and explores how they’re turning the tide in a key area of the war.
Further Reading:
- How Ukraine’s Naval Drones Turned the Tide in the Battle of the Black Sea
Further Listening:
- Ukraine Makes a Deal with Wall Street
- Ukraine's $30 Billion Problem
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The Unusual Economics of the Bilt Credit Card
Rent has long been an expense people wanted to pay on credit cards. In 2022, Wells Fargo launched a credit card with Bilt Technologies that allowed users to pay for rent, avoid processing fees and earn points. But the partnership is costing Wells Fargo millions. WSJ’s AnnaMaria Andriotis reports.
Further Listening:
-The Fight Over Your Credit Card Swipe
-The Deal That Could Change Credit Cards
Further Reading:
-Wells Fargo Bet on a Flashy Rent Credit Card. It Is Costing the Bank Dearly.
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Southwest Changed Flying. Can It Change Itself?
An activist investor says Southwest Airlines is stuck in the past. Elliott Investment Management says it has amassed a $1.9 billion stake, making it one of Southwest’s biggest shareholders and one of its most vocal critics. WSJ’s Alison Sider explains what Elliott wants, and why critics say some of the things that made Southwest great are now holding it back.
Further Reading:
- Southwest Changed Flying. Now It Can’t Change Fast Enough
- Meet the Southwest Superfans Who Don’t Want the Airline to Change
Further Listening:
- Ryanair: Cheap, Cramped and Making Its CEO a Fortune
- The Love Triangle Over Spirit Airlines
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Zyn pouches, ‘Zynfluencers’ and ‘the Zyndemic’
For about a decade, Zyn, a brand of nicotine pouch, was a niche product used by former smokers. But now it’s exploded in popularity and is hard to find on store shelves. WSJ’s Jennifer Maloney explains how Zyn achieved social media virality and has found itself in the middle of a culture war.
Further Reading:
- Zyn Nicotine Pouches Take Off—and Land in the Culture Wars
- Why America Is Running Low on Zyn Nicotine Pouches
Further Listening:
- The Juul Paradox
- The ‘Existential Threat’ Facing Big Tobacco
- How Puff Bar Became the Most Popular Vape for Kids
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Sam Altman's Opaque Investment Empire
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has a day job and a side gig. Only one of them makes him rich. WSJ's Berber Jin explains how Altman makes most of his wealth through investing in tech startups and how some of those startups' business relationships with OpenAI raise questions about conflicts of interest.
Further Reading:
- The Opaque Investment Empire Making OpenAI’s Sam Altman Rich
Further Listening:
- Artificial: The OpenAI Story
- Tesla's Multibillion-Dollar Pay Package for Elon Musk
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How ‘Conflict Gum’ Is Helping Fuel Sudan’s Civil War
Gum arabic is a widely used but little-known ingredient found in products like soda, gum, makeup and beer. But as WSJ’s Nicholas Bariyo and Alexandra Wexler report, the product has been used for a darker purpose: helping to fund the civil war in Sudan.Further Reading:
-How Soda, Chocolate and Chewing Gum Are Funding War in Sudan
-What Is Happening in Sudan? The Fighting Explained
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