The Journal. The Wall Street Journal
-
- News
-
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
-
Live from Seattle: A Weird Economy + Election = ??
If the upcoming presidential election could be summed up by a song, what would it be? And will voters cast their ballots based on a bright future or a gloomy one? In a live-taping before an audience at the Cascade PBS Ideas Festival, Kate Linebaugh and Ryan Knutson sat down with WSJ political reporter Molly Ball to discuss these topics and more. To watch the video, check out the episode on Spotify.
Further Reading:
-Biden and Trump, In Two Speeches, Speak to Two Visions of America
-Arizona is Booming, But Restless Voters Feel Downbeat About Economy
Further Listening:
-Trump Allies Draft Plans to Rein in the Fed
-Why the Fed Is Steering Away From Rate Cuts
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices -
North Korea’s Propaganda Mastermind
For six decades, one man has been largely responsible for creating North Korea’s propaganda machine: Kim Ki Nam. He served all three North Korean dictators and is the architect of many of the myths that have helped to keep the Kim family in power. Last week, Kim Ki Nam died at the age of 94. WSJ’s Timothy Martin reports on his controversial legacy.
Further Reading:
-The Original Mastermind Behind North Korea’s Cult-of-Personality Propaganda Dies
-Kim Jong Un’s New Look Is More Man Than Superhuman
Further Listening:
-How North Korea’s Hacker Army Stole $3 Billion in Crypto
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices -
How FTX Found Billions to Repay Customers
When FTX collapsed into bankruptcy in 2022, many customers never thought they'd see their money again. But FTX's assets have rebounded. WSJ’s Andrew Scurria unpacks why FTX will have more than enough money to fully repay customers and many creditors.
Further Reading:
- Crypto Exchange FTX Is the Rare Financial Blowup That Will Repay Victims in Full
Further Listening:
- The Trial of Crypto’s Golden Boy
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices -
Trillion Dollar Shot, Episode 1: Birth of a Blockbuster
Before Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro and Zepbound, there was Lotte Bjerre Knudsen.
In the 1990s, the young scientist at the Danish drug company Novo Nordisk was trying to unlock the key to a new technology for treating Type 2 diabetes. To her bosses, Lotte’s project, which focused on a hormone called GLP-1, looked like a distraction.
But as Lotte fought to save her diabetes project from the chopping block, she couldn’t have imagined how much of an impact her breakthrough would have. Her work would pave the way for a hit drug called Ozempic. And it would unleash a new class of blockbuster drugs, pitting two companies in a race to become the world’s first trillion-dollar pharmaceutical company by market cap.
Listen to Part 1 of “Trillion Dollar Shot” now.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices -
A Lawyer Says He Doesn't Need Help for Psychosis. His Family Disagrees.
WSJ’s Julie Wernau wanted to test a hypothesis: are there more mentally ill homeless people now, compared to before the pandemic? That question led her to Rob Dart. Once a successful lawyer, in 2022 he went into a downward spiral, which his family has not been able to stop despite their best efforts.
Further Reading:
- A Lawyer Abandoned Family and Career to Follow the Voices in His Head
- A Lawyer’s Slide Into Psychosis Was Captured in a WSJ Profile. He Tells Us His Story.
Further Listening:
- America's Maternal Mental Health Crisis
- Evicted on Wood Street: California's Housing Crisis
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices -
Can Chinese Customers Rescue Starbucks?
Starbucks has a problem: Sales at U.S. stores have fallen sharply and now the company is looking to China, its second biggest market, to boost its revenue. But as WSJ’s Spencer Jakab explains, increased competition there is making that a tall order.
Further Reading:
-Starbucks Is Running Out of Americans to Drink Its Expensive Coffee
-The Furious Race for the Future of Coffee
Further Listening:
-The Underdog Coffee Bean That’s Making a Comeback
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Customer Reviews
Good podcast but
I listen to these pretty religiously. However theres reporter with a bad accent/nasally and make it unable to finish.
Okay reporting, terrible listening experience
Too often, these episodes cover content in WSJ without adding much value. And far too often, the reporters invited to speak are nasal, grating, vocal frying…they just aren’t someone I want to listen to for 15-20 minutes. They have voices well suited to print media and it shows.
Never miss this podcast
Fantastic reporting