Marketplace (radio program)

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Marketplace
File:Marketplace print.png
Other names Marketplace Morning Report; Marketplace Weekend; Marketplace Tech Report
Running time ca. 30 min.
Country  United States
Language(s) English
Home station USC, Los Angeles
Syndicates American Public Media
Host(s) Kai Ryssdal
David Brancaccio
Lizzie O'Leary
Ben Johnson
Creator(s) Jim Russell
Director(s) Millie Jefferson
Exec. producer(s) Deborah Clark
Recording studio Los Angeles, California
Air dates 1989 to present
Audio format Monaural
Opening theme B.J. Leiderman[1] (composer)
Other themes "Stormy Weather", "We're in the Money", "It Don't Mean a Thing"
Website www.marketplace.org
Podcast Podcast

Marketplace is a radio program that focuses on business, the economy, and events that influence them. Hosted by Kai Ryssdal, the show is produced and distributed by American Public Media, in association with the University of Southern California. With a weekly audience of more than eight million, Marketplace is the most popular business program in America–more popular than those of CNBC, Bloomberg or Nightly Business Report.[2] Marketplace began in 1989, created by Jim Russell.[3] Marketplace is produced in Los Angeles with bureaus in New York; Washington, D.C.; Portland, Oregon; Baltimore, Maryland; London; and Shanghai. It won a Peabody Award in 2000.[4]

Companion programs

A sister program, the Marketplace Morning Report, offers seven unique seven-minute, thirty-second morning broadcasts that replace the business news-oriented "E" segment of the first and second hours of NPR's Morning Edition on many public radio stations. Since September 2014, Marketplace Morning Report has been incorporated into Morning Edition as a segment in the latter program's second hour.[5] The Marketplace brand also took over the money advice program Sound Money, which was renamed Marketplace Money in 2005, with content oriented toward a personal finance theme. All three shows share reporters and editorial staff. Marketplace Money was replaced with Marketplace Weekend in June 2014.[6] In addition, Marketplace reporters were featured in a daily interview segment on NPR's Day to Day program, an unusual link, since Marketplace is not otherwise affiliated with NPR. The partnership continued until Day to Day aired its final edition in the spring of 2009. In September 2010, American Public Media launched the Marketplace Tech Report with John Moe. In the same month American Public Media and New York Public Radio announced the creation of Freakonomics radio, a co-production with Marketplace and WNYC, which features journalist Stephen J. Dubner and economist Steven D. Levitt. The show is produced in WNYC's studios in New York, and contributes regular features to Marketplace. In 2011, Marketplace launched a five-minute market wrapup show entitled Marketplace Index.

Hosts

Since August 2005, Marketplace has been hosted by Kai Ryssdal, who had previously hosted the Marketplace Morning Report and Marketplace Money. Marketplace had formerly been hosted by Jim Angle, David Brancaccio (1993–2003) and later by David Brown (2003–2005).

The Marketplace Morning Report is currently hosted by David Brancaccio, who took over for Jeremy Hobson in May 2013. Hobson, formerly a reporter in the New York bureau of Marketplace, took over from Bill Radke in October, 2010. Previous hosts include: Cheryl Glaser, Steve Chiotakis, Kai Ryssdal, Scott Jagow, Mark Austin Thomas, and Tess Vigeland.

Marketplace Money was hosted by Ryssdal until 2006, and by Tess Vigeland from 2006 to 2012. Beginning November 2, 2013, the host of the program was Carmen Wong Ulrich until January 31, 2014.

Marketplace Tech Report is hosted by Ben Johnson as of May 2013, taking over for David Brancaccio. It was hosted by John Moe until September 7, 2012.

Brancaccio returned to Marketplace in 2011 to host a five-minute market wrapup titled Marketplace Index. That show was canceled as of February 17, 2012.

Commentators

Each week, the show runs short commentaries, contributed by people from a variety of political perspectives, including former Secretary of Labor Robert B. Reich, who served under the Clinton administration. The show's stable of commentators has included former Columbia dean Glenn Hubbard, once the head of George W. Bush's Council of Economic Advisers; libertarian economist and blogger Tyler Cowen; and Canadian-American journalist David Frum, a former economic speechwriter for President George W. Bush, who ended his contract with Marketplace in October 2011, saying he felt his point of view was no longer in line with the mainstream of the Republican party.

Reporters

The program's regular reporters include: Stephen Beard, London Bureau Chief; Nancy Marshall-Genzer, Senior Washington Reporter; David Gura, Senior Washington Reporter; Amy Scott, Education Correspondent in Baltimore; Rob Schmitz, Shanghai Correspondent; Scott Tong, Sustainability Reporter; Jeff Tyler, Adriene Hill and David Weinberg, in Los Angeles; Stacey Vanek-Smith, Mark Garrison and Sabri Ben Achour in New York; Queena Kim in Silicon Valley; Health Correspondent Dan Gorenstein in Philadelphia; and Mitchell Hartman, Entrepreneurship Reporter, in Portland, OR.

Numbers music

Every day the show has a segment where they "do the numbers," that is, the host tells the ending positions of the three major United States stock market indexes, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite. If all three have values higher at the end of the day than they did at the market's open that morning, the music played during the segment is "We're in the Money". At times in the past, programmers have played a brief tape of a cheering crowd when the market rises rapidly. When all three close below their opening positions, "Stormy Weather" is played. Often the indexes have little change from their opening positions or even differ with some up and others down; in this case, "It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)" serves as the background music for the segment. During the 1990s the "Marketplace" theme music incorporated the advertising jingle from its then-major underwriter, General Electric.

Podcast

On October 4, 2005 Marketplace began releasing a freely available weekly podcast Marketplace Takeout that "collects the best of Marketplace, Marketplace Morning Report and Marketplace Money." In January 2007 Marketplace Takeout was discontinued, and all three radio programs were made available as free podcasts themselves. In the fall of 2008, a new weekly podcast called "After the Bell" became available for download, but was discontinued in 2009. Also in the fall of 2008, Marketplace began offering a video download of the Marketplace Whiteboard. In 2010, Marketplace launched a podcast of Marketplace Tech Report. The Freakonomics Radio podcast, a co-production of Marketplace and WNYC was launched in the fall of 2010.

Marketplace Whiteboard

In the fall of 2008, Marketplace began posting a series of videos called the Marketplace Whiteboard. The videos feature Marketplace Senior Editor Paddy Hirsch explaining difficult financial terms and concepts with simple stick-figure drawings on a whiteboard. Topics covered include credit default swaps, collateralized debt obligations, toxic assets and write-downs. The Marketplace Whiteboard was a staff pick on iTunes for six months from its launch in 2008, and was a Webby honoree in 2009.

References

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  4. 60th Annual Peabody Awards, May 2001.
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External links