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Meta has gone all in on chatbots. The bots are capable of giving advice, answering questions and playing games with users. Some feature the licensed voices of some celebrities. But after months of testing, the Wall Street Journal found Meta's chatbots were also capable of engaging in graphic romantic roleplay, even with young users. Some people inside the company are concerned. Jeff Horwitz reports and Kate Linebaugh hosts for the last time. Further Listening: - Does Meta Have a Social Media Monopoly? - The Facebook Files Sign up for WSJ's free What's News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In our capstone episode, Kate Linebaugh and Molly Ball break down Trump's first 100 days in office with WSJ's Aaron Zitner, digging into the highs and lows, where things stand with voters and what's next for the administration and the country. Further Listening: -Canada's New Leader Is Ready to Take On Trump -Trump 2.0: Where is the Economy Headed -Taking Stock of the ‘Sell America' Trade Sign up for WSJ's free What's News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Suleiman al-Youssef's son, Shadi, has been missing since the beginning of the Syrian civil war. After the Assad regime was overthrown, Suleiman found new hope when he discovered a video of a man who looked like his son outside the country's most notorious prison. WSJ's Ben C. Solomon on Suleiman's search for his son and Syria's thousands of other missing loved ones like him. Kate Linebaugh hosts. Further Listening: - Assad's Regime Falls. What's Next For Syria? - Ten Days That Shifted Power in Syria Sign up for WSJ's free What's News newsletter . Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
President Trump's deportations, tariffs, federal layoffs and funding suspensions have generated nonstop headlines and frayed confidence, yet left surprisingly little trace on the economy. Hiring, spending and inflation look a lot like they did under Joe Biden. As Trump's first 100 days draw to a close, Kate Linebaugh and Molly Ball explore the state of the U.S. economy with Chief Economics Commentator Greg Ip and try to understand what might be coming next. Further Listening: - Taking Stock of the ‘Sell America' Trade - Inside the Harvard vs. Trump Battle - How Frog Embyros Landed a Scientist in ICE Detention Sign up for WSJ's free What's News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Telehealth companies make hair loss drugs easy to get. They also don't have to disclose side effects in ads. WSJ's Rolfe Winkler reports that some young men say they are suffering serious health consequences, and that they didn't understand the risks. Kate Linebaugh hosts. Further Listening: - Testosterone Clinics Sell Virility. Side Effects Sometimes Included. - ‘Uncontrolled Substances' from The Journal. Sign up for WSJ's free What's News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Kate Linebaugh and Molly Ball go behind the scenes of the administration's tariff pause. We dive deep with WSJ's Josh Dawsey, exploring the tension in the days after the announcement and what really changed the president's mind. Plus, your questions! Further Listening: - China Unleashes a Trade War Arsenal - The Tariff Trade Off: Jobs vs. Higher Prices - Wall Street Speaks Out Against Tariffs Sign up for WSJ's free What's News newsletter . Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In the early days of President Trump's second term, China was ready to negotiate on trade. Then came Liberation Day. Now China is ready with a trade war arsenal taking aim at U.S. companies. WSJ's Lingling Wei explains how China is gearing up for an extraordinary conflict with no immediate exits. Kate Linebaugh hosts. Further Listening: - Trump's Tariffs Force a New Era in Global Trade - The Trade War With China Is On Sign up for WSJ's free What's News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
President Trump has a new vision for the Environmental Protection Agency that significantly rolls back environmental regulations. Kate Linebaugh speaks to the man overseeing that vision— Administrator Lee Zeldin, about his plans and new approach to environmental governance. Further Listening: - The Fight Over Fluoride - Hot, Dry and Booming: A Texas Climate Case Study - Why Microsoft Wants Three Mile Island's Nuclear Power Sign up for WSJ's free What's News newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Yesterday, in the Rose Garden, President Trump sent out a clear message: the era of globalization is over. Trump announced sweeping tariffs on trillions of dollars of imports. The new duties immediately shook Wall Street and sent stocks plummeting. WSJ's White House economic policy reporter Brian Schwartz explains how President Trump has wanted this day to happen for decades. And we talk to an American business owner who is deeply worried about what these tariffs mean for his company's survival. Kate Linebaugh hosts. Sign up for WSJ's free What's News newsletter. Further Listening: - The Trade War With China Is On - Trump's Tariff Whiplash Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Charlie Javice sold her financial aid startup Frank to JPMorgan Chase for $175 million. But soon after the ink on the deal was dry, the bank discovered that their new acquisition was not at all what it seemed. WSJ's Alexander Saeedy explains how a trial about fraud committed against JPMorgan resulted in the bank feeling the heat. Kate Linebaugh hosts. Sign up for WSJ's free What's News newsletter. Further Listening: - A $175 Million ‘Huge Mistake' - JP Morgan CEO Jamie Dimon on What's Next for the Economy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
President Trump delivered a celebratory speech to Congress, declaring that he had swiftly notched several wins for the American people. WSJ's Andrew Restuccia joins Kate Linebaugh and Molly Ball to discuss the roadmap Trump laid out and what it means for the next few years. See The Journal live! Take our survey! Further Listening: -The Trade War With China Is On -Trump's Tariffs Cause Chaos in Auto Industry -Inside DOGE's Campaign of Secrecy Further Reading: -An Annotated Fact-Check and Analysis of Trump's Speech to Congress -How Trump's Polite Meeting With Zelensky Descended Into Acrimony Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Joe Erlinger, President of McDonald's USA, sits down with Kate Linebaugh to talk about how the company is trying to keep customers happy despite rising prices and a shift towards healthier eating. Further Reading: - The Fast-Food Fight Over the $5 Meal Deal - A Day in the Life of a California Fast-Food Manager Who Makes Up to $174,000 Further Listening: - Farm-to-Table Pioneer on Why We Still Need Better Food - Beyond Meat Loses Its Sizzle Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Alice Waters helped the farm-to-table movement go mainstream in the U.S. through her restaurant Chez Panisse. In the decades since she has kept advocating for locally grown, organic food over the fast food Americans regularly consume. Kate Linebaugh sat down with Waters at The Wall Street Journal's Global Food Forum. To watch a video of the conversation, check out the episode on Spotify. Further Listening: – Could Paris Hilton Create the 'Next Disney?' – Live from Seattle: A Weird Economy + Election Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Today we're presenting Trillion Dollar Shot, a new series that explores the business story behind the rise of Ozempic and other blockbuster drugs being used for weight loss. The first episode focuses on the Novo Nordisk scientist who invented the compound that paved the way for Ozempic. You can find every episode on The Journal's show feed. Trillion Dollar Shot is part of The Journal, which is a co-production of Spotify and the Wall Street Journal. This episode was hosted by Jessica Mendoza, with Bradley Olson. It was produced by Matt Kwong, with help from Jeevika Verma. Additional production from Adrienne Murray Nielsen. The series is edited by Katherine Brewer. Sound design and mixing by Peter Leonard. Mixing for Science Vs by Bobby Lord. Music in this episode by Peter Leonard and Bobby Lord. Theme music by So Wylie, remixed for this series by Peter Leonard. Special thanks to Maria Byrne, Stefanie Ilgenfritz, Kate Linebaugh, Peter Loftus, Sara O'Brien, Enrique Perez De La Rosa, Sarah Platt, Sune Rasumssen, Jonathan Sanders, Nathan Singhapok, Leying Tang, Rolfe Winkler, Liz Essley Whyte, and Tatiana Zamis. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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
Kate Linebaugh sat down with SEC Chair Gary Gensler to discuss why the agency is working to reign in crypto. Further Listening: - A Crypto Exchange Crackdown - The Rise of Binance - And The Effort to Reel It In - The Charges Against FTX's Sam Bankman-Fried Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Digital marketing is a constantly changing field. Yet, with new tools and strategies proliferating, one necessary component remains the same - content. In today's episode of the MORE podcast, Ricardo is joined by Dadpreneur Alex Oliveira to discuss writing tools to help in anyone's digital marketing efforts. Alex's journey into digital marketing is complicated. After moving to the U.S. from Brazil in 1988, he became an entrepreneur in multiple industries, from construction to financial. In 2000 he dabbled in buying and selling internet domains, and he loved the ability to constantly try new things and adopt new strategies - both things the early internet allowed. After graduation, he ran his mom's textile company for three years before joining his uncle at his construction company. About six months in, Alex bought out the company and ran it himself for five years. In this position, he learned how much money was available in lead generation (and it was a lot.) His favorite lead generation tool: Jarvis.ai Everything online comes down to content. Look at competitors using SEMRush (or another platform) and see how you stack up to your competition. The salesperson is not as key to the purchasing decision as they once were. The internet allows customers to inform themselves about the product or service. Assuming you've performed keyword research with Google Keyword Planner or SEMRush, Jarvis.ai is artificial intelligence for content creation. Whether creating blogs, product pages, Facebook ads - Jarvis will write based on the keywords you want to implement. Who is Jarvis for? Alex has yet to come across an industry that isn't good for Jarvis. While the articles it creates will need editing and changes, it gets the ball rolling far faster than a physical writer. The free tool gives you up to 10,000 per month, which is enough features to make it work for most businesses. The largest challenge for most small business owners when writing ads is being creative. Jarvis.ai creates mock-ups that simulate the creative process without spending a ton of time. A key caveat- know your stats: Using Google Analytics or some platform is critical to ensure an effective content marketing campaign. You can't state your efforts lack results if you don't understand the numbers. Alex's Book and Podcast Recommendations: The Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell The Journal hosted by Kate Linebaugh and Ryan Knutson The Daily hosted by Michael Barbaro Bankless hosted by Ryan Sean Adams For more content from Alex, connect with him on LinkedIn or listen to his podcast, The Dadpreneur Podcast, on Spotify or Apple Podcasts. And be on the lookout for his upcoming book, “If You Build it, Would They Come?” published early next year.
StarburstThe sweet tooth crowd knows it as candy. For star gazers it's a gaseous collision in space. And now the financial failings at Chrysler have given the automotive world its own unique version of the noun, Pentastarburst! This nearly 85-year old company has seen troubled times before and has always cheated financial death. And though it might have done it again, this time it's not without some major consequences for everyone involved. Who knows if its famous Pentastar logo, by the end of it all, might not even lose a triangle or two.Joining John on his Chrysler panel to discuss the bankruptcy and where the company goes from here are representatives from the accounting, analyst & journalism worlds. Craig Fitzgerald is a partner from Plante & Moran, Jim Hall is a veteran auto observer from 2953 Analytics, and finally Kate Linebaugh, covers the auto industry for the Wall Street Journal.
Starburst The sweet tooth crowd knows it as candy. For star gazers it's a gaseous collision in space. And now the financial failings at Chrysler have given the automotive world its own unique version of the noun, Pentastarburst! This nearly 85-year old company has seen troubled times before and has always cheated financial death. And though it might have done it again, this time it's not without some major consequences for everyone involved. Who knows if its famous Pentastar logo, by the end of it all, might not even lose a triangle or two. Joining John on his Chrysler panel to discuss the bankruptcy and where the company goes from here are representatives from the accounting, analyst & journalism worlds. Craig Fitzgerald is a partner from Plante & Moran, Jim Hall is a veteran auto observer from 2953 Analytics, and finally Kate Linebaugh, covers the auto industry for the Wall Street Journal.
While there’s been a lot of press on Chrysler’s bankruptcy, not much has been said about what impact bankruptcy will have on Chrysler’s suppliers. On this edition of Autoline EXTRA, John and his guests discuss what the outlook is for suppliers and if Fiat’s suppliers have a chance to enter North America now that it is allied with Chrysler. Also talked about during the discussion is what impact bankruptcy will have on states where Chrysler operates. Joining John in the discussion are Kate Linebaugh of the Wall Street Journal and Craig Fitzgerald from Plante & Moran.
While there’s been a lot of press on Chrysler’s bankruptcy, not much has been said about what impact bankruptcy will have on Chrysler’s suppliers. On this edition of Autoline EXTRA, John and his guests discuss what the outlook is for suppliers and if Fiat’s suppliers have a chance to enter North America now that it is allied with Chrysler. Also talked about during the discussion is what impact bankruptcy will have on states where Chrysler operates. Joining John in the discussion are Kate Linebaugh of the Wall Street Journal and Craig Fitzgerald from Plante & Moran.