We're sunsetting PodQuest on 2025-07-28. Thank you for your support!
Export Podcast Subscriptions
cover of episode A touch of Trump in every phone call

A touch of Trump in every phone call

2025/6/17
logo of podcast Marketplace All-in-One

Marketplace All-in-One

AI Deep Dive AI Chapters Transcript
People
B
Bridget
专注于打击数字骗局和保护个人隐私的个人,特别是在 AI 生成的虚假讣告方面。
D
Dan Ives
D
David Brancaccio
P
Patriot Mobile's CEO
R
Roger Entner
S
Stephanie Hughes
Y
Yeonrin Jung (Z)
Topics
David Brancaccio: 特朗普集团正在进军手机行业,计划推出名为Trump Mobile的无线服务和一款名为T1的新智能手机,售价约为500美元。这标志着特朗普家族企业在移动通信领域的新尝试。 Stephanie Hughes: 特朗普集团声称手机将在美国制造,但行业专家对此表示怀疑,因为过去十年没有主要的手机制造商在美国生产设备。这引发了关于在美国重建手机制造业可行性的讨论。 Roger Entner: 手机制造商离开美国是因为在亚洲制造设备更便宜,现在美国几乎没有基础设施。缺乏必要的机器、员工和供应链使得在美国生产手机变得非常困难。 Dan Ives: 特朗普试图抓住势头在美国进行建设,但这只适用于有限数量的手机。大规模生产消费者想要的手机需要很长时间和大量资金投入,因此他认为这是行不通的。即使能够小规模生产,也难以满足市场需求。 Patriot Mobile's CEO: 我们的使命依然坚定,我们仍然是唯一一家基督教和保守派的无线供应商,上帝掌管着我们的业务,我们为特朗普集团的成功祈祷。这表达了对特朗普集团新业务的祝福和支持,同时也强调了自身在市场中的独特定位。

Deep Dive

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

If you work in quality control at a candy factory, you know strict safety regulations come with the job. It's why you partner with Grainger. Grainger helps you find the high quality and compliant products your business needs to inspect, detect, and help correct issues. And the sweetest part is, everyone gets a product that's as safe to eat as it is delicious. Call 1-800-GRAINGER, clickgrainger.com, or just stop by. Grainger, for the ones who get it done.

When you're a teen, it can feel like everyone else is calling the shots. Parents, teachers, coaches, they all have something to say about what you do. But your period? That should be 100% in your control. That's why NYX, the number one leak-proof underwear company in North America, created KT for Teens, period products that put you in charge. KT leak-proof underwear, swimwear, and activewear give you the power to do what you want,

when you want without your period making decisions for you. Heavy flow during soccer practice? You decide to keep playing. Surprise period during a sleepover? You decide to keep the party going. Hitting the beach or pool? You decide when to jump in. No more sitting out, going home early, or changing your plans just because of your period.

Because the one thing you should absolutely have power over is your own body. Ready to take back control? Visit nxteen.com now and get 15% off your first purchase with promo code CONTROL. That's knixteen.com, promo code CONTROL. A touch of Trump in every phone call.

I'm David Brancaccio in Los Angeles. The Trump Organization, the president's family business, is getting into mobile phones. The company is promising a new wireless service called Trump Mobile and releasing a new smartphone called the T1 set for about $500.

The Trump Organization says the phone will be made in the U.S. and available starting in August, but industry experts are skeptical as to whether that is even possible. Marketplace's Stephanie Hughes reports. No major phone manufacturer has built its devices in the U.S. for at least a decade. That's according to Roger Entner with Recon Analytics. We have made smartphones when we were still in the 2G and maybe in the 3G era.

So like today's phones, super great grandparents. He says phone manufacturers left because it was cheaper to make devices in Asia. And now there's little infrastructure left here. You don't have the machines. You don't have the employees that can do it. You don't have the supply chain. According to a Trump mobile spokesperson, its new phone is going to be made in Alabama, California and Florida. Look, I think Trump's trying to seize the momentum and build in the U.S.,

Dan Ives is global head of tech research for Wedbush. But he says this only works for a limited number of phones. This is something that could be done at a very, very small scale. And that's probably what they're aiming for. But anything above 20, 30, 40,000 will be very, very difficult for them to actually make in the U.S.

He says to really build out and manufacture the kinds of phones consumers want here at a large scale. For it to even get off the ground would take a long time and significant amount of dollars to put in before they start any sort of profit. He calls it a non-starter. I'm Stephanie Hughes for Marketplace.

Trump's competition has put out a news release congratulating the president on his new phone venture. Patriot Mobile calls itself a trailblazer in the red economy. In a statement, Patriot Mobile's CEO said, quote, Our mission remains as strong as ever. We remain the only wireless provider that is both Christian and conservative. God is at the helm of our business, and we pray for the Trump organization's success.

If your job at a health care facility includes disinfecting against viruses, you know prevention is the best medicine. And maintaining healthy spaces starts with a healthy cleaning routine. Grainger's world-class supply chain helps ensure you have the quality products you need when you need them. From disinfectants and cleaning supplies to personal protective equipment, so you can help deliver a clean bill of health. Call 1-800-GRAINGER, clickgrainger.com, or just stop by.

Granger, for the ones who get it done.

Now at Verizon, we're locking in low prices for three years guaranteed on MyPlan. And you can get a single line for just $45 a month when you switch and bring your phone. That's our best price ever on unlimited welcome with auto pay plus taxes and fees guaranteed for three years. Because at Verizon, we got you. Visit your local DC Verizon store today. $20 monthly promo credits applied over 36 months with a new line on unlimited welcome. In times of congestion, unlimited 5G and 4G LTE may be temporarily slower than other traffic. Domestic data roaming at 2G speed.

Price guarantee applies to then current base monthly rate. Additional terms and conditions apply. Now to our series on jobs off the beaten path. Today we meet Yeonrin Jung, a sneaker entrepreneur. It's the secondary market, which started as a small project to resell shoes, has now opened multiple brick-and-mortar stores in Tennessee and Kentucky.

Hi, my name is Yonron, but I go by Z. I am a full-time sneaker reseller. I personally own 600 to 700 pairs of sneakers. I think I have lost count at this point. I would say in the day, there's probably two or three hours on a normal day that I'm surrounded by shoes, as always. One of my main goal when I first started reselling sneakers was just to get my own pair for free.

And I soon realized that, oh, this is actually a little easier than I thought. So at some point, I stopped caring about my personal pair. And then we kind of snowballed all the profits together just to have more capital to go buy more sneakers. Growing up in a immigrant family, my mom has always had an entrepreneurial spirit. And one of the things that she did was

when we got here in America in the early 2000s was that she saw opportunity to buy and flip iPads. So that's a little bit of how I got my entrepreneurship started by just, you know, watching and learning from her. And then when I started taking this sneaker resale business a little bit more seriously, she actually gave me $2,000 as startup capital. Walk through closet.

After a short stint in Mississippi, we moved to Memphis, Tennessee. That's when I really fell in love with, you know, the basketball culture as well as the sneaker culture. And then we moved to Louisville, Kentucky, and I really grew up there. And I think just being an outsider for the first part of my life and looking at everything going on in the United States, you know, what the kids are wearing, becoming fascinated by that, and then that really let me have a different vantage point than a lot of kids maybe that grew up in America. ♪

When Kobe Bryant passed away, there was a huge stir in the community because LeBron James wanted to find a size 18 Kobe to wear on the first day back. Pretty much a ton of resellers all got the same contact information to say, hey, do you have any size 18 Kobes in stock? And he said, no, I don't.

and the game is tomorrow night. So you had to get on a plane to fly to LA to drop the shoes off LeBron. And I was in Miami at the time for the Super Bowl. So I was like, oh man, I don't, you know, I can't even do anything. But just the idea of it, it's like, wow, it's like, you know, somebody's reaching out to ask me for some shoes for LeBron.

When you have a lot of high profile clients hit you up to looking for a shoe and there maybe is a time crunch or something like that. So be able to

reach out and make something happen, learning how to say yes instead of no's. That was one of the biggest things I think I learned. And to just be able to, you know, step outside of just, hey, this is just a sneaker store, but it allowed me to go backstage with some artists to have the opportunity to go meet some of my favorite, you know, basketball players. So Penny Harway, he's one of my favorite basketball players, had a chance to meet him through sneakers and actually get a pair of the Nike Penny shoes signed by him in person.

I saw Michael Jordan twice in person, you know, just stuff like that. I think that, you know, the 18 year old me probably wouldn't believe. At Z talking there, Yonron Jung, his sneaker stores in Nashville and Louisville are called 23 penny. Have you worked a niche job or heard of an odd job? You want to learn more about odd as in unusual, pop us an email morning report at marketplace.org. Now,

Now, our producers are James Graham, Linda Walker, Courtney Bergseger, Ariana Rosas, and Erica Soderstrom. Our senior producer is Alex Schroeder. Our supervisory senior producer is Meredith Gerritsen-Morby. In Los Angeles, I'm David Brancaccio. It's the Marketplace Morning Report from APM American Public Media.

Hey there, it's Bridget, co-host of Million Resilient, a podcast that answers your kids' big questions about money. There's a lot of talk about tariffs lately, so how do you explain such a complex topic to kids? Of course. A tariff is an extra charge or tax that countries put on goods that are made somewhere else, like in another country. It also goes by the name of duty.

Join us as we break down that extra tax governments add on stuff that comes from other countries. Listen to Million Bazillion wherever you get your podcasts.