The Best One Yet - ⚾ “Torpedo Bat” — NY Yankees’ innovation. Q2’s Stagflation risk. Drone Delivery’s burrito vs blood.

The New York Yankees set a home run record… Thanks to a new data-optimized torpedo bat.

The #1 term you gotta know for Q2? “Stagflation”… when unemployment and inflation both rise.

One drone delivery startup is beating Amazon in the sky… but should serve houses or hospitals?

Plus, Kim Kardashian’s Skims is launching a Wall Street Shapeware line… 


$SPY $AMZN $GOOG


Want more business storytelling from us? Check out the latest episode of our new weekly deepdive show: The untold origin story of 📱iPhone: The Device Steve Jobs Didn’t Want to Build. 


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“The Best Idea Yet”: The untold origin stories of the products you’re obsessed with — From the McDonald’s Happy Meal to Birkenstock’s sandal to Nintendo’s Susper Mario Brothers to Sriracha. New 45-minute episodes drop weekly.



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Short Wave - The Iguanas That Rafted To Fiji

Most iguanas are indigenous to the Americas. So how did the Fijian species end up on the island, nearly 5000 miles away in the South Pacific? According to a new study in the journal PNAS, it was probably via raft ... that is, on clump of floating trees.

And this rafting hypothesis isn't entirely unprecedented. After hurricanes Luis and Marilyn hit the Caribbean in the 1990s, researchers found that a group of iguanas had floated over 180 miles away from Guadeloupe to the territory of Anguilla.

Want to hear more about iguanas? Or rafts? Or evolutionary biology? Email us at shortwave@npr.org.

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The Indicator from Planet Money - Should we vote for all judges?

Mexico is gearing up to directly elect federal and state judges for the first time this June. President Claudia Sheinbaum says the new system will combat nepotism and increase the integrity of the courts. But critics see it as a naked attempt to dilute the court's independence. Today on the show, how Mexico's judicial reforms are creating angst for businesses at home and abroad.

Related episodes:
SCOTUS: De-facto pro-business?

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NPR's Book of the Day - In ‘Long Island,’ one woman returns to Ireland after discovering her husband’s affair

At the beginning of Long Island, an Irish-American woman named Eilis opens the front door of her New York home and is greeted by news of her husband's affair. The other woman is pregnant – and Eilis must decide what to do next. Author Colm Tóibín says this scene convinced him to write the novel, an unplanned sequel to Brooklyn. Long Island picks up 25 years after Brooklyn left off, following Eilis as she returns to the Irish town where she grew up. In today's episode, Tóibín talks with NPR's Mary Louise Kelly about his decision to write the sequel, his own hometown in Ireland, and his characters' views of what makes someone a foreigner.

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Native America Calling - Tuesday, April 1, 2025 – The righteous rebellion of Indigenous punk rock

Punk rock’s rebellious anger aimed at the forces of economic and political oppression and its low-fi, DIY aesthetic are among the reasons the genre took hold with some Indigenous musicians. It’s a connection that continues to resonate with both players and audiences. Kristen Martinez (Yaqui and Mexican) is both a punk performer and a graduate student researching the history of the Indigenous contributions to the legacy of punk, one short, loud, and angry song at a time. She is building an archive of Indigenous punk musicians, posters, and performances on social media. We’ll hear from Martinez about her growing archive of Indigenous punk history and what the art form has to offer to today’s listeners.

What Next | Daily News and Analysis - Free Speech? Not If You’re A Foreign Student.

As video of federal agents stopping Tufts student Rumeysa Ozturk on the street and taking her away to be detained circulated on social media, people kept asking, “how could this happen here?” The answer involves organizations that claim to help the federal government identify and find activists, and victims whose rights to free speech and due process can be swiftly suspended.


Guest: Aymann Ismail, staff writer at Slate.


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Podcast production by Elena Schwartz, Paige Osburn, Anna Phillips, Madeline Ducharme, Ethan Oberman, and Rob Gunther.


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The Stack Overflow Podcast - Boots on the ground: Holistic AI and Audioshake at HumanX

Holistic AI is an AI governance platform that helps the enterprise adopt and scale AI.

Audioshake uses AI to mix, master, and separate music and other audio content.

Learn more about HumanX here. Feeling the FOMO? The event takes place again on April 7-9, 2026 in San Francisco. Early birds can register here.

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Read Me a Poem - “The Dream” by Theodore Roethke

Amanda Holmes reads Theodore Roethke’s “The Dream.” Have a suggestion for a poem by a (dead) writer? Email us: podcast@theamericanscholar.org. If we select your entry, you’ll win a copy of a poetry collection edited by David Lehman.

  

This episode was produced by Stephanie Bastek and features the song “Canvasback” by Chad Crouch.


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It Could Happen Here - Anarchism In Uruguay feat. Andrew, Pt. 2

Andrew and James continue their discussion of Anarchism in Uruguay and talk about the nature of an anarchist military formation.

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