Stacey Vanek Smith is a senior reporter for Marketplace, where she covers banking, consumer finance, housing and advertising. She began her career with Marketplace in 2003 as an assistant producer and has worked as an editor, reporter and fills in as host on the Marketplace Morning Report. Vanek Smith is a graduate of Princeton University with a bachelor’s degree in comparative literature and creative writing. She holds a masters degree in French cultural studies and a masters in broadcast journalism from Columbia University. She also received a fellowship from the National Press Foundation to attend the Wharton Business Journalist Seminars in 2010. She is fluent in French and proficient in German. Vanek Smith’s work has appeared in TIME magazine, The Christian Science Monitor, Boise Weekly, Idaho Weddings, Freakonomics Radio, Weekend America, The California Report and Marketplace. A native of Idaho, Vanek Smith now lives in Brooklyn. She spends most of her free time exploring the city, cooking, watching reality television and trying to decide who makes the best pizza in New York.

Features By Stacey Vanek Smith

Pages

11

Margaret Thatcher's foes turned anger into big business, and a soundtrack for the '80s

From punk rock to TV satires such as Spitting Image, many of those who set out to pillory Margaret Thatcher for her policies made a nice living doing so. Listen to the soundtrack that hate created.
Posted In: Margaret Thatcher, Britain, Music
3

Staying on as a CEO...at 4 percent of your usual pay

JCPenney cut a top executive's salary by more than 96 percent. Other corporate boards also took a whack this week at poor performers. The curious case of executives who know they're not doing well, but keep working anyway.
Posted In: ceo pay, JC Penney
0

Big Data creates big industry for storing data

Every purchase, online web search and even cellphone call generates data that companies hope to use to boost sales. But storing all that data is becoming a big expense, and it has spawned a multibillion-dollar industry.
Posted In: data storage, technology, Amazon, ebay, Google
1

Corn prices plummet, will the price of Cheerios?

Corn prices are tanking amid stuffed silos and plans for the country’s biggest planting in decades.
Posted In: corn, Agriculture, food and drink
1

For one hedge fund: A heartbreaking week of staggering gossip

What do a $155 million Picasso, a $60 million Hamptons home, a $600 million fine and a trader in handcuffs have in common? The answer: a tumultuous week for high-profile hedge-fund titan Stephen A. Cohen.
Posted In: hedge funds, insider trading, sac capital
1

DOMA and the lesser-known benefits of gay marriage

Today’s Supreme Court case on gay marriage focuses on inheritance tax. But there are more than 1,000 financial programs and benefits for married couples.
Posted In: DOMA, gay marriage, gay
0

When your heart wants what's bad for your wallet

If you think about it, marriage is one of the most important financial decisions a lot of people make. But most people don't think of it that way.
Posted In: love, marriage
0

The economics of creating national monuments

President Obama is expected to name five new national monuments on Monday. In addition to historical significance and land preservation, national monuments can boost local economies through tourism.
Posted In: tourism, history, Obama, National Park Service
1

Why NBC may tap Fallon to succeed Leno

Jay Leno is king of late-night TV ratings, but Jimmy Fallon could represent the future of the TV franchise. He has strong ratings plus a big You Tube and Twitter following that advertisers care ever more about.
Posted In: late night talk shows, Jay Leno, Jimmy Fallon
2

Is rebranding the GOP like rebranding Cheerios?

Republican advisers have released a plan to grow their party. Some high-profile conservatives say the GOP needs a message-makeover to be competitive. How do corporate marketers view the challenge?
Posted In: Republicans, GOP, Re-branding, branding

Pages