Jeremy Hobson is host of the Marketplace Morning Report, an eight-minute daily business news program with an audience of nearly six million.  He’s interviewed hundreds of people on the show, including billionaire businessman Sir Richard Branson, former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers, celebrity chef Daniel Boulud and philanthropist Melinda Gates.

Hobson started at Marketplace in 2007 as a reporter based in Washington, D.C.  He later covered Wall Street and its impact on ordinary Americans for Marketplace, based in the New York City bureau. He started reporting from New York one week before Lehman Brothers collapsed in 2008.

Before joining Marketplace, Hobson frequently found himself in the right place at the right time when it came to big stories: He was calling Florida precincts for NPR’s 2000 election coverage, he was working for Boston’s WBUR during the Boston Catholic Church Sex Abuse scandal, and he was an intern for NPR’s Guy Raz in Turkey at the start of the Iraq War. In addition to those roles, Hobson has worked as producer for NPR’s All Things Considered, Day to Day and Wait Wait…Don’t Tell Me! He has also worked as a host and reporter for public radio stations WILL Urbana, WCAI Cape Cod and WRNI Providence.

Hobson’s radio career began in earnest at the age of nine when he started contributing to a program called Treehouse Radio.  Hobson is a graduate of Boston University and the University of Illinois Laboratory High School. He lives in New York and enjoys hiking, traveling and extremely spicy foods.

Features By Jeremy Hobson

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American Airlines merger has a lot of history

Bob Crandall, the former CEO of American Airlines, joins us to discuss the path to the US Airways merger and what's next for the new airliner.
Posted In: American Airlines, US Airways
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PODCAST: Pizza as just dessert, Valentine's Day insurance

Obama's plans for education from pre-school to college. Will an increase in minimum wage help or hurt workers? And in a twist, some former employees who'd been duped out of overtime pay are becoming part-owners of a Harvard Square pizzeria they used to work for.
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PODCAST: Valentines Day sludge

Betting wrong on gentrification in Chicago, the safest year for air travel since 1945, and looking back at the president's first term, where have the jobs actually come from?
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Better radar, tracking systems lead to safest air travel since 1945

Today marks four years to the day since the last fatal crash of a commercial airliner in the U.S. In addition, the New York Times points out that last year was the safest for global air travel since 1945.
Posted In: Airlines, safety, Tech
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PODCAST: Down with the beef burger, the State of the Union for toddlers

Pope Benedict and the church's branding, the State of the Union for toddlers, and a check in on Egypt two years after its revolution.
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The fiscal cliff reprise: Meet the sequester

There are less than three weeks to go until Washington's latest budget deadline -- the $85 billion spending cut package known as the sequester.
Posted In: fiscal cliff, sequestration, Obama
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PODCAST: Clear skies, congested roads

the U.S. trade deficit fell in December to its lowest level in three years. Airlines are cancelling flights by the minute as a major winter storm bears down on the northeast -- about 3,000 flights have alreday been cancelled today.
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U.S. trade deficit plunges

The nation’s trade deficit plunged in December, likely giving the U.S. economy an unexpected boost to round out the year.
Posted In: import export, Economy, Oil
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Leaving work after a Parkinson's diagnosis

A banking analyst makes the decision to leave his job at the age of 51, two years after being diagnosed with Parkinson's Disease.
Posted In: Health, Retirement
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PODCAST: Inhabiting a desert island...as a job

A possible merger between American Airlines and US Airways. Half of all Afghans pay bribes. And in Scotland, a 'dream job' offer.

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