Marketplace®

Daily business news and economic stories
Jordan Mangi

Jordan Mangi

Assistant Digital Producer

Jordan Mangi is an assistant digital producer for Marketplace based in Chicago, Illinois. She joined Marketplace in 2023 and was previously an intern on the digital team. Jordan produces online content for "Marketplace" the show, reports web stories and helps keep the site running smoothly.

A graduate of Northwestern University, Jordan worked at the Daily Northwestern as a digital managing editor, audio editor and reporter. Originally from Brooklyn, New York, she is also a proud alumna of Girls Write Now.

Before working in journalism, Jordan had many other jobs that involved telling stories and talking to strangers, including ice cream scooper, campus tour guide and children's theater director.

Latest from Jordan Mangi

  • Across the U.S., state grocery taxes can range from less than 1% to 7% on non-prepared foods.
    Elijah Nouvelage

    The poorest Americans spend the largest share of their paychecks on food at home.

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  • What does your car know about you?
    George Rose/Getty Images

    Your favorite song? Maybe. But what about your speed records or even medical data?

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  • IPO temperature check
    Getty Images

    Chip company Arm aims to raise $4.8 billion from its IPO later this year. Plus, JCPenney is reevaluating its in-store offerings.

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  • Taking on the tech giants

    From the BBC World Service: Services run by the world’s biggest tech companies are a part of everyone’s daily lives, but governments have been playing catch up when it comes to regulating their power. Today the European Union will publish a list of companies, known as gatekeepers, that will be subject to new rules aimed at encouraging competition and stopping big players from crushing smaller rivals. Plus, are you a fan of K-pop? It’s now estimated the industry earns South Korea around $10 billion a year. But it’s not just famous bands like BTS that are turning K-pop into a valuable export. Choreographers behind the dances are quickly gaining a following well beyond South Korea’s borders.

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  • Cloudy with a chance of recession
    David McNew/Getty Images

    This time last year, we were worried about an economic hurricane. Now, the forecast is much sunnier.

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  • Can green investing change the world?
    Eugene Gologursky/Getty Images for Humanity 2.0 Foundation

    ESG funds aim to make a positive impact. Lately, they’ve been a target of political controversy.

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  • Can Turkey broker a deal with Russia to re-open grain shipments?
    Sergei Supinsky/AFP via Getty Images

    From the BBC World Service: Russian President Vladimir Putin has said that the landmark Black Sea grain deal with Ukraine will not be restored until the West meets Moscow’s demands on its agricultural exports. BBC’s Victoria Craig joins us from Ankara in Turkey to discuss the latest developments. Also, Sarah Dalton, Head of the Doctors’ Union in New Zealand, explains why thousands of her members are going on strike for the first time ever. Finally, the BBC’s Leanna Byrne explores the impact of post-pandemic home working. 

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  • 25 years of Google: the brand so big it became a verb
    Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

    From the BBC World Service: Google was founded 25 years ago today. We hear from Elizabeth Linder, who started her career at Google and later became an executive at Facebook. Also, BBC’s senior Africa correspondent, Anne Soy, reports from Kenya, where African heads of state are gathering to discuss the continent’s approach to climate change. And finally, BBC’s Leanna Byrne reports on long queues for Italian cabs after the taxi drivers’ unions resist reforms aimed at increasing licenses.

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  • Video games for all!
    Getty Images

    Students at a video game design program in the Bay Area use the medium to explore cultural history, LGBTQ relationships, emotional wellbeing and more.

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  • Labor unions mean better wages for all
    Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

    They can also increase pay equity for underrepresented workers.

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