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Marielle Segarra

Senior Reporter

Marielle Segarra is a former reporter for Marketplace. She covers taxes and consumer psychology. She covered retail, consumer psychology and the economy. One topic she enjoyed exploring: how we shop – and the emotions that come up as we do. Pride. Guilt. Frustration. She also followed small businesses as they find their way in the pandemic and is always trying to show people how the ins and outs of the economy are relevant to their lives. What was your first job? Summer camp counselor to a bunch of 5-year-olds. In your next life, what would your career be? I think I would still want to create things. Maybe I'd be a chef. Or an interior designer. Or I'd write for a TV show. Fill in the blank: Money can’t buy you happiness, but it can buy you ______. Financial stability, which is a good start. What’s the favorite item in your workspace and why? My stash of chocolate.

Latest from Marielle Segarra

  • Throughout the pandemic, consumers have shopped quite a bit. It doesn't look like the spread of omicron is going to hamper that.
    Paul Ratje/AFP via Getty Images

    Retailers are making a calculation about what to put on shelves. And it comes down to supply and demand.

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  • Though first-time unemployment claims are at their lowest point in about 50 years, omicron could disrupt the job market.
    Patrick T. Fallon via Getty Images

    Weekly unemployment claims are still hovering at the lowest level we’ve seen since 1969.

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  • The U.S. economy added 528,000 jobs in July, according to the latest jobs report, far outpacing expectations.
    Joe Raedle via Getty Images

    The economy is growing and employers are still looking for workers, and that trend will probably continue for awhile.

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  • A scene from the Mariachi rent strike in Los Angeles' Boyle Heights
    Courtesy Union de Vecinos

    For the last episode of our season, we take you through months of court battles, protests and tense negotiations in a Los Angeles rent strike.

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  • Dec 9, 2021

    Chasing hippos

    Gina Serna and her family on a childhood trip to Hacienda Napoles.
    Courtesy: Gina Serna

    Gina Serna dreamed of being a wildlife veterinarian since she was little, but her biggest assignment has painful ties to her childhood.

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  • Felicia and Dalip Singh
    Courtesy Felicia Singh Campaign for City Council

    Dalip Singh thought driving a taxi would be his ticket to the middle class. Instead, he discovered that he’d bought into a massive lending scam.

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  • Hayli McKnight and her dad, Rick Carroll, when McKnight was a toddler.
    Courtesy: Hayli McKnight

    When you’re a kid, your parents make all the financial decisions for you. But what happens when you grow up … and don’t agree with their choices?

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  • Daranda Hinkey holds some pieces of clay containing lithium, or “white gold,” that could be key to a decarbonized future.
    Molly Wood/Marketplace

    To get off fossil fuels, you need a lot of batteries. To get a lot of batteries, you need to mine a lot of lithium. Welcome to Thacker Pass, Nevada, where a proposed lithium mine has sparked protests.

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  • Nov 11, 2021

    Alimony till death

    Sonia Delgado at her wedding, as a teenager.
    Courtesy: Sonia Delgado

    When Sonia Delgado divorced her husband after 30 years of a bad marriage, she thought she’d finally seized financial freedom. Instead, she faced a lifetime of alimony.

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  • Nov 4, 2021

    Family secrets

    The Chow family, circa 2003.
    Courtesy Serena Chow

    Matthew Chow spent his adult life trying to build a close relationship with his estranged father. In his father’s will, he found a decades-old family secret.

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