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    1970s

    Explore "1970s" with insightful episodes like "Stephen King Has Ruled The Horror Genre For 50 Years. But Is It Art?", "Weirdhouse Cinema: Blacula", "Merry Christmas!", "Mayhem: The 1970s You Never Knew, Episode 6" and "Dan Alpert on the Big Difference Between Now and the 1970s" from podcasts like ""Consider This from NPR", "Stuff To Blow Your Mind", "Here's Where It Gets Interesting", "Here's Where It Gets Interesting" and "Odd Lots"" and more!

    Episodes (5)

    Mayhem: The 1970s You Never Knew, Episode 6

    Mayhem: The 1970s You Never Knew, Episode 6

    A cover up that cost Nixon's presidency, a pardon that cost Gerald R. Ford his election, and a friendship dating back to the 1940s. It was the first time a President had been impeached, and the only time in U.S. history that a President resigned from office. The betrayal of the public’s trust reverberated well beyond Nixon’s presidency in a time of economic turmoil, but what happened following Nixon’s departure from office? How did the new Ford administration attempt to gain control over the rising unemployment and double-digit inflation? Join us as we learn about how this confluence of events created economic instability, unhappiness, and impacted the mood of the country in 1974.


    Writer, Host, and Executive Producer: Sharon McMahon

    Audio Producer: Jenny Snyder

    Writers and Researchers: Amy Watkin, Mandy Reid, and Kari Anton

    Production Coordinator: Andrea Champoux 





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    Dan Alpert on the Big Difference Between Now and the 1970s

    Dan Alpert on the Big Difference Between Now and the 1970s

    Official inflation measures in the U.S. remain elevated and so, of course, this has a lot of people thinking about the 1970s. Not only was this the last time the U.S. had a sustained period of high inflation, it was the period during which many of today's policymakers really started to form their views about managing the economy. On this episode, we speak with Dan Alpert, a managing partner at Westwood Capital, and a fellow at the Cornell Law School, about his new report on inflation risks, and what he sees as false comparisons to the 1970s.

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