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WALL STREET JOURNAL PODCASTS
Featured Audio
 Hard Times in Homestead: Rising gas prices are hitting homeowners in areas such as Homestead, Fla., hard, reports WSJ's Dawn Wotapka.
 Raw Feelings Over Women Sushi Chefs: Women are having a hard time cutting it as sushi chefs in Japan, reports WSJ's Mariko Sanchanta.
 Tough Times for Tough Cops: WSJ's Amy Chozick reports gritty cop shows are becoming endangered.
Daily Podcasts
One hour of the morning's top business and personal finance news. Host Gordon Deal anchors this fast-paced, entertaining and truly useful program.
Top story: 03-05-2011 - What is bad for Washington could be good for states, boomers turn to franchises to stave off retirement and the most expensive town in America.
Weekdays and Saturdays available 8:15 a.m. (ET)/5:15 a.m. (PT)
Hear about the top tech stories of the day, including news and features. Plus, get a rundown on tech stocks on the move.
Today's topic: Microsoft and Kayak team up, don't feel cheated if you bought an iPad just before Apple cut the price Wednesday and CBS buys Clicker Media. Tom Ortuso reports.
Twice each weekday
Get your personal finances in shape with advice on budgeting, credit card debt, college tuition, retirement and more.
Today's topic: When one parent stops working, it can be a real challenge for the household ... more "tweeners" are wearing makeup - and retailers want the business ... and why is choosing a new toothpaste so darn difficult? Jim Chesko reports.
Weekdays
Stay on top of the latest headlines from the Wall Street Journal Online.
Top story: The jobs market shows improvement; stocks fall on rising oil; and EADS will not protest the refueling tanker contract, which was awarded to Boeing.
Morning, midday and evening each weekday
A timely review of the top news of the day. WSJ reporters, editors and columnists offer lively insights into breaking stories and current events.
Top story: Violence grows in Libya, and oil prices rally to their highest point in more than two years.
Twice Daily M-F
Observations and anecdotes from the world of the small business. Hosted by Joe Connolly.
This week: Joe Connolly on how landlords are hurting neighborhoods by being unwilling to give new businesses a break.
Weekdays
It can be the little things that make a difference in your financial health. Jennifer Kushinka offers tips to stretch your hard-earned dollars.
Top story: Jennifer Kushinka on available help for care givers.
Weekdays
CEO Radio with Ray Hoffman of The Wall Street Journal is a program originated by WCBS Newsradio 880 in New York City. Hoffman interviews CEOs about their business practices.
Today's topic: Greg Booth, CEO of the Zippo Manufacturing Company on the purchase of the Ronson company.
Weekdays
Other Audio
A two-minute update on breaking business news and Wall Street activity. Click to listen on your PC. ("mp3" file format only)
Twice an hour, weekdays
Listen Now
Highlights of top articles in the current edition of Barron's magazine.
Fridays
Weekly & Other Podcasts
James Taranto provides personal commentary on the latest news from around the Web.
Latest installment: OpinionJournal.com's James Taranto discusses the morale obligation of political and government commentators.
Tuesdays and Fridays
In this video podcast, Personal Technology columnist Walter S. Mossberg reviews and explains -- in plain English -- the latest in consumer technology.
Latest installment: Walt Mossberg gives an exclusive first review of Peel, an app and companion $99 wireless device that turns an iPhone or iPod Touch into a universal remote for your TV, cable box, TiVo, DVD player, Roku player, and Apple TV. It controls all of these through one gesture-based interface on the screen of the iPhone or Touch.
Wednesday
Dan Henninger, deputy editor of The Wall Street Journal editorial page, offers personal commentary on the news.
Latest installment: Daniel Henninger explains that the Vietnamese are riding into the economic big league, atop millions of motorbikes.
Wednesdays
Scott McCartney looks at the ups and downs of airlines and travel.
Latest installment: Plastic surgery, paid for with frequent flier miles? That's just one of the bizarre things airlines are offering for purchase with frequent flier miles.
Wednesdays
Hear exclusive interviews and segments from Wall Street Journal Reporters on topics related to Journal Reports, special sections running on Mondays and Saturdays.
This week: Some employers are pushing their employees to make better investment choices in their 401(k) by moving their money for them. Hear Dow Jones Newswires reporter Veronica Dagher explain why companies are changing your allocation and what you need to keep in mind.
Fridays
Insights for starting and running a small business, from the Wall Street Journal and Startup Journal and experts in areas such as management and finance.
This week: Did the economic stimulus help small businesses? A review after two-years of the program. Also, the good and bad of running a business with your spouse; and high-cost and low-cost pet franchises.
Tuesdays
Hear exclusive interviews by Journal reporters and editors.
This week: Mariko Sanchanta and Gordon Deal of the Wall Street Journal This Morning explain why women are having a hard time cutting it as sushi chefs.
New Episodes Occasionally
In this video podcast, Wall Street Journal Online reporter Andy Jordan chronicles the (often odd) stories that can be found when people and technology come together.
Latest installment: Smug Hipster puppies, auto-corrected texts of Dads who say "divorce" when they mean "Disney" (oops) , and Asian moms who steal napkins from Chipotle. The world of user-generated blogs is full of random time-wasters, but also lucrative book deals. In his latest Tech Diary, WSJ's Andy Jordan examines the current market for blog-to-book deals and looks at the pesky question of profiting from user-generated content.
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Podcasts from MarketWatch
Go beyond the headlines. Listen to John Wordock and Ann Cates tackle the biggest money stories of the day, from Main Street to your street and everywhere in between.(Updated daily Monday through Friday)
Weekdays
Get money news before, during and after the U.S. trading day from the MarketWatch Radio Network., Market Update
Weekdays
Hear about what's driving the stock market from those in the know. MarketWatch Radio talks about the big stock movers, economic data and investment trends with Wall Street's top analysts, strategists and traders. Get the blow-by-blow on the markets when you need it most.
Weekdays
"Your Money with Chuck Jaffe" features a selection of money tips and advice from sources like Bankrate.com, Zacks.com, Retirement Weekly and more, as well as interviews with some of the financial world's top minds, and a daily dose of "Hold It or Fold It," where Chuck uses listener requests to talk specific stocks and funds with high-profile money managers.
Latest installment: David Brady of Brady Investment Counsel in Geneva, Ill., says the stock market is "slightly overvalued" right now, but that he's optimistic for the three- to five-year time frame. In an interview with MarketWatch senior columnist Chuck Jaffe, Brady aid he's buying energy, health care and communications while selling consumer discretionary, technology and industrial stocks.
Mondays
Stupid Investment of the Week is designed to be an educational exercise, highlighting the conditions and problems that make an investment far from ideal for the average consumer, thereby making it easier to root out bad investments when you come across them.
Fridays
Hear what's coming up that day on Wall Street plus money stories that impact us all. What are we buying? How much are we spending? MarketWatch reporters join John Wordock to answer these questions.
Weekdays
MarketWatch tech reporters Rex Crum and John Letzing take you inside the business of technology. Each week they discuss the highs and the lows, the right and the wrong and, in general, what they see as the best and worst of the week of technology. Learn what"s happening in high-tech from the guys who know first.
Weekdays
Get the latest analysis from Mark Hulbert, the editor of the Hulbert Financial Digest. Think you know what's happening on Wall Street? Think again. Hear insights that often challenge conventional wisdom.
Top story: An aging bull market suggests a change in leadership is overdue. And Mark Hulbert also says we have even more proof that Warren Buffett is the King of Wall Street.
Weekly (F)
From milk prices to mutual funds, grab money news for everyday Americans from award-winning MarketWatch Radio.
Top story: Smoked bread, paprika and duck fat are just some of the restaurant trends in 2011.
Weekdays
About Our Podcasts
Podcasts are short audio broadcasts that you can listen to on your computer, or download to a portable digital-music player. You can use special software to "subscribe" to individual programs so that new installments are automatically downloaded when they become available. Apple's free iTunes automates downloads and syncing with iPod players. Another free podcast program, Juice, works with a variety of portable players, while Odeo is a Web-based podcast player.
To listen to one or more WSJ podcasts feeds in your podcast software reader, click on the "Listen Now" button.
To subscribe to a podcast:
1) Right-click on the "Subscribe" button and select "copy shortcut" or "copy link location" to copy the location (URL) of the RSS feed.
2) Follow the instructions for your particular news reader, and then paste this location wherever it asks for the location of the RSS service or podcast you wish to subscribe to. (In iTunes, select the "Advanced" pulldown menu, and then select "subscribe to podcast." Paste the URL, as prompted.)
To see the archive of programs for a particular podcast in iTunes, click on the "Archive" button.
For information on more RSS feeds visit: http://online.wsj.com/public/page/0_0813.html

Podcasts - WSJ.com