ARTICLES
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							Lower prices are the top way to lure customers away from their favorite brands in every region around the world. Except one. 
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							At $200 billion, the infomercial industry is twice the size of the entire TV business. How is that possible? We investigate the business model behind the Snuggie. 
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							The private education industry is booming. How many consultants does it take to get a preppy into high school? 
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							Figuring out who is visiting national parks can be tricky, but geotagged posts from social media could help. 
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							The news that can only surprise inside the Silicon Valley bubble. 
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							How different Myers-Briggs personality types fare in the job market, and why we shouldn't care. 
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							Which political party offers a more popular product - in terms of Halloween costume sales? 
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							Marketers fill rum commercials with Caribbean beaches and whisky commercials with Scotsmen and Irishmen. The actual imbibers look a bit different. 
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							Where American couples met by the numbers - from working in the same office to joining the same quest in World of Warcraft. 
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							A major advancement in game theory sheds light on the tension between evolution, cooperation, and altruism. 
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							Running a hole in the wall restaurant is about as similar to running a large one as Henry Ford’s model T factory is to a shop building cars or motorcycles by hand. 
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							Everyone loves an underdog, but war favors the strong. Even when it comes to the battle for public opinion. 
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							Breaking down your cable bill - the great enabler of Americans' 5 hour a day television habit. 
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							The institutions capable of furnishing the largest incomes constitute a small world where growing up as the son or daughter of a politics or business magnate proves extremely valuable. 
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							Making a pilot for a new TV show can cost over $125,000 a minute. Netflix just paid $100 million for a new show, sight unseen. Why is finding the next hit show so darn expensive? 
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							If you look closely, you can see Americans start giving up on productivity and relapsing to games and entertainment apps around 3pm. 
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