
Morning Brew Daily
Americans Have Bad Vibes on Economy & UK Demands Apple’s Encrypted Data
10 Feb 2025
Episode 515: Neal and Toby dive into the latest report that shows American consumer sentiment being at a low-point with the news of tariffs. Then, the British government orders Apple to let it spy on users’ encrypted data. Also, the National Institutes of Health cuts billions of dollars for indirect costs and universities say it could jeopardize their research. Meanwhile, the winners of the weekend. Finally, what you need to know for the week ahead. 00:00 - Why is the Super Bowl on a Sunday? 3:00 - Consumer sentiment is down on the economy 7:30 - UK wants Apple’s encrypted data 11:30 - NIH cuts billions of dollars 18:00 - The best Super Bowl commercials 24:30 - Week Ahead Subscribe to Morning Brew Daily for more of the news you need to start your day. Share the show with a friend, and leave us a review on your favorite podcast app. Check out https://wise.com/business for more! Listen to Morning Brew Daily Here: https://link.chtbl.com/MBD Watch Morning Brew Daily Here: https://www.youtube.com/@MorningBrewDailyShow
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Good morning, Brew Daily Show. I'm Neil Freiman. And I'm Toby Howell. Today, consumer sentiment is way down. Inflation expectations are way up. Are Americans souring on the economy?
Then the Super Bowl was kind of a blowout, but the ads, they were also honestly kind of boring too. It's Monday, February 10th. Let's ride.
Well, that was a spanking. The Eagles coasted by the Chiefs 40-22 to win the Super Bowl, avenge their loss to Kansas City two years ago, and prevent the Chiefs from winning a historic third straight championship. Just utter domination by the birds. But many of you won't be around to discuss the game and the commercials at the office today.
22.6 million people across the country plan to miss work the day after the Super Bowl, according to the Harris poll, which is up 40% from a year ago. Now, whether these numbers are accurate or not, who knows? But here's my question to the NFL. Instead of making everyone have a brutal Monday, why not just move the Super Bowl to a Saturday?
Well, Neil, Roger Goodell, the commissioner of the NFL, has answered that very question. It comes down to ratings. According to Goodell, the reason we haven't done it in the past is just from an audience standpoint. The audiences on Sunday night are so much larger.
So you got to feed the ratings machine, even if it means giving 22 million Americans a case of a Super Bowl flu, which, by the way, Neil, should you be partying in Philadelphia right now or something? My heart is on Broad Street.
My body is on 6th Avenue.
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