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Planet Money

ZIP Codes!

08 Jan 2025

Description

The ZIP code is less like a cold, clinical, ordered list of numbers, and more like a weird overgrown number garden. It started as a way to organize mail after WWII, but now it pops up all over our daily lives. You type it into the machine at the gas station to verify your credit card. You might type it into a rental search website if you're looking for a new apartment. Back in 2013, the ZIP Code contributed about 10 billion dollars a year to the US economy.On today's show, we turn our attention towards the humble ZIP code. Why was it born? How has it changed the mail? How has it changed the broader world? And... has it gone too far?This episode was hosted by Sally Helm. It was produced by Sam Yellowhorse Kesler with help from Willa Rubin. It was edited by Meg Cramer, and fact-checked by Sierra Juarez. It was engineered by Valentina Rodríguez Sánchez. Alex Goldmark is Planet Money's executive producer.Help support Planet Money and hear our bonus episodes by subscribing to Planet Money+ in Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org/planetmoney.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

Audio
Transcription

Full Episode

1.243 - 3.344 Sally Helm

This is Planet Money from NPR.

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7.427 - 20.476 Narrator

The other day, I went out into New York City with a mission. I wanted to travel the length of one entire zip code as fast as I could. Start the timer.

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21.056 - 22.017 Sally Helm

Okay. Three. Two.

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22.997 - 48.761 Narrator

Two, one, start. I got into an elevator with one of our producers, Willa, to start our journey from the bottom to the top of the Empire State Building. All right, we're passing through a hallway. Go, go, go. We had to run through a couple of hallways, take four separate elevators. And along the way, we passed by every single address ending in the numbers 10118.

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51.503 - 60.048 Narrator

Because this building, like other big buildings around the city and the country, it has its own zip code. Another elevator bank.

60.648 - 63.31 Tony Grubicek

Welcome to the 86th floor observation deck.

64.056 - 64.936 Sally Helm

My ears just popped.

65.597 - 74.5 Narrator

Finally, we made it to the top, the 102nd floor. Gorgeous views of New York City all around us. Willa, how long did it take?

75.38 - 78.922 Sally Helm

It took exactly three minutes and 40 seconds.

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