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Chicago Matters New features every other Tuesday
Money Talks
The topic of money is being tackled at a time when our country faces record budget deficits and our citizenry holds the highest levels of personal debt ever. The quest for money is often driven by pursuit of the American dream of upward mobility, yet the majority of Americans are anchored to the class we are born into, few move up, or down, for that matter.
Segments
12
 
Chicago Matters: Money Talks:Class Mobility and the Wealth Gap

Originally aired May 13, 2005, during our news broadcasts
Julia McEvoy—Executive Producer, Chicago Matters

The dream of getting ahead in this country is based on the belief that it's possible to move up in social class. But that's not likely for America's poorest. Seventy percent of those born into the bottom quartile of wealth distribution remain there all their lives. This report examines the growing popularity of government-assisted savings programs for low-income families, which claim to offer both a handout and a hand up.

Music Button: Shark Quest, “Rosetta Barrage,” Gods and Devils (Merge, 2004)

Posted on 5.17.2005
Chicago Matters: Money Talks: Documentary—Banking the Unbanked

Originally aired May 12, 2005, during our news broadcasts
Lex Gillespie—Independent Producer

We examine how Chicago's Mexican American immigrant communities have developed their own ways of money management and saving and how banks are trying to get them to change their ways to become more financially literate—American style.

Posted on 5.16.2005
Chicago Matters: Money Talks: “Los Chicago Boys:” Chicago's Economic Reach in Chile

Originally aired May 11, 2005, during our news broadcasts
Catrin Einhorn—Producer and Correspondent, Chicago Public Radio News

In the 1950s and 1960s, the U.S. government brought a group of young Chileans to study economics at the University of Chicago. Upon returning to their homeland, history gave them a virtually unprecedented platform to implement what they had learned. They became known as “los Chicago Boys,” and they revolutionized Chile. Their work is considered a test case, and this documentary explores their legacy through interviews with those who taught them here in Chicago, the everyday Chileans who lived through their free market revolution, and the Chicago Boys themselves.

Posted on 5.12.2005
Chicago Matters: Money Talks: Cost of Adoption

Originally aired May 10, 2005, during our news broadcasts
Tony Sarabia—Correspondent, Chicago Public Radio News

Money is a tremendous factor in deciding who gets to adopt and who doesn't. It also influences the choices available in selecting a child. This report traces the effect money has on creating a family through adoption.


Posted on 5.11.2005
Money Talks: Saving Their Way to the American Dream

Originally aired May 9, 2005, during our news broadcasts
Lynette Kalsnes—Producer, Chicago Public Radio News

Finding affordable housing is a common problem in the expensive Chicago region. But the issue hits hardest in immigrant communities, where people often arrive without much education or training...and are forced to take low-wage jobs that Americans won't. The manufacturing base that once offered high-paying work to new immigrants has largely disappeared from the Chicago area. Yet advocates say Latino families are somehow finding ways to save money and eventually afford homes.

Related Links
The Resurrection Project
Institute for Latino Studies—University of Notre Dame
Institute for Metropolitan Affairs—Roosevelt University

Music Button: Stefano Torrosi, “Fearing Much,” Easy Tempo (Esl Records, 1999)

Posted on 5.10.2005
Chicago Matters: Money Talks: Documentary—Consuming Desire

Originally aired May 5, 2005, during our news broadcasts
Todd Melby—Independent Producer
Diane Richard—Independent Producer

We enter the world of passionate collectors and compulsive shoppers to find out why people spent money on objects they don't need.

Posted on 5.9.2005
Chicago Matters: Money Talks: Follow the Money: Our Reporter Is on the Trail of 140 One-dollar Bills

Originally aired May 4, 2005, during our news broadcasts
Linda Paul—Independent Producer

We've sent 140 one-dollar bills into various Chicago neighborhoods, each with a stamped message asking its holder to call Chicago Public Radio. Follow the trail of these bills as we chronicle the money stories of those who find them.


Posted on 5.5.2005
Chicago Matters: Money Talks: In God We Trust: Charity and Accountability in One Chicago Parish

Originally aired May 2, 2005, during our news broadcasts
Monique Parsons—Independent Producer

From the collection basket to the counting room, we go behind the scenes of one church to examine exactly how charitable contributions are spent.

Music Button: Lisa Gerrard and Patrick Cassidy, “Psallit in Aure Dei,” Immortal Memory (4AD, 2004)


Posted on 5.4.2005
Money Talks: Best Education Money Could Buy: Battle for School Funding Reform

Originally aired May 3, 2005, during our news broadcasts
Jay Field—Correspondent, Chicago Public Radio News

We take a look at the reality behind the school funding reform movement from the perspective of several school superintendents who are in the process of fulfilling the federal mandate to hire a qualified teacher for every classroom.


Posted on 5.3.2005
Chicago Matters: Money Talks: Documentary—“Chicago Hustles”

Originally aired April 28, 2005, during our news broadcasts
Ann Hepperman—Independent Producer
Kara Oehler—Independent Producer
Jad Abumrad—Editor

A cigarette hustler takes us through Chicago's underground, where people use their own cars as cabs, drug dealers create mini-economies, and pharmaceuticals are sold door to door.

Posted on 5.2.2005
Chicago Matters: Money Talks: The Tipping Point: Are We Hostages to a Culture of Tipping?

Originally aired April 25, 2005, during our news broadcasts
Sonari Glinton—Intern and Newswriter, Chicago Public Radio

Our reporter, a part-time waiter, takes the temperature of the tippers and of the tipped—and learns that there's plenty of angst on both sides when it comes to this ubiquitous tradition.


Posted on 4.28.2005
Chicago Matters: Money Talks: A New Roof for a Boob Job: How Some Say No to Spending

Originally aired April 27, 2005, during our news broadcasts
Kelsey Dilts—Independent Producer

One alternative to spending cash is bartering. From informal deals to online barter associations, we look at some creative ways Chicagoans are avoiding transactions involving money.

Posted on 4.27.2005
Chicago Matters: Money Talks: Green Shift: Economics of Going Green

Robbie Harris—President, Lucid Dream Productions

Building environmentally-friendly homes and buildings is the buzz among developers these days. This report investigates the meaning of building “green,” who's doing it, and whether or not it can be cost effective.

Originally aired April 19, 2005, during our news broadcasts

Related Link
Chicago Center for Green Technology

Posted on 4.22.2005
Documentary—“The Meaning of Money: A Duet”

We begin with a story about traders flagrantly in pursuit of wealth, then shift to a scenario in which recent college grads move in together and take a vow of poverty.

Posted on 4.21.2005
Chicago Matters: Money Talks: The Golden Years: Retirement Myths and Realities

Originally aired April 20, 2005, during our news broadcasts
Shawn Allee—Independent Producer

Raided pensions, shaky Social Security, the inability to save on low-wage salaries...how is a person to plan for retirement these days? Our reporter examines how some employees of Chicago-based United Airlines are managing their “golden years.”

Posted on 4.21.2005
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