• Killer Whales
    Jan 26 2026

    Dominic tries to convince Cassidy that orcas (killer whales) are technically economics. Special thanks to Andres and Lexi for ideas for this episode.

    Mentioned:

    • “International Trade, Noise Pollution, and Killer Whales” by M. Scott Taylor and Fruzsina Mayer
    • “What Is Wave Washing: How Killer Whales Hunt Seals” Nature on PBS
    • “Why Are Orcas Called Killer Whales?” Britannica
    • “The vocalizations of an Orca” Reddit
    • “Consuming Values” by Jacob Conway
    • “Orcas have sunk 3 boats in Europe and appear to be teaching others to do the same. But why?” by Sascha Pare
    • “Whales Have Attacked Plenty of Boats Before. This Time Is Different” by Anna Guasco
    • “Orcas Sink Sailing Yacht With Family of Five Off Portugal" the Maritime Executive
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    53 mins
  • Instant Ramen
    Jan 12 2026

    Cassidy tries to convince Dominic that instant ramen is technically economics.

    Special thanks to Conner and Sophia for suggestions on this topic.

    Ideas for future episodes? Email technicallyeconomics@gmail.com

    Mentioned:

    • "A Contribution to the New Theory of Demand: A Rehabilitation of the Giffen Good" by Richard G. Lipsey and Gideon Rosenbluth
    • "Ramen Politics: Informal Money and Logics of Resistance in the Contemporary American Prison" by Michael Gibson-Light
    • “Momofuku Ando, a Young Man Brimming with Entrepreneurial Spirit” from the Nissin Foods website
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    58 mins
  • Christmas Trees
    Dec 22 2025

    Dominic tries to convince Cassidy that Christmas Trees are technically economics.

    Mentioned:

    • “Merchants of Joy” on PrimeVideo
    • “Why are Vickery Auctions Rare?” by Michael H. Rothkopf, Thomas J. Teisberg, and Edward P. Kahn
    • “Artificial Christmas Trees Face Real Headwinds” an interview on Bloomberg with National Tree Company CEO Chris Butler
    • “Why are more and more Americans buying fake Christmas trees?” by Courtney Vinopal
    • “The Economics of Christmas Trees” by Zachary Crockett
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    55 mins
  • Crop Tops
    Dec 8 2025

    Cassidy tries to convince Dominic that crop tops are technically economics.

    Special thanks to Emily for suggesting this topic.

    Ideas for future episodes? Email technicallyeconomics@gmail.com.

    Mentioned:

    • Clothing Rationing During WWII, Library of Congress Blogs
    • The First Crop Top, ShunVogue
    • The Trend Forecast, 99% Invisible
    • “Bright Pink”, WGSN
    • Why colour forecasting is critical to product success, WGSN
    • Bandwagon and Underdog Effects and the Possibility of Election Prediction, by Herb Simon

    Intro Music:@afterdinnersig

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    49 mins
  • Dating Apps
    Nov 17 2025

    Dominic tries to convince Cassidy that dating apps are technically economics.

    Ideas for future episodes? Email technicallyeconomics@gmail.com

    Mentioned:

    • “Who Solved the Secretary Problem” by Thomas S. Ferguson
    • “Tinder Experiments II” on Medium
    • “What's The Biggest Challenge Men Face On Dating Apps?” by Aviv Goldgeier (Hinge blog post archived by the Wayback Machine)
    • “Who Marries Whom?” by Benjamin Goldman, Jamie Gracie, and Sonya Porter
    • “The Strength of Absent Ties: Social Integration via Online Dating” by Josue Ortega and Philipp Hergovich
    • “Couples who meet online are more diverse than those who meet in other ways, largely because they’re younger” by Anna Brown
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    1 hr
  • Waiting in Line
    Nov 3 2025

    Cassidy tries to convince Dominic that waiting in line is technically economics.

    Special thanks to Anthony for suggesting this topic.

    Ideas for future episodes? Email technicallyeconomics@gmail.com.

    Mentioned:

    • “Naive Herding in Information-Rich Settings” by Erik Eyster and Matthew Rabin

    Intro Music:@afterdinnersig

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    56 mins
  • Apples
    Oct 20 2025

    Dominic tries to convince Cassidy that apples are technically economics.

    Follow us on Instagram at @TechnicallyEconomics. Ideas for future episodes? Email technicallyeconomics@gmail.com.

    Special thanks to Claire for consulting on this episode, and to Conrad for the topic idea.

    Mentioned:

    • “The Business of Apples and the Cosmic Crisp Story with West Mathison, President & CEO of Stemilt” by The Modern Acre Podcast
    • “The golden age of apples: How the fruit went from drab to delicious” by Deepa Fernandes, Samantha Raphelson, and Allison Hagan
    • “How One Man Saved Honeycrisp Apple from Extinction” by Regenerative Fruit Growers
    • “Apple tree: Honeycrisp - US Plant Patent” filed by Jim Luby and David S. Bedford
    • “Patents and Innovation: Evidence from Economic History” by Petra Moser
    • “Why are Honeycrisp apples still so expensive?” by the Curious Minnesota Podcast
    • “The Evolution of Brand Preferences: Evidence from Consumer Migration” by Bart J. Bronnenberg, Jean-Pierre H. Dubé, and Matthew Gentzkow
    • "Are beliefs stronger than taste? A field experiment on organic and local apples" by John C. Bernard and Yinan Liu
    • “The Cosmic Crisp Global Brand Guide”
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    56 mins
  • Fortnite
    Oct 6 2025

    Cassidy tries to convince Dominic that Fortnite is technically economics.

    Ideas for future episodes? Email technicallyeconomics@gmail.com.

    Mentioned:

    • “Suspense and Surprise” by Jeffrey Ely, Alexander Frankel, and Emir Kamenica
    • “A Note on Restaurant Pricing and Other Examples of Social Influences on Price” by Gary Becker
    • “Consumer Demand with Social Influences” by El Hadi Caoui, Chiara Farronato , John J. Horton, Robert Schultz

    Intro Music: Sound-logo-KOED.MP3 by Boryslaw_Kozielski -- https://freesound.org/s/246349/ -- License: Creative Commons 0

    Outro Music: Electronic music intro by frankum --https://freesound.org/s/268798/ -- License: Attribution 4.0

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    51 mins