PodcastsBusinessBusiness History

Business History

Pushkin Industries
Business History
Latest episode

19 episodes

  • Business History

    The War on The A&P: When America Decided Cheap Groceries Were "Evil"

    2026-2-18 | 48 mins.
    Mom and Pops grocery stores were charming, but inefficient. They contributed to Americans either spending a lot on their food or having to go hungry. The Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Company changed the entire model. The A&P established a chain of stores selling branded goods at the lowest prices.
    The A&P kept its profit margins slim and allowed Americans to buy more food for less - but this wasn't celebrated as a success story. Politicians, radio stars and vested interests ganged together to hound The A&P. They demanded the grocery chain change its strategy, raise prices and even put its owners on trial on criminal charges. So why didn't America like cheap groceries?
    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
  • Business History

    How To Dig a Train Tunnel Under the Hudson River (from HISTORY This Week)

    2026-2-16 | 34 mins.
    For more historical deep dives just like these, check out HISTORY This Week wherever you get your podcasts!
    February 14, 1905. A stick of dynamite detonates under the Hudson River — and the ground above swallows a locomotive whole. It's the latest setback in an audacious plan to tunnel beneath the river and bring trains into Manhattan. The Pennsylvania Railroad is the largest corporation in the world, but the goopy riverbed keeps fighting back. How did they finally break through? And why are these 115-year-old tunnels still the most critical infrastructure in America?
    Special thanks to our guests: Polly Desjarlais, content and research manager at the New York Transit Museum; Jill Jonnes, author of Conquering Gotham: A Gilded Age Epic: The Construction of Penn Station and Its Tunnels; and Andy Sparberg, former LIRR manager, transit historian, and author of From a Nickel to a Token: The Journey from Board of Transportation to MTA.
    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
  • Business History

    When E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial Tanked Atari

    2026-2-11 | 49 mins.
    Nolan Bushnell loved weed, hot tubs and games... especially games. He took computer games out of the laboratory and put them in bars. His arcade game Pong was a monster hit, so he set up Atari to build a home games console which became the must-have Christmas present of 1975.
    Atari was the name on every kid's lips... but then investors came onboard to help the company expand. Bushnell and his engineers were sidelined, and Atari embarked on a crazy plan to rush out a game based on Spielberg's movie E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial. It was so bad... it sank Atari.
    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
  • Business History

    How a Bad Boss Kickstarted Silicon Valley

    2026-2-04 | 47 mins.
    William Shockley was an electronics genius - he even won a Nobel Prize - but he was an awful boss. Shockley was a cruel, paranoid micromanager. And this annoyed the staff of brilliant young engineers he'd assembled in a quiet town in Northern California. In fact, they quit and set up a company of their own inventing silicon chips.
    Robert Noyce, Gordon Moore and the rest of "The Traitorous Eight" transformed computing, but also blazed a trail for the tech founders who would flock to Silicon Valley and change the world. Members of "The Traitorous Eight" set up Intel and AMD, while also funding businesses such as Google and Slack.
    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
  • Business History

    Sears: Cocaine Wine, Shotguns, and the World’s Tallest Tower

    2026-1-28 | 43 mins.
    Richard Warren Sears started off selling pocket watches - then published a catalog full of hundreds and hundreds of products from shotguns to cocaine wine. Sears & Roebuck offered even Americans living on remote farms the chance to shop like city dwellers. The catalog became an American institution - the Amazon of the 1890s - but as the nation changed, Sears adapted too and built a vast chain of physical stores.
    Sears felt so secure that it built the world's tallest office building to house all its staff - but then came competition from specialist big-box stores and out-of-town megastores. Sears found itself in a death spiral and couldn't pull out.
    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

More Business podcasts

About Business History

It’s the history of business. How did Hitler’s favorite car become synonymous with hippies? What got Thomas Edison tangled up with the electric chair? Did someone murder the guy who invented the movies? Former Planet Money hosts Jacob Goldstein and Robert Smith examine the surprising stories of businesses big and small and find out what you can learn from those who founded them.
Podcast website

Listen to Business History, The Tim Ferriss Show and many other podcasts from around the world with the radio.net app

Get the free radio.net app

  • Stations and podcasts to bookmark
  • Stream via Wi-Fi or Bluetooth
  • Supports Carplay & Android Auto
  • Many other app features

Business History: Podcasts in Family

  • Podcast Revisionist History
    Revisionist History
    Society & Culture, History
  • Podcast Fiasco
    Fiasco
    Government, History, News, Politics
Social
v8.6.0 | © 2007-2026 radio.de GmbH
Generated: 2/18/2026 - 8:59:18 AM