Mark Gimein

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Crack for Journalists: The Economics of Blogging

Thanks to Time.com and Justin’s lending me his space, I’ve had the chance to guest blog here for a week. In my last entry, I’d like to take a shot at some thoughts about blogging itself. A friend of mine who asked not to be named calls blogging “Journalist’s Crack.” Blogging, by which I mean [...]

Foreclosure Not So Lite?

For those who want to delve into the intricacies of subprime mortgage math, my item on subprime mortgages garnered some reaction, including an item from Felix Salmon at Portfolio.com seems to have taken up the challenge of proving that my view is nothing less than evil. Felix’s central objection is that most subprime loans were [...]

A $500 Million Check? More Please

The Associated Press has a story about about a man stopped trying to leave Italy with a $500 million check. It’s not clear exactly what kind of check; the implication is that it’s a cashier’s check, or the Italian equivalent. And the other implication is that it’s real. Says the Associated Press story: The man [...]

Aristotle, Jennifer Aniston, and TV For the Affluent

At the risk of turning away even more of the potential audience, I want to take a couple of minutes to talk about … Aristotle. Yes, the Greek philosopher. Which (if you’re counting) makes this entry even less timely than the one about the Jamestown colony. Aristotle’s Poetics divides men into “higher,” or noble, and [...]

Foreclosure Lite, Or Losing the Home You Bought With Nothing Down

If you’ve read anything about business in the last couple of months, and I’ll work under the assumption that almost all the readers of this blog have to avoid repeating all the sordid details, you know about the subprime mess. The basic story line goes like this: Irresponsible and unscrupulous bankers offered borrowers loans at [...]

You Too Can Make 40% A Year

… as long as you don’t mind losing everything every once in a while. The thought occurred to me as I read the profile of hedge fund manager Victor Niederhoffer in the New Yorker this week. As the profile was being written, Niederhoffer’s flagship hedge fund blew up. And this wasn’t the first time. Niederhoffer, [...]

Now we know: telecom kingpin Joe Nacchio believed more than anybody else in his company’s future. Yeah, right.

Former Qwest CEO Joseph P. Nacchio, convicted of insider trading charges in April and sentenced to six years in prison, is appealing his conviction, the Journal reports. Full disclosure here: I reported on Nacchio’s shenangans at Qwest for Fortune in 2003, so I’m not unhappy to find the Joe Nacchio saga come to a conclusion [...]

400 Years of Corporate Scandal: An Anniversary

I wanted to do an item about the economics of exploration on Columbus Day, but now it’s two days late, and I’ll take advantage of another, related anniversary: 400 years since the founding of the Jamestown Colony in Virginia. Yes, that was a long time ago. I wouldn’t stop the presses for this either. If [...]

Lazy Sexy Money, Or Why the TV Rich Don’t Work

Writing about economics gives me plenty of chances to zig when everyone else zags. The rest of the blogosphere is going to be telling you about last night’s Republican debate. So I’ll talk about what’s on TV tonight: Dirty Sexy Money, the new ABC show about the mega-rich. Yes, I know. This probably means my [...]

Would You Charge 75 Cents To Save A Child?

The New York Times has an extraordinary story today about getting mosquito nets to the poor. It’s billed as science section story, but it’s an instructive economic story too. Mosquito nets treated with DDT or other insecticides are a key line of defense against malaria in poor countries. They cost, according to Reuben Kyama and [...]