Sally Helm
Sally Helm reports and produces for Planet Money. She has covered wildfire investigation in California, Islamic Finance in Michigan, the mystery of declining productivity growth, and holograms. Helm is a graduate of the Transom Story Workshop and of Yale University. Before coming to work at NPR, she helped start an after-school creative writing program in Sitka, Alaska. She is originally from Los Angeles, California.
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Four years after the pandemic began, a small group of New Yorkers is still celebrating first responders. Each night at 7, they lean out their windows to make a big noise in thanks.
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Two reporters walk into a haunted house, in this special Halloween episode.
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Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act: A Classic Economics Horror StoryThe U.S. and China have announced new protectionist tariffs, in what some fear is a trade war. We bring you the story of a bygone era of American protectionism: the Smoot-Hawley tariffs of the 1930s.
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Five reporters go to the New York Produce Show and Conference, each on a mission.
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There's an entire universe of things spies are not allowed to tell us. Today on the show, a few of the teeny things they can say. They might come in handy.
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Understanding The Productivity ParadoxEconomists are worried about a crucial measure of innovation in the economy. That measure is productivity growth. It was surging for decades, but it's been slowing down.
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How fast is the world really changing? The answer has implications for everything from how the next generation will live to whether robots really will take all our jobs.
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Many Americans don't have enough savings to get through an emergency. Wal-Mart is offering a new program where you can win money by saving money.
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When products move around the world, they pass through a highly sophisticated system of ships, docks, trucks and more. But there is one link that has remained stubbornly human: freight forwarding.
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Zombie Docket Keeps Foreclosures From The Financial Crisis AliveAfter the housing market crash, a lot of foreclosure cases got started and then were abandoned. A court clerk in Queens discovered it's hard, lonely work to tie up a loose end of the financial crisis.