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Hello and happy Friday.

I’ve developed a bit of an embarrassing weekend ritual: Every Sunday morning, I rush to dismiss Apple’s weekly “screen time report” notification before I can read the top-line number. I simply don’t want to know. And sure, I could turn off the feature, but wouldn’t that be admitting defeat?

With that in mind, I was very interested in learning more about the growing “digital detox” industry, which my colleague Maria explored this week. Also in today’s newsletter: Chef Samin Nosrat shares a climate-friendly recipe with our podcast “How We Survive,” our Shanghai correspondent visits a robot upskilling school in China, and we dive deep into shopping trends ahead of the holiday season.

Is your mailbox full of catalogs too? Maybe I’ll leaf through one, get off my phone. — Tony Wagner, newsletter editor
A man's face lit by a smartphone screen.
Kazuhiro NogiAFP via Getty Images
Would you pay to use your smartphone less?
The so-called digital detox industry is expected to be worth $19.44 billion by 2032. Marketplace’s Maria Hollenhorst tried it out.

About a year and a half ago, a friend of mine told me about an app she’d downloaded to help curb her smartphone use. 

“It turns on a camera, and watches me, and I have to do either push-ups or squats for every minute of free use of the apps that I've chosen to lock,” said Hannah Palma, a 31-year-old software engineer. 

The app is called Clearspace. You can tell it how much you want to use distracting apps and it will prompt you to do an exercise or take a deep breath each time you open them. Oh — and it costs $49.99 a year. 

“I realize it’s kind of silly that I’m paying monthly for my phone and then I'm paying yearly to not use it, but I think that's the best way that I've stayed healthy in managing my screen time,” Palma said.

Clearspace is just one of dozens of companies that have popped up in recent years that are in the business of screentime reduction. Market researchers have estimated that the so-called digital detox industry could swell to $19.44 billion by 2032. 

It includes apps like ScreenZen and One Sec, which force you to take a pause before using social media. Others, such as BePresent , allow you to add friends and earn rewards and some have even more gamified features, like the Forest app, in which users plant and grow a virtual “tree” by abstaining from distractions.

After hearing Hannah talk about Clearspace, I signed up too. For a while, it kinda worked. I found that just taking a pause before opening TikTok at least helped me become more conscious of my scrolling. Like a lot of these apps, it has a dashboard where I could track my progress.

“It's fascinating, isn't it? Don't use your phone, but like, come to this dashboard, which will show you how much you've not used your phone,” said Zoetanya Sujon, a reader and program director in communications and social technologies at the London College of Communication.

She says those gamified features, including stats tracking, streaks, and the ability to add friends, are the same techniques that social media companies use to make their platforms so sticky in the first place.

“These apps are trying to give people, well, weirdly, using the same systems and tools to try to give people a sense of control over very pervasive interfaces and technologies,” said Sujon. 

Some startups, including Brick, Bloom, and Blok — yes, that’s three separate companies — sell physical devices that restrict apps when you tap your phone to them. They’re priced between $30 and $60, sometimes with an additional monthly subscription fee.

“I've used all of them — the lockbox phone case, Brick, Freedom software, like lots of different things,” said Benjamin Goldhirsch, co-founder of another mental health tech company called Matter Neuroscience.  “I think the challenge is the magnetism of the phone is strong, and the functional use of the phone is strong.” 
READ MORE


 
Stories for the weekend

News of the week

  • The government’s open again, but there’s still a fog over U.S. economic data. The White House said October jobs and inflation data won’t be released. It will also be a while before we understand how much the longest-ever shutdown cost the economy.

  • Congress released a ton of emails shedding new light on the relationship between President Donald Trump and New York financier Jeffery Epstein, who died in prison in 2019 after he was convicted for sex crimes. 

  • After a bruising Election Day that showed Americans are focused on affordability issues, Trump talked a lot about falling prices. Most of what he said was not true.

  • At the same time, Trump has floated sharing tariff revenue with Americans in the form of $2,000 “dividend” checks. Don’t hold your breath.

Your money

  • Trump also proposed a 50-year mortgage to make homes more affordable. Here’s how that would (not) work.

  • The Internal Revenue Service announced the new contribution limits for retirement accounts, and they’re up by more than the past couple years.

  • The government minted its very last penny this week. Watch the goodbye party and learn how retailers are coping without the one-cent coin.

  • It’s getting more expensive to stream TV all the time. Check out these charts showing how much costs have risen since “Stranger Things” debuted.

Holiday shopping

  • Retailers are sending out more holiday catalogs this year. Mall brands and online shopping giants alike are betting consumers will want something more physical and fun this season.

  • Credit card charges rose sharply last month. What does that tell us about gifting this year?

  • Despite record-breaking forecasted spending, stores are betting on lower foot traffic this year. They’re cutting back on seasonal hiring at a time when more Americans could use the work.

  • How about buying a home for the holidays? Mortgage applications are up as buyers look for a deal in the slowest months for the housing market.
Is money making things weird between you and your friends?
Our podcast "This is Uncomfortable" is starting an advice column, and we're looking for your questions about splitting the tab, breakups and anything else. Don’t worry, we’ll keep your name private. Send your questions and we'll answer them on the show!
WRITE IN!
An illustration shows books, music and magazines with the title
Binglin Hu
How to talk with your kids about…IP
In today’s digital world, we’re all consuming, creating and sharing content every day, and a lot of it is derivative of existing work: Think TikTok lip-synching or making memes out of a new movie. Our podcast “Million Bazillion” answers questions kids and families have about money, and for our season finale we’re looking at intellectual property. Here are some key points:

Copyright and trademarks are rules to legally protect your intellectual property. Some people call it IP, and it’s like other kinds of property you own, but it applies to “creations of the mind” like a song, book or drawing. 

Everybody can be a copyright owner! The moment something is finished it’s automatically copyrighted. That means nobody can copy it without permission. And if they do, you’re legally protected and can take action! 

Registering a copyright with the U.S. government can offer extra protection. Copyright protections last for the life of the creator, plus 70 years. 

Royalties are payments creators earn when others use their work. It’s how authors keep earning money for books they sell, or how musicians get paid when their songs are streamed. 

Trademarks help protect the things that define a brand’s identity like logos, slogans and product names. So, if you want to make a pair of sneakers and slap a Nike swoosh on them, just don't do it.

There’s so much more to learn this week on “Million Bazillion”!

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ICYMI
Your favorite stories this week

Here are the stories readers clicked on the most in our Daily Wrap newsletter this week. Sign up to get the latest news and numbers in your inbox every weekday evening.

  • Test your knowledge with Marketplace's new news quiz!

  • Visa and Mastercard reach deal with merchants over credit card swipe fees

  • Our interview with the economist who popularized the term "K-shaped economy"

  • Here's why tariffs haven't caused prices to rise much, despite inflation worries

  • From our Instagram: Kai Ryssdal answers your tariff questions! 
Amy Scott holds up a cricket before eating it.
Marketplace's Amy Scott tries chili lime crickets, a climate-friendly protein. (Alexander Heilner)
This week on "How We Survive"
Eating your greens? How about greening your eats?

Our climate podcast “How We Survive” wrapped up its season about sustainable food this week by answering your questions. You wanted to know:

  • Is grass-fed beef more nutritious than grain-fed?

  • Is cell-cultivated meat considered an ultra-processed food?

  • And what’s up with insect protein? That last one involved a taste test.

Find that episode wherever you get podcasts. To cap off the season, we published a series of recipes from acclaimed chef Samin Nosrat and “The Splendid Table” host Francis Lam to help make your diet more climate-friendly. 
GET THE RECIPES
Three young men operate a robotic arm.
Three students in Nanjing's Zhinanche Robot Technology training school try to program a robotic arm. (Charles Zhang/Marketplace)
Inside a training center aimed at bridging China's robotic skills gap
China’s manufacturing sector is desperate for skilled workers. Marketplace’s Jennifer Pak reports from a school training engineers for automated factories.

Zhinanche Robot Technology in China’s eastern city of Nanjing gives students hands-on experience with industrial robots.

Its main workshop is lined with robotic arms on one end. These machines are the same ones found in many Chinese factories.

During one of its robotics classes, about 10 students, all young men, organized into groups of three around each robotic arm. The students were given papers printed with rectangles and circles and tasked with programming the robotic arms to trace the shapes.

Mastering these robotic arms is key to getting a decent job in the manufacturing sector. Many Chinese factories have been automating as the labor pool shrinks and fewer educated young people want to go into manufacturing.

“Many young people don’t want to do basic factory jobs,” founder of Zhinanche, Liu Zenglong, said. “So, manufacturing is turning from labor intensive to technology intensive.”

In China’s new five-year plan, which will guide the world’s second largest economy until 2030, top Communist party leaders have pledged to boost manufacturing even more. However, the manufacturing sector has tens of millions of such skilled jobs going unfilled, according to China’s ministry of education. 

Meanwhile, young people, and there are a record 12.2 million graduates this year, are struggling to find suitable opportunities.

That is because of a mismatch between the demands of the job market and labor supply. Schools like Zhinanche are trying to bridge that gap.

At the end of a three-month course, graduates from Zhinanche can work as automation engineers.

“Take the iPhone for example. It’s manufactured in China by Foxconn. But who built the production line for the iPhone? It was another company with automation engineers,” Liu said. “And once the production lines arrive at Foxconn, they need someone to calibrate, operate and repair the machines.”

READ MORE
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SONG OF THE WEEK
"Words" by F.R. David
The cover art for
Listen to "Words" on Spotify | Apple Music | YouTube

Four in 10 adults under 44 told the Associated Press recently they often or always watch TV or movies at home with the subtitles turned on. 

“I feel like COVID was maybe the time that I started watching everything with captions, and I think that that was just because I was living in a perpetual couch state,” moviegoer Amelia Van Howe told WPLN’s Justin Barney. “Everyone I know watches with captions, and maybe this is because I’m a millennial, but why not have it in theaters as well?” 

Indeed, more multiplexes are offering open caption screenings. The shift makes moviegoing more accessible for people who are hard of hearing while catering to modern tastes. A subtitled viewing habit also makes the “one-inch-tall barrier” keeping many English-speakers away from foreign films even easier to clear.
 
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