Morning Brew Daily - Air Traffic Staffing Issues Cripple Flights & Solo Living Gets Pricier
Episode Date: October 9, 2025Episode 688: Neal and Toby recap the staffing shortage that is stifling air traffic control causing flight delays across the US. Then, renewable energy surpassed coal for the first time as a source of... electricity. Also, the WNBA just tipped-off its Finals, but everyone is still thinking about the conflict with its leadership. Meanwhile, Neal shares his favorite numbers on Cristiano Ronaldo, Carrie Bradshaw, and if he actually has 150 friends in his social circle. Spend $250 on your first campaign on LinkedIn Ads and get a free $250 credit for the next one. Check out https://www.linkedIn.com/mbd for more. Get your MBD live show tickets here! https://www.tinyurl.com/MBD-HOLIDAY Join us for October trivia night! https://mbd-trivianight-oct2025.splashthat.com/ Vote for MBD in the Signal Awards! Best Daily Podcast: http://bit.ly/3W4e5ik Best Commute Podcast: https://bit.ly/4pxZidv Best Business Podcast: https://bit.ly/3IE7lEP Subscribe to Morning Brew Daily for more of the news you need to start your day. Share the show with a friend, and leave us a review on your favorite podcast app. Listen to Morning Brew Daily Here: https://www.swap.fm/l/mbd-note Watch Morning Brew Daily Here: https://www.youtube.com/@MorningBrewDailyShow Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Good morning, Bird Daily's show.
I'm Neil Fryman.
And I'm Toby Howell.
Today for the WNBA, it was the best of times.
It was the worst of times.
Then it's just the worst of times for air travel as air traffic controller shortages lead to delays.
It's Thursday, October 9th.
Let's ride.
Are you locked in?
Because Gen Z is, a viral trend known as the Great Lock-in has spread across social media
in which young people challenge themselves to accomplish personal goals.
from September 1st through the end of the year.
So over the next few months, don't be surprised to see a Gen Z creator
journaling or training for a marathon or making healthy meals
accompanied by inspirational quotes from Kobe Bryant or Michael Jordan.
The term lock-in, meanwhile, has surged in popularity.
It was voted the most useful term of 2024 by the American Dialect Society,
which defined it as to enter a state of deep focus and concentration.
Toby, how locked in are you these days?
Neil, I've been locked in for the last 28 years.
So I'm going to do the great lockout, actually, for the rest of the year where I forget my keys inside of my apartment and have to call the locksmith.
No, listen, I am someone who is very partial to a self-optimization routine.
I've done 75 hard a couple of times.
I've tried to run every single day in a year.
I love social media trends like this.
So, yeah, this one is essentially adopt a pre-New Year's resolution before the year ends.
stay off your phone, make some money, get fit.
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If you're considering traveling via planes, trains,
or automobiles this week,
may be offed for the latter to. For a third straight day, U.S. air traffic controller shortages
brought on by the federal government shutdown led to some delays at major hubs. D.C., Newark,
O'Hare, and Nashville airports have been facing the most delays, so apologies if any,
Bachelorette plans have been disrupted. In Philadelphia, which is not a great bachelorette
destination, 50 out of 225 TSA officers reportedly showed up late or not at all on Monday. But even that
was better than California's Hollywood Burbank Airport, which went dark for several hours on Monday
when no controllers were available, a situation known as ATC Zero. Remember, air traffic controllers
are considered essential workers and are still expected to show up to work even though they
aren't being paid while the shutdown continues. But should they start to call in sick in greater
numbers, airline delays would pile up, exerting more and more pressure on lawmakers as one of
the most visible and immediately felt consequences of a government shutdown.
When airports grind to a halt, political pressure gets dialed up to 11.
Look no further than the 2018-2019 shutdown when a coordinated controller and TSA sickouts helped break the standoff.
Neil, the FAA was already dealing with air traffic controller shortages before the shutdown.
Any further absences could be too much for it to handle.
And it does not take a lot to send the aviation system to its knees back in 2019 during that shutdown.
There were just 10 air traffic controllers.
who called out sick during that coordinated sickout that you mentioned, six from Northern Virginia
and four from Florida. And that small work stoppage was enough to cause delays at several hubs
and shut down travel completely for several hours at LaGuardia Airport in New York. You know what?
The shutdown ended later that day. So it does not take a lot of these sickouts from air traffic
controllers. Like you said, there's already a huge shortage, about 77% of key air traffic control
facilities are already understaffed. That's according to a 2024. Inspector General report.
So the longer this goes on, the more sickouts we may see because these guys and gals are not
getting a paycheck. And when that comes, they're probably going to say, well, I need to feed my
family. And you heard Sean Duffy, the Secretary of Transportation, say, we're already seeing
air traffic controllers starting to take second jobs like working for Uber and other things
to actually pay themselves and feed their families during these times.
Yeah, air travel is just a massive pressure point in the entire American political and commercial apparatus.
Controllers are actually prohibited from striking precisely because it's such an essential part of just the American infrastructure.
Yet, here they are being told to keep the system going, even though they are not being paid.
So they are doing required labor, but they are doing unpaid labor at the same time.
So it makes it such a uniquely volatile industry during a shutdown.
So it is just putting an immense strain on a lot of people as well.
These people, I mean, we've joked about 9-96 working from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. 6 days a week.
That's basically what air traffic controllers are already doing.
They're working these very long shifts six days a week to cover up from the lack of controllers in the pipeline.
There's not many young people who are entering this industry.
There's not a lot of trainees that are entering.
So right now the system was already strained even more so right now.
And what are the air traffic controller organizations saying, like what are they saying from their side
about what's going on. Well, the organization that represents more than 20,000 air traffic
controllers, the National Air Traffic Controlers Association, said that its members are already
working so much. They're already under strain 10 hours a day, six days a week. And so they
urge the federal government without pointing any particular fingers to bring a shutdown to a
close so that they can continue doing this work that they're already under a lot of pressure
to do. But they also added that they formally discourage these sickouts saying that it's
against their policy and also illegal to call in sick when you are not. So they kind of try to
play at both sides saying we need to bring this shutdown to an end so we can do our jobs and
actually get paid for it while also not condoning what's going on. Also, the government shutdown
is now rippling beyond just air travel. In as it's entering its second week, more than 250,000
federal employees have missed their scheduled paychecks. If it extends into a third week,
that number could rise above two million federal employees. So when you start to talk about
the economy being impacted.
That's when government shutdowns become especially vulnerable or damaging because
two million people not getting their paycheck.
That affects consumer spending.
That will knock on GDP.
All these big headline numbers that we've kind of hinted at happening if the shutdown
continues, that will happen as it grows longer and longer because of just the way that
paychecks are doled out in the government.
They're not all doled out on the first Friday of every month.
It's kind of multiple payroll providers in multiple industries.
are spreading out those paychecks. Third week, though, is when things really start to escalate.
Moving on, how about this milestone? Renewable energy became the world's leading source of electricity
in the first half of the year, overtaking coal for the first time in history. According to a report
from the think tank Ember, new solar and wind capacity was enough to meet growing electricity
demand around the globe, which even led to a dip in coal and gas use. But clean energy is doing
better in some parts of the world than others. China is leading the charge, adding more solar and
wind capacity than all other countries combined. Other developing countries like India, Pakistan,
and African nations are also beefing up their renewable bonafides and pushing down coal generation
in the process. The same can't be said for Europe and the United States. Here, the demand for
electricity is growing faster than the clean energy to meet it, while in Europe, bad spells for
hydro power and wind have also increased dependencies on fossil fuels. So Toby, it's a split screen for
renewables across the world, but taken an aggregate, this seems like a turning point for the global
energy system. Yeah, it really is a big headline number here. Renewables overtaking coal. That is a big
deal. It does look like a lot of the momentum is coming from emerging markets, though,
who are actually building renewables out of necessity. They need more power to build out the infrastructure
in their countries, the easiest and cheapest way to do that now is solar, is sometimes when,
but mostly solar because, you know, coal power plants are actually more expensive to operate than
a solar farm in many parts of the world, especially as China has kind of flooded the world with
very, very cheap inputs for, you know, to build solar infrastructure. And it is interesting, too,
that we're seeing some geographical nuances between what type of renewable energy certain countries
are building.
a sunbelt countries like, you know, India and Africa that are mostly receiving a lot of direct
sunlight. And so they are building solar. And then there's wind belt economies, which are actually
mostly Europe and North America. And Sunbelt nations are doing a lot better than windbelt nations
are right now because solar is cheaper to build than wind. Yeah, there's an astonishing stat that
solar has seen prices fall 99.9% since 1975. They're so cheap.
that a lot of developing economies with not a lot of money to spend can start to do that.
Meanwhile, wind costs have just spawned by a third over the last decade.
We've seen a lot of problems with the offshore wind industry here in the United States and
also in Europe.
The infrastructure costs are just so much higher than in solar.
So you are seeing those geographical discrepancies between the Sunbelt countries that are
deploying a lot more solar capacity compared to the more northern ones that are struggling
a little bit with wind.
But I think the bottom line here is that China is just leapfrogging the rest of the world.
They are adding capacity at a rate that we haven't seen before, and they're dwarfing pretty much every other country when it comes to not only putting, inputting renewable energy in their own country, but exporting it across the world.
Renewable energy exports topped $20 billion from China to the rest of the world just in August alone.
And what the heck is happening in the U.S. It's ironic that this milestone was achieved right when the International Energy Agency slash U.S. renewable growth forecasts by,
nearly 50 by 50% over the next five years because we've seen some of these Biden-era clean energy
incentives be rolled back under the Trump administration.
So as the rest of the world is accelerating towards this renewable future, the U.S.
is kind of taking its foot off the gas right now.
So it is ironic that we are seeing these crazy headlines renewables outpacing coal
at the same time the U.S. is kind of falling behind.
Moving on, game one of this year's WNBA finals was the most watched since 1997.
the league's first year in existence. Four-time MVP, Asia Wilson, and the Las Vegas Aces are up
three-o on the Phoenix Mercury, looking for their third title in four years. And even with Caitlin
Clark's sideline with an injury for most of the year, ratings, attendance, and interests were all
up. So why are the vibes in the league so off right now? Nefisa Collier, an All-Star on the
Minnesota Leagues made headlines earlier this month when she said the WMBA has the worst leadership
in the world. Her criticism was aimed directly at Commissioner Kathy Engelbert, who she claimed
privately told her that Caitlin Clark should be grateful for the WMBA's platform, something
Engelbert denied saying. While friction between player and commissioners is nothing new in pro sports,
it's created a messy situation during a time that Clark declared straight up the most important
moment in the league's history. Clark is referring to the surgeon eyeballs and interests that is
coinciding with collective bargaining negotiations between player and league. WMBA players
and leadership have until October 31st to shake hands on a new CBA with players
asking for a bigger cut of the league's growing revenue.
Under the current agreement, WMBA players only get 9.3% of league revenue.
That means Caitlin Clark's rookie contract was worth just $76,000 a year.
A WMBA max contract is only worth $250,000 a year.
WMBA leadership long justified this low pay as a result of low revenue.
But now that viewership, ticket sales, brand sponsorships, and broadcast partnerships are booming.
They want to renegotiate.
Neil, there is a big disconnect between eyeballs and dollar signs right now.
The press conference by Collier was truly draw dropping.
She took a piece of paper that.
She wrote this four and a half minute speech lambasting league leadership.
And no one saw this coming.
And after the game, she just lit into Kathy Engelbert, the commissioner of the WMBA.
She said the real threat to our league isn't money.
It isn't ratings or even missed calls or even physical play.
It's the lack of accountability from the league.
office. You saw other stars after this happened say, you know what, Collier is kind of right.
We don't really like the way this, the direction of the leadership of the WMBA right now.
So she got a lot of support from other players. However, there is an M. Knight-Sharmelon level twist here.
And that Collier is the co-founder of a rival league to the WMBA, unrivaled. She co-founded it with her husband,
who is now the president and former New York Liberty Forward Breonna Stewart, a former WMBA star.
a three-on-three league, and they pay players six figures to play. And it is seen as somewhat of
a rival to the WMBA. So she is a financial interest in growing unrivaled, and she also may
have a similar interest in seeing the WMBA lose a little bit compared to unrivaled. So some
were questioning perhaps a conflict of interest here, but I think that is getting a little bit
buried by the groundswell of support for Collier's comments directed against the leadership of the
WMBA. It is just, as you said at the beginning, the show, the best of times or worse
of times, because again, this was the most viewed finals game. Again, take Caitlin Clark
completely out of the equation. She's not in the finals. She hasn't been in the playoffs at all,
and yet eyeballs are still tuning in to watch the league. And so as this is happening, you have
the players kind of at leadership's throat because it is kind of a crux right now in negotiations.
Are NBA WMBA players going to start to receive a larger share of revenue? Again, they're not
asking for NBA level salaries.
They're just asking for NBA level amount of revenue share that that league is getting.
So right now, this is a very important moment.
That's why Caitlin Clark called it the most important for a while.
And it would stink if next year's season kind of gets delayed or disrupted,
which is a very real possibility right now.
If there's no deal by Halloween, technically, that could stretch into next year,
which would, again, be a bummer because the league has so much momentum right now.
but that is absolutely something we've seen happen
in other men's sports leagues.
It could very well happen in the WMBA.
We should also mention that Kathy Engelbert,
the commissioner of the WABA,
who was a former CEO of Deloitte,
did respond to Collier.
She said that she denied that she said
that Caitlin Clark should be grateful.
She just said that that never happened.
She was supposed to meet with Collier
a few days after this press conference happened,
but after denying that those comments happened,
they broke off that meeting.
So it looks like that relationship still remains icy.
She said that it's clear that I'm not very well liked among the players right now,
and I'm working to restore that trust.
But she also, and along with the NBA Commissioner Adam Silver,
said that they are confident that they are going to reach a CBA deal,
perhaps not by the end of the month, but at some point.
Meanwhile, the ACE is up 3-0 and kind of roll into the third championship in four years.
All right, we're going to take a quick break and come back with Neal's numbers.
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Welcome to Neal's numbers, the segment where I share three stats from the week's news
that will wake you up faster than a Celsius.
My first number is for all of you aspiring Carrie Bradshaw's.
The economist ranked America's top 100 cities by affordability for people who want to live
alone, which it calls the Carrie Bradshaw Index after the sex in the city character
who lived her best solo Manhattan life dubiously.
Without further ado, the most affordable city for living alone is which
Tachata, Kansas, where median wages are 75% higher than what is needed to afford the average
studio apartment.
Other super affordable cities for solos include Lincoln, Nebraska, and Tulsa, Oklahoma,
which make up for in cheap what they lack in excitement.
On the other end of the spectrum, New York was once again the most unffordable city for
living by yourself, which is why very few people do it here outside of TV shows.
The median monthly rent for a studio apartment is about $3,800, meaning you must earn a
over $151,000 a year to live there without spending more than 30% of your gross income on rent,
a common measure of affordability.
Toby, the economist, uses the character of Carrie Bradshaw to reveal a deeper truth,
quote, if you dream of affording a place to yourself, what town you live in is as important
as what you earn because rents vary across cities far more than wages do.
How was she affording all those shoes on a columnist salary?
That's what I want to know.
there are certain towns and cities where their star is rising in terms of affordability and certain towns and cities that are falling in terms of affordability.
One of the biggest two that I want to call it are Houston in Dallas, which were comfortably affordable last year.
But now this year they've both fallen into the unaffordable zone as rents have drastically outpaced wages.
Austin saw rents jump 25% year over year.
The city's median wage is $10,000 less.
so that gives it a Bradshaw score of 0.8.
Again, above one is what you're looking for.
Below one means you're unaffordable.
So it is fascinating to see how certain Sunbelt states have just risen and fallen in affordability too.
Memphis actually had one of the biggest slides, too.
They became a lot more unaffordable from just residual COVID migrations as well.
So interesting to see which parts of the country are becoming more unaffordable
and which like Wichita are just like a bastion of affordability.
And we should put some respect on Wichita's name because, yeah, maybe we said it's not that exciting,
but there are some few interesting things about Wichita.
First of all, some of the best fast food in the country started there.
Pizza Hut was launched on May 31st, 1958 by two brothers who went to Wichita State University.
White Castle is another great chain that started in Wichita.
It's also known as the air capital of the world.
I'm sure they gave themselves that moniker.
But Cessna, this guy named Clyde Cesson.
who started Cessna there.
And it's become a huge supplier of aircraft parts for Boeing and Airbus.
And then finally, we got to talk about the DeBruce Grain Elevator.
That is recognized by the Guinness World Records as the world's largest grain elevator by capacity.
As a storage capacity, get this, of over 20 million bushels of wheat.
It's a massive structure stretching 2,700 feet about a half a mile.
We got to talk about the grain elevator.
And we have to have another section in the city reboot with Carrie heading to Wichita.
I mean, something's good.
It's going to happen between that.
So HBO, if you're listening, Carrie in Wichita, I think that's magic there.
All right.
For my second number, Cristiano Ronaldo is a billionaire.
Not terribly shocking, I know.
But for the first time, Bloomberg clock the soccer star's net worth at $1.4 billion, making him the sports only billionaire.
Ronaldo's come a long way from his upbringing in poverty on the Portuguese island of Madeira,
where the airport is now literally called Cristiano Ronaldo International Airport.
His soccer career began in his native country, then at mega clubs across Europe like
Manchester United and Real Madrid.
To complement his substantial salary for prolific goal scoring on the pitch,
Ronaldo signed more endorsement deals than Sidney,
earning untold millions from brands like Nike and Armani.
We don't know how much he gets paid per sponsored post,
but it's probably more than anyone else on this earth,
because Ronaldo is the most popular person on Instagram with over six.
660 million followers. But all that didn't add up to a billion dollars until Ronaldo made one of the most
decisive and controversial moves of his career, leaving Europe to sign with the Saudi Arabian
team Al Nasser. To lure Ronaldo, Saudi Arabia offered him more than Mark Zuckerberg offers
AI engineers. And his recent deal with the team worth more than $400 million, vaulted him into
the three comma club. Toby Ronaldo is a unique sports billionaire in that most of his money comes
from actual income from playing the sport, not equity in an adjacent.
in business, Roger Fedder's billionaire status primarily stems from his stake in the shoe brand on
running, while Michael Jordans comes from his long-running deal with Nike and his ownership of
the Charlotte Hornets.
Ronald has just played for a really long time as one of the best players in the sport and
moved to teams that paid him gobs of money. Pretty simple formula. You should try it.
He's just a W-2 guy, you know, collecting a paycheck, becoming a billionaire. His paycheck just
looks a little bigger than yours or mine. It is fascinating, though, David Beckham, who is
the, call him Christiana Ronaldo before Christiana Ronaldo, just in terms of global recognizability.
He retired with $100 million in total lifetime earnings.
Ronaldo is creeping up on $600 million in its salary.
So it just shows the amount of money.
But this Al-Nasar contract is just a total outlier in global sports.
No one is even clearing close to the amount of money that Ronaldo is bringing in.
He also got equity in the team as well.
So you said that he's mostly making the money.
off of salary, but in the future, he says he wants to own multiple soccer clubs. He already
owns a stake in the very club he's playing for now. So I could see this number start to
compound over time as well. And here is a very interesting piece of Ronaldo lore. He was
named in honor of his dad's favorite movie actor, who was Ronald Reagan. I genuinely, I mean,
I've played soccer my whole life. I've been a Ronaldo fan for a long time. Literally never knew
that until researching this story. Ronald Reagan, are you serious? That is one of the craziest piece
of bar trivia that you'll have in your back pocket now.
Bernaldo was named after Ronald Reagan,
and now he's a billionaire.
Okay, my final number is 150,
which is how many people, on average,
are in your social circle.
The number comes from British psychologist,
Robin Dunbar, who studied more than 30 primate species
to come up with a fascinating relationship,
the size of the neocortexes in these species' brains
was directly correlated to the size of their stable social groups.
As the Wall Street Journal notes,
the neocortex of the brain is responsible for things like language, problem solving, and self-awareness,
all skills that translate to fostering social relationships that, for primates, improve survival rates.
Because when a predator is bearing down, it helps to be able to coordinate escape routes.
Humans have an unusually large neocortex, which gives us the cognitive energy to maintain connections
with approximately 150 people, according to Dunbar.
He found this number consistent through societies and eras from hunter-gatherer kinship networks to
Mormon wagon trains in the 1800s.
No one has 150 best friends, of course.
And Dunbar notes that a human social circle is divided into hierarchies.
You've got your inner circle of five people you can fight in the most.
And 10 additional good friends you see about once a month, which accounts for 60% of your
social attention.
Then comes what he calls the weekend backyard barbecue party group of 50 people, which
includes your besties and then a final outer ring of 100 that would come to your wedding.
Toby, what a coincidence. You're planning a wedding. Do you find this 150 rule holds as you're figuring out who to invite?
Yeah, it is interesting that this concentric circles, you start to expand when you start planning your wedding and you go, man, how long do these circles actually expand into?
Like, I haven't talked to this person in a while right now. But as we are in wedding planning, I have exceeded 150 people that maybe could come to the wedding because some Swedish researchers have found that 150 people might be.
under prediction.
Humans are not like other primates, they argue,
because we are no longer living in a survival-based environment.
So while resource availability or predation are things that monkeys might have to deal with,
humans do not have to deal with it anymore.
So there's no limit on food competitiveness anymore.
So even if I have 150 or more people in my group,
we're not fighting over the same scraps of food anymore.
And so therefore, why can't I have 250 people or 350 people?
or 350 people in my group.
I've seen you at a Tripoli.
I know. I do fight pretty hard over that.
All of this to say is that maybe this 150 number
that has kind of become the de facto number
of how many people you could possibly know
is not necessarily a de facto number anymore.
All right, let's sprint to the finish
with a final headline.
Dolly Parton posted a video yesterday
telling fans, I'm not dying,
which, hey, is great news.
But also, why did she feel the need to say that?
The day before, the legendary country singer's sister,
Freda wrote on social media that Dolly quote hasn't been feeling her best and she had been up all
night praying for my sister who said she hasn't been feeling her best lately. That sparked a national
freak out about her health because we can't lose Dolly, not right now. Rest assured,
Dolly is doing fine saying I'm not ready to die yet. I don't think God is through with me and
I ain't done working. And her sister also tried to clean up this mess. Posting the next day,
I didn't mean to scare anyone or make it sound so serious when asking for prayers for Dolly.
Toby, it's another reminder to think before you post.
Think before you post, but I do think it showed people's mental states right now saying,
oh my gosh, anybody but Dali, it is funny that people just have these parasols
relationships too and that social media can blow things out of proportion.
Another kind of funny dying joke was recently made in Malibu earlier this week as well.
Dick Van Dyke, who is 99 years old, said that he hopes he makes it to his 100th birthday
because he's on a book tour promoting his book,
100 rules for living to 100,
a optimist guide to a happy life.
But his birthday is in December,
so he goes, how funny it would be
if I didn't actually make it to that?
And here I am promoting this book.
So a couple of semi-mormid but semi-funny,
celebrity death jokes, if you will.
But Dolly, she's doing fine,
and we're all happy to see it.
May they live long and prosper.
Okay, that is all the time we have.
Thanks so much for starting your morning with us
and have a wonderful Thursday.
If you have any feedback on today's episode, send a note to Morning Brew Daily at Morningbrew.com.
And if you're coming in to write and saying that I said that Brianna Stewart was a former WMBA player.
Well, I'm correcting myself now.
She is currently a player for the New York Liberty, so you can withhold your criticisms there.
I apologize for the error.
Okay, let's roll the credits.
Emily Milliron is our executive producer.
Raymond Liu is our producer.
Our associate producers are Olivia Graham and Olivia Lake.
Hair and makeup is the opposite of locked in.
Devin Emery is our president and our shows a production of Bording Brew.
Great show you guys, Neil. Let's run it back tomorrow.
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