The Best One Yet - 🙅 “Cancel Your Internship” — Top-Paid Internships. Momofuku’s Chef-to-Shelf Strategy. Why Stocks hit ATHs.

Episode Date: June 30, 2025

TBOY Live Show Tickets to Chicago on sale NOW: https://www.axs.com/events/949346/the-best-one-yet-podcast-ticketsDespite trade war & real war, US stocks just hit all-time-highs… We whipped up 4 ...reasons why.Momofuku’s Michelin-starred restaurant just raised $27M of VC… to stick its noodles in Costco.Internships are down, but some are making $25K/month?... Our advice: Cancel your internship.Plus, get your tickets to our Live Show in Chicago… it’s gonna be a TBOY$SPY $JPM $NVDAWant more business storytelling from us? Check out the latest episode of our new weekly deepdive show: The untold origin story of… Dr Pepper 🥤Subscribe to The Best Idea Yet: Wondery.fm/TheBestIdeaYetLinks to listen.About Us: The daily pop-biz news show making today’s top stories your business. Formerly known as Robinhood Snacks, TBOY Lite is hosted by Jack Crivici-Kramer & Nick Martell.GET ON THE POD: Submit a shoutout or fact: https://tboypod.com/shoutouts NEWSLETTER:https://tboypod.com/newsletter SOCIALS:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tboypod TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@tboypodYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@tboypod Anything else: https://tboypod.com/ Our 2nd show… The Best Idea Yet: Wondery.fm/TheBestIdeaYetLinksEpisodes drop weekly. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is Nick. This is Jack. Welcome back. It is Monday, June 30th. And today's pod is the best one yet. This is a T-boy. The top three pop business news stories you need to know today. Jack, checking the calendar. We got a three-day weekend, four-day work week situation. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:00:15 Friday is the 4th of July. Everybody's off. We're dropping something on the feed. It's a surprise. I know you love it Friday, 4th of July, by the way. I mean, you cook burgers on Friday. You have ice cream on Saturday. You nurse your hangover on Sunday.
Starting point is 00:00:28 Wednesday's a new Thursday. Thursday's a new Friday. Friday's still a real Friday. Friday, Jack, three stories for today's T-Boy because it's Monday. What do we got on the pod? For our first story, despite trade wars, real wars, credit downgrades, and the Sabrina Carpenter album controversy. Who could forget? Stocks hit an all-time high on Friday. Jack and I will tell you how that is possible and why you shouldn't bet against the market. For our second story, Momofuku, the Michelin-starred noodle chain, is expanding big into grocery stores. The new trend is chef to shelf.
Starting point is 00:01:00 our third and final story. It's intern season, and intern pay has never been higher. But Jack, intern roles have never been scarcer. So here's our internship advice. What is it, Jack? Cancel your internship. Cancel your internship. But yet he's before we hit that wonderful mix of stories. Hatee coming in three. Wonderful mixes stories. Love the mix, Jack. Hey, MJ. Are you busy next month? Yeah, Michael Jordan. We're less than four weeks until our live show in Chicago. What you got going on, man? Yeah, his people haven't gotten back to our people yet, actually. No, they have not. But on July 23rd at Chicago's Vic Theater, we are on stage for our fourth T-Boy Live show.
Starting point is 00:01:39 T-Boy live show right now, and you have never seen a show like this before. Here's how it's going to go down. Nick and I are going to wear our T-boy finest, and we're going to step on stage and perform our three classic news stories in front of you all. Yeah, so you get to hear them the night before anyone else does. Yeah, you do. And it's a full-on physical performance we're talking about. Totally. I mean, we are standing.
Starting point is 00:01:59 We are sweating. We might have an accidentally spit on the people in the front row. That's what happens when he whip up the takeaways, Jack. For us, podcasting, it is a physical sport. So our daily show that you listen to is 20 minutes. Our live show is 90 minutes. It's like a marathon meets Lala Palooza, baby. Because we're also going to share stories about our journey that we've never told before.
Starting point is 00:02:20 And bring up a special pop-biz guest for a 20-minute powwow. Plus, this time, Nick and I are putting ourselves on the hot seat. Jack, you're talking about the T-Boy earnings report? This is really exciting. Our first annual T-Boy quarterly earnings report. We're going to answer your questions on what the T-boy business is up to like a publicly traded company. It's going to be a once-quarterly catch-up with just you, the audience, and you can ask us anything. So, Bessie, this show, this live show, it is the ultimate expression of what Jack and I have always deeply believed in.
Starting point is 00:02:51 That business news can be as entertaining as a concert. So we would love to see you at this show. And the ticket link is in this episode description. Bring your kids, bring your coworkers, bring your buddy Timmy. Bring a deep dish. Link is in the episode description. We'll see you in Chicago in a few short weeks. T-Boys.
Starting point is 00:03:11 Let's hit the three-story check. It's before this song. Two boys from the Northeast met in the dorm. They had an idea that caused a cultural storm. It's the best one yet, but the best is a norm. 50% that's a fat tip. Tea Boy City on your at list. If you know you know because we're ready to go.
Starting point is 00:03:34 We can't wait no more, so just start the show. First, a quick word from our sponsor. For our first story, the U.S. stock market touched an all-time high on Friday, just 79 days after crashing in April. Trade wars, actual wars, credit downgrades, none of it can stop the U.S. stock market. Yeties, a happy A-T-H-day that's all-time high day to all those who celebrate. Because on Friday, the S&P 500, an index of the top 500 American stocks, set a record beating the previous record set in February. And now, Jack, pause the calendar for a sec.
Starting point is 00:04:24 Can you please bring on some context as to what happened after February? After February, stocks tanked, starting with the trade war that was declared on April 2nd, aka Liberation Day. We also got a war in Iran on top of the wars in Gaza and Ukraine, which haven't ended yet. And the U.S. credit rating got downgraded on the passage in the house of a budget bill that would have have ballooned our already huge deficits. But Jack, let's not stop there. The U.S. dollar is now down 10% this year to a three-year low. And interest rates remain as high as they've been in 40 years. So nobody is buying a house right now. And McDonald's canceled its deal with crispy cream. You can't even get a glazed donut at McDee's anymore, man. Despite all of that, Yeties, stocks are at a record high.
Starting point is 00:05:09 Stocks are up 24% since the April trough. Add it all up. And Jack and I call this situation, not a stock market. It's a shrug market. As in, investors are shrugging off all of these huge concerns. So we know what you're thinking. We were wondering it too. Why are investors ignoring all of those headwinds we just mentioned? Nick and I have four explanations for it. Why don't you kick them off, Jack, starting with Taco. Trump always chickens out. Basically, the whole trade war is just a bluff. China is really the only place where we have meaningful tariffs right now. And next week, Trump is going to extend the 90-day tariff delay that he gave to the rest of the war. Okay, now here's where the second reason comes in. If there's no trade war, then that clears the path of the Fed to finally cut interest rates. And lower interest rates are like lubrication for the
Starting point is 00:05:55 stock market, and Wall Street is ready for it. Okay, the third reason why stocks are at record highs right now is that the stock market isn't the economy. Basically, half of our stock market is tech companies who are all riding AI hype. So while the economy shrank in Q1, corporate profits actually rose, 13% in Q1. The fourth and final potential explanation for stocks being at an all-time high is Tina. Tina, as in there is no alternative to U.S. stocks. T-I-N-A, there is no alternative. Even if you think the trade war is bad for the economy, it could be least bad for the U.S. compared to the rest of the world. So, besties, why are stocks still at an all-time high? Well, in some combo of taco, which means the trade war is not real and interest rate cuts are coming.
Starting point is 00:06:44 Also, the stock market is not the economy and there is no alternative to U.S. stocks. Tina, those are the four reasons. Which leads to our takeaway, Jack, what's the takeaway for everybody staring at this shrug stock market? Don't bet against the U.S. stock market. You'll probably be wrong. Yeties, Jack and I have been watching the markets closely for 15 years. We started our careers in finance at Ben. So our millennial perspective?
Starting point is 00:07:11 Is that every time we thought the market was in trouble, it miraculously rebounded. Yeah, like when the Brexit vote happened, what was the result, Jack? Just eight days later, stocks had returned to all-time highs. When the pandemic happened, what happened in the markets, Jack? Four months later, stocks were back to record highs. Just last week, the United States attacked Iran. And guess what happened after the U.S. entered a new war in the Middle East? stocks went on a five-day winning streak, and the price of oil fell.
Starting point is 00:07:41 The opposite of what you'd think would happen. Yeah, we humans, we tend to over-index on fear. It is a natural reaction. So one reason Nick and I don't try to time the markets is that stock movements can just defy logic. Like, even if you are right about what you think will happen, you could be wrong about how the stocks react. We know we're supposed to say there's always the risk that stocks fall and don't recover. We know we're supposed to say that. But when we look at history, even the financial crisis, the great recession, the worst in our
Starting point is 00:08:10 lifetimes, stocks recovered within five years. That's why we're invested for the long term. And long term, don't bet against the U.S. stock market. For our second story, how did a Michelin-starred fancy restaurant turn into a grocery store brand? Momofuku did it on purpose and just raised another 27 million of venture capital to make it happen. Now, Jack, second year out of college, you and I got our first sponsorship deal with our Market Snacks newsletter, you know, the predecessor to this show. How exactly did we celebrate? You want to share it with the Yetis? We went to Momofuku, an epic restaurant about three blocks away from us in the East Village.
Starting point is 00:08:53 Great spot in East Village. And we ordered the Bosom. Ah, the Bosom for the uninitiated. That is a $250 eight-pound Korean barbecue hunk of pork shoulder. We've feasted on it with all the our roommates, our girlfriends, and my brother, present. Momofuku, the restaurant brand run by Michelin-starred chef Dave Chang. This man was a ramen revolutionary and a pork bun icon. We're talking the J-Z of Umami, the David Bowie of the Bimba Bowl, baby. Momofuku is a noodle bar that transformed the rest of the industry. It did.
Starting point is 00:09:29 Because of Dave Chang, noodles now get the same recognition as pasta. And today, as a result, Dave is a chef Leopardy. Is he not Jack? He has a best-selling book, two Michelin stars, three Netflix shows. And six restaurants. Also, he sells in 18 different stadiums with his signature spicy chicken sandwich. Did we mention the Momofuku Milk Bar, by the way? We did not, but with my sweet tooth, I appreciate it, Jack. Milk Bar, the dessert chain of nine awesome bakeries, it was spun out of Momofuku's restaurant.
Starting point is 00:09:59 That's how that cookie began. Yeties, this private company, the revenue is not known, but they last reported $100 million. bucks in sales in 2019. But hold the chili crunch. Please, Jack. Momofuku just raised $27 million to get into the grocery business. Oh, we know what you're thinking, Basties. Why is one of the most expensive and fancy restaurants in America doing an aisle six. It's actually the savviest moving food since Caesar invented the salad. Get this. During the pandemic, Dave's business, it shut down. A hundred million dollars of restaurant revenue disappeared because of the shutdown. Okay, so he made a decision. To keep his restaurant empire alive, he pulled off a pivot in his pantry. Literally. Literally.
Starting point is 00:10:44 Because in 2020, Momu Fuku started bottling all of his famous kitchen sauces. We're talking soy, tamari, chili crunch sauce. They started bottling and selling what they were actually making and using in the kitchen. Not just sauces, actually. They also bagged dry noodles so you could boil the ramen at home. So a few years ago, it was wild, but you'd walk into Wegmans and you could get an entire packaged recipe for Momu Fuku's most famous dishes. Although I don't think the boss, I don't think like package the eight pound pork shoulder. Yes. The whole thing is called
Starting point is 00:11:13 Momo Fuku goods. It's consumer package goods and it did $68 million of sales last year. With huge growth potential because it's still only in a fraction of grocery stores out there. The way we see it,
Starting point is 00:11:25 Dave Chang created a new industry. Chef to Shelf. Star chefs from the Michel and Stars to the Food Network, they're now going into grocery. Because as David talks about in his book, restaurants are not scalable. but products are. Nick, I once ordered the chilled noodle bowl from Momofuku.
Starting point is 00:11:42 I had to cancel the date midday. It was that spicy. I woke it into any further details. From a landlock state, Jack just can't handle the scaly and ginger baby. Jack, what's the takeaway for our buddies over at Momofuku? A good chef knows that you can mix aspiration and access. Yeties, there is a lie that we tell ourselves about the luxury industry. And that lie is exclusivity. The myth that aspirational brands must also be hard to get. Well, Dave Chang took a risk, but he proved that you can remain high-end, fancy, and aspirational, but still reach a massive number of people with a lower-priced product. Yeah, like, let's compare this to fashion.
Starting point is 00:12:21 Aramaze famously keeps a wait list for its $10,000 handbags. They are Uber exclusive. You can only get them in the stores. But Dave Chang stuck his restaurant logo on a bag of noodles, so you can buy them next to the instant ramen shelf at Costco. Now, Basties, there was a risk that mass presence would dilute his Michelin-starred brand. But instead, it doubled his business. Because aspiration can actually pair well with accessibility. Now a quick word from our sponsor. For our third and final story, internships.
Starting point is 00:12:57 They've never had higher pay, and yet they've never been harder to get. So we've got some internship advice to all the high school and college yeties out there. Hate us with the Jack. Cancel your internship. Cancel your internship. All right, Jack, you know what time of year it is. Every bar in Manhattan is filled with boat shoes and coach bags. It's intern season, baby.
Starting point is 00:13:18 Can I get six Soco Limes and put it on my Phoebe's tab? I think it's just pronounced Phoebs. That was a test, Jack. And you passed. Besties, the reason all the interns are opening up unlimited bar tabs these days? What is it, Jack? They're getting paid C-suite level cash. That's right.
Starting point is 00:13:33 J.P. Morgan pays seven. $1.2,000 a month for their interns, which would be $86 grand for the whole year. NVIDIA is paying $8,000 a month, which would be a $98,000 salary. Get this, Stripe is dropping $9,000 a month per intern. That's like $100,000 salary. But pause the pod, because if you're a PhD student off for the summer, then hedge funds will pay you that much per week. Citadel pays future PhDs $25,000 a month to come in crunch numbers and help them make more
Starting point is 00:14:04 money for the summer. That's equal to a salary of $300,000 a year. So, why are all these finance and tech companies paying so much for interns? Well, we're trying to recruit the top talent as early as possible and make full-time offers to the best performers. So if you're a top-performing intern at a financial company, you could get a offer and a signing bonus before you leave to go back to school. Eat your hard out NFL draft. These are like round two draft numbers right here, Jack. Like the people at Middlebury who got full-time offers before coming back for senior year. Oh, yeah? They spent their final year of school ridiculously loaded without a worry in the world.
Starting point is 00:14:43 I mean, just stick your feet up and let Chad CheapT write your term papers for you at that point. The only thing you need to do is just not get kicked out of school and you're golden. But here is the intern paradox that got Jack and I so curious. Despite intern pay being at an all-time high, the amount of internship opportunities are not. Get this, besties. it is literally 10 times harder to get into Goldman Sachs than into Harvard University. Goldman has a 0.7% acceptance rate for their intern program. You are more likely to get into all the Ivy League schools than be a Goldman Sachs sales and trading intern.
Starting point is 00:15:17 And a key reason for that is that there's simply fewer internship positions than there used to be. From the data we've seen, this is the third straight year where the number of job postings with the word intern have fallen. And it's not a coincidence that this is the third summer that AI has been a thing. That's right. We're not just seeing this on Wall Street. We're also seeing in Silicon Valley, too. Tech companies eliminated 14% of all their internships this summer. Artificial intelligence. It's doing entry-level work, even if it can't do a coffee run yet. So AI is kind of creating an internship process. Yeah, Jack, like we've got intern unemployment if you think about it. So yet, if you can get a blue chip internship for the summer, it's going to offer higher pay than ever before.
Starting point is 00:15:55 But it's going to be harder than ever to actually get that blue chip internship. And as a couple of guys who've done the intern grind. Yep. And have 15 years of wisdom since doing those coffee runs. Did you say doc? Did you say decaf or caramel? Nick and I have some advice. I think he said decalf, but I don't want to get fired. Jack, what's the takeaway for our buddies who are everyone pursuing an internship? Cancel your internship. Cancel it. Yeties, the biggest professional regret of Jacks in my careers is doing too many corporate internships. We over-interned ourselves. Starting our final years of high school, we were constantly trying to start and build our resumes. Yeah, we were.
Starting point is 00:16:35 Basically, we grabbed the career ladder too early. 15 years later, we can tell you, while some was really helpful, it wasn't all necessary. We were better off doing a crazy thing or two for a couple of the summers. Because there's a good chance you'll be working on a desk for the rest of your life. True, Jack. So when you're young, take a couple summers and work with your hands. Do something where you work outside. Do something where you interact with people face-to-face.
Starting point is 00:16:59 on a regular basis. All right, Jack, your most valuable summer experience that you wish you'd done more of, what would it be? I waited tables in Burlington one summer. It was the best summer. I was in great shape. I got free food. I met a bunch of people. I did construction in New York one summer, and it was insane. I met this incredible mix of people, and we did some wild stuff, but I learned a lot. Look, it helped our careers that we got good internships, so we understand if you pursue them, and congrats if you get them. But if you do something untraditional, that can make for a fantastic story too in your next job interview. What we're also saying is that if you don't get an internship, that could be an amazing opportunity to do something awesome instead.
Starting point is 00:17:37 Basties, what we're saying is that in a world obsessed with getting internships, cancel your internship. Try one summer doing something else. Jack, could you whip up the takeaways for us to kick off the week? Stocks hit an all-time high on Friday as investors have shrugged off every big risk. It's basically a shrug market. So don't bet against the U.S. stock market, because you'll probably be wrong. For our second story, Momofuku, the Asian restaurant chain, raised venture capital money to expand big into the grocery store because a good chef knows you can mix aspiration with access. And our third and final story is internships. Interns. They offer higher pay than ever, but they're harder than ever to get. So our advice, don't grab the corporate ladder earlier than you need to.
Starting point is 00:18:23 Cancel your internship. But Yeties, this pod's not over yet. Here's what else you need to know today. First, this week is the deadline for Trump's big, beautiful bill. This is the bill that Elon was real housewife ripping into until he went quiet. The bill's got huge tax cuts, huge border control, and more military spending along with huge deficits. The 4th of July isn't a real deadline, but Trump has told his Republicans they can't leave for vacation until they pass the bill. And second, IKEA has a surprising strategy in the face of the trade war. You ready for this? Free stuff.
Starting point is 00:18:58 IKEA announced half-price food for adults and free food for kids at stores on weekdays. Basically, all you can eat meatballs, Nike, Walmart, Costco. They're all raising prices because tariffs are still on China. But IKEA sees an advantage in doing the opposite. Yeah, that's right. Oh, and they've also started selling falafel. That's the new thing. I think that's free to.
Starting point is 00:19:17 I love falafel. It's like the first vegetarian thing I ever ate. Vegan meatball. And finally, last week, we covered Nike. They announced earnings, and everyone was excited about the snowfers. Snowfers are sneaker loafers. Yeah, that's right. Not snow loafers like I initially thought.
Starting point is 00:19:32 But get this, Nike stock jumps 17% because they also announced something else. Jekers. Jeekers. Jean sneakers. And a collab with Levi's. This sounds like something Jack and I would make up. Jack and I did not make this up. No, we did not.
Starting point is 00:19:45 It's just more turduck in fashion. Now, time for the best fact yet. And today, because it's Monday, is T-Boy trivia. Jack, what do we got for the trivia? What Broadway musical has the most work? words spoken in the show. Like, if you take the manuscript for a play and do a word count, what musical has the most words?
Starting point is 00:20:05 Here's a hint. The winner has nearly three times more words than the average musical. So we want to know what Broadway musical has the most words by far. Drop your guess in the comments. The answer's coming in tomorrow's show. Because the answer is the next episode of the best idea yet. Yetties, you'll look fantastic over there. And if you're going to be in Chicago in three and a half weeks,
Starting point is 00:20:28 we want to definitely see you looking fantastic in person at our live show. It's going to be an incredible show. Tickets are available on the link in the episode description. Bring your family, bring your coworkers, bring your brother Timmy. Like our average age listeners probably 30 check, but they also bring like kids and grandparents to this thing. First date? Oh, I think it would be a great event for a first day.
Starting point is 00:20:47 Second date, you're definitely getting the third date. We'll leave it at that. The ticket link is in this episode description, and Jack and I will see you tomorrow. And before we go, a happy 10th birthday to Yeti Isaac Lindemann in Springdale, Arkansas, who's playing in the Little League World Series. Wow. Williamsport.
Starting point is 00:21:10 This is huge. Draft this kid. And Adriana Brea went to Dintai Fong and counted 18 wrinkles on every single dumpling she ate jack. It's confirmed. In other words, she fact-checked our pie. And congratulations to Devin and Ellie in Baltimore, Maryland, who got engaged. Whoa, their buddy. is pumped for you. We are pumped for you. Let's see the ring picks. Congratulations, guys.
Starting point is 00:21:35 And a big shout out to Brian O'Keeke, from Dallas, Texas. Brian, we got to come to Texas for a live show someday to give you the live experience. And Cole Thompson got into his dream master's program in the Bay Area. Congratulations, Cole. Congrats to Max and Dimitri Slabiac of Bass Monkeys who just launched a new book. Future bestseller. And to anyone else, celebrate something today. Make it a T-boy. Celebrate the wins. This is Jack. I own stock of Leastry. I, Nickel and Stock of Nike, and we both own ETFs of the S&P 500.

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