CEOs make Scandals, Talk Show Hosts Make $15M, and We Make Free Podcasts cover art

CEOs make Scandals, Talk Show Hosts Make $15M, and We Make Free Podcasts

CEOs make Scandals, Talk Show Hosts Make $15M, and We Make Free Podcasts

Listen for free

View show details

About this listen

In this episode of A-Squared Ramblers, hosts Alex and Adriana celebrate a podcasting milestone: 20 recorded episodes. They reflect on the persistence it takes to outlast the average show, sharing behind-the-scenes realities like branding costs, gear purchases, and the challenges of remove collaboration.

Things take a dramatic turn as the duo dives into a real-life scandal involving the CEO of Astronomer and his head of HR - caught on the Coldplay Jumbotron getting cozy in all the wrong ways. They explore power imbalances, workplace ethics, and how professional lines get dangerously blurred when HR and the C-suite mix business with pleasure.

From there, the episode zooms out to broader issues like wealth inequality and absurd CEO salaries. They critique the $15 mission Colbert paycheck, vent about how fast grocery bills reach $300, and joke about how even bagels have become luxury items.

The conversation then shifts to post-secondary planning as Adriana shares that her parents' ancient Dell all-in-one computer finally gave out - sparking a chat about helping family navigate tech decisions, from Dell vs. HP to the Apple ecosystem. This launches a deeper discussion about graduate school: the cost, the commitment, and the lingering question of whether further education is a valuable investment or just academic busywork in a degree-saturated job market.

It's a fast-paced, opinionated episode full of scandal, sticker shock, and sincere questions about what's really worth our time - and our money.

No reviews yet
In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.