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The Best Idea Yet

Audiblewondery.com

The untold stories behind the products you’re obsessed with and the bold risk-takers who made them go viral.

How did Birkenstocks go from a German cobbler’s passion project 250 years ago to a starring role in the Barbie movie? Who created that bottle of Sriracha permanently living in your fridge? Did you know the Air Jordans were initially banned by the NBA, or that Super Mario became the best-selling video game character ever thanks to a strategy called “The Infinite Game?” On Wondery’s new weekly podcast The Best Idea Yet, Nick Martell and Jack Crivici-Kramer (hosts of the award-winning daily pop-business podcast, The Best One Yet [TBOY]) have identified the most viral products of all time and reveal their untold origin stories — plus the bold risk-takers who brought them to life. From the Happy Meal to Levi’s 501 jeans, come for the products you’re obsessed with, stay for the business insights that’ll make you the most interesting person at your next brunch.

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Episodes

🎬 That’s a Wrap on Season 1 | 51

But you can still get Nick & Jack every day! Follow The Best One Yet, our daily news show delivering 3 stories in 20 minutes. Where business meets pop-culture. Listen on Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-best-one-yet/id1386234384 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5RllMBgvDnTau8nnsCUdse Listen on Amazon Music: https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/25e48622-4069-47e9-baaf-1d97586f9fc2/the-best-one-yet Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/tboypod Thank you, Yetis ...

Sep 30, 20256 minEp. 51

📺 SNL: The Snickers Bar of Saturday Night | 50

This episode delves into the unlikely success of Saturday Night Live, born out of NBC's need to fill a cheap, undesirable late-night slot. It chronicles Lorne Michaels' revolutionary vision, the chaotic early days, and the challenges of managing a show that consistently launched comedic legends into superstardom. The discussion also covers SNL's intensive weekly production cycle, its surprising influence on YouTube's early growth, and the unique philosophies—like the "Snickers bar" model and efficiency in inefficiency—that have ensured its half-century reign as a comedy powerhouse.

Sep 23, 202542 minEp. 50

🎧 Sony Walkman: The Analog Icon That Led to a Digital Revolution | 49

Discover the untold story of the Sony Walkman, from its post-war Japanese origins as a radio repair shop to its status as a global electronics giant. This episode explores how Masaru Ibuka and Akio Morita's vision for portable music led to the iconic Walkman, a device that inspired the mixtape era, influenced Steve Jobs, and inadvertently laid the foundation for the digital music revolution. Despite initially fumbling the MP3 transition, Sony's strategic pivots into gaming and music publishing ultimately secured its lasting legacy in the entertainment world.

Sep 16, 202542 minEp. 49

👜 Birkin: The Handbag That Costs More Than Your House | 48

This episode delves into the fascinating origin of the Hermes Birkin bag, from Jane Birkin's accidental airplane encounter with Jean-Louis Dumas to its meticulous 18-hour handcrafted production. It explores how Hermes leveraged exclusivity, a secret waitlist, and even a boost from "Sex and the City" to turn the Birkin into a global status symbol and a highly appreciating investment asset, all while battling sophisticated counterfeit operations.

Sep 09, 202545 minEp. 48

⚾️ New York Yankees: Rise of the Bronx Bombers | 47

In the spring of 1903, the NYC subway wasn’t yet open… the Wright Brothers hadn’t yet taken their epic flight… and the New York Yankees were not yet the Yankees. They were the Highlanders: a group of unremarkable transplants from Baltimore, their future not guaranteed. But through determination—and some old-style political maneuvering— the Highlanders clung on as the Big Apple’s third-best baseball team. Then, with a single trade, the fate of the Yanks and Major League Baseball changed forever: ...

Sep 02, 202543 minEp. 47

🏍️ Harley-Davidson: Tattoo’d on 700,000 Biceps | 46

It started with a souped-up bicycle inspired by a vaudeville show, and the need for speed. The dream – shared by four Harley brothers and one Davidson – came true, and became one of America’s most iconic companies. But their real innovation? Myth-building. These machines roared through death-defying races and two world wars to start an entire subculture built around the open road…and became a symbol of freedom, defiance, and American grit. Along the way, the bikes became machines of contradictio...

Aug 26, 202543 minEp. 46

🏰 Disneyland: The Fantasy that Almost Flopped | 45

This episode delves into the improbable origins of Disneyland, exploring Walt Disney's initial struggles and his visionary concept for a family-focused park. It details the challenges of securing funding through an unprecedented TV deal with ABC and the chaotic 'Black Sunday' opening. Ultimately, the episode highlights how Walt's relentless attention to detail and his 'flywheel' business strategy transformed a seemingly 'Goofy idea' into the thriving lynchpin of the Disney empire.

Aug 19, 202542 minEp. 45

🍜 Instant Ramen: The Incredible, True Story of “Mr. Noodle” | 44

It’s postwar Japan, and entrepreneur Momofuku Ando has lost everything—his business, his home, and his savings. In fact, the whole country has been ravaged by air raids, and people are hungry. But when he stops at a black-market noodle stall and watches desperate people line up for a simple bowl of ramen, something clicks. What if they didn't have to wait? What if comfort could come from a packet? This moment of inspiration would spark a global empire worth over $8 billion, and change how the wo...

Aug 12, 202542 minEp. 44

🥃 Hennessy: From King George to Kendrick | 43

A wounded Irish soldier crawls from a blood-soaked battlefield in the French countryside. He survives, but his fighting days are over. So he settles in the Cognac region, and in 1765, starts a modest brandy business. Richard Hennessy could never dream that 260 years later, his name would ring out—not just in the world of fine spirits, but in the universe of hip-hop. No liquor brand in existence has more musical name-drops than Hennessy (mentioned in over 2,500 songs!). But the brand’s accomplish...

Aug 05, 202541 minEp. 43

🛹 Skateboard: Defying Physics & Freaking Out Parents for 60+ Years | 42

Imagine yourself on a sandy SoCal beach, surfboard in hand. But the ocean’s too calm: not a single wave in sight. What do you do? Well, if you’re a kid in the early 60s, you throw some wheels on a plank of wood and go “sidewalk surfing.” This one simple innovation can’t be traced back to a single inventor; it evolved more like a language than a product. Even so, the skateboard caused a revolution in sports, fashion, and culture: launching multiple billion-dollar brands and viral products. Follow...

Jul 29, 202542 minEp. 42

🐲 Pokémon: The Little Monsters that Played Their Cards Right | 41

What do you get when you mix a passion for collecting bugs with an obsession for video games? For Satoshi Tajiri, the answer is the world's largest media franchise (over $92 billion revenue — more than Star Wars and Harry Potter combined). Tajiri dreamed up a new kind of video game: one built not just on battling monsters, but trading them. What followed was a full-blown cultural takeover with TV shows, trading cards (global market value $6 billion), more video games, and so much merch. Find out...

Jul 22, 202543 minEp. 41

⭐ Michelin Guide: The Tire Company That Accidentally Conquered Food | 40

This episode unveils the surprising origin of the Michelin Guide, tracing its journey from a humble travel booklet for French motorists—designed by the Michelin tire company to sell more tires—to becoming the revered arbiter of global gastronomy. It explores the strategic pivots, including charging for the guide and employing anonymous food critics, which solidified its authority. The discussion also highlights the guide's little-known role in World War II and its lasting impact on both the culinary world and tourism, making a Michelin star a coveted, yet sometimes challenging, distinction for chefs worldwide.

Jul 15, 202543 minEp. 40

🥏Frisbee: A Pie in the Sky Idea (literally) | 39

What do you do for fun if you’re a bored college kid? For students across New England in the early 1900s, the answer was simple: toss around empty pie tins (obviously). Soon, shouts of “Frisbee!” echoed across campus quads — and a local recreational sensation was born. But it took a WWII pilot with an eye for aerodynamics and a beachside side hustle to give the Frisbee its wings — and a toy company with a nose for viral hits (think: Hula Hoop) to send it sky-high. After a redesign by a deep-sea ...

Jul 08, 202539 minEp. 39

🎭 Hamilton: From Founding Father To Broadway Star | 38

In 2008, Lin-Manuel Miranda badly needed a vacation. He’d just won the Tony for his musical “In The Heights,” he’d been going nonstop. So he took a break, bringing a book with him for poolside lounging: the 800-page biography of America’s first treasury secretary, Alexander Hamilton. But what started as a light beach read soon became an obsession. Lin HAD to bring this man’s incredible life to the stage. Thus began an epic journey: from the White House, to Lincoln Center, to (eventually) Broadwa...

Jul 01, 202543 minEp. 38

🥤Dr Pepper: The Mystery & Magic of America’s #2 Soda | 37

Discover the unlikely rise of Dr. Pepper, from a quirky Texas drugstore experiment with 23 secret flavors to America's second most popular soda. Learn how it turned its indescribable taste into a marketing advantage, exploited distribution loopholes to navigate the Cola Wars, overcame knockoff attempts, and leveraged a unique identity to eventually overtake Pepsi.

Jun 24, 202541 minEp. 37

🏎️ Ferrari: The Racing Machine Even A Child Could Draw | 36

This episode delves into the paradoxical rise of Ferrari, from Enzo Ferrari's early racing obsession and family tragedies to building a dominant racing team and a coveted luxury brand. It covers key strategies like "Win on Sunday, Sell on Monday" and scarcity, navigating deadly crashes, public trials, and ultimately, a transformative merger with Fiat that cemented Ferrari's global success and enduring legacy.

Jun 17, 202542 minEp. 36

🧸 Beanie Babies: The Cutest Boom, Bubble & Bust | 35

Beanie Babies — the unassuming critters with birthdates and bios — are designed to tug on your heartstrings (and your wallet). But for a moment in the late-90s, they burst out of gift shops and into investment portfolios as America went crazy over Legs the Frog, Pinchers the Lobster, and the rest of the plushie pals.Behind this bean-stuffed market bubble hid a mysterious salesman with a chip on his shoulder named Ty Warner (the P.T. Barnum of Plush), who masterminded limited drops, direct-to-ret...

Jun 10, 202540 minEp. 35

🏖️ Tommy Bahama's Beach Chair: Fake Dude, Real Billions | 34

Discover how the Tommy Bahama brand, born from a fictional character dreamed up by two friends facing unemployment, overcame near failure through pivots like private label work and innovative store-restaurants. This episode details their journey to a billion-dollar empire, highlighting how the now-iconic beach chair, initially doubted, became a market leader thanks to a crucial partnership with Costco.

Jun 03, 202541 minEp. 34

🍅 Heinz Ketchup: The King of Condiments | 33

When entrepreneur Henry J. Heinz went bankrupt after his first venture, he nearly lost it all—his farmland, his parents' home, and his own reputation. But then, he launched a stunning comeback that changed everything about the meaning of the name “Heinz.” This Master of Tomatoes built a condiment empire on super fresh produce and, by pioneering food safety standards decades before regulations existed. (Hint: it involved unleashing a team called the Poison Squad… and no, that name isn’t metaphori...

May 27, 202542 minEp. 33

💧 LaCroix: The Cinderella of Seltzers | 32

This sexy seltzer started out more than 40 years ago as a Wisconsin brewery’s quiet, nonalcoholic spinoff. Throughout the 80s and early 90s, LaCroix remained the low-key, low-cal fave of Midwestern Little League coaches and soccer moms. But then, LaCroix hit its stride—and its second act, reborn as the trendy choice of Hollywood writers, Instagram influencers, and diet gurus. So, what caused this gobsmacking glow-up? Would you believe it was all thanks to a quirky former construction worker and ...

May 20, 202542 minEp. 32

🌎 Google Maps: The *Actual* ‘Everything App’ | 31

When out-of-work coder Jens Rasmussen couldn’t find directions to a cafe in Copenhagen, he wound up changing navigation forever. Alongside his brother Lars (also an out-of-work coder), Jens developed a radical vision—not just for a faster map, but a vibrant, multi-dimensional platform to help plan your entire life. With maxed-out credit cards, these Danish brothers built a prototype that caught Google co-founder Larry Page's eye—but faced HUGE technical issues to get it over the line. From CIA-f...

May 13, 202543 minEp. 31

🍑 Juicy Couture Tracksuit: How Cozy-Core Went Viral | 30

In a high-end boutique between Hollywood and Beverly Hills, Pamela Skaist-Levy and Gela Nash-Taylor met as fashion-obsessed shopgirls with dreams of entrepreneurship. But they had no obvious path to get there… until Gela became pregnant – with nothing to wear. What came next was a history-making business venture started with only $200 and a pile of smelly used denim. From a successful maternity jeans line, to soft fitted T-shirts embraced by the characters on “Friends,” Juicy Couture rose as a s...

May 06, 202544 minEp. 30

🥤Frappuccino: The Billion-Dollar Brainfreeze Starbucks Nearly Killed | 29

Explore the surprising origin story of the Frappuccino, from its humble beginnings in a Boston coffee shop to its global domination under Starbucks. Learn how a simple frozen coffee drink transformed the coffee industry, fueled Starbucks' explosive growth, and created a customizable beverage phenomenon. Discover the key players, strategic decisions, and unexpected twists that made the Frappuccino the best idea yet.

Apr 29, 202541 minEp. 29

🐢Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The “Dumbest” Best Idea Yet | 28

Kevin Eastman and Peter Laird were just trying to get work. These two broke illustrators were scraping by on side hustles and instant ramen… until, one fateful night, Kevin drew a doodle to get Peter to laugh: a nunchuck-wielding turtle in a ninja mask. But this one “dumb” drawing would launch the most successful self-published, creator-owned comic in history. The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles— crime-fighting reptiles named for Renaissance painters— have taken on many forms, from gritty comic to ...

Apr 22, 202542 minEp. 28

🔫Super Soaker: Invented by a Rocket Scientist (Literally) | 27

Lonnie Johnson was already a brilliant Air Force engineer working on cutting edge, planet-saving inventions…when a surprise bathroom discovery (we’ve all been there) sparked an idea that changed water fights forever. This nuclear scientist's side hustle—a game-changing water gun prototype—would go on to reshape backyard battles and launch a billion-dollar toy sensation. But just like Lonnie when beat the odds as a Black student in Alabama’s segregated school system, his entrepreneurial era put h...

Apr 15, 202541 minEp. 27

🐣 Peeps: A Backroom Marshmallow Mystery | 26

Roscoe Rodda was in the fight of his life. His candy factory was right down the road from Milton Hershey’s—yes, THAT Hershey’s—and he needed to set himself apart. So Roscoe embraced a single holiday to get the competitive confectionery edge: Easter. Chocolate eggs, jellybeans… and a secret treat painstakingly sculpted behind closed doors: a marshmallow chick with inquisitive waxy black eyes. These chicks circulated in obscurity until a Navy engineer-turned- candymaker molded them into a squishy,...

Apr 08, 202541 minEp. 26

📱iPhone: The Device Steve Jobs Didn’t Want to Build | 25

Before 2007, mobile phones had tiny keyboards, crappy screens with internet so slow - you could finish a super burrito while waiting for your MySpace profile to load. Then Apple wowed the world with the iPhone: a digital Swiss Army knife that replaced cameras, maps, music players, AND created an entire new app economy. But the wildest part? Steve Jobs didn’t even want to build it…at first. Once Steve finally said ""yes,"" the real work began: a top-secret team (codename: Project Purple), some en...

Apr 01, 202542 minEp. 25

🧀 Goldfish Crackers: The Most Romantic Snack | 24

Margaret Rudkin’s family was in crisis. The Great Depression cleaned out their finances, her husband was bedridden after an accident, and her son was suffering from crippling allergies. Things were looking grim… until Margaret invented a revolutionary wheat bread, and built a baked-goods empire named for the tree in her front yard: Pepperidge Farm. A visionary businesswoman, Margaret’s talents extended way beyond the kitchen. She grew her company by haggling sweet deals for new Pepperidge Farm p...

Mar 25, 202541 minEp. 24

📺 MTV: How Video Killed the Radio Star | 23

In 1981, a scrappy ex-radio executive named John Lack had a wild vision: “What if there was a 24-hour television channel devoted entirely to music videos?” Back then, music videos weren’t really a thing, just a goofy way for record labels to promote new albums (Queen’s Bohemian Rhapsody? Basically a hype video). But Lack saw them as the perfect opportunity to capture a completely untapped demographic…Teens. Record labels laughed him out of the room (""We ain't giving you our f*cking music"") and...

Mar 18, 202543 minEp. 23

🌭 Costco’s Kirkland: How a $1.50 Hot Dog Changed Store Brands Forever | 22

If you currently own a 12-pack of bath tissue, a 150-count bag of laundry pods, and/or a 48-oz jar of cashews, chances are they all have the same label: Kirkland Signature. Costco debuted this private-label brand—aka ‘store brand’—in 1995 and since then, it’s become a sales-driving juggernaut. Kirkland products now account for a quarter of Costco’s total sales, from coffee and batteries to their famous rotisserie chickens and $1.50 hot dogs. But don’t you dare call Kirkland “generic”, the brand ...

Mar 11, 202543 minEp. 22
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