Ron Lieber
@ronlieber.bsky.social
6.5K followers 560 following 630 posts
I work for readers as the New York Times money scribe. Author of "The Price You Pay for College," teacher of a course about merit scholarships (meritaidcourse.com), Brooklyn now but forever Chicago. He/We/Abba. Gratitude and rage.
Posts Media Videos Starter Packs
Pinned
ronlieber.bsky.social
NEW: After the California fires, we wanted to know this: How can people shop for a climate-safe home? Turns out there were more than 65 questions nested under that first one. @tarasiegelbernard.bsky.social and I got to work on all of them, and here's the result. nyti.ms/3DREtXd
How to Shop for a Home That Won’t Be Upended by Climate Change (Gift Article)
Deciding where to live has always been a high-stakes financial decision, but a changing climate makes it even more critical. This guide will get you started.
nyti.ms
ronlieber.bsky.social
I get your take on the public editor though. I'd like to see it brought back. Not sure I'm in the majority internally on that.
ronlieber.bsky.social
I love good criticism, and context isn't an attack. (And this is a reply, not putting you on blast the way you just did to me.) I don't get your take tho. As someone who works there (& as a reader of competitors) that much home page play is a much bigger signal to readers than front page/dead tree.
ronlieber.bsky.social
This story was already published when you posted -- and in a prominent place on the NYT home page -- and proceeded to get more readers than the number of print newspapers that get printed during the week. www.nytimes.com/2025/08/26/u...
What, Exactly, Was That Cabinet Meeting?
www.nytimes.com
ronlieber.bsky.social
Actual good news, and writing the bad news down, as Eric did, can lead to kind people doing lovely things.
ronlieber.bsky.social
Forget not the charitable deduction for explosives here -- and the business tax deduction for meals taken on fishing boats.
ronlieber.bsky.social
Great op-ed. This is why I've quit pro sports fandom. There are great ideas in here for laws; here's another that might be bad: I should be able to shove a $10 or $20 bill into my TV/phone/laptop and watch any, single game I want -- or subscribe to any NBA finals/World Cup for a reasonable price.
joon.bsky.social
Sports was one of America's most accessible forms of entertainment. Now it's paywalled, splintered and sold to the highest bidder.

Fandom isn't being nurtured. It's being mined.

For @nytopinion.nytimes.com on on the state of sports, and what it says about America: www.nytimes.com/2025/06/16/o...
Opinion | $4,785. That’s How Much It Costs to Be a Sports Fan Now.
www.nytimes.com
ronlieber.bsky.social
Anyone who uses State Farm for anything should really read this story. And if you switch insurers, tell them California sent you to do it. www.nytimes.com/2025/06/12/r...
California Opens Investigation Into State Farm
www.nytimes.com
ronlieber.bsky.social
We will all miss him, though I think/hope he'll keep educating us.
ronlieber.bsky.social
The WSJ has the receipts showing that Meta doesn't care much about consumer fraud. One ironic twist - as a Meta advertiser myself for my merit aid course, there are all sorts of scammers trying to convince me that *my ads* are bad and I'm about to have my account shut. www.wsj.com/tech/meta-fr...
Meta Battles an ‘Epidemic of Scams’ as Criminals Flood Instagram and Facebook
Fake puppies and phony offers of mouthwatering bargains are often seeded by overseas crime networks; employees say company is reluctant to impede its advertising juggernaut
www.wsj.com
ronlieber.bsky.social
Amazing. Miraculous, really. And this is the most interesting phrase in the story: "which built on decades of federally funded research..." www.nytimes.com/2025/05/15/h...
Baby Is Healed With World’s First Personalized Gene-Editing Treatment
www.nytimes.com
ronlieber.bsky.social
Google calendar works fine in our family, but I guarantee you that if you're partnered with offspring you'll recognize something in this delightful story, which is really more about relationships than it is about calendars. www.nytimes.com/2025/05/12/s...
Can a $700 Calendar Save Your Marriage?
www.nytimes.com
ronlieber.bsky.social
Back on the @marketplace.org radio waves talking about who pays what and why for college. This morning, I got word that someone used my advice to get another $40,000 out of Syracuse AFTER the teenager had committed on May 1. That family gets an A-plus. www.marketplace.org/story/2025/0...
How colleges come up with the price of admission
Reporting in The New York Times finds that schools are turning to little-known consultants to optimize how much they charge.
www.marketplace.org
Reposted by Ron Lieber
nbedera.bsky.social
I cannot emphasize enough how many decisions on college campuses are made by a handful of external consultants.
ronlieber.bsky.social
They've followed the playbook pretty well it seems!
ronlieber.bsky.social
NEW: The little-known consulting firms that tell colleges what kind of aid and discounts to offer to each individual student. Whenever I explain this to people out loud, their jaws hit the floor. I finally wrote it down. Happy May 1 decision day to all who celebrate! www.nytimes.com/2025/05/01/b...
Who Decides How Much You Pay for College? Here’s How Tuition Costs Are Set. (Gift Article)
Schools turn to little-known consultants, owned by private equity firms, to find applicants and calculate scholarships. Here’s how that affects the price you pay.
www.nytimes.com