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PODCAST: Tiger bread and chicken wings

Nevada led the nation in the number of home foreclosures last year, a fact that could help steer the caucus there tomorrow. States have until Monday to decide if they want to join a national settlement with banks over abusive mortgage practices. In the U.K., restaurants and bars have declared war on the straw. And we dig into the January unemployment numbers from the government.

Did you get your share?
Did you get your share?
Jeff Fusco/Getty Images

The economy adds 243,000 jobs in January and the unemployment rate falls to 8.3 percent. The Labor Department’s monthly job numbers are good — better than almost anyone expected. Manufacturing added jobs. Construction and retail too.

The European Union’s data protection authorities have asked Google to delay the rollout of its new privacy policy until they have verified that it doesn’t break the bloc’s data protection laws.

Here in the U.S., education lender Sallie Mae says it’ll change its fee policy. It had allowed people to suspend loan payments if they’d lost a job, but required borrowers pay $50 per loan every three months as a good faith deposit. Now Sallie Mae says it’ll start applying that fee toward a customers’ balance.

To a supermarket in the U.K. called Sainsbury’s which sold a product called Tiger Bread. The crust of the bread looks sort of like the side of a tiger. Well, actually, as a 3-year-old girl named Lily Robinson wrote in a letter to Sainsbury’s it should be called giraffe bread because it looks more like a giraffe. Sainsbury’s agreed with little Lily. And now, all across the U.K., it’s called Giraffe Bread.

The Super Bowl is the 2nd biggest eating day after Thanksgiving. And a big part of the spread — chicken wings. Bloomberg reports wing prices are at an all time high. Wholesale prices in Georgia, the largest chicken state, are up 52 percent. But that doesn’t seem to be slowing most of us down as we make plans for Sunday. The National Chicken Council says American’s will eat 1.25 billion chicken wings during the Super Bowl. That’s wings enough to circle the earth twice — and about a hundred billion calories.

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