• Ticketmaster Just Started Showing Real Prices. The Loophole Already Exists.
    May 16 2026

    Last week the FTC forced Ticketmaster to show the full price upfront. They complied. Which, in Ticketmaster, means the mugging now comes with an itemized receipt.

    The advertised price is just the bait price. Junk fees, drip pricing, resort fees, processing fees, "convenience fees" that are anything but. Markus Grant breaks down how the architecture works: catch you when your credit card is emotionally involved, then add the fees.

    This sidebar bridges the Body Tax arc and the Shelter Tax arc, setting up RealPage and the rent algorithm conversation that comes next.

    Receipts and case file: theranter.com/case-file/sidebar-2
    Daily writing: newsletter.theranter.com
    Watch on YouTube: youtube.com/@TheRanterOfficial

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    6 mins
  • Facility Fees - When Your Doctor's Office Becomes a "Facility"
    May 9 2026

    Same doctor. Same room. Same forty-minute appointment. Bill comes in 50% higher than last time. Why? The hospital bought the doctor's office. Rewrote the paperwork. The same room is now a "facility" and you get billed for being inside it.

    Markus Grant breaks down facility fees: the administrative reclassification that adds 40-50% to your healthcare costs without any change in service. Pure extraction through paperwork.

    This is a Sidebar - shorter format than full episodes, single segment, no arcs. Quick hit on one mechanism, one move.

    Receipts and case file: theranter.com/case-file/sidebar-1
    Daily writing: newsletter.theranter.com
    Watch on YouTube: youtube.com/@TheRanterOfficial

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    5 mins
  • EP03: Your Hospital Bill Is Wrong. Here's Why That's by Design.
    May 2 2026

    American hospitals maintain "chargemaster" prices: fictional rates that bear no relationship to actual costs or insurance-negotiated rates. A procedure that costs $400 to deliver gets negotiated at $800 for insured patients and billed at $3,500 to the uninsured. The 27 million Americans without insurance pay 8.75x actual cost. When you can't pay, your debt gets sold for 1-4 cents per dollar (everyone knows it's uncollectible) and pursued at 24-35% interest. CareCredit charges 26.99% retroactive interest. UCHealth filed 24,843 lawsuits seeking $76.6 million in medical debt.

    Then there's facility fees: same doctor, same room, same procedure - hospital reclassifies it as "facility-based" and the price goes up 40-50%. The most-billed code in medicine has a 63.4% error rate. $564 million in improper payments on one code alone.

    Markus Grant maps the chargemaster, the upcoding, the trauma activation fees that range from $1,000 to $61,734 (77% of which fail federal compliance requirements), and the $28 billion in nonprofit hospital tax exemptions where 86% of hospitals spend less on charity than they get in tax breaks. Both parties enabled this.

    Key receipts:
    - $3,500 vs $800 vs $400: chargemaster vs negotiated vs actual cost
    - 8.75x: uninsured charge vs actual cost
    - 27 million: Americans on chargemaster pricing
    - 63.4%: error rate on most-billed medical code (99214)
    - 24,843: lawsuits filed by UCHealth for medical debt
    - $28B vs $16B: nonprofit hospital tax exemptions vs charity care provided
    - 86%: hospitals spending less on charity than tax break value
    - 26.99%: CareCredit retroactive interest rate
    - 1-4 cents per dollar: secondary market price of medical debt

    Receipts and case file: theranter.com/case-file/
    Daily writing: newsletter.theranter.com
    Watch on YouTube: youtube.com/@TheRanterOfficial

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    18 mins
  • EP02: The Cure Heist - How Drugs Get Priced
    Apr 25 2026

    In 2015, Martin Shkreli raised the price of Daraprim from $13.50 to $750 overnight. Same molecule. Same factory. Same patient population. The only thing that changed was who owned the company. The healthcare industry called it an outlier. The architecture says otherwise.

    Markus Grant maps the system that lets one company buy an old drug and 50x the price the next morning. Pharmacy benefit managers. Patent extensions. Citizen petitions filed by the same companies that wrote the patents. Both parties take the money. Different mascots.

    Key receipts:
    - $13.50 to $750: Daraprim price jump (Turing Pharmaceuticals, 2015)
    - 0%: change in molecular structure during the price hike
    - 75%: of insulin market controlled by 3 companies (Eli Lilly, Novo Nordisk, Sanofi)
    - $1.4B: amount Big Pharma spent on lobbying in 2024 (OpenSecrets)

    Receipts and case file: theranter.com/case-file/episode-2
    Daily writing: newsletter.theranter.com
    Watch on YouTube: youtube.com/@TheRanterOfficial

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    20 mins
  • EP01: They Deny Claims Every 1.2 Seconds. 90% Are Wrong.
    Apr 18 2026

    In 2023, ProPublica revealed that Cigna's PXDX system reviews health insurance claims at an average of 1.2 seconds per claim. One medical director denied over 60,000 claims in a single month. 90% of these denials get overturned on appeal. Only 0.2% of patients ever file one.

    The architecture is the story: algorithm flags a diagnosis-code mismatch, physician signs off in 1.2 seconds, claim denied. Repeat 50 times in 2 minutes. Repeat 300,000 times in 2 months.

    Markus Grant walks through who designed this system, how the math works, what both political parties did to enable it, and what you can actually do when your claim gets denied.

    Key receipts:
    - 1.2 seconds: average review time per claim (Cigna PXDX, ProPublica March 2023)
    - 300,000+: claims denied in 2 months at Cigna
    - 90%: denials overturned on appeal
    - 0.2%: percentage of patients who appeal

    Receipts and case file: theranter.com/case-file/
    Daily writing: newsletter.theranter.com
    Watch on YouTube: youtube.com/@TheRanterOfficial

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    17 mins