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If you use a credit card, you open your statement every month and of course, you see the things that you spent money on, but then you see this other number in the corner that tells you how many points you've earned. And you can spend these points on things like vacations and hotel stays and dinners. And it's kind of like free money. But then if you stop and think about it, it makes absolutely no sense. Why should spending money earn money?

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My name is Jamie Lauren CAYLUS, and I'm a contributing writer to the New York Times magazine. I wrote a story about the world of credit card rewards and airline miles, a.k.a. points.

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I first got into points when I opened a credit card, racked up some rewards and was able to take a free vacation to Vietnam. So then a couple of months later, I opened another card and got another rewards bonus and took a trip down to D.C. to see some national parks. I thought to myself, if I could do this once or twice. Are there people out there who are doing this at an extreme level? I was able to open maybe seven credit cards for the points, but I found guys out there who had opened 75, most of these guys and and they are mostly guys.

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We're just doing this as a hobby. But then I was able to talk to the guy who had built it into a career. Brian Kelly is the points guy he was able to turn his knowledge of points into a business and a lifestyle brand. I first met Brian in February of last year on what felt like one of the last normal days before all anyone was talking about was coronavirus within a month of that meeting. Because points have so much to do with the travel industry, I was almost certain the story was about to be killed, but the guy kept going well.

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I spent the last year holed up in my apartment. I watched as he traveled the world from Palm Springs to Antigua to Mexico City. When we last spoke in November, he had just returned from two weeks in Bora Bora swimming with humpback whales.

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So I wrote about how he pulls it off and how America's convoluted financial system makes it all possible. Here's my story. The man who turned credit card points into an empire read by Eduardo Ballerini. They came to Dubrovnik by cruise ship or Ryanair, members of a new hyper mobile class of tourist who traveled for cheap and didn't stay long, they'd seen its walled old town on Game of Thrones and they wanted to be there themselves.

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So they went to Venice, Barcelona, certain beaches in Thailand. These places had all faced their own over tourist problems. But even by this standard, Dubrovnik was extreme. On busy days, tourists could outnumber permanent Oldtown town residents about six to one with a main thoroughfare less than a thousand feet long. There's pressure on. The city's charm was overwhelming. By 2017, tourism. It's so overburdened the old town that UNESCO is threatening to revoke its world heritage status.

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Mayor Matteo Frankovich set out to save his city by sabotage, capping passage through the gates at four thousand daily visitors and functionally banning new restaurants. Nevertheless, the tourists kept coming back. Then, around March 20 20, they stopped. After the Diamond Princess debacle, no more cruise ships appeared in the port. Airplanes were grounded, then took flight again, ending an age of quick and easy travel and ushering in a new slower one pandemic. Travel was arduous and impeded by naughty, sometimes contradictory governmental guidelines.

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To travel under these conditions required an unhinged urge to take flight and a bureaucrat's eye for parsing fine print. Brian Kelly, the founder of a website called The Points Guy, had both lost a few million unused frequent flyer miles. This was how on Saturday, August 7th, he found himself heading from New York to Dubrovnik to see the world city with nobody there.

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His trip began at two p.m. the day before with an express nasal swab at NYU Langone Medical Center. Travelers arriving in Croatia were at that time required to present a negative Corona test no more than 48 hours old. Between test processing time and travel time, the tight window posed a logistical challenge, but Kelly, as the face of the world's most popular credit card rewards blog, had plenty of experience interpreting strict guidelines. For 10 years, readers had come to his site for help turning terms of service into free trips.

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In this way, the pandemic was another day at work. That afternoon, he posted footage of his nasal swab to Instagram. Nine hours later, he shared his results negative. The following evening, he arrived at JFK ready to board a Virgin Atlantic flight to London, the business class ticket cost him fifty seven thousand five hundred miles, plus seven hundred twenty four dollars cash. He eased his way through the TSA PreCheck line and signed into the Delta Sky Club Lounge.

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The airline he knew had a partnership with Virgin. A bartender announced the evening special 10000 points for a bottle of Dom Perignon. On that day, the Points guy, which publishes monthly cash valuations of the top forty five rewards currencies, had Delta miles trading at one point one cent each. Kelly did a quick calculation in his head. The deal was worth about 110 dollars, the same bottle of Dom at a restaurant might go for 250 dollars or more.

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He ordered the champagne. The flight boarded at 10:00 pm, Kelly counted just 12 passengers in the 44 seat business class cabin. Everyone was wearing a mask and some fell asleep wearing two face and eye flying during covid is kind of like flying. Private Kelly told me later. I had my own A3 50 plane. The transfer at Heathrow went smoothly, the flight touched down in Croatia just in time. Kelly presented his negative test results. Dubrovnik that day was near empty and majestic, saved by disease from the lure of its own beauty.

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Kelly met up with his friend Mauricio, a furloughed fashion merchandiser from Miami, and they made plans to meet up with more friends and all rent a boat to hop around the nearby islands. The idea was that by the time they docked again, they'd all have been in Europe for two weeks, freeing them up to travel on to other places. This was sort of a loophole in the strict EU travel restrictions. Kelly knew that international travel was not at the moment feasible for the average points guy reader.

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But he had the points that covid status and the time to allow his readers to travel vicariously through him. He had no idea when the world might reopen. For now, he was content to enjoy the solitude. No cruise ships, no mass tourists, he says, just the reigning king of cheap travel, enjoying a momentary upside to its downfall.

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The seeds of cheap travel were planted in the 1970s as US airline deregulation drove down the cost and luxurious ness of flying. The boom would not begin for another two decades. Oneself book travel websites curtailed travel agents power, removing considerable friction from the market and allowing the consumer to take flight more casually. In twenty eighteen, according to the United Nations, global tourist arrivals reached a record annual high of one point four billion, a 56 fold increase since the end of World War Two.

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This boom, like all booms, had its clear cut losers, locals, the environment and winners, home sharing platforms, crowd sourced review sites, wanderlust and influencers.

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Somewhere in this mix is the sky, and its domain is the set of novel currencies issued by airlines and credit cards. Points are ersatz money that you earn by spending real money, a form of currency hidden inside of another, and loyalty programs as the broader sector is known, are businesses inside businesses.

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On an ordinary non pandemic weekday, an American might encounter half a dozen opportunities to accrue loyalty points from Morning Coffee. Starbucks rewards to daily commute. ExxonMobil rewards plus to lunch break. Chipotle rewards after work errands CVS Extra Care Points to date night Regal Cinemas Crumpler. The degree to which loyalty programs actually increase customer loyalty varies widely from program to program. Good programs dangle a deliberate carrot, forging customer loyalty and heightening what behavioral economists call switching costs. They exploit perceived thrift and a fantasy of status to make users want to earn and thereby spend within the loyalty program.

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Space traveling credit card rewards are by far the most successful and well known as one oft cited, almost certainly imaginary airline executive. Once put it, people are willing to pay anything for a free ticket. Traveler rewards pose a compelling incentive, a shortcut to the playgrounds of the globalized elite, or, if not that, at least a chance to sit in the part of the airplane where cocktails are free. And yet, as rewards programs have multiplied, the earned point has grown increasingly complex and fungible, a chase ultimate rewards point worth about two cents, as I write, can also be converted to a British Airways mile, which in turn can be transferred to Iberia plus or a cashed out for a ticket on Cathay Pacific or used to book a rental car with Hertz.

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The Points guy helps readers navigate this web. Since 2010, the Points Guy has published over 30000 blog posts, hotel, airline and cruise ship reviews next to one fictionalizes of Rewards program fine print. Some typical headlines. Why the Amex gold is the perfect in between credit card, how to get to Puerto Rico and Miles and Points. Why I canceled Bora Bora again. Kelly is only the face of the site. The guy is now voiced by a 30 person team of credit card experts, aviation reporters and expats from legacy travel media, older travel publications, seller daydream, crisp ocean vistas, street side cafes, European hamlets with more steeples than people.

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The point sky sells that daydream as a promise, upholding a sworn oath to help you maximize your travel. This is not a false promise, at least not on an individual basis. Almost anyone with a decent credit score can get a free vacation by following the protocol outlined in the TPG Beginner's Guide. First, forget your debit card. Your debit card has no point pun intended. It takes without giving and spends without earning. Wouldn't you rather know that all the money you spend is like an investment toward your next trip?

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If the answer is yes, your next step is credit. Since the chunk days of the Diner's Club card, the credit card industry has evolved from a substitute for checks into a passport to total convenience. The latest credit cards known on the market as premium cards charge an annual fee for access to deluxe amenities, airline lounges, free TSA PreCheck travel reimbursements and most crucial points. Convertible, transferable, practically alchemical points turn diapers and caramel macchiato into premium status and first class upgrades and overwater villas.

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At the Conrade, Maldives points a crew passively, without apparent work, taunting the labor theory of value by simply appearing on your monthly credit card statement on the points guy Instagram feed, there is proof of all the ways that household budgets draw might be spun into travel gold honeymooners hold hands and lie flat seats. Retirees see the Taj Mahal at last, a cancer survivor with a new lease on life strikes. Suppose that the world's tallest indoor waterfall, two dads with two kids take a family selfie en route to a free getaway in Cancun.

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Three shades dominate the color palette. Vitreous ocean, blue, white sand and cleanable seatback headrests. Navy here. The leg room goes on forever. All the rooms are suites. All the pools are infinite. And anyone can live like a billionaire so long as you play your credit cards right. Don't have a premium credit card yet. The points guy is happy to sign you up for one. This is in fact the site's main source of revenue. Wander the labyrinth of guides and reviews and soon you'll encounter your first sign up bonus.

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Sixty thousand for Chase Sapphire preferred one hundred thousand points for a Capital One venture. Why should running money through this essentially arbitrary chain of transactions produce value? Does it? The points guy is barely concerned with such questions. With one new card, a free trip can be yours. Just enter your address and your mother's maiden name. The Points guy is headquartered in New York City in a mid rise office building just north of Union Square. I went there to visit on February 10th, a month or so before the pandemic would devastate the U.S. travel industry.

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Stepping off the elevator, I felt no sense of impending collapse. The office floor word with bullish momentum. Inside a glass walled conference room, a blogger picked out posts from a converted airline seat salvaged from a defunct Concorde turbo jet. Kelley's office was spacious and clean, appearing mostly ceremonial. In 2012, the sky was purchased by Bankrate, a consumer finance company which in turn was acquired by Red Ventures, a portfolio of services sites including a Lonely Planet CreditCards.com, safety dot com reviews, dot com and higher education dot com.

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Kelly stayed on through both acquisitions, retaining the title of chief executive and remaining the figurehead of the brand in a typical year, he spends about four months traveling, splitting the rest of his time between two homes in the West Village and Bucks County, Pennsylvania, where he grew up. Still, when you go on vacation for a living, the line between personal and professional life can be hard to draw. A March 20 20 Business Insider article highlighted this lack of boundaries, reporting that Kelly had made passes at freelancers and snorted cocaine in front of colleagues on a business trip to the Nobu Hotel, Las Vegas, Kelly and Reid Ventures denied any wrongdoing.

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A bank of shelves behind a large and empty desk showcased evidence of Kelly's airport lounge lifestyle, an unopened box of Klecko, a scale model of a Singapore Airlines jet, two copies of Rich Bitch, a simple 12 step plan for getting your financial life together. Finally, the author was a guest on his podcast. In the corner of the room on a gray sectional sofa, Kelly and dark washed jeans and Gucci boots reclined into a stockpile of novelty throw pillows.

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One was inspired by air traffic control lingo, Alpha, Bravo, Charlie, etc. Another showed a dozen smiling. Celine Dion's a third in brassy, bold face type, asked, Do I look like I fly economy at six feet seven inches tall? He did not. He spoke with a frank inside Irishness that made me feel as if I shouldn't either. On TSA PreCheck, I haven't waited more than five minutes and years on the Concorde, I'd rather be in a live flat bed for six hours than a cramped seat for three.

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Whose time is that valuable on the diminishing thrills of success? The joy of a fifty thousand point sign up bonus is lost when our corporate cards earn up to two million points a month. Kelly found points in Miles as a child one morning in 1996, his father, a health care consultant, came to him and said, hey, I have all these frequent flyer miles. If you can figure out how to use them, we'll go somewhere. Kelly, age 13, closeted gay, fabulous by his own description, called the US Airways customer service line, asked a few questions in his best adult voice, then hung up and told his parents, OK, we're going to the Cayman Islands.

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He'd first heard about the Caribbean hideaway and John Grisham, the best selling thriller, The Firm, a few months later, the family of six was wheels up on a zero dollar flight to paradise. Thus, a devotion to Miles was born. In college at the University of Pittsburgh, Kelley earned U.S. Airways gold status flying to and from student government conferences on the university's dime. After graduation, he moved to New York and eventually wound up in human resources at Morgan Stanley, recruiting at college job fairs and racking up airline miles in the process.

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A year after he started, the economy collapsed, a failure of two imaginative financial widgets. Morgan Stanley downsized. Kelley found himself on the firing squad, waiting outside conference room doors to escort the casualties down to the lobby. This was thankless, demoralizing work. The lifers sometimes cried. Kelly went home, feeling drained. Miles and points became an escape, rewarding on some higher plane of human need. He learned the fine print of his corporate Amex card and earned a water cooler reputation as the points guy.

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In spring 2010, he unveiled a simple website where visitors could pay him for help booking vacations. The first version of the points guy went online just as several economic trends converged, as the economy began to improve, credit card companies were looking for ways to regain the customers they lost during the downturn. Chase had just poached a top executive from American Express, the reigning reward's charge card at the time, and it just introduced Chase Ultimate Rewards, a new flexible points currency designed to draw millennials into the premium card market.

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Kelly added a blog to his site in June 2010. Just as many other miles hobbyists were launching credit card blogs of their own, but only Kelly was lucky enough to come across a way to turn this passion into money. In February 2011, a distant friend who had come across the site reached out and asked Kelly to meet him for dinner. I thought he was asking me out on a date, Kelly says. He was like, Let's meet up.

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I can help you with your block. And I was like, OK, that's like the lamest excuse. The two sat down for a Pinot Grigio near the Morgan Stanley office in Times Square. The friend, it turned out, was an account manager at Lync Share. Now Rocketboom, which specialized in affiliate marketing, an online sales tactic in which a company pays a commission to bloggers for selling its product. If you wrote a blog post that got the top Google ranking for, say, best nonstick skillet and put in an affiliate link to the product, you could earn money for every customer you brought in.

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This was a relatively novel concept in 2011. To Kelly, it seemed spammy. But what did he have to lose besides time? The friend signed him up as a Chase affiliate and Kelly put up a blog post about the Chase United Card. That first month, Kelly says he earned five thousand dollars in affiliate Pince the following month. He earned twenty thousand dollars a month. After that, he earned one hundred and thirty thousand dollars. I don't like talking about numbers, Kelly says, but basically it just picked up from their.

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See Casper dot com slash promo for details and end date. At the time we sat down in his office, the points guy had reached a peak of about 12 million monthly unique readers up on the wall, a flat screen TV reeled off a feed of metrics from the site. The blog by then had published 16 posts about what we then called the novel coronavirus, covering rerouted cruise ships and suspended flights from China weeks before most mainstream publications. Still, the outbreak remained a curiosity.

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None of the posts were cracking the top 10. The main thing on Kelly's horizon that day was a new points Sky app, which he hoped would be released by June. After months of delays, the AP explained was designed to synthesize the terms of different loyalty programs, helping people choose which transactions to put on which credit card beyond sign up bonuses and regular spending. A major way to rack up points is by playing the so-called category bonuses e.g. five times points on dining, which vary among cards and change all the time.

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Hardcore earners keep track of these rules and Excel spreadsheets or by sticking Post-it notes to their cards. The Points Guy app would make the chaos systematic, opening the Hobbit up to more casual earners. MasterCard now has lift credits Amex has offered over Chase now has left to Kelly said, trailing off it is dizzying the amount of constantly changing promotions and target's. More dizzying than racking up points is figuring out how to spend efficiently. Most casual credit card users think of rewards as a freebie, the points guy thinks in terms of cold, hard cash and wants you to get the most freebies for your money beyond publishing points to sense valuations.

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The site also posts step by step instructions for transferring points among the currencies themselves. Most airlines and credit cards have transfer partners, and those transfer partners have their own partners by converting points among the different programs, a traveler can arbitrage his way to better deals. This convoluted system formed, incidentally, over many years as airlines and credit cards formed ad hoc agreements. Kelly, who told me he has 25 cards and employs a full time staff member to manage his and his company's rewards, admitted he still messes up the calculus.

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I'll post on Instagram. I'm using Alaska Airlines to fly, American Airlines to fly to London first class and people will be like dumdum. Didn't you realize if you transfer Amex to Etihad, it's less miles. Kelly is a middle man's man, an intermediary in an industry that exists to turn intermediation into profit. There are three major players in the travel rewards game credit cards, banks, airlines and consumers points. The set of novel currencies minted by airlines transform their vague but strong mutual interests into something fun.

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This web of partnerships can become tangled, but generally speaking, the system works like this. Airlines issue their own frequent flier miles, but they don't always go directly to consumers.

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Just as often, the currency is sold in blocks to banks with points in hand. A bank can then issue a code branded credit card like the Chase Southwest Rapid Rewards Card use the incentives to attract high value customers. In another version of this arrangement, a bank issues its own currency like Chase Ultimate Rewards.

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These points can be redeemed for just about any. The bank converts its own points into real dollars when buying the desired reward from a third party vendor, points function in most ways, as real currencies do when airlines devalue their points, as United did recently during the pandemic to counter the glut of unspent miles, it can cause a minor shock wave surfing one card or supercharging another. But because travel remains such a high value prize, what industry wonks call an aspirational reward, the minor fluctuations have not yet destabilized the market.

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With points in the mix, all three players generally win.

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Airlines make money selling rewards. Consumers enjoy the indulgence of free travel. Banks recruit new customers more than justify the upfront cost of acquisition. It's a common misconception that premium credit cards earn money mainly through interest payments and annual fees, their meat and potatoes are interchange fees. The surcharge is levied on merchants per transaction. When you pay with your credit card in a store, the owner pays the bank a percentage of your total for certain credit cards, this fee is low, maybe one to two percent for premium cards like Chase, Sapphire or American Express.

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The fees can be higher, depending on the merchant to cover the cost of a card's amenities. This is partly why restaurants, which operate on thin margins, sometimes exclude American Express from the list of cards they accept. In places outside the United States, interchange fees are generally capped, which can make rewards far less rewarding. In this way, points and miles are an all-American pastime. Only here was the margin wide enough for the coupon scheme to flourish into the kind of game the points guys readers play.

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You might rightly begin the history of points with Diner's Club, the first credit card which came into use in 1950 and through issuing monthly statements, inadvertently established a way to track and analyze consumer spending. Credit cards would eventually become an indispensable tool for administering travel rewards programs. But it was deregulation in the 1970s that did more to establish points. Currencies themselves from the Nixon administration on think tank types on both sides of the aisle began to advocate for regulatory reforms that decreased federal involvement in America's largest industries.

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Energy was partially deregulated in 1973. Railroads began in 1976. In 1978, Jimmy Carter signed the Airline Deregulation Act, which undid federal aeronautics controls in place since 1938. Before airline deregulation, flight maps and ticket prices were set centrally by the Civil Aeronautics Board because this prevented airlines from competing on price, they were forced to offer flyers, deluxe amenities for meals in coach conversation, pit seating, attractive stewardesses and Oleg Cassini suits. Under the Airline Deregulation Act, carriers were free to determine their own prices, which could theoretically increase profits, but also introduced a new quandary.

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What would prevent the airline market from simply becoming a race to the bottom frequent flyer programs emerged as a way to reward customers for staying loyal. Certainly the business traveler would spend a little more of his boss's money if it meant getting something extra for himself. Using incentives was hardly new, says Bob Crandall, American Airlines CEO at the time. Supermarkets gave out SNH green stamps, luring customers with prizes like free toasters and the airline industry. Experiments like United's 100000 Mile Club had already demonstrated some success, but the big impediment to administering such programs was keeping track of customers who could say whether the John Smith, who flew New York to London was the same John Smith who flew Houston to Detroit.

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On this front, American had a technological advantage, a new computerised reservation system. So we started doing some research about what kind of rewards people would like, Crandall says the answer, somewhat obvious in hindsight, was travel. The only thing people want more than cash as an incentive is travel, says Hal Brierly, a consultant who helped design Americans first program. Advantage, as it came to be called, debuted in May of 1981 with a wave of pre enrollment mailers directed at the airline's top customers, from the beginning, the program was tiered, with a top prize being a free round trip ticket.

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If you flew 50000 miles in one year, Brierley says, you got a first class trip to wherever we flew, which at the time meant go to Hawaii. Even a business guy wants a beach in Hawaii with Heyst. Other airlines unveiled their own mileage programs I credit United for having responded to the program literally over the weekend. Brierley says these early miles, unlike modern points or measures of actual distance miles flown from A to B program, enrollees received monthly statements tracking their progress toward the reward.

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At this early stage, a free trip cost an airline almost nothing to give away. Airline seats were perishable. Planes take off, full or not, by turning this so-called distressed inventory into an asset, airlines retain their most loyal customers who more than paid them back in repeat business. Within a few years, an estimated 75 percent of all business travelers had joined at least one frequent flyer program. The programs were free. There was no risk in joining.

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Consumer expectations were low and most still saw the miles as a kind of funny money. Business sections throughout the early 80s devoted column space to explaining terms of service and complaining about blackout dates and mileage thresholds. One reporter deemed frequent flyer programs as confusing and as complicated as Rubik's Cube. Another critic, the former Senator Eugene McCarthy, took to The New York Times to complain. I was rarely able to take advantage of the special reduced fares given if one scheduled three months in advance or agreed to go on Tuesday and return on Sunday before noon, or to complete one's round trip within the octave of the Feast of All Saints or of the birth of Clare Boothe Luce, or buy a ticket before the spring equinox and use it before the summer solstice, or failing in that only after the September equinox and before the winter solstice.

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Flying West before noon and east after sundown. The gimmick reputation of early mileage programs proved to be a hindrance. But soon, a set of early adopters came to see the programs for what they were worth, or rather what they could be worth in 1981 when advantage was introduced. Randy Peterson was 30 and working in the corporate offices of Cheskin, a groovy young men's mall retailer founded on the market research proposition that teen males loved auto racing and chess. Flying from grand opening to grand opening to reposition racks of nylon parachute pants, Peterson accrued a free trip to Hawaii, booked a room at the Sheraton Waikiki and a dinner at the luau every single night.

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When he returned to the Chess King offices in New York, his co-workers gathered around his desk with questions about taking free trips of their own. Seeing latent demand in their barrage of increase, Peterson put in his two weeks notice by 1986, he had struck out on his own as the publisher, editor and the only employee of the world's first frequent flyer magazine. The first issue of Inside Flyer looked, in Peterson's words, like a bad ransom note, typewritten commentary on airline programs mixed with photocopied offers clipped from monthly statement mailers.

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Its first readers were road warrior types, guys and wrinkled suits with Hakman luggage who traveled enough to earn a free trip now and then, but didn't go out of their way to earn further. This all changed in 1988 with the debut of Delta Triple Mileage, one of the first industry experiments in driving consumers to actually fly more than they might otherwise, the promotion, which delivered on the promise of its name, shortened the free ticket, a crucial time from a period of years to a period of months.

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A free trip to Hawaii, which cost about 30000 miles, used to be an ambitious goal. Now it could be earned in one third of the distance, just two round trips from LAX to JFK for the average business traveler.

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Delta triple mileage increase the immediate value of belonging to a loyalty program for mileage obsessives like Peterson taking miles off the gold standard of concrete distance transformed program membership from a static, passive interest to a game that could be played. Triple mileage gave rise to a frequent flying frenzy, one that could be amped up even further by learning and exploiting airline route particular's. Back then, routes were more limited, and travelers often completed the last leg of a trip, with a short flight from a hub airport to a smaller regional one to make accounting for these brief jaunts less annoying.

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Delta decided to compensate all flights with a minimum of one thousand rewards miles. Even when the actual distance was shorter under triple mileage, the minimum well tripled. And quickly inside, flyer readers realized that by stacking these short flights, they could meet their own free trips, flying back and forth between two short like cities. A rewards ticket to Hawaii could be earned in just eight continuous hours of flying. One of the most popular ones was Dallas to Austin, Petersen says people would do that eight, nine, 10 times in a day.

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In time, other airlines introduced their own multiple promotions and around the mileage community was born inside. Flyer eventually spawned its own online replacement, a message board called Flyer Talk, where mileage prodigies, including Brian Kelly, would come to hear the lure of their mileage ancestors. Most stories from this Wild West time have proved impossible to fact check in hindsight. Back in the 80s, before the TSA and security theater, the number of people that used to fly under other people's names strictly to earn frequent flyer miles was extraordinary, Peterson says, according to his memory.

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One high school basketball coach enlisted a whole team to fly under his name back and forth all weekend. He says between Dallas and Austin, just so he could earn bonus miles. That's how you push the envelope. You get greedy.

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One of the greatest points in Miles Hustle's of the free broadband age was something called the Latin Pass run. In the lead up to the new millennium, a small handful of Latin American Airlines formed a consortium called Latin Paths. For a while it was doing OK. But then the big global airlines came in and started eating up all of the business travelers. Latin past needed a competitive edge. So it turned to Bobby Buth, an airline marketer out of Miami.

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Booth's idea was to incentivize travel with the smaller carriers by creating a million mile prize for flying at least one international segment on each of the Latin past member airlines in one year. There were a bunch of exceptions and fine print stuff involving rental cars, hotels and partner airlines, all of which amounted to a brain teaser for Peterson. In 2000, he worked out a plan for how you could do it and published an article, an inside flyer, saying, I'm going to do it all in one weekend.

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And he volunteers. Three people joined the first Latin pass run. One was a Silicon Valley investor, one was a loan officer down in Dallas. The third was an off duty IRS agent. The foursome met up in Miami on a Friday and flew 24 hours a day. Up, down, connect, up, down, connect. They got into Lima, slept on the concrete floor of the airport for two hours and then caught the first flight out to Nicaragua.

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There was unrest in the country at the time, Petersen recalls, you'd look at all the soldiers all around with the machine guns and think, we've been here, this qualifies. I'm not getting off. No, no. I'll sit here for two hours while you refuel. In the end, the whole run cost about 1100 dollars per person. The million miles via transfer partners were worth at least three first class international round trips. Peterson published the details of the run, and after that, Latin paths really took off.

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You'd fallen to Lima last flight of the day, he says, and you'd look over and see a couple of other Americans in the back because we were all in coach and you'd kind of nod your head a little bit like I know what you're doing. In the end, about 250 people earn the million mile bonus, more than the few dozen the program had forecast. One was the famous pudding guy immortalized by Adam Sandler in Punch Drunk Love. They ended up folding that venture just a few years later, Peterson says, just because they couldn't handle all the redemptions.

[00:36:17]

Latin pass was an inflection point in loyalty program history, marking a moment when airlines began to give more thought to the delicate math required to maintain a strong points currency. By 2005, the global pool of frequent flyer miles was accruing 10 times as fast as the open seats that made the whole system possible. That year, the economist estimated the value of these unredeemed miles as more than the value of all the one dollar bills in circulation. Consumers that embraced the frequent flyer program, but now airlines found themselves facing pressures to give away seats that would otherwise be sold in time, more and more programs would begin selling points to banks by turning their loyalty programs into income streams.

[00:37:00]

The airlines could afford to give away more free seats. In fact, according to ever, Tobor, managing partner of an airline loyalty consulting firm, seats purchased with airline points can generate more revenue than seats purchased with cash. Today, the business of selling points is more stable and more reliably profitable and the business of actually flying people places over time. Airline performance is very volatile, de Boer says. Something happens, say the price of oil goes up or a competitor comes in dumping capacity and it constantly goes up and down, up and down.

[00:37:34]

Up and down. Points, by contrast, are relatively calm. Recently, in the midst of the pandemic, American Airlines use the program as collateral to secure a seven point five billion dollar Cares Act alone. Delta did the same with Sky miles to get nine billion dollars from private lenders. As in other parts of the American economy, airlines are finding ways to become financial service providers. There have been transactions in the past where the loyalty program was acquired or sold at a total value exceeding that of the airline.

[00:38:05]

Deborah says it's the tail wagging the dog. Earlier this year on March 8th, I traveled to Washington, D.C., to attend Frequent Traveler University, a travel hacker seminar series held several times a year around the world, most often an airport hotel conference rooms. This iteration took place at the Walter E.. Washington Convention Center as part of a traveling adventure show that unfortunately coincided with the first wave of covid travel panic. And the main hall of the convention center to scuba instructors floated idly in an unattended demonstration pool.

[00:38:41]

I arrived at the conference room just in time for introductory remarks by Stephen Kraszewski, a blogger who had leveraged the Delta and United mileage programs to visit every U.N. member country before his fortieth birthday. Kazansky, like much of the room, was male, white, not overtly subculture looking. He warmed up the crowd with some lighthearted cracks about how travel hacking had affected his marriage. His wife, he said, had recently instituted a one free hotel lounge meal per day rule.

[00:39:11]

The room laughed along in recognition. In the mileage community, almost every relationship has one obsessive and one tolerance enabler, generally known as player to marriage, unlocks a higher level of the game by uniting two incomes to credit scores and two Social Security numbers. Several obsessives I spoke with joked that getting access to a spouse's credit card was one of the best days of his or her life. Berezovsky told the room that one of the most common questions he gets was, what can I do about spouses that are interested in the spending but not the earning?

[00:39:45]

He and his wife had begun taking an annual spousal harmony trip. She lays out the parameters and he has to deliver Fourth of July weekend. Australia business class, single connection preferred Korean Air. My first seminar of the day was called Awards Worth Meeting For Mazor manufactured spending was popularized through flyer talk. The technique has since established itself as the foremost earnings tactic of hardcore milers. The seminar was hosted by Nick Reyes, a self-declared rabid points and male collector with an open collared shirt and a neatly trimmed goatee.

[00:40:22]

He approached the lectern, took off his fedora and rubbed some sanitiser on his hands as someone struggled to set up the projector, he stalled for time by telling the crowd that he'd named his first son, Conrad, after the Hilton luxury hotel chain. It already collected several complimentary Conrad branded stuffed animals from his previous days. If you were to name your child after a hotel brand, which would you pick? He asked. The crowd tossed off suggestions Regis an homage to the St.

[00:40:52]

Regis Hotel chain and Bonnefoy after the recently merged Starwood Marriott Ritz Carlton Rewards Program. Soon, the PowerPoint presentation was up and running. Manufacturers spending, Reyes explained, is a tactic in which you buy a cash equivalent using a credit card, earn credit card, rewards points for the purchase and use the cash value to pay off the bill. A simple example might entail using your Visa credit card to buy a MasterCard prepaid gift card and then repaying the bill through an online bill pay app, perhaps even using the gift card itself.

[00:41:26]

This is a tidy way to print points, but rarely are my schemes so obvious. Bill pay apps, gift cards and other cash abstractions tend to come along with all kinds of piddly fees. In order for an MBS scheme to turn a profit, the earning must exceed the cost of manufacture. One of the earliest mouse schemes at this point to foundational legend of the Points and Miles community was the dollar coin bonanza. In 2005, in an attempt to overcome the struggling Sacagawea dollar and to piggyback off the recent state quarter craze, Congress passed the presidential one dollar coin act, introducing a new series of coins.

[00:42:05]

The first, featuring George Washington's face, went into circulation around Presidents Day 2007 for the next few years by congressional mandate, a new president was minted every season. Adams, Jefferson, Madison and so on. Nearly every venue of American consumer life is set up to dissuade the use of coins. And so the new series was a failure in order to get the currency into circulation. The US Mint started a new direct SCHIP program allowing consumers to buy the coins online and have the mailed out free of charge.

[00:42:38]

Before long, the Mint started to notice strange buying patterns as travel hackers discovered the program, using their credit cards to buy millions of coins and delivered the packages straight from their mailboxes to the bank. This hustle generated an untold number of milage millionaires and even more big fish tales for the points in Miles community. Here's one at the first frequent traveler university in 2010, held at a Sheraton near LaGuardia Airport, attendees broke for lunch together at a nearby Chinese restaurant, only to discover that the business was cash only on the bill finally arrived.

[00:43:13]

The waitress was surprised to discover a table piled high with golden coins. Eventually, the mint halted the bonanza by disallowing credit card orders altogether. In my second talk of the day called Simply Manufactured Spending, a software engineer named Mike Graziano ran through a list of other bygone EMS tactics, like paying yourself through the Amazon pay portal or prepaying a Visa bux debit card. In the course of my reporting, I heard of others to paying yourself through a square credit card reader over paying your taxes with a credit card and waiting for the IRS to refund you.

[00:43:49]

Issuing short term microloans to the developing world using a website called Kiva. One travel hacker I spoke with divided my schemes into two categories pyjama spend, which you could do from your computer and real world spend, which took in-person work. Manufactured spending was getting harder as credit card algorithms became smarter at catching hackers. Increasingly, the profitable schemes involved arduous real world effort like driving between Wal-Mart locations to buy money orders at a discount. Some hackers I read about online build these pit stops into their real job commutes as a kind of second shift.

[00:44:29]

Others, a small percentage, make travel, hacking and other arcane arbitrage schemes a full time occupation, reselling their points in secret online markets against the credit card terms of service. Staying ahead as a manufactured spender means staying alert and attuning yourself to particular ways that abstract financial innovations can be layered. There are new financial products popping up every day, Graziano assured the crowd pay perhaps are Silicon Valley backed companies generally that are moving very quickly. And we are not on their radar when they put these products out.

[00:45:03]

When you see that, do not hesitate. Legally speaking, travel hacking is not a crime, though it does lead to conflict with vendors and credit card companies, many of which have instituted rules against MS schemes, a bank or airline has a lot of leeway to decide what abides by its program's rules and what does not. Even if a travel hacking scheme does not outright violate the terms of service, a company can simply decide the technique, transgressors, the spirit of its program.

[00:45:31]

In cases like these, your rewards balances might be seized. Card issuers even instituted long term bans. Every travel hacker I spoke with had a different relation to the morality of the Hobbit. Credit cards and airlines are not sympathetic victims, and this fact could be used to justify almost any ethical position. Some drew the line at exploiting credit unions. Others stopped and misrepresenting their own identities or reselling points online for cash. Pretty much every player at this level disliked Brian Kelly and the Points guy for one reason or another, including, but not limited to being a sellout, beating them to the punch, getting in bed with a credit card.

[00:46:11]

Companies advocating for suboptimal deals masquerading as a consumer advocate, taking credit for a community he did not create, and giving face to a subculture that would rather remain anonymous.

[00:46:23]

Kelly admits these travel hackers are not his target audience.

[00:46:27]

I don't want to have to go around to 10 different targets to buy different gift cards to get points, he says. People called me a sellout in the beginning, like, Oh, you're just doing this for the masses. And yeah, I am. That's the point. He didn't start the points guy to keep his deals a secret. That was a business decision early on.

[00:46:47]

And that's why I think we've been able to grow it. We are very open about the fact that we have to make money.

[00:46:52]

I have 100 employees. I can't pay their salaries and Amex points.

[00:46:56]

I left Washington on March 8th and arrived back home in New York City just in time to watch it shut down. That Thursday, Broadway went dark and a prohibition on gatherings of more than 500 people was announced in the following weeks, the schools were closed. The city's daily covid deaths reached a peak of more than 800. By some counts. The point sky, with its fluency in bureaucratic jargon, pivoted almost exclusively to passing the daily changing crisis plans. Some sample headlines, everything you need to know about the US European travel ban.

[00:47:29]

Here's how to figure out if you qualify for a flight refund, how to cancel an Airbnb if your reservation is affected by coronavirus.

[00:47:37]

Over the months that followed, I checked in with Kelly periodically as he bounced around the world from Palm Springs, California, to Antigua to Mexico City, getting messages, dining out at restaurants, updating his Instagram story throughout. When we last spoke in November, he had just returned from two weeks in French Polynesia, where he stayed at the Conrad Bora Bora Nui and swam with humpback whales. Now, back home in Pennsylvania, he was once again looking forward to the release of the Sky app, which had been kicked down the road to mid twenty twenty one, I'm still confident it will change the way people think about points, he said while writing this article.

[00:48:15]

My own perspective on miles and points certainly changed through day to day spending and expenses, which were later reimbursed by the New York Times by Reward's balancers began to grow at press time. I have three thousand eight hundred fifteen an advantage four thousand seven hundred thirty five and Delta Sky Miles five thousand six hundred and Mariotte Bonnefoy forty four thousand four hundred eighty five and Southwest Rapid Rewards and sixty five thousand four hundred and eighty two. And Chase Ultimate Rewards. I hope to end the story in a faraway place, relaxing in my own plot, concluding free vacation, but who knows when this might be possible?

[00:48:53]

The more I sit home daydreaming about travel, the more skeptical I feel about the sorts of trips that points in miles tend to produce. As corporate partnerships have grown increasingly enmeshed, rewards have come to form a worldwide hampster tube connecting Sky Club lounges to Ritz Carlton lobbies, to Wolfgang Puck Express's, to Uber black cars. This elite global habitat part of our world, but also apart from it, is suggestive of our stratified economy at large, one that stays aloft through financial novelties and unfettered access to cheap money.

[00:49:29]

A major reason points and miles trips exist is because airlines turn a more stable profit by minting their own currencies than by selling actual airline seats, the flight seems almost ancillary to the financial transaction. It enables a trend across the whole economy. But the selling of goods or services serves to enable the collection of data, the absorption of venture capital funds, or the levying of hidden transaction fees in the scheme. Posting to social media or collecting points in miles or ordering a taxi or a hero on your phone is merely a gesture to keep the whole process in motion.

[00:50:04]

The real moneymaking happens behind the scenes, driven by a series of exchanges where value seems conjured from nothing at all. But of course, value always comes from somewhere. If you trace the thread back on any one of these businesses, it's always the same deal. The poor underwrite the fantasies of the middle class, who in turn underwrite the realities of the rich. When credit cards charge high interchange fees, they pass the cost of loyalty programs on to merchants who in turn pass it back to customers by building the fees into their sticker prices.

[00:50:38]

Those who pay with credit can earn it back and points those who pay with debit or cash wind up subsidizing someone else's free vacation. According to a 2010 policy paper by economists at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, the average cash using household paid one hundred forty nine dollars over the course of a year to card using households, while each card using household received one thousand one hundred thirty three dollars from cash users, partially in the form of rewards. It remains a regressive transfer to this day.

[00:51:12]

Almost a year into the pandemic, we've seen travel plummet to practically premodern lows, according to the United Nations World Tourism Barometer, international tourist arrivals dropped ninety three percent year over year.

[00:51:24]

Last June, the beginning of the summer tourism season, the ripple effect was quick and vast, manifesting itself in idiosyncratic ways.

[00:51:33]

Carbon emissions dipped.

[00:51:35]

The Mona Lisa sat alone for four for months, probably her longest solitude since she was painted and famously over touristed Venice reduced canal traffic. And the disappearance of tourist wastewater output contributed to what one study called unprecedented water transparency. The decline in export revenue from international tourism has been, according to one estimate, eight times more severe than the loss the sector experienced following the global financial crisis.

[00:52:03]

Hundreds of millions of people are out of work. The United Nations predicts travel will begin to rebound as early as the third quarter of twenty, while McKinsey says we might return to pre covid levels by twenty three. Rebound to me is a strange way of describing whatever the next tourist wave might look like.

[00:52:22]

In any case, I'll keep holding on to my points.

[00:52:36]

This was recorded by autumn. Autumn is an app you can download to listen to lots of audio stories from publishers such as The New York Times, The New Yorker, Vanity Fair and The Atlantic's.

[00:53:05]

This podcast is supported by the Cornell, SC Johnson College of Business. We all have goals, especially career goals, like enhancing and diversifying our skills or tapping into a broader network of opportunity. The Cornell executive MBAs designed with Ivy League prestige for goal achievers from any industry. By advancing your career without interruption, by providing global perspectives, an intimate classroom settings, by challenging, informing, connecting and propelling, you achieve your goals with a Cornell executive MBA on the weekends and close to home.

[00:53:34]

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