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StackingBenjamins.com | Money Podcast | Cumulus Podcast Network
The same mental patterns that cause investors to panic-sell during a downturn, chase validation through status purchases, or freeze up when facing big financial decisions -- those are the exact patterns performance coach Jim Murphy has spent decades helping elite athletes overcome. His framework isn't about trying harder. It's about getting aligned. And today he brings it down to the basement to help Stackers apply it to the one game that matters most -- the one you play with your own money and your own life. What You'll Walk Away With The three pillars of extraordinary performance -- belief, freedom, and focus -- and why chasing results instead of these three things is costing you more than you know Why the score, the portfolio balance, and the quarterly statement are all distractions -- and what elite performers focus on instead The resonance framework that helps you recognize when you're making decisions from alignment versus anxiety Four daily goals that reorient your attention from outcomes you can't control to the process that actually produces them Why the same ego patterns that derail pro athletes -- always comparing, never satisfied -- show up identically in how most people handle money The homeless harpist story: what Jim did with his last $100 when he was $90,000 in debt -- and what happened next Why retiring from a career you've tied your identity to can feel exactly like getting cut from a team -- and how to prepare for it before it happens Five questions to ask yourself before any high-stakes decision to know whether you're operating from fear or from genuine conviction The AI warning hiding in this episode -- why an assistant that never disagrees with you might be the most financially dangerous tool in your arsenal What a cancer diagnosis in January taught a performance coach about what the best possible life actually looks like Why This Matters Now In your 40s, the financial pressure is real -- but so is a quieter kind of pressure that rarely gets named. Am I building the right life? Am I making decisions because they matter to me, or because of what other people will think? Jim Murphy's work sits at the intersection of those two questions, and the answer he keeps arriving at is the same one the best investors, the best athletes, and the most contented people share: stop optimizing for the scoreboard and start arranging your days around what actually makes you feel fully alive. From the Basement Jim Murphy joins Joe and OG to walk through the framework behind his new book, The Best Possible Life -- including the desert solitude, the FedEx job, the homeless harpist, and the cancer diagnosis that field-tested everything he teaches. Joe and OG close out the episode with a Psychology Today headline on AI and financial trust -- and OG's story about nearly committing accidental tax fraud because Claude was being extremely encouraging about a box he absolutely should not have checked. Doug arrives with McDonald's trivia in honor of Tax Day and Ray Kroc's first store. Whether the basement scoreboard survived the week is a question best answered with your earbuds in. Resources Mentioned The Best Possible Life by Jim Murphy -- available wherever books are sold Inner Excellence by Jim Murphy -- also available wherever books are sold Jim Murphy on Substack -- live Q&A coaching sessions and weekly newsletter; find him at interexcellence.com Jim Murphy on Instagram -- @InterExcellence Mental Toughness Training for Sports by Dr. Jim Loehr -- referenced by Jim as a foundational influence Psychology Today article on AI and financial trust -- linked in show notes at stackingbenjamins.com Stacking Benjamins Guides -- updated monthly at stackingbenjamins.com/guides Stacking Benjamins Vault -- budget and net worth tracking at stackingbenjamins.com/vault Stacking Benjamins Meetups -- find a group at stackingbenjamins.com/bad FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/achieve-your-inner-excellence-with-jim-murphy-1829 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Oil prices up. Tariffs in the headlines. Markets bouncing. Your phone serving you a fresh reason to panic every 10 seconds. This week Joe Saul-Sehy and OG break down why everything you're feeling right now is normal, why acting on it is the mistake, and how to think about your portfolio when the world feels like it's on fire. Plus CFP Anna Allem joins OG for the basics segment, walking through the three-bucket investing framework that makes it easier to ignore the noise. In this episode: Why volatility is the price of admission, not a warning sign, how the news business and your investing strategy are working against each other, why a broadening market is actually a healthy sign, and the foundation, bridge, engine framework for goals-based investing. Biggest takeaways: In a normal year the market drops 14% from its high watermark at some point during that year. Then it recovers. That's not a crisis. That's Tuesday. The media's job is to keep you on the platform. Your job is to stay in the market. Those two goals are not compatible. When you tie your money to a specific goal with a specific timeline, the day-to-day noise becomes almost irrelevant. Know which bucket your money is in and why. Resources mentioned: The Stacking Benjamins scorecard: stackingbenjamins.com/scorecard The Vault: stackingbenjamins.com/vault Stacking Benjamins guides (taxes, college planning, HR): stackingbenjamins.com/guides FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-manage-geopolitical-risk-1828 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Most people don't start thinking seriously about retirement until their forties. If that's you, the good news is you're not behind. You're normal. And this week three CFPs, Jackie Cummings Koski, Roger Whitney, and OG break down exactly what to do, in what order, starting right now. In this episode: Why panic is the enemy of a good retirement plan, the first place your money should go before anything else, why your savings rate matters more than finding the perfect investment, and the one investing mistake people make when they feel behind. Biggest takeaways: Give yourself grace first. This stuff isn't taught in school. The two years Jackie spent just processing her situation before taking action weren't wasted. That clarity is what made everything else stick. Increase your savings rate by 1% every six months. Going from 3% to 13% over five years feels like a non-event the entire time. Automation makes it invisible. Simple beats clever. Index funds, low cost, diversified, and boring. When you feel behind, the temptation is to swing for the fences. That's exactly when boring saves you. Real estate and dividend strategies are tactics. Tactics come after you have a strategy. For a 40-year-old starting from zero, the strategy is build the habit and save more. Resources mentioned: Jackie Cummings Koski's book Fire for Dummies and podcast Catching Up to FI at catchinguptofi.com Roger Whitney's Retirement Answer Man podcast at rogerwhitney.com The Stacking Benjamins scorecard: stackingbenjamins.com/scorecard The Vault: stackingbenjamins.com/vault FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-start-saving-for-retirement-at-40-1827 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Retirement expert Jamie Hopkins has spent 20 years helping people plan for retirement, and his most counterintuitive advice stops most savers cold: in the final years before you retire, putting more money away might actually be hurting you. This week he joins Joe and OG to explain why, and what to do instead. In this episode: Why financially prepared retirees still end up miserable, how to practice spending before you retire, the home bias that quietly tanks your portfolio and your quality of life at the same time, and what to actually do with all that home equity when the time comes. Biggest takeaways: The last three to five years of extra contributions barely move the needle on your retirement portfolio. Working six months longer matters more. So does learning to spend. Take that money and actually use it, so you're not hitting retirement having never practiced. Retirement isn't a math problem, it's an identity problem. The people who struggle most aren't broke. They never figured out where their purpose and community would come from once work disappeared. Over half of Americans are forced into retirement earlier than expected. You need a plan for that scenario now, not when it happens. Resources mentioned: Jamie Hopkins' Retirement Sketchbook wherever books are sold The Stacking Benjamins scorecard: stackingbenjamins.com/scorecard The Vault: stackingbenjamins.com/vault Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
A Kiplinger study of 1,000+ everyday millionaires found four traits that kept showing up. None of them involve a big salary, a hot stock tip, or a lucky break. This week Len Penzo, OG, and Joe dig into what those habits actually look like in practice, how to train yourself to spend with intention, and how to find a financial advisor who does what you actually need. In this episode: The "Midwest millionaire" traits anyone can adopt, why becoming a great saver can make you a terrible spender, the monthly money habit that takes 20 minutes and changes everything, and exactly what to say when you're interviewing financial advisors. Biggest takeaways: Frugality without intention is just suffering. The millionaires in this study were the last to spend on themselves and the first to give generously to others. Not cheap. Intentional. Set a money goal big enough to compete with impulse spending. Once you have a real why, "I deserve this" stops winning. When looking for a financial advisor, lead with exactly what you want in the first five minutes. A real professional will tell you if it's not their specialty. Resources mentioned: Len Penzo's blog and book True Money Stories at lenpenso.com The Stacking Benjamins scorecard: stackingbenjamins.com/scorecard The Vault (budget and net worth tracker): stackingbenjamins.com/vault FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-live-like-a-midwestern-millionaire-1825 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Most of us were never taught this stuff. So, where do you actually start? Thirty-nine states now require a personal finance course to graduate from high school. That's real progress — and it still might not be enough. Because financial education isn't a one-time event. It's a living curriculum that has to grow with you, stay connected to your actual life, and — crucially — help you get out of your own way when things get emotionally charged. This week, Joe and the crew build that curriculum from the ground up. Whether you're 22 or 52, there's a starting point here for you. Rubin Miller — Financial advisor, founder of Peltoma Capital, and author of the Fortunes and Frictions blog. Came from the investment world before financial planning, which means he sees the whole game differently and isn't afraid to say so on LinkedIn. Paula Pant — Afford Anything host, behavioral finance truth-teller, and the person who goes on record this week with a very confident guess about the trivia answer. OG — The basement's own financial planner, father of a teenager who wants to day trade, and enthusiastic opponent of giving the government any money he doesn't absolutely have to. On building the foundation: Why the first step in any financial plan is an honest accounting of where everything actually stands: income, spending, assets, debt, all of it What's coming up in the next three to five years and why that question matters more than any abstract retirement calculation Why teaching a 17-year-old about mortgages probably doesn't stick and what actually does The one thing traditional savings accounts do really well (hint: it's great for banks, not for you) Why your behavior matters more than your math and what to do about it On protecting what you're building: The insurance mistake most people make: spending too much protecting low-probability events and too little protecting high-probability ones Why disability insurance is more expensive than life insurance and what that price difference is actually telling you When improving your credit score should not be your priority (this one surprises people) Why debt is never really "good," just occasionally less bad On growing your money: What an investment philosophy actually is and why you need one before you pick a single fund The behavioral biases — recency bias, loss aversion, the availability heuristic — that make smart people do dumb things with their portfolios Why nobody ever thinks they're panicking. They just think the circumstances changed. Why taxes are a year-round event, not a February problem The financial media teaches you to chase. New strategy, hot sector, better fund. But the research keeps landing in the same place: most investors' biggest obstacle isn't information. It's themselves. The curriculum that actually helps isn't the one that covers the most ground. It's the one that connects to your real life, your real timeline, and the emotional triggers that quietly blow up even the best-laid plans. Start there. Everything else builds on top. Rubin joins the crew for the first time and immediately plays trivia on Jesse Cramer's behalf — which feels both generous and karmic, given that Jesse and his wife Kelly just welcomed a new baby into the world (on Jesse's birthday, no less). Doug brings the Eddie Murphy birthday trivia energy. Paula goes on record with a very confident guess. OG applies his usual ironclad logic to arrive at his number. Someone wins. Someone absolutely should not have said what they said out loud before the answer was revealed. MENTIONED / RESOURCES Rubin Miller's blog: fortunesandfrictions.com Peltoma Capital: palomacapital.com Rubin on LinkedIn: search Rubin Miller Paula Pant: Afford Anything podcast, wherever you listen OG's calendar: stackingbenjamins.com/OG Wall Street Journal piece on personal finance requirements by state New to the basement? Subscribe so you never miss an episode — and if this one made you want to finally build your own financial curriculum, that's the whole point. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/looking-at-your-money-report-card-1824 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Bola Sokunbi didn't start with advantages. She started with a $54,000 salary she never negotiated, a rollover IRA mistake that cost her 40% of her savings, a tenant who stopped paying rent for eight months, and a first year of business that generated exactly $200. She's also built one of the most influential personal finance brands in the country and helped millions of people on the path to becoming millionaires. The gap between those two things isn't luck. It's four pillars -- and she walks through all of them today. What You'll Walk Away With The four wealth-building pillars that work in any combination -- and why you only need one to start Why negotiating your salary isn't about being aggressive -- and the simple strategy Bola used to close a gap between $54,000 and the $70,000+ her peers were already making for the same work The rollover IRA mistake that cost Bola nearly 40% of her retirement savings in a single tax year -- and exactly how to avoid it Why the investing pillar isn't just a 401k -- and the specific questions to ask yourself to know if you're actually maximizing it The honest truth about real estate as a wealth-building vehicle -- including what Bola learned from eight months of unpaid rent and a judge who heard everything How to get into real estate investing without ever becoming a landlord The entrepreneurship timeline nobody posts on social media -- and the financial runway strategy that lets you build a business without blowing up your household finances Why the four pillars aren't meant to be pursued one at a time -- and how stacking them together is where the real wealth acceleration happens The one mindset shift that separates people who build wealth from people who keep waiting for the right moment Why starting late is a story we tell ourselves -- and what the math actually says about investors who begin in their 40s or 50s Why This Matters Now If you're in your 40s and you've been doing the right things -- contributing to the 401k, avoiding bad debt, building some savings -- but still feel like the millionaire milestone is someone else's story, this episode is the reframe you didn't know you needed. Wealth at this stage isn't about finding a better investment. It's about understanding which pillars you already have, which ones you're leaving on the table, and how to combine them in a way that fits your actual life. From the Basement Bola Sokunbi joins Joe and OG to walk through the four pillars of her new book, Clever Girl Millionaire -- and yes, the guys are allowed in today. Doug arrives with April Fools trivia involving the Tower of London and a very old prank about lion-washing that somehow still worked on Londoners in 1856. Joe and OG also spend the headline segment making what is either a very compelling case for strategic debt -- or the most elaborate April Fools bit in Stacking Benjamins history. The basement scoreboard had nothing to do with any of it. Resources Mentioned Clever Girl Millionaire by Bola Sokunbi -- available wherever books are sold Clever Girl Finance -- free courses, worksheets, and resources at clevergirlfinance.com Clever Girl Finance on YouTube and Instagram -- @CleverGirlFinance Grind by (coffee shop founder) -- referenced by Joe during the entrepreneurship discussion Stacking Benjamins Scorecard -- assess your financial strategy at stackingbenjamins.com/scorecard Stacking Benjamins Meetups -- find a local group at stackingbenjamins.com/bad Live Show -- Stacking Benjamins and Afford Anything joint live recording, April 7th at Texas A&M Texarkana; details at stackingbenjamins.com/meetup FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/clever-girl-how-to-become-a-millionaire-1823 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Markets are down. Social media is loud. And somewhere in the back of your mind, a voice is asking if you should do something. That voice has cost investors more money than any bear market in history. Joe and OG dig into what actually separates disciplined investors from everyone panic-refreshing their brokerage account -- and how to build the guardrails that keep you from making the one mistake that derails everything you've built. What You'll Walk Away With Why the average intra-year market decline is 14% -- and what that means for how seriously you should be taking a 5% dip right now The real reason financial news channels make you feel like you need to act -- and how understanding their business model changes everything How to build a simple investment policy statement that removes emotion from the equation before the next market drop hits Why setting arbitrary calendar dates to review your portfolio might be the single most underrated investing strategy available to anyone The case for checking your portfolio less often -- including a real example of how last April's market chaos looked completely different depending on how often you were watching How to set automatic triggers that tell you when it's actually time to rebalance -- so you're never guessing in the middle of a storm A powerful perspective shift: look at your tax returns from 2003 or 2010 and then look at your balance today -- what that exercise does to your decision-making in volatile markets Why your only real job as a long-term investor is to not interrupt the compounding -- and how systems make that easier than willpower ever could A four-factor framework for calculating exactly how much emergency fund you actually need -- built around your income, job stability, reemployment risk, and expense flexibility Why the standard three-to-six month emergency fund rule is the wrong starting point -- and what a personalized risk-based approach looks like instead Why This Matters Now If you're in your 40s and you've been building toward something -- a retirement account that finally has real weight to it, a financial plan that took years to assemble -- a volatile market feels personal. Because it is. The stakes are higher than they were in your 30s and the noise is louder than ever. The investors who come out ahead aren't the ones who reacted fastest. They're the ones who had a plan written down before things got uncomfortable. From the Basement Joe and OG work through what a real investment policy statement looks like in plain language -- rules, triggers, and all. OG and Anna return with the second installment of the financial planning basics series, this time tackling exactly how much emergency fund you need using a four-factor framework that replaces the three-to-six month rule of thumb with something actually built around your life. Doug arrives with insurance trivia that is technically about premiums and practically about Joe's unregistered vehicle situation in Texarkana. Whether the basement scoreboard survived the week is a separate matter entirely. Resources Mentioned JP Morgan Guide to the Markets -- monthly research report tracking S&P 500 returns and intra-year declines (Google "JP Morgan Guide to the Markets" for the latest edition) Stock Market Maestros by Claire Flynn Levy and Lee Freeman-Shor -- referenced throughout; available wherever books are sold SSA.gov -- Social Security earnings history lookup, referenced as a tool for tracking long-term financial progress Stacking Benjamins Scorecard -- rate your overall financial strategy at stackingbenjamins.com/scorecard Stacking Benjamins Vault -- budgeting and net worth tracking tool at stackingbenjamins.com/vault Stacking Benjamins Voicemail -- share your investment policy statement questions at stackingbenjamins.com/voicemail Stacking Benjamins Meetups -- find a group near you at stackingbenjamins.com/bad FULL SHOW NOTES: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-protect-your-money-for-when-times-turn-bad-1822/ Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Willpower has a terrible track record with money. It works until it doesn't, and then your good intentions are the first thing to go when life gets busy. The investors and savers who actually make consistent progress aren't trying harder. They've built systems that keep running in the background whether they're paying attention or not. Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, Paula Pant, and Jesse Cramer break down the small, repeatable habits that quietly move the needle -- and why simpler usually wins. What You'll Walk Away With Why motivation fades and willpower fails -- and the structural shift that keeps your finances moving forward anyway The real debate between starting small and going big with savings -- and how to know which approach actually sticks for your personality A practical framework for automating your finances so progress happens whether you're paying attention or not When tracking every budget category helps -- and when narrowing your focus to just one creates faster, more lasting wins How to dump a year's worth of spending data into an AI tool and get back a categorized breakdown that surfaces forgotten subscriptions and leaks you've stopped seeing The surprising relief that comes from consolidating accounts -- and why mental buckets sometimes matter more than the actual number of accounts Why brand loyalty and fewer cards aren't just convenient -- they quietly reduce the decision fatigue that erodes financial consistency The "joy budget" reframe that changes how you think about spending -- and makes it easier to spot what's actually worth keeping The shift that changes everything -- from cutting spending to aligning spending with what actually matters to you How small habit changes, repeated without fanfare, compound into financial progress that eventually surprises you Why This Matters Now In your 40s, mental bandwidth is the real scarce resource. Work, family, and a hundred competing priorities mean complicated financial systems tend to break down exactly when you need them most. The edge doesn't come from trying harder -- it comes from simplifying, automating, and setting up defaults that keep working on your busiest days, when you're not thinking about money at all. From the Basement Joe, OG, Paula Pant, and Jesse Cramer trade strategies on building better financial habits while the crew debates whether you should start small or go big -- and nobody agrees. Doug arrives with a Beatles trivia question that shifts the basement scoreboard in ways the current leader did not anticipate. Whether the points hold or the margin call changes everything is a question best answered with your earbuds in. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/diving-into-the-all-weather-portfolio-with-paul-merriman-1821 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The best investors in the world are wrong -- a lot. Researchers Claire Flynn Levy and Lee Freeman-Shor spent over a decade studying elite money managers and found that being right about stock picks isn't actually what separates the winners. What separates them is what happens after the pick. The discipline, the rules, the willingness to act when the data changes -- and the ability to remove emotion from decisions most people make entirely on feeling. What You'll Walk Away With Why top investors can be wrong more than half the time and still dramatically outperform -- and what that means for how you evaluate your own strategy The critical shift from obsessing over what to buy to building a repeatable process around what you do next Three behavioral tribes investors fall into when a position moves against them -- and which one quietly destroys long-term returns Two distinct ways investors handle winning positions -- and why the more comfortable approach tends to leave serious money on the table How elite investors use predefined rules to decide when to sell, trim, or hold -- and why removing emotion from that decision is the whole game A real-world example of a rules-based system built around earnings surprises and data-driven holding periods -- one you can actually learn from Why planting tiny "seed" positions can preserve massive upside while keeping risk almost invisible on the downside The hidden cost of a pattern so common it barely registers -- holding losers too long while cutting winners too early What makes China's market behave unlike anywhere else -- and how one maestro built an entire strategy around it The AI cautionary tale hiding inside this episode -- a real advisor, a real client presentation, and math that was off by a factor of 12 Why This Matters Now For investors in their 40s, the goal quietly shifts. Finding the next big winner starts to matter less than building something that actually holds up over time. Markets feel noisier, AI tools feel more powerful, and the promise of faster answers has never been louder. But long-term results still come down to behavior, discipline, and repeatable systems -- the same unglamorous edge the pros have been using all along. Knowing that changes how you listen to the noise. From the Basement Joe and OG press Claire and Lee on what a decade of studying elite investors actually reveals -- and the answers are more behavioral than most people expect. The crew then turns to AI in financial advice, and OG shares a story that should give every advisor and DIY investor pause before they hit send on anything they haven't personally verified. Doug arrives with a trivia question that somehow connects Michael Jackson's moonwalk to one giant leap for your bragging rights. Whether the basement scoreboard sticks the landing is best discovered with your earbuds in. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/diving-deep-into-stock-market-research-1820 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
If your emergency fund feels like it's just sitting there doing nothing, you might be measuring the wrong thing. The real return on cash isn't the yield -- it's what that cash helps you avoid. Panic selling during a downturn. High-interest debt after an unexpected bill. Tapping your 401(k) at exactly the wrong moment. Joe and OG reframe emergency savings not as a financial placeholder, but as a strategic asset quietly holding your entire plan together. What You'll Walk Away With Why your emergency fund may be one of the highest-impact moves in your financial life -- even when the yield looks embarrassingly boring How cash on hand protects your long-term investments by keeping emotional, costly decisions off the table during market swings The overlooked way a strong emergency fund can actually lower your overall costs -- starting with how you think about insurance deductibles A side-by-side look at where to keep your cash -- high-yield savings, CDs, money markets, Treasuries -- and what actually matters when choosing How to weigh liquidity, safety, taxes, and yield without falling into the trap of endlessly optimizing something that should stay simple Why chasing marginally better rates or bank bonuses often creates more friction than financial value A practical way to use AI tools to pressure-test your cash strategy without turning it into a part-time job How CD laddering and Treasury options like SGOV can fit into a modern emergency fund without overcomplicating the approach The "good enough" mindset that quietly outperforms the constant optimization trap -- and why it's harder to embrace than it sounds A five-column cash flow framework that cuts through the noise and reveals the one number driving your entire financial picture Why This Matters Now In your 40s, financial decisions don't happen in isolation -- they stack. You're managing growth, protection, and flexibility at the same time, often with less margin for error than you'd like. Cash can feel like a drag when markets are moving and rates look modest. But the right emergency fund creates options, absorbs shocks, and quietly makes every other part of your plan more resilient. It's not idle. It's infrastructure. From the Basement Joe and OG dig into what your emergency fund is actually doing -- and it turns out the math goes well beyond the interest rate on the tin. OG and Anna close out the show with the second installment of the new financial planning basics series, walking through a five-column cash flow system simple enough to sketch on a napkin but powerful enough to anchor your entire plan. Doug arrives with elevator trivia that's smoother than the ride up. Whether the scoreboard moves is a conversation best had with your earbuds in. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-get-the-most-out-of-your-emergency-fund-1819 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Your financial plan is only as good as what happens to it under pressure. A market drop. A job loss. An inflation spike that turns "fine" into "wait, what?" Most portfolios are quietly optimized for the good times, and that's exactly why they crack when things get uncomfortable. This week, Joe, Paula, Jesse, and special guest Paul Merriman aren't chasing the highest returns. They're building for something harder: a system that doesn't force bad decisions when everything around it is going sideways. Because the real test of your plan was never the bull market. It's right now. Paula Pant — Afford Anything host and career-flexibility advocate. Jesse Cramer — Host of Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors and someone who clearly plays the long game in more ways than one. Paul Merriman — Longtime investor, educator, and the person in the room who's seen enough market cycles to stop being impressed by any single one of them. On building a portfolio that doesn't quit: Why the "sports car" portfolio feels exciting and quietly raises the odds you'll blow up your plan at the exact wrong moment The real definition of all-weather investing: built for resilience, not bragging rights How diversification feels like it's failing right before it does exactly what it's supposed to do Why index funds have a built-in self-cleaning mechanism most investors never think about The behavioral trap of performance-chasing and how it causes permanent damage, not just temporary losses On the parts of your plan that aren't your portfolio: Why your investment strategy alone isn't a financial plan and how cash reserves, insurance, and income stability complete the system The often-skipped roles of disability and umbrella insurance in protecting everything you've built How to think about job-loss risk in a world reshaped by AI and shifting careers Why negotiation skills and career flexibility might matter more to your long-term security than picking the "right" fund On measuring success differently: A better scorecard for your financial plan: not just returns, but whether it survives the next storm without forcing a bad call If you're in your 40s, the math has changed. You've built real momentum, which means a major mistake costs more than it used to, and there's less runway to recover. Markets are unpredictable, job security looks different than it did a decade ago, and the financial media is a constant nudge toward reacting to something. An all-weather approach doesn't try to predict what's coming. It prepares for it. The goal shifts from winning every season to still being in the game when the weather turns, and that shift makes all the difference when things actually get hard. OG's chair is empty this week, but Paul Merriman is a more than worthy substitute, joining Joe, Paula, and Jesse to trade ideas on portfolios built to take a punch. Doug holds down the trivia desk, and let's just say the leaderboard gets an interesting update. Somewhere between market wisdom and basement bragging rights, the point lands: you don't need to win every season. You just need a plan that doesn't fall apart when the weather does. New to the basement? Subscribe so you never miss an episode, and leave a review if this one helped you stop optimizing for the wrong thing. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What if reaching financial independence was the easy part? Amy Minkley spent years optimizing toward her number — then hit it and discovered something nobody's spreadsheet prepares you for: freedom without purpose feels surprisingly empty. She joins Joe and OG to talk about what actually fills the gap: community, meaning, and building something instead of just escaping something. Then the basement crew gets practical. Because even the most purpose-driven life still needs its foundations. Joe and OG break down the one emergency fund mistake that quietly undoes years of good planning — and how to fix it before it matters. Amy Minkley — FI traveler, community builder, and living proof that the goal was never really the number. On redefining FI: Why "hit the number and quit" is being quietly replaced by something more sustainable — and more honest The unexpected emptiness many people feel after reaching FI, and what actually fills it Why retirement works better as a redesign than an escape How building something — not just saving something — creates momentum, meaning, and sometimes new income Why real financial confidence comes from community and conversation more than any spreadsheet On emergency funds (the part everyone gets wrong): Why your emergency fund should be built around essential expenses — not income — and how that one shift changes everything The two factors most people skip entirely: job stability and realistic income-replacement timeline Why credit lines tend to fail you at exactly the wrong moment The right range for emergency savings — and how to avoid the trap of holding too much cash "just in case" For a lot of people in their 40s, the question has quietly shifted from "Can I retire someday?" to "What am I actually building?" FI isn't just an escape from work anymore — it's a design problem. And the people figuring it out fastest are the ones pairing big-picture purpose with boring-but-critical foundations: the right emergency fund, the right community, and a clear answer to what they're running toward. Doug arrives with trivia and — in a surprise result — silver has a moment. Joe and OG tie Amy's story back to the practical stuff, because the most intentional life still needs a financial floor underneath it. Whether you're chasing FI, redefining it, or just trying to understand your emergency fund math, the basement crew has you covered. Amy's retreat: https://fifreedomretreats.com Subscribe so you never miss an episode. Leave a review if the basement has ever saved you from a bad financial decision. (You know who you are.) FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/your-journey-to-fi-with-amy-minkley-1817 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
A 401(k) loan often looks harmless. You're borrowing from yourself, the interest comes back to you, and you'll pay it back before it matters -- right? But the fastest way to protect your retirement isn't understanding how loans and hardship withdrawals work. It's building a financial life where you almost never need them. Joe and OG dig into why more people are tapping retirement accounts than ever, and what confident investors quietly do differently. What You'll Walk Away With Why the biggest retirement threat isn't the loan itself -- it's the system that made the loan feel necessary The subtle ways a 401(k) loan can quietly erode long-term growth even when you pay every cent back on schedule How hardship withdrawals actually work, when the IRS gets involved, and why they're almost always the last move you want to make The career risk hiding inside every 401(k) loan -- and what happens when a job change turns your repayment timeline upside down A simple "tripwire" buffer for your checking account that gives you an early warning before spending drifts into dangerous territory How expense creep quietly pushes otherwise disciplined savers toward retirement withdrawals -- and the quick audit that catches it early A surprisingly effective way to use exported spending data and AI tools to surface budget leaks you've completely stopped noticing Why a properly built emergency fund functions like a circuit breaker between life's surprises and your retirement account The real situations where people most often raid retirement savings -- and the smarter alternatives that keep your long-term plan intact A beginner-friendly framework for grading your financial life across six core areas before small cracks become expensive problems Why This Matters Now Your 40s are often your highest-earning years -- and your most financially complicated ones. Rising costs, family obligations, and career uncertainty can make even disciplined savers feel the pull toward retirement money. The goal isn't just knowing the rules around 401(k) loans. It's building the habits and buffers that make raiding your future self's account something you simply never have to consider. From the Basement Joe and OG dig into fresh data showing more retirement accounts getting tapped just as the stakes are highest. Doug shows up with trivia that has no business being as competitive as it gets. The crew also pulls back the curtain on a new beginner-friendly series built to help Stackers pressure-test their entire financial foundation -- because the best retirement strategy was never about knowing when to borrow from yourself. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-build-good-money-habits-1816 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Millennials didn't just change how people invest -- they changed what investing even looks like. Cheaper, faster, more automated, and occasionally more dangerous than anything that came before. The real question isn't whether to adopt their habits. It's which ones are actually building wealth and which ones are quietly lighting your portfolio on fire. Joe, OG, Jen Smith (Frugal Friends), and Doc G (Earn & Invest) sort the signal from the noise. What You'll Walk Away With The quiet Millennial investing shift that made building wealth more accessible than any generation before them -- and why most people missed it Why automation may be the single most powerful tool in your financial stack, and the one condition that turns it against you The difference between technology built to help you invest and technology built to keep you tapping the trade button How budgeting apps can create real spending clarity -- or accidentally trigger what the crew calls "procrasti-spending" Why fewer investment decisions often outperform more of them, and what the research actually says The hidden cost of frictionless trading and why the winning move is sometimes the most boring one available Where to take big swings if you want outsized rewards -- and why your long-term portfolio probably isn't the right arena How Millennials are diversifying beyond just assets, and what that broader thinking means for investors in their 40s The honest tension between values-based investing and long-term returns -- and how serious investors are navigating it without sacrificing either What growing portfolio customization actually means for everyday investors who aren't managing millions Why This Matters Now If you're in your 40s, you've watched an entire new financial infrastructure get built around a generation younger than you -- and you may be wondering what's worth borrowing. More access and more information don't automatically produce better outcomes. Knowing which Millennial habits genuinely compound over time, and which ones just feel productive, is the kind of edge that shows up in your account balance a decade from now. From the Basement OG makes his case for patience (again), Doc G steers things toward the bigger life picture, and Jen Smith grounds the conversation in the money habits real people actually use. Doug surfaces a trivia question involving a NASA probe budget -- and whether you think you know the answer or not, the basement scoreboard has a way of humbling even the most confident Stacker. Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Personal finance loves clean rules. Save 20%. Follow the 4% rule. Always max the 401(k). But real life rarely cooperates with tidy formulas. This week Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and guest co-host CFP Anna Allem dig into the gap between the advice we hear and the messy decisions we actually face. What your savings rate really means. How often you should rethink inflation assumptions. Why a mysterious tax form after a backdoor Roth conversion might not be the crisis it first appears to be. Turns out some of the most stressful money moments simply come from misunderstanding how the system works. The conversation tackles real listener questions about whether their savings rate is good enough (spoiler: it depends entirely on the life you want), how to increase savings without feeling squeezed, when to update retirement projections for inflation, and whether contributing to a terrible 401(k) with no employer match still makes sense. Anna brings fresh perspective on the backdoor Roth tax scare that panics people every year, explaining why receiving a 1099-R is completely normal and usually harmless, plus the small IRS form that keeps your Roth strategy squared away. The crew also breaks down what's actually happening when a mutual fund splits (far less dramatic than the headlines suggest) and the one disclosure document every advisor must provide that contains important clues about fees, conflicts, and discipline history. Down in the basement, Doug delivers trivia about a document most investors rarely request but absolutely should. Somewhere between inflation math, tax forms, and the occasional rant about terrible retirement plan providers, the crew reminds us that personal finance isn't about memorizing rules. It's about understanding how the pieces fit together, even when the paperwork looks scary. What You'll Walk Away With: • Why your savings rate isn't a universal scoreboard and how to judge it based on the life you actually want • A low friction strategy for increasing savings over time without feeling budget squeezed • The expense audit trick that quickly reveals whether your spending still matches your priorities • A smarter way to adjust retirement projections for inflation and how often those numbers deserve a second look • Why the famous 4% rule should guide your thinking but never run your retirement plan • How to evaluate whether contributing to a frustrating 401(k) plan still makes sense without employer match • What's really happening when a mutual fund splits and why the headline sounds more dramatic than reality • Why receiving a 1099-R after a backdoor Roth conversion is completely normal and usually harmless • The small IRS form that keeps your Roth strategy squared away and prevents tax headaches later • The one disclosure document every advisor must provide and the important clues it contains about fees and conflicts This Episode Is For You If: • Money decisions suddenly feel like they carry more weight • You're tired of clean money rules that don't fit your messy real life • You're ready to understand how the pieces fit together instead of just memorizing formulas For many people in their 40s, retirement planning gets real, inflation has reshaped expectations, and the margin for error feels smaller. The danger is relying on simple financial rules without understanding the assumptions behind them. When you know how these tools actually work, you can make smarter decisions and stop stressing about the parts that aren't problems in the first place. Question for You: What's one money rule you've been following without really understanding why? Drop it in the comments or The Basement Facebook group because Anna, Joe, and OG might tackle it in a future episode. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/stacker-community-show-1814 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The ultra-wealthy get access to private equity, private credit, and pre-IPO deals the rest of us don't. Now, suddenly, those same deals are being marketed to you. Coincidence? Maybe. Cause for suspicion? Absolutely. Joe, OG, and Doug settle in at the basement desk (yes, Joe's mom's basement — the most prestigious financial address in podcasting) to dig into a Wall Street Journal headline asking whether everyday investors should be chasing the same private deals as the 1%. OG breaks down why "exclusive access" and "higher returns" can also mean binary outcomes, illiquidity traps, and a failure rate that the ultra-wealthy can absorb — and you probably can't. Oh, and there's a Ty Lopez–led retail investment that allegedly became a Ponzi scheme. So that's fun. What's in today's episode: Why private equity and private credit are suddenly being pitched to regular investors — and what that timing might tell you The real difference between risk-free returns, stock market investing, and private bets (they are not the same thing, no matter what the brochure says) How "exclusive opportunity" can be a polite way of saying "binary outcome with limited exits" A real-world look at regulation risk using Airbnb as the example What liquidity actually means — and what happens when you need your money back and the market says "no" The Ty Lopez distressed retail saga and how it allegedly went full Ponzi Why private credit often means lending to borrowers who couldn't get money elsewhere The uncomfortable truth about who gets targeted by aggressive investment marketing (hint: it's people who feel behind) OG also walks through an SEC-inspired framework for evaluating any investment before you hand over a dollar: Build a financial roadmap before chasing complex deals Know your actual risk tolerance (not the aspirational version) Diversify — for real, not just in theory Handle your emergency fund and high-interest debt first Grab every employer match on the table Rebalance regularly How to spot the early signs of fraud before it costs you Also in the basement: Doug drops Mustang trivia (the 1964 Ford kind, not the horse kind). The TikTok Minute rides off into the sunset, replaced by a shiny new back-to-basics segment. There are community meetup updates — including Benjamins After Dark in Boston. And somehow, against all odds, Kool-Aid nostalgia becomes a conversation. Because sometimes the most dangerous investment isn't the one that looks risky. It's the one that sounds like something only smart, wealthy, connected people get access to. Pull up a chair. The basement is open. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-avoid-the-wrong-investments-1813 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The market feels expensive. Again. So should you invest or wait for a pullback? Joe Saul-Sehy brings together a powerhouse roundtable featuring Len Penzo, Paula Pant (Afford Anything), and Greg McFarlane to tackle the question every investor faces when markets hit new highs. The twist? This conversation originally happened in 2016 when the SPY ETF which tracks the S&P 500 was trading at around $190. Today it's near $700. Everyone who waited for the "right time" back then missed massive gains through a pandemic, inflation, and everything else. The group digs into investing rules that sound simple but get complicated fast. Sell losers quickly and let winners run. But how do you define a loser? Buy low and sell high. But what counts as high? Turn off financial TV noise. But how do you stay informed without getting overwhelmed? They debate whether you need pre-set exit strategies or if long term ownership beats trying to time perfect entries and exits. The conversation shifts to practical money decisions. Cash versus credit. The group mostly favors credit cards for rewards and dispute protection, but uses cash selectively for tips, travel, and splitting group dinners. They debate the risks of a cashless society, negative interest rates, and what happens when you lose the ability to hold physical money. Then they tackle one of the toughest money topics. How do you answer kids' hard questions about income, spending priorities, and why you use credit cards? The panel shares candid approaches to money conversations with children that balance honesty with age appropriate information. What You'll Learn: • Why waiting for the "right time" to invest often means missing gains • How to think about investing when markets feel too high • The difference between selling losers fast and giving good investments time to work • How to define what counts as a loser versus a temporary dip • Why turning off financial TV matters more than most people think • The case for credit cards over cash (rewards, protection, tracking) • When cash still makes sense despite the convenience of cards • Risks of a cashless society and negative interest rates • How to answer kids' tough questions about money without oversharing or lying • Age appropriate ways to explain income, spending, and credit This Episode Is For You If: • Markets feel too high and you're not sure whether to invest • You've been waiting for a pullback and wondering if you're making a mistake • You want to hear experienced investors debate real strategies, not just theory • You're trying to figure out the cash versus credit question • You need language for talking to your kids about money honestly Question for You: Have you ever waited to invest because the market felt too high, and if so, did you regret it? Drop your story in the comments or The Basement Facebook group because this roundtable might shift how you think about timing. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What if retirement isn't about doing less, but about becoming more? George Jerjian spent his career as a retirement mindset coach, helping others navigate life after work. Then he decided to practice what he preached. He planned an 80-day round-the-world journey, intentionally choosing unfamiliar countries where he'd be forced out of his comfort zone and into transformation. This greatest hits crossover from Stacking Adventures brings George's story to the basement, not because it's about exotic travel (though the destinations are incredible), but because it illustrates something crucial about the retirement mindset. The question isn't whether you can afford to travel. The question is whether you're willing to reinvent yourself when the structure of work disappears. George shares the planning behind his epic journey, including why he used a travel agent (yes, really), how he chose destinations that would challenge him rather than just relax him, and what each stop taught him about identity, purpose, and staying relevant after a career ends. From South Africa's Robben Island and a five day safari that taught him about patience, to Australia's Great Barrier Reef and a Melbourne Immigration Museum exhibit that forced him to rethink identity, to New Zealand's Milford Sound and a Maori dance lesson about seeking approval, to Japan's samurai service culture and Hiroshima's lesson in resilience, to Canada's awe inducing Rockies and French-flavored Quebec. Every stop was chosen deliberately to teach him something, not just show him something. The conversation explores his DARE method for retirement planning, why so many retirees struggle with identity once their business cards disappear, and how intentional travel creates the mindset shift that makes retirement feel expansive rather than diminishing. Along the way, Joe and Crystal plug the "Where in the World is Crystal Hammond?" guessing game (she's not in the continental U.S. or Aruba), announce Seattle and Boston community meetups, and mention the Vault tool for credit monitoring. Plus, you'll hear about George's book, Odyssey of an Elder: Around the World in 80 Days. What You'll Learn: • Why retirement success depends on mindset transformation, not just financial preparation • George's DARE method for retirement planning and identity • How to plan transformational travel versus just vacation travel • Why choosing unfamiliar destinations matters more than comfortable ones • What each stop on George's journey taught him about life after work • How travel forces identity shifts that make retirement feel expansive • Why so many retirees struggle once their professional identity disappears • Practical strategies for reinventing yourself when work ends • How to use travel as a tool for personal growth, not just leisure This Episode Is For You If: • You're approaching retirement and worried about losing your identity • You've saved enough money but haven't thought about who you'll become • You're recently retired and struggling with the transition • You want retirement to feel like expansion, not contraction • You believe travel can transform you, not just entertain you Question for You: If you could take an 80-day trip designed to transform you (not just relax you), where would you go and why? Drop your answer in the comments or the Basement Facebook group. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
If Jen Drummond can climb K2, you can open that Roth IRA. That's the premise of this greatest hits episode featuring mountaineer and author Jen Drummond, who became the first woman to complete the Seven Second Summits. But here's why we're replaying this conversation from early 2024: it's not about mountaineering. It's about courage. Joe Saul-Sehy opens by explaining why courage matters for your money goals. It takes courage to look at your financial life honestly, to try something new like opening your first investment account, to admit you made a mistake and course correct. Courage builds confidence, which gives you the commitment to take another step. It works like a flywheel. One brave decision leads to another, which builds more confidence, which creates momentum. Jen's story illustrates this perfectly. After surviving a devastating 2018 car crash that first responders said should have killed her, and losing a friend shortly after, she made a decision to "die living." That mindset took her from someone who'd never slept in a tent to the top of some of the world's most dangerous peaks. But what makes Jen's approach so valuable isn't the extreme nature of her goals. It's her method. She didn't succeed through recklessness. She succeeded through preparation, safety protocols, building the right team, learning from others who'd gone before her, and breaking massive goals into clear milestones. Sound familiar? That's exactly how you build wealth. Throughout the conversation, Jen shares lessons that apply whether you're climbing Everest or just trying to max out your 401(k). How to push through "blue ice" (those moments when progress slows to a crawl and every move has to count). Why big goals require big teams (you can't do this alone). How to fire bad help when someone's dragging you down. Why getting to the summit is only halfway (you need enough energy to get home safely). The episode also includes practical career advice for navigating today's tougher job market, from refreshing your LinkedIn profile to the power of face to face networking, plus Doug's trivia about Andrew Jackson and the only day the U.S. was completely debt free. What You'll Learn: • Why courage is a skill you develop through reps, not something you're born with • How small brave decisions compound into bigger ones (the flywheel effect) • Why preparation and safety matter more than boldness in any big goal • How to break down overwhelming goals into clear, achievable milestones • Why looking back at progress matters as much as looking ahead • The importance of learning from others who've achieved what you're attempting • How to build the right team around your goals and fire people who hold you back • Why getting to your goal is only halfway (you need sustainability, not just achievement) • Practical strategies for strengthening your career in a competitive job market • How Jen's "blue ice" moments teach us to slow down and be deliberate during tough stretches This Episode Is For You If: • You're intimidated by financial goals that feel too big or complicated • You keep putting off important money moves because you're scared of making mistakes • You need permission to start small and build momentum over time • You're looking for a framework that works for any goal (financial or otherwise) • You believe courage is something you can develop, not just inherit This is a greatest hits episode because Jen's message about building courage through action is exactly what you need heading into a new year. If she can climb the second highest peak on every continent, you can absolutely handle that 401(k), that budget, that first investment account. Question for You: What's one small brave money move you could make this week? Opening an account? Checking your credit score? Having that awkward budget conversation? Drop it in the comments or The Basement Facebook group because sometimes the first step isn't dramatic, it's just intentional. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Live from Joe's mom's basement (where humility is encouraged and spreadsheets are optional), the crew tackles a deceptively simple question. If most people think they're above average with money, what advice actually helps someone who isn't? Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, Doug, Jesse Cramer, and guest Whitney Hanson (Money Nerds podcast) run a thought experiment inspired by Morgan Housel's observation that nearly everyone believes they're financially smarter than the median. What straightforward moves keep someone from needing last minute financial Hail Marys? The answer isn't flashy. It's systems. Whitney kicks things off with a practical starting point: identify your knowledge gaps. Tools like Investor.gov quizzes can reveal blind spots, and she suggests theming your learning (one focus per month) so financial literacy doesn't feel overwhelming. From there, the conversation turns to controllables: cash flow, savings rate, lifestyle inflation, and career capital. Because while markets bounce around, your habits are yours. The gang also introduces the idea of a tactile money leak audit, physically reviewing spending to spot waste that autopilot budgeting apps can miss. It's less glamorous than crypto speculation but far more effective. Investing gets reframed too. Instead of treating it like a mysterious Wall Street game, they suggest thinking of it as owning small pieces of companies you already know and use. Start small. Automate it. Build reps. Confidence follows action. Insurance and estate planning round out the episode. The crew urges listeners to shop multiple advisors, understand policy details before signing, use AI to help decode fine print without blindly trusting it, and avoid overconfidence just because something sounds right. Doug keeps things lively with trivia revealing that Johnny Carson's 1982 DUI fine was a very specific $603, and OG once again proves suspiciously good at guessing. What You'll Learn: Why most people overestimate their financial knowledge and what to do about it How to identify and close your personal money knowledge gaps The key financial variables you actually control How to perform a simple money leak audit Why small, automatic investing beats waiting for the perfect moment How to make investing feel familiar instead of intimidating The basics everyone should understand about insurance and estate planning Why repetition builds financial confidence faster than theory The Big Takeaway: You don't need advanced tactics. You need consistent systems. Focus on what you control. Automate the boring stuff. Learn one thing at a time. Build margin. Repeat. Because the goal isn't to be above average. It's to be steady enough that you never need a desperate Hail Mary. This Episode Is For You If: You feel like everyone else has money figured out except you Financial advice usually feels too complicated or assumes knowledge you don't have You're tired of feeling behind and want simple systems that work You want to build confidence through action, not just theory You believe steady progress beats trying to be perfect Question for You: What was the first simple money habit that changed your trajectory? Share it in the Spotify comments or The Basement Facebook group. Your small win might be exactly what another Stacker needs to hear. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/bottom-50-money-tips-1809/ Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Live from Joe's mom's basement (where the jokes are free but hospital care apparently isn't), the Stacking Benjamins crew tackles two very real financial stressors: surprise medical debt and a shifting housing market. First up is Imani Vance, who joined the Coast Guard at 19 and soon faced a nightmare scenario. What started as appendicitis escalated to severe sepsis after limited on-base resources and long waits for off-base care. After hospitalization, including treatment for an abscess and eventual appendix removal, Imani received a bill totaling roughly $43,000 to $45,000. And here's where it gets worse. She didn't qualify for VA help because she hadn't yet served 180 days. Accessing Coast Guard records proved difficult. The bill arrived after the care, opaque, overwhelming, and completely disconnected from what she had agreed to or expected. If you're a Stacker, you know this feeling. The stress isn't just the number. It's the lack of clarity. Imani shares how she started researching options, discovered the nonprofit Dollar For through Reddit, and used them to apply for hospital financial assistance. Dollar For helped her complete and submit the required forms, and within weeks, she was approved for 100% financial assistance, wiping out the bill entirely. Joe Saul-Sehy highlights an important takeaway. Nonprofit hospitals are legally required to offer financial assistance. Many for-profit hospitals offer programs, too. Income thresholds are often higher than people assume. The applications can be confusing, which is where advocates like Dollar For can make a huge difference. Instead of locking into $300 to $500 monthly payments for years, Imani walked away debt-free and with a completely different outlook. After Doug drops trivia about the youngest bank robber (yes, really), the crew pivots to housing. A recent Wall Street Journal/Redfin headline suggests the housing market may be tilting toward buyers, with more homes selling below list price and average sales around 8% under asking. Joe and OG break down what that means for Stackers, not in headline hype terms but practical life terms. What You'll Learn: Medical Bills and Financial Assistance: • Why medical debt feels different from other debt • How hospital financial assistance programs work • Why many people qualify but never apply • How nonprofits like Dollar For can help navigate the paperwork • Why you should always ask for itemized bills and assistance options Housing Market: Think Forward, Not Backward: • Why you shouldn't get stuck in your mortgage just because you locked in a low rate • How anchoring to past rates can cloud present decisions • Why negotiating power is shifting and how to use it • The importance of building financial margin when income rises • Smart, low cost staging tactics, including hiring a pro for just an hour of advice • How AI tools can help with pricing and presentation ideas The Big Takeaways: Before paying a massive medical bill, check whether you qualify for assistance. Financial stress often comes from confusion. Clarity is power. Housing decisions should be forward-looking, not emotionally anchored to the past. Margin and flexibility beat perfect timing. This Episode Is For You If: • You're facing medical debt and thought you had no options • You've been putting off dealing with a hospital bill because it feels hopeless • You're stuck in a low rate mortgage and wondering if you should move • You want to understand what's really happening in the housing market • You believe there's always more to the story than the bill or the headline Question for You: Have you ever negotiated or reduced a bill you initially thought was non-negotiable? Share your story in the Spotify comments or The Basement Facebook group. Your experience might help another Stacker avoid paying more than they should. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Live from Joe's mom's basement (complete with dog mugs, birthday roasting, and Doug polishing his trivia crown), the crew tackles a headline that caught plenty of attention. Suze Orman backing off her long held stance that everyone should work until age 70. Does that mean you shouldn't work longer? Not exactly. Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, Doug, and special guest Len Penzo break down the math behind working into your late 60s or beyond. More years to save, more compounding, fewer years drawing down assets. It's powerful stuff. But they also remind Stackers that work doesn't have to mean the same grind, and that retiring and claiming Social Security are two completely separate decisions. Len shares why he plans to delay Social Security until 70, walks through the break even math versus claiming at 62, and highlights the importance of survivor benefits for spouses. At the same time, the crew emphasizes that health, longevity expectations, and personal priorities can completely change the right answer. Suze's updated advice leans heavily on stress testing your retirement plan, and that's where the basement really digs in. What happens if inflation sticks around? If your side hustle disappears? If returns are lower than expected? The team argues that instead of chasing the perfect retirement date, you should solve for flexibility. Avoid analysis paralysis but don't skip the planning either. They also debate liquidity (hint: it doesn't mean stuffing your mattress with cash), share a cautionary tale about delayed IRA access, and remind listeners that logistics matter just as much as spreadsheets. In the TikTok Minute, a retiree reframes time as priceless instead of something to maximize. That sparks a thoughtful conversation about identity in retirement, the adjustment period after leaving work, and what makes life satisfying once the paycheck stops. Plus: A big community win as a fellow Stacker crosses the $1 million net worth milestone, stats on how common that really is, upcoming Stackers meetups, Doug's Gutenberg themed trivia, and unexpected retirement expenses involving squirrels and BarkBox. Because this is the basement, after all. What You'll Learn: • Why working longer can strengthen your retirement math and when it might not • The difference between retiring and claiming Social Security • How to think about Social Security timing, longevity, and survivor benefits • What it means to stress test your retirement plan • Why flexibility often beats perfect optimization • The real meaning of liquidity and why too much idle cash can hurt efficiency • How retirement success is often about time, not just money • Why identity shifts matter just as much as account balances The Big Takeaway: Retirement doesn't require working forever. But it does require a coordinated plan, one that brings together your assets, Social Security strategy, spending flexibility, and (most importantly) how you want to spend your time. Because in the end, money is renewable. Time isn't. This Episode Is For You If: • You've been told to work to 70 and aren't sure if that's right for you • You're trying to figure out when to claim Social Security • You want to stress test your retirement plan but don't know where to start • You're worried about the adjustment period after leaving work • You believe retirement planning is about more than just hitting a number Question for You: If you could retire tomorrow, what would you spend more time doing, and what would you happily leave behind? Share your thoughts in the Spotify comments or The Basement Facebook group. Your answer might inspire another Stacker who's quietly wondering the same thing. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Want your kids to grow into confident money decision-makers without turning every dinner conversation into a financial lecture? In this roundtable episode, Joe sits down with Livia (“Liv”) Roder, host of the Liv Lab Podcast, Karen Holland of GiftingSense.org, and John Lanza, host of the Art of Allowance Podcast to explore what actually helps kids understand money before the stakes get big. Instead of theory, this discussion focuses on real moments when money suddenly becomes real: college price tags, house-hunting sticker shock, allowances that run out too fast, and purchases that teach better lessons than any lecture ever could. The panel shares practical ways families can build financial confidence through everyday decisions, honest conversations, and a willingness to let kids learn by doing. What the Stacking Benjamins “Confident Explorer” will gain from this episode: How to talk about money naturally so kids see it as a life skill, not a stressful taboo topic Why modeling everyday behavior matters more than formal “money talks” A simple shift from “Can I have it?” to “Is it worth it?” that builds independent thinking How small spending mistakes become powerful teaching moments when handled without shame Ways to introduce big topics like college costs gradually so kids feel informed instead of overwhelmed Real-life money lessons that sparked the conversation: Livia’s moments when money suddenly felt real, from college forms to realizing savings aren’t just “bank numbers” Karen Holland’s memorable eighth-grade back-to-school budget experiment Early allowance experiences that helped connect choices with consequences Why kids absorb far more from overheard conversations and daily habits than parents expect Practical strategies parents can use right away: Starting with simple allowance systems or “jars” to visualize spending, saving, and giving Karen’s “Does It Make Sense?” pause to slow impulsive purchases Joe’s “circle back” technique, revisiting purchases later to reflect without criticism Letting kids fail safely so regret becomes learning instead of embarrassment Helping kids split costs or contribute toward purchases to create ownership Navigating tougher parenting questions: Should kids see financial stress, or should parents shield them? How to practice age-appropriate honesty without creating anxiety Why financial jargon like FAFSA or taxes can unintentionally intimidate teens Bringing kids into real financial conversations so they build confidence early Money challenges unique to today’s kids: Teaching spending awareness in a tap-to-pay, frictionless world Cash vs. cards vs. apps and how each changes behavior Building a “pause habit” before spending when transactions feel invisible If you could teach just one money skill… The panel compares their top priorities: Awareness of cash flow and where money actually goes Thinking before buying instead of reacting emotionally Paying yourself first and building saving habits early Plus, a little basement fun along the way: Favorite purchases that truly felt worth it (from snowboards to board games to a Kindle) Stories that prove money lessons stick best when tied to real experiences Resources and next steps from each guest, including tools, calculators, and upcoming episodes This episode reinforces a core Stacking Benjamins idea: kids don’t learn money through perfect decisions. They learn through guided experience, honest conversations, and the freedom to practice while the stakes are still small. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-teach-your-kids-about-money-1806 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Live from Joe's mom's basement (where receipts go to be judged and spreadsheets fear OG), this episode tackles two big questions Stackers are asking right now. What's the best tax software for filing your 2025 return? And what should normal, long term investors make of gold, silver, and crypto taking a wild ride? Joe Saul-Sehy and OG are joined by Robert Farrington from The College Investor to break down the tax software landscape without the marketing fluff. Because if you're our Stacker avatar, you don't want hype. You want something that works, doesn't overcharge you, and doesn't suddenly upsell you because you clicked the wrong box. Then in the headline segment, the crew digs into the sharp pullback in precious metals and crypto. Is this the beginning of something bigger? A buying opportunity? Or just another reminder that chasing shiny objects (literally shiny in gold's case) can make your portfolio feel like a roller coaster? As always, Doug brings trivia, there's some basement banter, and the team separates smart strategy from financial fashion trends. Choosing the Right Tax Software (Without Overpaying): • Why FreeTaxUSA might be the best overall value for most Stackers • When TurboTax or H&R Block make sense and when you're just paying for bells and whistles • The pros and limitations of truly free options like Cash App Taxes and Chime • Why TaxSlayer can be a solid choice for student loan borrowers, landlords, and side hustlers • What investors and crypto traders need to know about brokerage imports and the new 1099-DA form • Why filing taxes is mostly data entry and where real tax planning can make a difference • Simple tools to track mileage, expenses, and side hustle income without losing your mind Bottom line: the best software isn't universal. It's the one that fits your situation without surprise fees. Gold, Silver, and Crypto: What the Drop Means: • Why assets without earnings (like gold and many cryptocurrencies) can swing wildly • The danger of investing based on FOMO instead of a plan • How concentration risk increases the range of possible outcomes, both good and bad • Why short term volatility doesn't automatically change a long term strategy • The risks of misinformation, including AI generated financial advice that isn't real OG walks through how disciplined investors think during volatile moments: zoom out, revisit your allocation, and stick to your strategy instead of reacting emotionally. The Big Takeaway: Whether you're picking tax software or deciding what to do during a market drop, the lesson is the same. Choose tools that fit your life. Build a plan before the chaos hits. Don't let headlines or shiny objects hijack your strategy. This Episode Is For You If: • You're trying to pick tax software without getting ripped off • Markets are making you nervous and you're not sure if you should do something • You want to understand what's happening with gold and crypto without the hype • You're looking for calm, practical guidance during a chaotic time • You believe steady wealth beats chasing shiny things Let's Hear From You: What tax software are you using this year and why? When markets get volatile, what helps you stay disciplined? Share your thoughts in the Spotify comments or The Basement Facebook group. Your experience might help another Stacker avoid an expensive mistake. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/the-best-tax-software-2026-robert-farrington-1805 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Think building seven figure wealth requires exotic investments or perfect timing? This President's Day episode from Joe's mom's basement tells a very different story. Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug dig into a Kiplinger My First Million case study featuring a Wisconsin couple who started saving at age 32 with exactly zero invested and quietly built $2 million over the next 22 years using mostly retirement accounts and steady habits. Their success sparks a bigger conversation about why simple strategies often outperform complicated ones, and how surviving the boring middle is where wealth is created. Along the way, the gang tackles advisor fees, the psychology of enough, long term care decisions, and the real value financial professionals can bring. Of course, it wouldn't be a basement episode without trivia, community wins, and a few unexpected detours (including a conversation about giant toilet paper rolls that somehow reinforces the episode's central theme). What You'll Take Away: • Why ordinary retirement accounts (401(k)s, SEP IRAs, and Roth IRAs) can be enough to build significant wealth without chasing complex investments • How starting with just enough to earn the employer match creates momentum without overwhelming new savers • A simple escalation strategy: increasing contributions by 1% each year to grow savings almost painlessly • The often missed detail of contributing through the final paycheck to capture the full employer match • A creative gamification approach to Roth contributions tied to the Social Security wage base • How reframing long goals into months instead of years helps investors stay motivated during the long, quiet middle stretch • Why imperfect plans with higher fees can still beat waiting for the perfect investing setup • The real concerns people have about trusting workplace retirement plans and how those plans actually function • Lessons the featured couple learned, including the value of post tax flexibility later in life • Long term care planning as risk management, including balancing insurance coverage with self funding strategies Big Behavioral Conversations: • A TikTok minute featuring Dr. John Delony sparks a discussion about defining enough and whether chasing more success is driven by purpose or ego • How redefining success can shift financial decisions more than any spreadsheet ever will • The danger of constantly moving financial goalposts once progress begins Listener Mailbag: When Is a 1% Advisor Fee Worth It? OG walks through how to evaluate an advisor relationship beyond performance numbers, including whether your advisor helps you make money or avoid costly mistakes, the value of saved time and reduced stress, planning continuity for spouses or heirs, typical fee structures, and how to have an honest fee conversation without damaging a long standing relationship. This Episode Is For You If: • You're behind on saving and worried you've missed your window • You feel like wealth building requires strategies you don't understand • You want proof that simple plans work if you stick with them • You're wondering if your advisor's fee is worth it or if you should manage it yourself • You need reassurance that boring and consistent beats exciting and complicated This episode is a reminder that wealth rarely comes from brilliance or shortcuts. More often, it comes from steady decisions repeated consistently while everyone else searches for something more exciting. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-make-a-million-after-starting-late-1804 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Nothing says romance like a heated debate about the 4% rule. Live from the basement (which suspiciously resembles YouTube headquarters), Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, Neighbor Doug, and the panel celebrate Valentine's Day weekend the only way Stackers know how: by putting their favorite financial ideas on the hot seat. This isn't a polite discussion. It's a rapid fire "love it or leave it" showdown where popular money strategies either get roses or get shown the door. On the chopping block: Paying off a low interest mortgage early: financial freedom or opportunity cost disaster? The FIRE movement: empowering clarity or accidental misery? Lifestyle inflation: natural evolution or silent wealth killer? Real estate as passive income: dream scenario or second job in disguise? The 4% rule: reliable rule of thumb or outdated security blanket? Budgeting apps: behavior changer or digital guilt machine? Expect strong opinions. Expect pushback. Expect OG to bring spreadsheets to a knife fight. Expect Doug to stir the pot. And expect at least one take that makes you argue out loud in your car. Along the way, the crew swaps Valentine's Day plans, reviews survey results from listeners, and throws down in a trivia challenge that could shake up the leaderboard. With margin call rules in play, nobody's position is safe. What You'll Discover: Which popular financial strategies hold up under scrutiny and which ones deserve a breakup Why smart people disagree about mortgage payoff strategies Whether the FIRE movement creates freedom or just different problems The truth about lifestyle inflation and when it's okay versus when it's dangerous Why real estate investing is rarely as passive as it sounds Whether the 4% rule still works or needs serious revision If budgeting apps actually help or just make you feel guilty How to question your own financial assumptions without second guessing everything This Episode Is For You If: You want to understand WHY you believe what you believe about money You're tired of one-size-fits-all financial advice You enjoy hearing smart people debate and disagree respectfully You've been following certain money rules without questioning if they fit YOUR life You believe the most loving thing you can do for your financial plan is challenge it This episode is for anyone who doesn't just want answers but wants to understand the thinking behind them. Because sometimes the most loving thing you can do for your financial plan is break up with strategies that aren't serving you anymore. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/love-it-or-leave-it-valentines-day-edition-1803/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What's more romantic than roses and chocolate? How about not fighting about money. Joe Saul-Sehy and OG welcome Douglas and Heather Boneparth, the financial planning power couple who literally wrote the book on navigating money in relationships. Broadcasting from the basement (where love is patient and spreadsheets are kind), the crew dives into how people can build financial trust, avoid money secrets, and actually enjoy talking about dollars without it turning into a heavyweight title fight. Whether you're navigating finances with a romantic partner, a roommate splitting rent, an accountability partner keeping you honest, or a family member you're in business with, these principles apply. Because let's face it: our Stacker avatar isn't trying to impress Wall Street. You're trying to build a great life with the people who matter, without money becoming the thing that creates tension. Douglas and Heather break down what healthy financial communication really looks like, how to spot and prevent financial secrecy, and why shared goals matter more than perfectly matched spending styles. They also tackle the tricky stuff: different money upbringings, emotional baggage around finances, and how to reset when conversations go sideways. And since this is the basement, you'll also get practical reminders about key financial deadlines (because nothing kills momentum like IRS penalties), smart ways to teach kids about money, and Doug's festive trivia to keep things light. What You'll Learn: How to talk about money without it escalating into a debate or argument The warning signs of financial secrecy and how to prevent it in any relationship Why shared goals matter more than identical personalities or spending styles Practical ways to align spending, saving, and investing with another person How your childhood money experiences shape your adult financial behavior Smart ways to teach kids patience, work reward connections, and intentional spending Important financial deadlines to keep on your radar Why communication, not math, is often the real key to financial success This Episode Is For You If: You avoid money conversations because they always seem to go badly You're navigating shared finances with a partner, roommate, or family member You want to align financial goals with someone without constant friction You're single but have accountability partners or friends you talk money with You believe better communication is the key to better financial outcomes Question for You: What's one money conversation that felt awkward at first but ultimately made a relationship (romantic, friendship, or otherwise) stronger? Drop your answer in the Spotify comments or the Stacking Benjamins Facebook group. You might just help another Stacker start a better conversation. Because in the end, mastering money isn't just about returns. It's about building a life and relationships that work. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/relationships-and-money-with-doug-and-heather-boneparth-1802 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug pull up a rickety basement chair and unpack a growing trend: people treating investing like a series of high stakes bets instead of a long term plan. Sparked by a recent Wall Street Journal piece on aggressive investing, the gang digs into where the line is between smart risk taking and straight up gambling with your future. Using plenty of real world examples and a few basement metaphors, the crew breaks down how stocks, businesses, options, and even so-called innovative products can fall into very different categories depending on why you're using them. The key theme? Good investing isn't about being bold. It's about understanding probabilities, controlling what you can, and stacking the odds in your favor over time. Along the way, the team also tackles listener questions, including some strong feelings about Costco (because of course), and shines a flashlight into the dark corners of complex products like Indexed Universal Life insurance, explaining why "sounds sophisticated" doesn't always mean "fits your plan." If markets feel noisy, confusing, or a little unhinged right now, this episode is your reminder that boring, disciplined strategies still win, and that you don't need to bet the farm to build one. What You'll Learn: • Why so many investors are confusing betting with investing right now • How to tell the difference between calculated risk and speculation • Why understanding probability matters more than chasing big wins • Where options, businesses, and alternative investments can fit and where they often don't • The hidden risks behind complex products like Indexed Universal Life (IUL) policies • Why compounding beats hype even when headlines say otherwise • How small, consistent decisions quietly outperform flashy moves • Yes, what Costco has to do with smart money choices This Episode Is For You If: • Markets feel confusing and you're not sure if you're investing or just guessing • You've been tempted by strategies that sound sophisticated but feel risky • You want to understand the line between smart risk and gambling • You're tired of flashy investment advice and want clarity on what actually works • You need reassurance that boring, disciplined strategies still win Question for You: What's the riskiest financial move you've ever considered, and what stopped you (or didn't)? Share your answer in the Spotify comments or the Stacking Benjamins Facebook group. Bonus points if hindsight made you laugh or wince. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Eighteen hundred episodes calls for something special, and what better way to celebrate than by dragging the absolute worst money advice into the light and laughing at it together? Special guest and CFP Sarah Catherine Guiterrez from Aptus Financial joins Joe Saul-Sehy, Neighbor Doug, Paula Pant (Afford Anything), and Jesse Cramer (Personal Finance for Long Term Investors) for a rapid-fire, no mercy takedown of the most damaging financial clichés ever passed down at family dinners, car dealerships, and internet comment sections. This episode is equal parts group therapy, myth-busting, and friendly argument. Exactly the kind of chaos that's kept the Stacking Benjamins basement standing for 1,800 shows. What You'll Hear in This Milestone Episode: • The most cringeworthy financial advice the panel has ever heard and why it sticks around • Why phrases like "just let the bank take it" quietly wreck long-term wealth • How YOLO thinking sneaks into financial decisions disguised as confidence • The difference between common advice and useful advice • Sarah Catherine's planner level perspective on why bad advice feels comforting • Paula and Jesse sparring over long term thinking versus short term emotion • OG bringing strategy, clarity, and the occasional eye roll • Neighbor Doug doing what he does best: poking holes, cracking jokes, and keeping everyone honest • Why car buying advice is one of the most misunderstood areas in personal finance • How trivia, travel, and history collide in a surprisingly competitive game segment • What Singapore's founding teaches us about perspective, patience, and getting the facts right • Why smart money decisions usually sound boring but work anyway This Episode Is For You If: • You've ever heard money advice and thought, "Wait, people actually believe that?" • You're tired of conflicting financial wisdom and want validation that some of it IS terrible • You've been burned by advice that sounded good but cost you money • You want to hear smart people argue about what actually works versus what just sounds good • You've been with us since episode 1, or just wandered into the basement and want to celebrate This episode is a love letter to Stackers who question conventional wisdom and trust their gut when advice doesn't add up. It's loud, opinionated, funny, and packed with reminders that the best financial moves often start by ignoring the advice everyone else is shouting. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Whitney Elkins-Hutten's story isn't about overnight success or getting lucky. It's about building a wealth machine that keeps working even when life throws curveballs. Broadcast as always from Joe's mom's basement, this episode explores how Whitney went from a modest, very 1970s upbringing to creating systems that generate lasting wealth, and what everyday people can realistically take from her experience. Yes, she built an $800 million real estate portfolio, but this conversation is about something bigger: how to create income systems that compound, scale, and eventually run without you. Along the way, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Doug connect the dots between mindset, cash flow strategies, and protecting what you've already built in a world full of digital landmines. What You'll Take Away: • Why Whitney's early mistakes became her biggest long term advantages • How to think about building cash flow engines, not just accumulating assets • The difference between owning things and building repeatable income systems • Why passive income still requires intentional structure and where people go wrong • How mentorship accelerates progress and what to look for in the right mentor • Practical ways to get started building wealth systems without massive capital • Why diversification across income streams matters more than most people realize • What unexpected businesses like car washes teach us about operational efficiency • How subscription models and recurring revenue quietly stabilize cash flow • The long game of turning short term decisions into generational wealth • Why protecting your personal data is now part of protecting your net worth • How small habits (financial and otherwise) compound into outsized results This Episode Is For You If: • You want to build wealth that lasts beyond your lifetime • You're curious about creating income systems that don't require your constant attention • You're tired of overnight success stories and want the real trajectory • You're looking for principles that work whether you invest in real estate, businesses, or other assets • You believe smart systems and consistent learning can change your family's financial future This episode is for Stackers who want proof that progress doesn't require perfection, and that building the right wealth machine can change the entire trajectory of your financial life and your family's future. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/building-generational-wealth-with-whitney-elkins-hutten-1799 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Taxes don't have to feel like something that happens to you. Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug break down the biggest recent tax changes and, more importantly, how to use them intentionally instead of accidentally leaving money on the table. This isn't about memorizing the tax code or becoming a DIY CPA. It's about understanding where the real opportunities are right now, which moves matter most at different life stages, and how smart planning today can quietly add up to thousands of dollars over time. From new deductions to retirement-focused strategies, this episode helps you move from reacting at tax time to planning all year long. What You'll Learn: • The most important recent tax changes and who actually benefits from them • How the expanded SALT deduction works and when it matters • What the new senior deduction could mean for retirees and near retirees • Why maximizing retirement accounts isn't just about saving for later but lowering taxes now • How Health Savings Accounts create one of the most powerful tax advantages available • When tax loss harvesting helps and when it's mostly noise • Why managing your tax bracket in retirement can be as important as investment returns • Smarter charitable giving strategies that align generosity with tax efficiency • How education savings tools fit into a broader tax plan for those who need them • Common tax season mistakes that quietly cost people money every year This Episode Is For You If: • You suspect you're paying more in taxes than you should • Tax planning feels overwhelming so you just deal with it in April • You want to understand which tax moves actually matter at your life stage • You're tired of hearing about strategies that don't apply to your situation • You're ready to stop reacting to taxes and start planning for them This episode is for anyone who wants their tax strategy to support their bigger financial goals, not work against them. If you're looking to keep more of what you earn and make fewer "wish I'd known that earlier" decisions, this is one to queue up. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/tax_planning_moves_for_2026-1798 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What if the path to better money decisions, more confidence, and a calmer life wasn't a massive overhaul but just getting a tiny bit better today than you were yesterday? Joe Saul-Sehy, Neighbor Doug, OG, and Paula Pant (Afford Anything) are joined by David Gillis, creator of the 1% Better Conference, for a roundtable exploring the surprisingly powerful idea of improving by just 1% at a time. No vision boards. No 5 a.m. ice baths. Just small, intentional choices that compound into real results, financially and otherwise. David brings practical insight and zero guru energy into what sustainable improvement looks like. Together the group talks about why most people burn out trying to change everything at once, and how Stackers can instead design days that make better decisions easier. You'll hear honest conversations about energy drainers (including the ones we pretend aren't draining), why saying "no" is often the most underrated financial skill, and how rest, relationships, and even boredom play a bigger role in success than grinding ever will. There's also a healthy reminder that progress doesn't always look productive, and that's okay. As always, Doug brings the trivia, the basement brings the banter, and the lesson sneaks up on you when you're not looking. If you've ever felt like you should be doing more but don't want to torch your sanity getting there, this episode is for you. If the 1% Better philosophy resonates with you, the 1% Better Conference is happening February 21-22 in Omaha, where Joe will be the keynote speaker. What You'll Learn: Why 1% better beats "start over Monday" every single time How to identify the biggest energy leaks hurting your money decisions Why learning to say "no" can improve your finances immediately How rest, nature, and relationships quietly boost long term success Why small habits matter more than motivation How to grow personally and financially without burning out A realistic framework for steady improvement that fits real life This Episode Is For You If: You're exhausted from trying to overhaul everything at once You feel like you should be doing more but you're already maxed out You want progress that doesn't require torching your current life You're tired of all or nothing approaches that leave you burnt out You're ready for sustainable improvement instead of another failed fresh start Question for You: What's one small change you could make this week that would make your life or money just a little easier? Drop it in the comments or share it with us in the Basement Facebook group. We promise not to turn it into a 30 day challenge with a workbook. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Where do great ideas come from, and why do they always show up in the shower, on a walk, or five minutes after you've stopped trying so hard? Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug welcome this week's mentor, behavioral scientist George Newman, to unpack how creativity really works and how Stackers can use it to make better decisions with money, careers, and life. This isn't about becoming "more creative" in a woo-woo sense. It's about understanding the conditions that consistently produce better ideas. George explains why your best thinking doesn't come from grinding harder but from combining curiosity, expertise, and space to think. The crew digs into why incremental improvement (the famous "1% better" mindset) often beats chasing giant breakthroughs, and how that approach applies just as well to financial planning as it does to business, habits, or personal growth. You'll also hear why surveying the landscape before acting leads to smarter money moves, how relaxing your brain can unlock solutions you didn't know you had, and why most people already have access to better ideas but don't recognize them yet. Whether you're trying to improve your finances, rethink your career, or simply stop overthinking every decision, this episode gives you a practical framework for generating smarter ideas without burning yourself out. What You'll Learn: Where great ideas are most likely to come from (hint: not when you're stressed) Why expertise plus curiosity beats raw inspiration every time How the 1% better philosophy creates long term breakthroughs The role relaxation plays in clearer thinking and decision making Why surveying your options first leads to better financial outcomes How small experiments like paper trading improve confidence before real world action Why coaching, reflection, and time horizons matter more than quick wins This Episode Is For You If: You feel like you're working harder but not thinking better Your best ideas come when you're NOT trying to force them You're exhausted from grinding and want a smarter approach You want to improve your finances but feel stuck in the same patterns You're ready to stop chasing breakthroughs and start making steady progress Questions to Think About: When do your best ideas usually show up, and what are you doing when they arrive? What's one area of your finances that could improve with a "1% better" mindset? Drop your answers in the comments or the Basement Facebook group because George's framework for generating better ideas might shift how you approach everything. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/where-do-your-best-ideas-come-from-1796 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ever made a money move that felt right then immediately wondered if you just emotionally invested in a bad idea? We've all done it. Some of us have receipts. Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug tackle one of the trickiest parts of personal finance: knowing when to trust your gut and when your gut needs to sit down and let the math speak. Because here's the thing. Most Stackers aren't struggling because they don't know what a Roth IRA is. You're struggling because real life decisions don't happen in a spreadsheet. They happen in the middle of a busy Tuesday, with a dozen tabs open in your brain and a million little "what ifs" fighting for attention. So the guys dig into how intuition works (and when it betrays you), and why data is powerful until you start using it to talk yourself into doing something dumb with extra steps. You'll also hear how the best financial plans aren't built on perfect predictions but on repeatable decisions. Plus the episode veers into some surprisingly useful territory with Costco membership strategy, the hidden psychology of "good deals," and how advisors use tools to help optimize Social Security choices without making you feel like you need a PhD in government paperwork. What You'll Learn: How to tell the difference between good intuition and financial anxiety in a trench coat Why data can be a superpower or a weapon you use against yourself The role of AI and research in decision making and what it means for everyday people How OG thinks about sticking to a plan when emotions get loud Why "a deal" can be a budget win or a trap door What a Costco membership is really doing to your spending habits The Social Security optimization tools advisors use and why timing decisions matter This Episode Is For You If: You've made emotional money decisions you later regretted You either overthink every financial choice or jump too fast without enough info You're not sure when to trust your instincts versus when to run the numbers You want to make confident decisions without needing perfect information You're tired of second guessing yourself every time money is involved Questions to Think About: When was the last time your gut feeling saved you financially or cost you money? Are you more likely to overthink decisions with too much research or jump too fast without enough? Drop your answers in the comments or the Basement Facebook group because finding your balance between intuition and data might be the unlock you need. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/should-you-trust-your-gut-or-data-1795 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Inflation may be doing its best to body slam your budget, but this episode is all about fighting back without turning your life into a sad spreadsheet. Joe Saul-Sehy, Neighbor Doug, Paula Pant (Afford Anything), and Jesse Cramer (Personal Finance for Long Term Investors) are joined by special guest Justin Brown-Woods (Price of Avocado Toast) for a roundtable tackling the big question Stackers keep asking: Why does life feel so expensive even when I'm doing everything right? Instead of the usual "just cut lattes" advice, the crew digs into what's really happening. How to calm chaotic expenses. How to stop getting ambushed by "random" costs that aren't random. How to build a plan that makes your money feel predictable again. The conversation hits the real pressure points: food, housing, subscriptions, and the sneaky spending that doesn't look dangerous until it adds up. If you've ever looked at your bank account and thought "Wait, where did that go?" this episode will help you spot the leaks, tighten the system, and still enjoy your life while you do it. What You'll Learn: • How to stop chaotic expenses from wrecking your month • The difference between fixed and variable spending, and why it matters more than you think • Practical ways to lower food costs without eating sadness for dinner • Why housing is the heavyweight champion of your budget and what to do about it • How subscriptions quietly drain cash even when you barely use them • The best way to cut costs without feeling punished • Why mandatory expenses are often more negotiable than you've been told This Episode Is For You If: • You feel like you're doing everything right but still barely keeping up • Your bank account keeps surprising you with where the money goes • You're tired of frugality advice that makes life feel like punishment • You want to cut costs without giving up everything that makes life worth living • You're ready to calm the chaos and make your spending feel predictable again Questions to Think About: What's one expense that used to feel normal but now feels completely ridiculous? Which category gets you more: food spending, housing, or the sneaky monthly subscriptions? Drop your answers in the comments or the Basement Facebook group because this roundtable's framework for taming chaotic spending might be exactly what you need. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-afford-the-new-normal-1794 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What if your money stopped dictating your schedule and started supporting the life you actually want to live? Joe Saul-Sehy welcomes CFP Dana Anspach of Sensible Money as special guest co-host for an episode featuring this week's mentor, Andy Hill. Andy shares how he stepped away from the corporate grind, redesigned his priorities, and built a life where family and flexibility came first. His story isn't about escaping work. It's about building a financial foundation that gives you options. Then the conversation shifts to a headline that caught everyone's attention: NASCAR driver Kyle Busch and his wife Samantha are suing their insurance company, calling the life insurance they purchased "a scam." Dana uses this case to break down one of the most misunderstood areas in personal finance: life insurance. From Indexed Universal Life (IUL) policies to knowing when insurance is a tool and when it's a distraction, she shows how clarity of goals should drive every decision and how to avoid the traps that caught even high earners like the Buschs. The episode also touches on estate planning, scams to watch out for, how young adults should think about budgeting and debt, and how to evaluate whether paying off loans or investing is the better move for your situation. It connects the dots between time freedom, smart planning, and protecting what you're building. What You'll Learn: • How to design your finances around the life you want, not just the paycheck you earn • What "owning your time" really means and how to start moving in that direction • Why your financial plan should begin with values and priorities, not products • How to think about entrepreneurship without blowing up your financial stability • What the Kyle Busch insurance lawsuit reveals about life insurance products and sales tactics • The truth about Indexed Universal Life insurance and when it may or may not make sense • How to evaluate life insurance based on goals instead of sales pitches • How estate planning protects your family and your legacy • The pros and cons of paying off loans versus investing • Budgeting principles that help young adults build strong money habits early • How to recognize and avoid financial scams (including insurance product traps) • Why celebrating progress matters just as much as setting the next goal This Episode Is For You If: • You feel like your money controls your life instead of supporting it • You want more flexibility and time freedom but don't know how to fund it • You're confused about whether life insurance products are helping or just costing you (especially after hearing about the Busch lawsuit) • You're trying to figure out the right order of financial moves (debt vs investing, insurance vs saving) • You want your financial plan to reflect your actual values, not just what you're "supposed" to do This episode is about aligning your money with your life. If you're ready to stop reacting to your finances and start using them to build more freedom, flexibility, and confidence, this one belongs at the top of your queue. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/own-your-time-with-andy-hill-and-dana-anspach-1793 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ever feel like your money questions don't fit neatly into one category? One minute you're thinking about retirement, the next it's insurance, emergency funds, gifting money, or whether your workplace plan is helping or hurting you. This is one of those episodes where Stackers bring the real-life questions, and Joe Saul-Sehy, CFP Anna Allem, and Neighbor Doug help sort through the noise. It's a true Q&A show built from the issues you're wrestling with right now. No perfect spreadsheets. No one-size-fits-all answers. Just practical guidance for making smart decisions when your financial life has a lot of moving parts. You'll hear how to prioritize when everything feels important, how to adjust your strategy as rules change, and how to stay flexible without losing control of your long-term plan. College planning comes up, but it's part of a bigger conversation about balancing competing goals, not the center of the episode. What You'll Learn: • How to make better decisions when multiple financial priorities collide • Smarter ways to think about life insurance when cash flow feels tight • How to build or rebuild an emergency fund with inconsistent income • What changes to 401(k) rules could mean for your saving and investing strategy • When opting out of a workplace plan might make sense, and when it's a mistake • How automatic enrollment and contribution changes can impact your future wealth • The right way to gift money to kids or grandkids without creating tax or planning problems • How HSAs fit into your bigger financial picture • Why financial gridlock happens and how to break through it • How to balance short term flexibility with long term security • A clear explanation of FAFSA and financial aid, and how it fits into overall planning for families who need it This Episode Is For You If: • You're juggling multiple financial priorities and not sure which one to tackle first • You feel stuck because everything seems important and nothing feels urgent enough • You want guidance that fits your messy real life, not just textbook answers • You're tired of financial advice that assumes you only have one problem at a time • You need permission to prioritize imperfectly and still make progress If your finances feel like a maze, this is your map. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/answering-stacker-questions-with-anna-allem-1792 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Some people kick off a new year with a vision board. We prefer a runway show in sweatpants from Joe's mom's basement. Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug throw personal finance into the spotlight and ask the question every Stacker secretly loves: What's officially "so last year" in your money plan, and what's worth keeping for 2026? Because here's the truth. You don't need a total financial makeover. You need a few smart "wardrobe swaps" that fit your real life. The habits that quietly drain your progress (hello, lifestyle creep). The stuff people obsess over that doesn't matter as much as they think. And the overlooked moves that make everything else easier. The crew breaks down what's out (financial habits that looked good but never delivered), what's in (the practical moves that reduce stress and create actual progress), and why real financial planning isn't just about investments but about building a system that holds up when life gets messy. Also on the docket: a fresh start to the yearlong trivia competition with new rules, new twists, and the kind of competitive energy that makes you wonder if the trophy comes with a safety warning label. What You'll Learn: • What financial trends are out for 2026 and why they weren't helping anyway • The habits that are in if you want more freedom, less stress, and fewer "where did my money go" moments • Why real financial planning isn't just investments but a system that works in real life • How lifestyle creep sneaks in and a couple ways to stop it before it becomes your full-time hobby • What tax strategy means for normal people, not just spreadsheet enthusiasts • The money conversations you should have early in the year before life gets loud again • A realistic take on housing in 2026 and what to focus on when markets don't behave • New trivia rules including a twist that changes everything if you're not paying attention This Episode Is For You If: • You want to know what to stop doing so you can focus on what works • You're tired of financial advice that adds more tasks instead of clarity • You suspect some of your money habits aren't pulling their weight • You want permission to quit the financial trends that never fit your life • You're ready for a few strategic changes that make 2026 feel more manageable Questions to Think About: What's one money habit you're officially retiring in 2026? If you could upgrade one part of your financial plan this year, what would it be: spending, saving, investing, insurance, or taxes? Drop your answers in the comments or the Basement Facebook group because this episode is all about figuring out what stays and what goes. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/finance-hot-or-not-2026-1791 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
If you're making decent money but still feel like you're one bad month away from stress, this episode is for you. Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug sit down with Mel Abraham to talk about something most Stackers think about but don't know how to start: creating income that doesn't depend entirely on showing up to work every single day. Not side hustle mania or get-rich-quick schemes. Just practical ways to build what Mel calls a "money engine" that makes your financial life steadier and way less stressful. Mel breaks down the different types of income streams, how they fit into real life (not just theory), and where to start if you're tired of feeling like your paycheck is the only thing keeping everything afloat. The goal isn't to quit your job tomorrow. It's to create options and breathing room so one surprise expense or career hiccup doesn't derail everything you've built. Then Joe and OG tackle the January financial to-do lists that flood your inbox every year. You know the ones: "15 money moves to make before February!" They separate what's worth your time from what's just financial busywork designed to make you feel productive without moving the needle. Because here's the truth. You don't need more financial homework. You need a few strategic moves that make 2026 feel more manageable from the start. What You'll Walk Away With: • How to think about building income beyond your paycheck without burning out • The different types of income streams and which ones fit your actual life right now • Where to start creating assets that work even when you're not clocking in • Which January money tasks are worth doing and which ones waste your time • How to prioritize your financial checklist for maximum impact with minimum stress • Simple ways to organize your money for the year without it becoming a second job This Episode Is For You If: • You're making decent money but still feel financially stressed • You want options beyond your paycheck but don't know where to start • You're tired of feeling like everything depends on your next paycheck • January financial advice usually overwhelms you more than it helps • You want systems that reduce anxiety, not add more tasks to your list Before You Hit Play, Ask Yourself: What's one income stream you'd love to build if you knew it wouldn't be complicated? If you only had one hour this month to improve your finances, what would you spend it on? Drop your answers in the comments or the Basement Facebook group because Mel's framework plus Joe and OG's January reality check might be exactly what you need to start the year without the usual stress. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/build-your-money-engine-mel-abraham-1790 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What if some of the "rules" you've been told about money aren't rules at all, just assumptions that haven't been questioned lately? Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug pull apart a handful of deeply held financial beliefs and see what holds up when real life enters the conversation. From Social Security timing to investment return expectations, the crew explores where common advice works, where it falls short, and why context matters more than catchy rules of thumb. Along the way, the discussion shifts from spreadsheets to behavior, because knowing what to do is one thing and doing it (especially in retirement) is another. The team talks through spending realities, inflation anxiety, and how small mindset shifts can make your plan feel less fragile and more livable. Then, just when things get serious, Doug introduces a challenge that's equal parts practical and revealing. The Survivor Pantry. It's a simple idea that uncovers how prepared (or not) we really are, and why preparedness isn't about fear but flexibility. In This Episode You'll Explore: • Why popular Social Security advice isn't one size fits all • What real world investment returns look like over time • How behavioral blind spots can derail otherwise solid plans • The difference between planning for retirement and living in it • Smarter ways to think about spending as prices change • Why some financial myths refuse to die (and how to spot them) • What the Survivor Pantry reveals about readiness and resilience • How questioning assumptions can lead to calmer, more confident decisions This episode is less about finding new answers and more about asking better questions, especially if you're tired of feeling like you're "behind" for not following every money rule to the letter. Conversation Starter for the Basement: What's one money belief you've always accepted but now you're not so sure about? Drop your thoughts in the Facebook group or comments and compare notes with other Stackers who are rethinking the playbook right alongside you. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/challenging-money-assumptions-1789 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
It's that time of year when we look ahead, squint confidently into the future, and pretend we have any idea what's coming next. In this annual Stacking Benjamins tradition, Joe Saul-Sehy welcomes back Mindy Jensen from the BiggerPockets Money Podcast, Len Penzo of LenPenzo.com, and OG for the predictions episode that blends money talk, pop culture, and just enough nonsense to keep everyone honest. Instead of pretending anyone can forecast the markets, the crew leans into what really matters: how to think about uncertainty. With help from a Magic 8 Ball (clearly the most reliable forecasting tool available), the panel throws out bold guesses about stocks, crypto, AI, inflation, interest rates, and the kinds of headlines that will dominate conversations in 2026. Some predictions are financial. Some are cultural. Some are optimistic, let's say. But beneath the fun is a useful reminder for Stackers. Predictions don't build wealth, process does. This episode isn't about acting on guesses. It's about stress-testing assumptions, questioning narratives, and remembering that long-term success comes from good habits, not crystal balls. If you've ever wondered how much attention to pay to forecasts (and how much to ignore), this conversation delivers clarity wrapped in entertainment. And yes, there are sports predictions, celebrity guesses, and enough wild speculation to guarantee at least a few laughs when we look back a year from now. In This Episode You'll Hear: The crew's biggest financial and cultural predictions for 2026 What the Magic 8 Ball "thinks" about markets, rates, and inflation Why forecasts are fun but dangerous if taken too seriously Thoughts on AI, energy use, and how technology may affect daily life Predictions about crypto, gold, and the stories investors love to chase A reminder of what matters when markets surprise everyone Sports, pop culture, and wildly specific guesses that will age somehow Join the Conversation: Which prediction do you think has the best chance of being right, and which one will age the worst? Share your take in Spotify comments or the Basement Facebook group so we can revisit it next year and keep receipts. This episode is a reminder that while nobody knows what 2026 will bring, Stackers who stay curious, flexible, and grounded tend to do just fine. Magic 8 Ball or not. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/magic-8-ball-and-2026-predictions-1788/ Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
If 2026 already feels busy and it's barely started, you're not imagining it. Joe Saul-Sehy and OG sit down with renowned time management expert Laura Vanderkam to tackle one of the biggest stressors Stackers face. Feeling like there's never enough time to do the things that matter, including managing money well. Laura helps break the myth that better time management means squeezing more productivity into already packed days. Instead, the conversation centers on intentional time use: how to protect space for what matters most, reduce decision fatigue, and build simple systems that make life (and money) feel lighter. If you've ever said "I don't have time to deal with this right now" about your finances, this discussion will feel uncomfortably familiar in a good way. From there, the show zooms out just enough to connect time decisions to money decisions. Joe and OG explore why financial stress often comes from neglect rather than bad choices, and how a few well-timed actions (like organizing documents, planning ahead for aging parents, or setting aside focused "money time") can prevent massive headaches later. No doom and gloom economics here, just a reminder that uncertainty is always around and preparation beats prediction every time. The episode also takes a thoughtful turn toward caregiving and elder planning, a topic many Stackers are quietly juggling while managing careers, kids, and their own goals. Laura and the team talk about how planning before a crisis saves not just money but emotional energy, one of the most overlooked resources of all. This is a conversation about doing less reacting, more choosing, and building a 2026 where your calendar and your bank account work together. What You'll Hear: • Why "being busy" isn't the same as using time well • Laura Vanderkam's practical strategies for reclaiming focus and presence • How small pockets of time ("time confetti") quietly drain energy • Simple ways to create space for money decisions without overwhelm • Why procrastinating financial tasks often costs more than bad investing • How to think ahead about caregiving without panic or perfection • What documents and conversations make future decisions easier • How to prepare for uncertainty without obsessing over headlines If you want to start 2026 feeling more in control (not just of your money but of your life), this episode offers a grounded, encouraging roadmap. No hustle culture. No financial fear tactics. Just smart conversations about using your time wisely so your money decisions get easier, not harder. Listen for the moment when "I don't have time" turns into "I'm choosing what matters." FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/master-your-time-management-with-laura-vanderkam-1787 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
A new year has arrived, and with it comes a fresh wave of hot takes, bold predictions, and "can't miss" investing ideas. Joe Saul-Sehy and OG step back from the noise to discuss what clearly doesn't work and then to focus on what actually helps you build wealth in 2026 and beyond. Rather than chasing hot trends, they revisit the timeless rules that have quietly done the heavy lifting through every market cycle. Why diversification still matters even when it feels boring. Why IPO hype and speculative real estate deals often disappoint. How consistency beats cleverness far more often than most people expect. From there, the conversation shifts into a practical framework Stackers can use no matter what the market throws their way. Joe and OG walk through the proper order of investing decisions: start with clear goals, build the right asset allocation, choose appropriate asset selections, and then layer in tax strategy. By putting taxes in the right place (after the big structural decisions), they explain how to improve outcomes without letting tax avoidance distort the entire plan. The episode also digs into real-world traps that tend to surface when uncertainty rises. Real estate crowdfunding. Penny stock temptation. Misunderstood property tax increases. The guys break down where people get tripped up and how to protect yourself without becoming overly cautious or frozen by fear. Just as important, Joe and OG explore the difference between luck and skill in investing stories. If you've ever felt behind because someone else's risky move worked out, this discussion brings perspective and relief by reminding Stackers what sustainable progress actually looks like. What You'll Learn: • Why timeless investing principles matter more than 2026 predictions • How diversification truly reduces risk and where people misuse it • The dangers of IPOs, penny stocks, and "exclusive" real estate deals • The correct order of smart investing decisions: goals first, asset allocation next, asset selection after that, tax strategy layered on last • How to think about tax efficiency without letting taxes drive the plan • What new homeowners often misunderstand about property taxes • How to spot luck masquerading as skill in investing success stories • Ways to stay confident and consistent when markets feel uncertain If you're looking to start 2026 grounded, informed, and focused on the moves that actually matter, this episode delivers a steady, practical roadmap without hype, fear, or shortcuts. Listen for the principles that hold up when markets misbehave and the small mistakes that quietly derail otherwise solid plans. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/real-estate-scam-companies-1786 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What if earning more money in 2025 has less to do with working longer hours and more to do with becoming dangerously useful? In this conversation, Joe Saul-Sehy and OG sit down with entrepreneur Alex Hormozi to break down how skill stacking, leverage, and better decision-making can radically change your income trajectory, whether you run a business, lead a team, or clock in for a 9-to-5. Alex pulls back the curtain on what actually drives higher pay: choosing the right skills, focusing on work that compounds, and learning how to take smart risks without blowing up your life. Along the way, he tackles one of the hardest challenges Stackers face, how to pursue growth when well-meaning friends, family, or coworkers are urging you to play it safe. This isn't about hustle culture or quitting your job tomorrow. It's about building a skill set that makes you indispensable, learning how to negotiate from a position of strength, and thinking long-term while others stay stuck optimizing small things. WHAT YOU'LL TAKE AWAY: Why skill stacking beats talent when it comes to earning power How to identify high-leverage skills that pay off in any career Ways to invest in yourself that don't require an MBA or massive risk How to apply entrepreneurial thinking inside a traditional job Practical negotiation insights that actually work in the real world When giving away value helps you grow and when it backfires How to tune out discouraging advice without burning bridges Why systems and processes matter more than motivation If you're serious about earning more in 2025 but want to do it thoughtfully, sustainably, and on your own terms, this episode gives you a blueprint worth studying. Listen for the mindset shifts that compound quietly and the small changes that can unlock much bigger opportunities over time. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What if the biggest driver of your financial future isn't the stock market but your skill set? In this episode of The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy and the crew sit down with entrepreneur and business strategist Alex Hormozi to unpack one of the most overlooked wealth-building tools Stackers have access to: skill acquisition. Alex doesn't pitch get-rich-quick nonsense or risky moonshots. Instead, he walks through how ordinary people (employees, side hustlers, and business owners alike) can increase their income by focusing on high-leverage skills, smarter negotiations, and taking calculated risks that actually make sense. You'll hear how Alex went through early business struggles and hard-earned lessons before building real wealth. Not by chasing trends, but by deliberately stacking skills, learning faster than the competition, and betting on himself without blowing up his life. The lessons apply whether you're asking for a raise, switching careers, growing a side hustle, or simply trying to earn more without working yourself into the ground. This is an episode about earning more on purpose, not grinding harder. WHAT TO LISTEN FOR: Why skill-building often beats investing early in your career How to identify high-leverage skills that pay off repeatedly The difference between smart risk and reckless risk Why small optimizations won't change your life but big skills might How to design your own curriculum without going back to school When betting on yourself actually makes financial sense ALSO IN THIS EPISODE: Reflecting on standout episodes from 2025 and what's coming next, a quick check-in on managing your money with intention not noise, why confidence is built through reps not motivation, and how compensation and risk are more connected than you think. A QUESTION FOR THE BASEMENT: What's one skill you've learned that's paid off way more than you expected, or one you wish you'd started earlier? Share it in Spotify comments or bring it to the Basement Facebook group. Your answer might help another Stacker spot their next big opportunity. Because money grows in accounts, but wealth starts with what you can do. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
New year, clean slate, and maybe time for a closer look at the person managing your money. Joe Saul-Sehy and OG kick off 2026 by answering the question many Stackers quietly wonder about: Is my financial advisor actually good at their job? Rather than talking theory or credentials, they break down five real-world red flags that signal an advisor might be more focused on products, commissions, or their own ego than on your goals. These are the subtle warning signs you'll never see in a glossy brochure but you'll absolutely feel over time. The 5 red flags: • Poor communication that keeps you in the dark • Office culture that feels off • Confusing jargon (often a feature, not a bug) • Unclear or hidden fees • Products over process Plus: Doug's Italian food trivia, New Year's breakfast burrito chaos, and a reminder that you're allowed to expect clarity and respect. Question for you: What's the biggest green flag or red flag you've seen from a financial advisor? Share in the comments—your story might help another Stacker avoid a costly mistake. The Red Flags Your Financial Advisor Hopes You Miss New year, clean slate, and maybe a closer look at the person helping you manage your money. In this episode of The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy and OG kick off the year by pulling back the curtain on a question many Stackers quietly wonder about: Is my financial advisor actually good at their job? Rather than talking theory or credentials, the guys break down five real-world red flags that signal an advisor might be more focused on products, commissions, or their own ego than on your goals. These are the subtle warning signs you'll never see in a glossy brochure but you'll absolutely feel them over time. From how an advisor communicates (or doesn't), to what their office culture tells you, to why confusing jargon is often a feature not a bug, this episode gives you practical ways to evaluate whether your advisor is truly on your team. And because this is Stacking Benjamins, the serious stuff is balanced with laughs, a little New Year's chaos, and Doug's trivia detour into Italian food. If you've ever wondered whether you should stay, ask better questions, or quietly run for the exit, this episode gives you the confidence to decide. WHAT YOU'LL LEARN: The top five red flags that signal a subpar financial advisor Why great advisors focus on process and goals, not hot products How poor communication quietly sabotages your financial progress What an advisor's office environment and staff behavior can reveal Why unclear fees and excessive jargon should make you nervous How to check public records without feeling overwhelmed ALSO IN THIS EPISODE: A fresh start to the year with breakfast burritos, Doug's trivia break on Italian food, a reminder that you are allowed to expect clarity and respect, plus community updates and what's coming next. HERE'S A QUESTION TO THINK ABOUT: What's the biggest green flag or red flag you've seen from a financial advisor? Share your experience in Spotify comments or bring it to the Basement Facebook group. Your story might help another Stacker avoid a costly mistake. Because the right advisor doesn't just manage money. They help you sleep better at night. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
As we close out the year, we're bringing back this powerful 2023 conversation with financial educator Tiffany Aliche (The Budgetnista) because it resonates even more today than when we first aired it. Joe Saul-Sehy and OG sit down with Tiffany for a conversation about financial wholeness. Not just having the right accounts, but building a money life that supports you when life doesn't go as planned. Tiffany shares what the past year taught her about preparedness, community, and resilience after the sudden loss of her husband, and why the systems she had in place mattered more than any single perfect financial move. This isn't a story about fear or worst-case scenarios. It's about confidence, clarity, and giving yourself grace while still doing the work that protects the people you love. Along the way, Joe and OG pull practical lessons every Stacker can use without overwhelm or guilt. The money basics that quietly make everything else easier: beneficiaries, insurance, wills, and the difference between having a plan and having peace of mind. If you've ever wondered whether you're focusing on the right financial priorities, or how prepared you really are, this episode offers reassurance, perspective, and a clear path forward. WHAT YOU'LL TAKE AWAY: What financial wholeness really means beyond budgets and spreadsheets Why having basic systems in place matters more than chasing optimization The quiet power of beneficiaries, insurance, and estate documents How preparation can reduce stress not just financially but emotionally Why community and education are essential parts of a strong money life How to enter a new year with confidence instead of pressure THIS EPISODE IS FOR YOU IF: You've ever wondered whether you're focusing on the right financial priorities, you want to make sure your essentials are covered without overwhelming yourself, you're thinking about what really matters as you head into a new year, or you believe the smartest financial move isn't always doing more but making sure the basics are handled. This is one of those episodes that makes you pause and ask: If something unexpected happened tomorrow, would my money make life easier or harder? You don't need to answer that perfectly today, but it's a great conversation to start. Sometimes the smartest financial move isn't doing more. It's making sure the essentials are handled so you can live fully the rest of the time. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What if the biggest upgrade to your finances wasn't a new strategy but a new way of thinking? Joe Saul-Sehy and OG unpack the small but powerful money mindset shifts that separate people who know what to do from people who actually make progress. This isn't about motivation posters or vague positivity. It's about practical mental frameworks that lead to better decisions, fewer regrets, and more confidence with money. The team walks through their top five money mindset tweaks. How to focus on strengths instead of endlessly fixing shortcomings. Why taking action beats overthinking every time. How playing long-term games with the right people changes everything. Along the way, they connect mindset directly to real-world choices, like how thinking clearly about value, longevity, and opportunity cost affects something as everyday as buying a car. That's where Carl Brauer from iSeeCars joins the conversation with insight into which vehicles deliver the best long-term value. It's a perfect case study in mindset-driven money decisions. Not chasing shiny objects, but choosing options that quietly compound in your favor. If you've ever felt like you're doing most things right but not seeing the results you want, this episode helps you zoom out, recalibrate, and move forward with intention. WHAT YOU'LL LEARN: The five mindset shifts that consistently lead to better money outcomes Why progress comes from doing rather than perfecting your plan first How understanding compounding changes the way you view time, effort, and money Why focusing on your strengths beats trying to fix every weakness How to think about purchases like cars through a long-term value lens The power of playing long-term games with people who think the same way THIS EPISODE IS FOR YOU IF: You feel like you know what to do with money but struggle to actually do it, you're tired of motivational content that doesn't translate into real change, you want to understand why some people progress faster with less effort, you're making a big purchase soon and want to think about it more clearly, or you believe the way you think about money matters as much as what you do with it. Sometimes the most profitable move isn't changing your plan. It's changing how you think about the plan. Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What separates people who build lasting wealth from people who just chase the next hot investment? David Greene from BiggerPockets has a clear answer, and it's not what most people want to hear. Joe Saul-Sehy and OG revisit a standout 2023 conversation with David that still resonates today. His story isn't about shortcuts, hacks, or getting lucky. It's about skill building, discipline, and learning to turn everyday work into long-term opportunity. From scooping ice cream at Baskin Robbins to building a successful real estate career, David breaks down what actually creates momentum over time and why "passive income" still requires serious intention. This episode showcases the kind of conversation that belongs in the vault. David explains what makes work feel worth it, how to develop skills that compound, and why the unsexy fundamentals matter more than the flashy strategies everyone's talking about. If you're tired of hype and ready for substance, this interview delivers. The show also tackles two critical protection topics. Adam Barowy from UL's Fire Safety Research Institute joins to explain the real (and often overlooked) risks of lithium-ion batteries in e-bikes, scooters, and everyday devices. He shares practical steps every family can take to reduce fire risk without panic or overreaction. Then Joe and OG field a listener question about keeping family property in the family. The discussion explores estate planning tradeoffs, communication challenges, and how to think through shared ownership without creating future conflict. Every segment connects to the same core idea. Building a life that's not only financially strong but resilient, safe, and meaningful. What You'll Walk Away With: • David Greene's framework for building wealth through skill mastery, not investment shortcuts • Why "passive income" is never truly passive and what actually makes work sustainable long term • Practical fire safety guidance for lithium-ion batteries you probably already own in your home • Simple steps to reduce household fire risk based on real research, not fearmongering • Thoughtful estate planning insights for preserving family property across generations • How to think about money not just as growth but as protection and stewardship This Episode Is For You If: • You're tired of wealth-building advice that sounds too good to be true • You want to hear how someone actually built success through discipline and skill development • You've got lithium-ion batteries around the house and never thought twice about fire safety • You're thinking about how to pass property or wealth to the next generation without creating conflict • You believe the smartest money moves involve both growing and protecting what you have Before You Hit Play, Think About This: What's one area of your financial life where you're focused on growth but might need more protection or structure? Share your thoughts in the Spotify comments or bring the discussion into the Basement Facebook group because this episode tends to spark great follow-up conversations. Sometimes the smartest money move isn't about earning more. It's about keeping what you've built safe and aligned with what matters most. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Is the constant push to be great quietly making life (and money) harder than it needs to be? This vault-worthy episode from 2023 hits differently, especially during a season when expectations run high and energy can run low. Joe Saul-Sehy is joined by Len Penzo, Paulette Perhach, Diania Merriam, and special guest Stephanie O'Connell Rodriguez for a candid roundtable about ambition, procrastination, perfectionism, and the surprising freedom that comes from choosing good over exhausting. Instead of chasing flawless systems or ideal outcomes, the conversation explores what actually moves the needle in real life. Building momentum. Removing friction. Letting go of the idea that every decision has to be optimized. Whether it's money habits, career goals, or simply getting unstuck, this episode offers a calmer, more sustainable way forward without lowering your standards or your future. Along the way, the group shares personal stories, practical strategies, and a few moments that only happen when smart people stop pretending they've got it all figured out. It's thoughtful, honest, and exactly the kind of perspective many Stackers didn't know they needed. What You'll Take Away from This Episode: • Why perfection often slows progress more than fear or lack of knowledge • How "good enough" can be a powerful financial strategy, not a compromise • Practical ways to break through procrastination without burning out • When delegation and automation actually help and when they just add complexity • How to balance ambition with contentment without feeling like you're settling • Why consistency beats intensity in both money and life Questions Worth Sitting With: Where are you chasing "perfect" when "done" would be better? What would improve immediately if you lowered the bar just a little? Which money habit could become easier if you stopped optimizing it? We'd love to hear your take. Share your thoughts in the Spotify comments or bring the conversation into the Basement Facebook group, especially if this episode gave you permission to ease up without giving up. Sometimes the best financial move isn't pushing harder. It's choosing progress that actually fits your life. This one's a quiet classic, and those tend to age the best. Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
One snowy Christmas Eve in Texarkana, Neighbor Doug settled into bed in his snazzy Superman Footie PJs (Amazon affiliate link), still buzzing on Joe’s Mom’s eggnog… Today’s special holiday episode recounts a completely original tale of Doug and the money lessons learned when he’s visited by three ghosts—past, present, and future. Especially when it comes to past credit mistakes, what’s done is done. Whatever method works best for you (debt snowball or debt avalanche), do that one. Come to terms with your bad money habits and realize that you can’t outearn them. It’s on you to fix the bad money habits of your past. Focus on what’s current and fix what needs fixing today. Don’t get caught in the trap of lamenting your past nor only planning for the future. Our only truly limited resource is time. Balance living for today with planning for the future. Remain in the present – especially when spending time with your loved ones – while keeping a vision in mind for your longer-term future plans. Be intentional about your plans and actions today and timeline what you want to achieve in what time you have remaining. Communicate on a regular basis with your “team” (loved ones) about your financial goals, progress, and situation. We recommend scheduling a weekly Family Budget Meeting. Automate as many of your financial decisions as possible today so you never have to think about them again in the future. Commit to paying off that mortgage early, ramp up those retirement savings contributions, stack those Benjamins for your kids’ college savings. Decide where you want to be financially in the future; face reality of where you are currently (we like our sponsor, Monarch Money, to track where you are); and take the necessary step to make that future a near certainty. Remember that time is the one commodity that’s finite for all of us. Value your time and experiences while staying responsible to your present and future self. Remember and learn from the sins of your past to build on your strengths; focus on living in the present and building your financial foundation; and head into the future with more confidence than Joe’s Mom’s Neighbor Doug during the annual Sun’s Out, Guns Out El Camino Competition at the Sizzler. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/doug-and-the-three-ghosts-2025-holiday-special-1778 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
It's the most wonderful time of the year in the basement, and we're kicking off the holiday season with our biggest, most packed episode yet. Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug welcome Joel Larsgaard and Matt Altmix from the How to Money podcast for a year-end celebration of everything that mattered in money during 2025. Think of this as the holiday parade of personal finance episodes. There's a lot happening, it's all connected, and you'll want to stick around for the whole thing. First up, Joel and Matt join the crew for their Top 5 Lessons from the Events of 2025. From AI's real impact on everyday work to market surprises nobody saw coming, this segment unpacks the money moments that actually changed how we think about our finances. These aren't just headlines rehashed. They're the insights that'll help you make smarter moves in 2026. Then the show shifts to a fascinating trend everyone's noticing but nobody's quite figured out yet. Why is everyone suddenly betting on everything? Prediction markets are exploding, retail investors are taking bigger risks, and the line between investing and gambling feels blurrier than ever. Joe, OG, Joel, and Matt dig into what's driving this shift, whether it's brilliant or reckless, and how to think about risk when it seems like the whole world just discovered the casino. But wait, there's more. Nick from Alaska calls in with a real-world budgeting challenge that proves even the most prepared Stackers face seasonal money surprises. His situation sparks the kind of practical, helpful conversation this show does best. And because this is a holiday kickoff episode, we're wrapping with big news about the Stacking Benjamins Vault, the new tool designed to help you organize and protect your most important financial documents without the headache. This episode has everything. Big ideas, real questions, legendary guests, surprise calls, and the energy of a show that knows the best episodes are the ones where there's almost too much good stuff to fit in. Welcome to the holiday season, Stacker style. What You'll Walk Away With: • Joel and Matt's Top 5 Money Lessons from 2025 that actually matter going forward • How AI really affected work and income this year in practical, not theoretical, ways • Why prediction markets and betting culture are suddenly everywhere and what it means for investors • Whether the shift toward riskier investments is smart adaptation or dangerous groupthink • Nick from Alaska's budgeting challenge and the solutions the crew offers in real time • An inside look at the Stacking Benjamins Vault and how it helps you organize what matters most • The perfect energy boost heading into holiday episodes and a new year of smarter money moves This Episode Is For You If: • You want the year-end money recap that feels like a celebration, not a lecture • You've noticed everyone's suddenly betting on elections, sports, and markets and wonder what's going on • You love episodes with special guests, surprise calls, and enough happening to keep you engaged the whole way • You want to head into the holidays feeling smarter about money, not more anxious • You're ready to kick off the season with the Stacking Benjamins crew at their absolute best After You Listen, Share This: What was your biggest money lesson from 2025? And have you noticed yourself (or people you know) getting more comfortable with risky bets lately? Drop your thoughts in the Spotify comments or the Basement Facebook group because this episode kicks off our holiday run, and we want to hear what's on your mind heading into 2026. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/year-end-lessons-with-the-runners-up-of-the-charity-challenge-1777 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Before you charge into a new year with fresh goals, shiny spreadsheets, and unrealistic optimism, it's worth doing the one thing most people skip. Looking back honestly at what just happened. Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, Neighbor Doug, Paula Pant (Afford Anything), and Jesse Cramer (Personal Finance for Long Term Investors) gather for an end-of-year roundtable to unpack the financial, personal, and behavioral lessons that 2025 handed us. Sometimes those lessons arrived gently. Sometimes they shoved us face-first into reality. Either way, this episode isn't about predictions for what's coming. It's about understanding the patterns from what already happened. The team digs into what diversification actually meant this year when some of the old rules stopped working the way they used to. They explore why emotional reactions to headlines still cost investors real money, even when everyone knows better. And they examine how policy noise (tariffs, political drama, market freakouts) reminded us once again that short-term chaos rarely deserves long-term decisions. Along the way, the conversation touches on housing lessons learned, family priorities that got re-examined, and AI's quiet but growing influence on work, productivity, and opportunity. The thread running through it all? Financial planning only works when it serves the life you're trying to build, not the other way around. This episode balances big-picture thinking with real-life reflection. It's the kind of honest look back that actually helps you move forward smarter instead of just louder. What You'll Walk Away With: • The most important financial lessons 2025 taught investors, whether they actually listened or not • How AI quietly changed work, productivity, and opportunity in ways that matter for your money decisions • Why diversification looked different this year and what investment principles still held up under pressure • How market volatility exposed emotional blind spots you might not have known you had (and how to fix them) • What the housing market taught us about patience, expectations, and timing • Why year-end reflection beats year-end predictions every single time • How family dynamics, personal values, and money planning intersect more than anyone likes to admit This Episode Is For You If: • You want to learn from 2025 before setting goals you'll abandon by February • You made some money decisions you're proud of and some you'd rather forget • Market headlines changed your behavior this year and you're wondering if that was smart • You're tired of prediction content and want actual reflection on what already happened • You believe getting smarter about money means being honest about what you got wrong Before You Hit Play, Think About This: What money decision in 2025 are you most proud of, and which one taught you the biggest lesson? Going into 2026, what one financial habit would make the biggest difference if you actually stuck with it? Bring those thoughts into the Facebook group or drop a comment because your reflections might help another Stacker avoid learning the same lesson the hard way. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/top-money-lessons-of-2025-1776 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What if "giving back" isn't about writing bigger checks but about using what you're already great at? Most people think philanthropy is reserved for people with their names on buildings. That assumption keeps them from realizing they already have something valuable to give. Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug welcome John Studzinski, managing director at PIMCO and founder of the Genesis Foundation, for a conversation about generosity, purpose, and impact that actually applies to everyday Stackers. John challenges the whole concept of "philanthropy" as something for the ultra-wealthy and reframes giving as a muscle anyone can build using time, talent, and intention instead of just cash. The conversation reveals how you can create meaningful impact right now, regardless of your bank balance. Whether you're great at organizing, teaching, listening, or solving problems, those skills matter more than you think. John breaks down how to identify your personal talent for impact and why intentional giving beats reactive charity every single time. Then the show shifts to retirement planning, specifically how to design a glide path that works with your behavior instead of fighting it. Joe and OG break down how to manage risk as you age, why annuities keep showing up in retirement conversations, and why smart planning focuses less on chasing perfect returns and more on creating stability you can actually live with. Because the math might say one thing, but your ability to sleep at night matters just as much. Along the way, the crew takes a detour into ChatGPT's potential future, explores a few behavioral finance truths that hit uncomfortably close to home, and wraps with a pop culture review reminding us that money decisions never happen in a vacuum. This episode is about aligning your resources (financial and otherwise) with the life you actually want to live. What You'll Walk Away With: • Why "giving" is a better word than "philanthropy" and why that shift in language actually matters • How to identify your personal talent for impact even without significant wealth • Why generosity works best when it's intentional and strategic rather than reactive • How retirement glide paths actually work and why your behavior matters more than the math • The role annuities can play in reducing retirement anxiety without sacrificing everything • Why percentages can be misleading, real dollars tell better stories, and context is everything • How fear, FOMO, and age quietly shape your investment decisions in ways you might not notice • Permission to build a retirement plan around stability instead of maximum growth This Episode Is For You If: • You want to give back but think you need more money before you can make a real difference • You're approaching retirement and tired of advice that ignores how you actually feel about risk • You've wondered if annuities deserve their bad reputation or if there's something there • You want your money decisions to reflect your values, not just optimize for returns • You believe purpose and planning should work together, not compete Before You Hit Play, Think About This: What's a talent you already have that could create more impact than money alone? And when it comes to retirement investing, what decision do you know is emotional but still struggle with? Drop your answers in the comments because John's perspective on giving and the crew's take on retirement planning might shift how you think about both. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Some episodes help you protect your money. Some help you protect everything your money makes possible. This episode does both. Joe Saul-Sehy and OG welcome fire safety expert Steve Kerber from UL's Fire Safety Research Institutes, who delivers simple, practical, "do this today" steps that dramatically increase your home's safety. From upgrading outdated smoke alarms to understanding lithium-ion battery risks to spotting hidden hazards most people walk past every single day, Steve gives everyday Stackers the tools to keep their homes and families safer. This isn't scare tactics. It's straightforward guidance from someone who's spent his career studying what actually prevents fires and saves lives. Then the show shifts gears for the headline segment. Joe and OG unpack T. Rowe Price's latest Global Retirement Survey to explore what savers around the world are most anxious about right now. How are people adapting to inflation? Are retirement expectations shifting across different countries? What can you learn from how others are handling the same fears you probably have? The data reveals patterns that might surprise you and insights you can actually use to build more confidence in your own retirement planning. Between these two segments, you'll get Doug's trivia throwdown, a TikTok detour through airport lounge mythology, and a few classic basement moments that remind you why this show mixes serious topics with serious fun. It's a wide-ranging episode packed with actionable takeaways and a good reminder that your financial plan works best when your home, your health, and your long-term outlook are all protected. What You'll Walk Away With: • The small home safety upgrades that make the biggest difference in fire prevention • Why smoke alarms fail more often than you think and how to pick the right replacement • Lithium-ion battery safety covering where to store them, what to avoid, and which myths to ignore • How real-world fire prevention thinking overlaps with smart financial planning habits • What savers around the world worry about most when it comes to retirement • How inflation, longevity concerns, and economic uncertainty are reshaping retirement expectations globally • Practical steps to feel more confident about your long-term retirement plan based on what the data reveals • Permission to take simple safety steps today that your future self will thank you for This Episode Is For You If: • You can't remember the last time you checked your smoke alarms (or know they're overdue for replacement) • You've got lithium-ion batteries around the house but aren't sure if you're storing them safely • You're curious what retirement worries look like around the world and how yours compare • You want retirement insights based on actual data instead of just one expert's opinion • You believe protecting what you have is just as important as growing what you're building Before You Hit Play, Ask Yourself: When's the last time you actually tested your smoke alarms or checked their expiration dates? And what's your biggest retirement worry right now? Drop both answers in the comments because Steve's fire safety tips and the global retirement data might address fears you didn't even realize were universal. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/holiday-fire-safety-tips-steve-kerber-1774 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Does more money make life easier, or does it just give you more expensive problems to solve? Most people assume that once they start earning more, their financial life will finally calm down and organize itself. Then they get the raise or the promotion or the business success, and somehow things feel just as chaotic as before, just with bigger numbers involved. Joe Saul-Sehy is joined by Paula Pant (Afford Anything), Jesse Cramer (Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors), and OG to explore why "more" isn't always "simpler." The crew digs into early money mistakes they'd all like to forget, the weird psychological traps that show up as income grows, and why your brain doesn't automatically upgrade its money management skills just because your paycheck did. The conversation gets real about the hidden mental challenges that come with wealth growth. Decision fatigue gets worse, not better. Lifestyle creep sneaks in wearing a very convincing disguise. And suddenly you're agonizing over choices that used to be simple, because now you can afford multiple options and none of them feel obviously right. If you've ever wondered why your financial life didn't magically self-organize the moment you started earning more, this roundtable has your answers. The crew also tackles listener questions about building budgeting habits that actually stick, finding genuine financial confidence, and creating systems that scale with your life instead of working against it. Because the goal isn't just to make more money. It's to build a life that feels manageable and intentional at whatever income level you're at. Plus, Doug delivers a trivia showdown featuring fierce competition, questionable strategy, and what might be the most overthought trophy dilemma in basement history. What You'll Walk Away With: • Why more income doesn't automatically reduce financial stress and often creates new complications • The hidden mental traps people fall into as their wealth grows and how to spot them early • How Paula, Jesse, OG, and Joe think about building lasting financial confidence at any income level • Practical budgeting strategies that work whether you're making $50K or $500K • Why simple pleasures matter more (not less) as your money grows • The surprising ways earning more actually complicates everyday decisions • Listener Q&A on habits, organization, and creating systems that smooth out financial chaos • Permission to admit that making more money didn't solve everything like you thought it would This Episode Is For You If: • You're earning more than you used to but somehow don't feel more in control • You assumed financial stress would decrease with income but it just shifted to different problems • You're stuck between multiple good options and can't figure out why that's so paralyzing • You want to hear successful people admit that more money created complications they didn't expect • You're building wealth but want to make sure you're also building a life that feels good Before You Hit Play, Think About This: What's one financial decision that got harder (not easier) as you started earning more money? Drop your answer in the comments because this roundtable proves you're definitely not the only one experiencing this paradox. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Walking away from a secure city government job to eventually run one of the world's most recognizable handbag brands sounds like fiction. For Lew Frankfort, it became his career story, and the path between those two points is exactly what makes this conversation so valuable. Lew joins Joe Saul-Sehy and OG in the basement to break down how a combination of discipline, curiosity, and what he calls "magic and logic" shaped his journey from city hall to the corner office at Coach. This isn't just inspiration for aspiring executives. Lew's insights about making better decisions, taking calculated risks, and building a meaningful life apply whether you're 25 or 55, whether you're climbing the ladder or considering jumping to a different one entirely. Lew shares how preparation became his secret advantage, why curiosity beats confidence during major transitions, and what he learned about leadership while helping transform Coach into a global powerhouse. His framework for balancing intuition with analysis gives the Confident Explorer a practical lens for evaluating their own big moves, career pivots, or midlife reinventions. Then Joe and OG shift gears to tackle a different kind of transition. The first year of retirement. When excitement runs high and "go-go" energy meets newfound freedom, spending can spiral in ways that derail decades of careful planning. They break down the crucial financial decisions retirees face right out of the gate, why that first year can be surprisingly dangerous, and how to set yourself up for long-term stability without killing the joy of finally having time to live. Plus, Doug delivers trivia involving time travel and underwear, because even episodes about CEO wisdom and retirement planning need a reality check from the basement. What You'll Walk Away With: • How Lew Frankfort pivoted from city government work to leading Coach and what that path teaches about career reinvention • The "magic and logic" framework anyone can apply to big decisions and career moves • Why curiosity and thorough preparation matter more than confidence when making your next leap • Leadership lessons from someone who helped build a global brand from the inside • What retirees absolutely must understand about spending during that crucial first year • Why the "go-go years" of early retirement can wreck your finances if you're not careful • Strategies for aligning your early retirement excitement with long-term financial stability • Permission to reinvent yourself at any age, armed with both inspiration and practical wisdom This Episode Is For You If: • You're considering a career change but worried you're too far along to pivot • You want to understand how successful people actually made their big moves • You're approaching retirement and want to avoid the spending traps that catch most people • You're curious how to balance intuition with analysis when making major life decisions • You believe it's never too late to build something meaningful or try something new Before You Hit Play, Think About This: What's one career move or life transition you've been thinking about but haven't pulled the trigger on yet? What's actually holding you back? Drop your answer in the comments because Lew's story might be exactly the perspective shift you need to take that next step. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/https-stackingbenjamins-com-lou-frankfort-bagman-1772/ Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 (https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201) Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Holiday parties make you want to hide behind the cheese tray. Gift-giving season makes your budget cry. This episode is your survival guide for both. Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug welcome Pulitzer Prize-winning author Charles Duhigg to turn holiday small talk from awkward endurance test into something you might actually enjoy. Whether you're facing the office party, a family gathering with that cousin who won't shut up about crypto, or the neighborhood potluck where you know exactly three people, Charles reveals how to walk into any room with confidence, even if you're an introvert who'd rather be home watching movies. The secret? Super communicators aren't the loudest people in the room. They're the ones asking better questions, reading the conversation correctly, and making others feel heard. Charles breaks down the skills that turn painful small talk into genuine connection, and why introverts actually have hidden advantages at holiday gatherings (yes, really). Then the crew tackles the other holiday stressor of gift-giving that doesn't demolish your December budget. Joe, OG, and Doug explore the rising trend of secondhand gifting. It's not just about saving money (though your wallet will thank you). It can be more meaningful, more creative, and kinder to both your finances and the planet. From thrifted treasures to thoughtful "found" gems, they share how to give smarter instead of just spending more. Plus, Doug's toilet paper trivia arrives right on schedule (because what's a holiday episode without something unexpected?), along with stories about neighbors behaving badly and a brief tour through apps you forgot you're still paying for. What You'll Walk Away With: • Charles Duhigg's framework for turning small talk into actual connection without feeling fake • Why introverts have secret advantages at holiday parties and how to use them • Smart, budget-friendly gifting strategies that feel thoughtful rather than last-minute or cheap • The case for secondhand gifts and how to do it in a way that feels special • How to avoid blowing your holiday budget without looking (or feeling) stingy • Creative ways to personalize gifts without overspending or resorting to gift cards • Why communication skills affect both your happiness and your financial decisions This Episode Is For You If: • Holiday small talk feels like torture and you'd rather shovel snow • You want to give meaningful gifts but refuse to wreck your January budget doing it • You're an introvert dreading the season of forced social interaction • You're tired of generic gift guides telling you to "just spend less" without actual ideas • You believe better conversations and smarter spending are both learnable skills Before You Hit Play, Ask Yourself: What's the most meaningful non-new gift you've ever given or received? Think about why it mattered. That's the kind of gifting Charles and the crew are talking about. Drop your story in the comments because we're building the anti-Amazon holiday gift playbook together. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-actually-enjoy-holiday-small-talk-1771/ Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Here's the problem with most frugality advice: it makes you feel like a monk who's taken a vow of joylessness. Joe Saul-Sehy and Neighbor Doug gather the roundtable crew—Paula Pant (Afford Anything), Jesse Cramer (Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors), and Andy Hill (Marriage, Kids, and Money)—to prove that frugality isn't about deprivation. It's about designing a life that feels good and costs less. The conversation gets real fast: what's the difference between thoughtful frugality and soul-crushing penny-pinching? How do you cut spending without cutting joy? And why do some people thrive on frugal challenges while others just end up resentful and burnt out? The crew shares their own tactics, from "shopping your fridge" (a shockingly high-ROI habit most people ignore) to the power of frugal sprints instead of permanent deprivation mode. They break down how to align your spending with your actual values instead of society's expectations, why raising income often beats shaving another $3 off your grocery bill, and how to turn frugality into something your kids actually want to participate in (no guilt trips required). You'll also hear about the expenses each of them refuses to cut no matter how frugal they get, because smart money management isn't about eliminating everything; it's about keeping what matters and ditching what doesn't. Plus: stories about mystery freezer leftovers, subscription fees that sneak in like cat burglars, and Doug's perspective on... well, whatever Doug decides matters that day. What You'll Walk Away With: • The difference between frugality that improves your life and penny-pinching that just makes you miserable • Why "shopping your fridge" might be the highest-return grocery habit you'll ever adopt • How to design spending around your actual values instead of just cutting blindly • The power of "frugal sprints"—short-term challenges that work without long-term burnout • How to involve your kids in frugal habits without making them feel deprived • Why focusing on raising income often matters more than obsessing over tiny budget cuts • Which expenses the pros refuse to cut—and why knowing your "worth it" list matters This Episode Is For You If: • You want to save money but refuse to live like you're broke when you're not • Traditional frugality advice makes you feel guilty about things that actually bring you joy • You're trying to cut spending but can't figure out where to start without feeling deprived • You want to model smart money habits for your kids without making them fear spending • You're tired of finance advice that assumes everyone should want the same lifestyle Before You Hit Play, Think About This: What's the one expense you refuse to cut, no matter how frugal you get? And what does that tell you about what actually matters to you? Drop your answer in the comments—we want to know what's on everyone's "worth it" list. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-save-money-without-making-your-life-miserable-sb1770/ Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Here's something nobody tells you: knowing how to make money is easy compared to knowing how to spend it well. Morgan Housel, bestselling author and one of the sharpest minds in personal finance, is back in the basement with Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug to tackle the question most financial advice completely ignores: why do we spend the way we do, and how can we get better at it? This isn't about budgeting apps or cutting lattes. It's about understanding the psychology underneath every swipe of your card. Morgan shares stories from his early days working valet for the ultra-wealthy—the spending patterns he observed, the misery he witnessed, and the lessons that changed how he thinks about money forever. Turns out, having more money doesn't automatically make you better at spending it. In fact, it often makes you worse. The conversation digs into what actually creates happiness (spoiler: it's not more stuff), why contentment matters more than your net worth, and how true financial independence isn't about the size of your portfolio—it's about the freedom to make choices that align with your actual values. Morgan also breaks down what Warren Buffett's retirement announcement reveals about staying grounded while building wealth, and why comedians might understand money better than most economists. Plus: Doug takes a trivia detour to a surprisingly risqué national park (because of course), and the crew wraps with binge-worthy recommendations for your next couch night. If you're tired of chasing more and ready to figure out what enough actually looks like, this episode is required listening. What You'll Walk Away With: • Why spending money well is a psychological skill, not a math problem—and how to develop it • What Morgan learned about wealth and misery from parking cars for millionaires in their driveways • The hidden drivers behind your financial decisions (and how to spot them before they derail you) • Why contentment—not consumption—is the real key to long-term happiness • What true financial independence actually means (hint: it's not a number in your bank account) • How Warren Buffett's approach to retirement reveals timeless principles about money and legacy • Simple guiding principles to help you spend smarter and live calmer This Episode Is For You If: • You've hit financial goals but still don't feel satisfied • You're tired of spending money on things that don't actually make you happier • You want to understand why you make the money decisions you do (even the questionable ones) • You're curious what actually separates people who enjoy their money from people who just have it • You believe there's more to financial success than just accumulating more Before You Hit Play, Think About This: What's one purchase you made that brought way more joy than its price tag would suggest—and can you figure out why? That's the kind of spending Morgan's talking about. Drop your answer in the comments—the basement wants to hear what actually brought you happiness. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/the-art-of-spending-money-with-morgan-housel-1769/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Let's be honest: taxes feel like that thing you're supposed to understand but somehow never learned, and now you're too embarrassed to ask. Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug welcome Hannah Cole—artist-turned-tax-pro and author of the brand-new book Taxes for Humans—to finally explain taxes in language that doesn't require a CPA license to understand. Hannah's built her career translating tax code for freelancers, side hustlers, and small business owners who just want to know what they can deduct, what'll get them audited, and how to stop drowning in shoebox receipts. She breaks down the real difference between a legitimate business expense and wishful thinking, how to track startup costs without losing your mind, and why the bookkeeping system that works is the one you'll actually use (spoiler: it doesn't have to be fancy). Whether you're launching a side gig, running a creative business, or just trying to keep the IRS from ruining your holiday season, Hannah's got the roadmap. Then Joe and OG shift gears to tackle the "AI bubble" conversation everyone's having—is this tech hype justified, or are we watching 1999 all over again? They break down how to think about market froth without panicking, why smart investors don't build their strategy around TikTok prophets predicting doom, and how to prepare your portfolio for volatility without making fear-based moves. Plus: Doug delivers trivia about Richard Pryor's Blazing Saddles days, because even tax talk deserves a palate cleanser. What You'll Walk Away With: • Tax basics explained in actual human language (finally)—what counts as a deduction and what's just wishful thinking • How to set up simple, sustainable bookkeeping systems for side gigs or small businesses that you'll actually maintain • The smartest way to track startup expenses without drowning in receipts or spreadsheets • Why the IRS isn't as scary as you think when you've got your basics covered • How to think about AI market hype without getting swept up in either the euphoria or the panic • Smart strategies for preparing your portfolio for volatility without making emotion-driven decisions • Why the right tax and investing systems buy you back time, creativity, and peace of mind This Episode Is For You If: • You've been winging it on taxes and know you're probably missing deductions (or making mistakes) • You run a side hustle but have no idea what you can actually write off • Tax season makes you anxious because you're never sure if you're doing it right • You're hearing AI bubble talk everywhere and wondering if you should be worried about your investments • You want systems that are simple enough to actually follow, not perfect enough to abandon by February Before You Hit Play, Think About This: What's the tax mistake you wish you could warn your younger self about? Drop it in the comments—we're all learning here, and sometimes the best lessons come from what we got wrong the first time. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/tax-basics-for-side-hustlers-ai-market-tips/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Here's a secret: some of the best financial education doesn't come from books or podcasts. It comes from a board game box. Joe Saul-Sehy welcomes Kylie Prymus, board game expert and owner of Pittsburgh's award-winning store Games Unlimited, for a conversation about the games that sneak money lessons into brilliant gameplay. These aren't boring "educational games" that make kids groan—they're genuinely fun strategy games that happen to teach supply and demand, resource management, risk assessment, and long-term planning better than most finance courses. Kylie walks through his top picks for economic games that'll make you (and your kids, and yes, your brother-in-law) think differently about money. From deck-builders like Dominion that teach portfolio diversification to Food Chain Magnate (basically an MBA in a box, but way more entertaining), these games turn financial concepts into actual decisions with consequences you can see play out in real time. But this isn't just about learning—it's about leveling up your holiday gatherings. Kylie shares his favorite cozy games for the season, from the absurdly cute cat-themed strategy game Boop to party games like Monikers that even Uncle Larry can't ruin. Whether you need something cooperative to bring the family together or competitive enough to settle old scores, this episode has you covered. Plus: you'll hear why game stores like Games Unlimited curate experiences (not just inventory), and how the right game can turn a tense holiday gathering into something people actually want to repeat. What You'll Walk Away With: • The board games that teach money concepts like budgeting, income streams, and resource management without feeling like homework • Why Dominion, Food Chain Magnate, and other economic games are secretly brilliant financial teachers • Kylie's top holiday game picks—from cozy strategy games to party games that work for any crowd • How game mechanics like deck-building and resource trading translate directly to real-world money decisions • What to look for when choosing games that work for both newbies and strategy enthusiasts • Why games teach financial lessons better than lectures—and how to use that with kids (or adults who need a refresh) • The surprising ways marketing, scarcity, and community building show up in tabletop games This Episode Is For You If: • You want to teach your kids about money in a way that doesn't feel like a lecture • You're looking for games that are actually fun but happen to build financial thinking • Your family game nights need an upgrade beyond Monopoly arguments • You're curious about board games but don't know where to start • You believe the best learning happens when you're having too much fun to notice you're learning What's Your Money Game? Drop your answer in the comments: What board game taught you a real money lesson, even if it wasn't trying to? Or if your financial personality were a board game, which one would it be? The basement wants to know—and we're always looking for new game recommendations. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/kylie-prymus-board-games/ Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Black Friday's coming, your inbox is screaming deals at you, and you're trying to figure out: is this tech actually worth it, or will it be collecting dust by Valentine's Day? Joe Saul-Sehy, guest co-host CFP Anna Allem, and Neighbor Doug bring in Bridget Carey from CNET to cut through the holiday tech chaos. Bridget's spent her career testing gadgets, and she's here to tell you what's actually worth your money this season—from Nintendo's surprisingly strong lineup to handheld gaming devices like Steam Deck and Xbox Cloud that might replace your console. She also warns you away from AI-powered appliances that still feel like they're arguing with you instead of helping. Bridget breaks down the smart way to approach Black Friday and Cyber Monday without wrecking your December budget, which deals are real and which are manufactured hype, and why some tech gifts send a very specific message to your in-laws (and maybe not the one you want). Then the conversation shifts from tech temptations to investing platforms—specifically Robinhood. The confetti animations are fun, the interface is slick, but is it actually built for serious long-term investing? Joe and Anna dig into where Robinhood works, where it distracts, and why your retirement plan might need something more substantial than gamified stock trading and crypto side quests. Plus: Doug delivers Thanksgiving-adjacent trivia, and the crew takes a nostalgic detour through Skip-Its and Long Furbys that'll fuel your next holiday gathering conversation. What You'll Walk Away With: • Bridget Carey's insider guide to which holiday tech deals are legit and which are overhyped garbage • The best gaming and gadget gifts this season (from someone who actually tests this stuff for a living) • Why some AI appliances still feel like expensive beta tests you're paying to debug • Smart strategies for Black Friday and Cyber Monday that don't demolish your December budget • The honest truth about Robinhood: where it shines and where serious investors should look elsewhere • How investing platforms subtly influence your behavior—and whether that's helping or hurting you • How to stay grounded when shiny objects (tech or financial) start calling your name This Episode Is For You If: • You're staring at Black Friday ads wondering which deals are actually worth it • You want tech gift advice from someone who isn't trying to sell you something • You've been using Robinhood and wonder if it's actually helping your long-term investing goals • You're curious whether the flashy features on investing apps are making you a better or worse investor • You need a reality check before holiday spending turns into January regret Before You Hit Play, Ask Yourself: What's the worst tech purchase you've ever made? Bonus points if it broke before New Year's. Drop it in the comments—misery loves company, and we're building the ultimate "do not buy" list together. Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Black Friday is coming, and you've got two choices: get trampled at 3 a.m. for a discount air fryer, or learn how the pros actually save hundreds without the drama. Joe Saul-Sehy and Neighbor Doug kick off Black Friday week with the perfect blend of strategy and sanity. First up: Australian comedian Josh Liston tries to make sense of American Thanksgiving traditions and why we consider waking up before dawn to fight strangers over discounted electronics "normal holiday fun." Spoiler: he's not buying it. Then Regina Conway from Slick Deals drops in with the actual playbook. Regina breaks down when to shop during Black Friday week (different categories peak on different days), how to stack coupons with cashback and gift card deals for maximum savings, and why subscriptions and memberships might be the smartest budget-friendly gifts you're not considering. She also reveals how the Slick Deals community spots hidden bargains before they disappear—and how you can do the same. But here's where it gets real: Joe, Doug, and Josh tackle Buy Now Pay Later schemes like Affirm and Klarna. They're everywhere this season, and they're tempting. They're also the financial equivalent of eating Halloween candy for breakfast—feels great in the moment, regrettable by lunch. You'll learn exactly when these services make sense (rare) and when they're just a trap disguised as convenience. Whether you're hunting deals or trying to avoid holiday debt, this episode is your survival guide for coming out ahead. What You'll Walk Away With: • Regina Conway's insider strategy for when to shop during Black Friday week (hint: timing matters more than you think) • How to stack coupons, cashback offers, and gift card deals to maximize every purchase • Why subscriptions and memberships make surprisingly smart (and budget-friendly) holiday gifts • Grocery hacks that actually save money during the most expensive shopping weeks of the year • The truth about Buy Now Pay Later—when it's useful and when it's just expensive debt with good marketing • How community-powered deal sites like Slick Deals help you find and vet bargains before they vanish • Smart strategies to enjoy the holidays without the January credit card hangover This Episode Is For You If: • You want Black Friday deals without the 3 a.m. wake-up call or the crowds • You're trying to save money this season but feel overwhelmed by all the "deals" • You've been tempted by Buy Now Pay Later but aren't sure if it's smart or stupid • You want to give great gifts without blowing your budget (or your sanity) • You believe there's a smarter way to shop than fighting strangers for discounted TVs What's Your Black Friday Strategy? Are you a doorbuster warrior, an online deal hunter, or someone who avoids the whole thing? Drop your approach in the comments—and if you've got a Black Friday horror story (or victory), the basement wants to hear it. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-save-big-this-black-friday-regina-conway-1765 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What if you could sit down with the people actually building the future of personal finance and just... ask them everything? That's exactly what happens in this episode. Joe Saul-Sehy gathers three FinTech insiders around the basement table—Peter Polson (founder, Tiller), Aaron Froug (founder, Grifin), and Ryan Ruff (longtime FinTech pro, Array)—for a rare look inside the industry that's reshaping how we handle money. This isn't about pitching their products. It's about understanding how FinTech actually works, where it's headed, and how everyday people can use these tools more effectively. Peter and Aaron share what they've learned building companies from the ground up, while Ryan pulls back the curtain on the infrastructure most people never see but rely on every single day. The conversation goes deep: What are most people getting wrong about money apps? How can you get more value from the tools you're already using? Where is AI actually making finance easier (versus just adding complexity)? And as creators, how can they design tools that genuinely help people instead of just creating more digital clutter? You'll also hear their take on what's coming next—the innovations that'll matter in five years, the trends that are overhyped, and the blind spots the industry still needs to address. Whether you're a FinTech skeptic or an early adopter, this conversation will change how you think about the apps sitting on your phone right now. What You'll Walk Away With: • The insider perspective on how FinTech tools are actually designed—and what builders wish users understood • How to get more value from the financial apps you're already using (most people only scratch the surface) • Where the industry is headed: what innovations are real and what's just hype • Why some tools work for some people but fail for others—and how to find your fit • The infrastructure that makes your financial apps work (and what breaks when it doesn't) • How AI is changing personal finance in practical ways, not just buzzword ways • What FinTech creators are trying to solve—and where they admit the industry still falls short This Episode Is For You If: • You're curious about what's actually happening inside the FinTech world • You want to use your money apps smarter, not just download more of them • You're wondering what's coming next in personal finance tech and whether it'll actually help • You've felt like financial tools are being built for someone else, not for you • You want the insider perspective without the sales pitch—just honest conversation from people who live this every day Before You Hit Play, Think About This: What's one thing you wish your money apps could do better? Drop it in the comments—these are exactly the kinds of insights that help creators build tools that actually work for real people. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/the-current-state-and-future-of-fintech-1764 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Be honest: When someone's talking to you, are you actually listening—or just waiting for your turn to speak? Joe Saul-Sehy and OG welcome executive coach Katie O'Malley, who's here to expose how terrible most of us are at paying attention—and more importantly, how to fix it. Whether you're trying to connect with your spouse, navigate a tough conversation with your kid, or just survive Thanksgiving dinner without the crypto uncle derailing everything, Katie's got the framework that makes you a better listener (and weirdly, a better decision-maker too). Here's the thing: better listening doesn't just improve your relationships. It improves your money decisions. When you're actually present instead of distracted, you catch the details that matter. You ask better questions. You make choices that align with your values instead of reacting on autopilot. Katie breaks down the reflective listening technique that changes every conversation—at work, at home, and yes, even about money. Joe and OG also dig into financial literacy for younger Stackers (because the skills you wish you'd learned earlier are the ones you should be teaching now), plus new research on all-stock portfolios and whether they're brilliant or just reckless depending on your risk tolerance. And Doug? Doug's got Halloween-adjacent music trivia and commentary that reminds you not everything needs to be taken seriously. What You'll Walk Away With: • The reflective listening framework that immediately improves how you communicate (with everyone) • Why "listening to respond" instead of "listening to understand" sabotages your conversations • Simple techniques to break free from distraction loops—especially the ones involving your phone • How better communication leads to better financial decisions (they're more connected than you think) • What the research actually says about all-stock portfolios and whether they fit your risk tolerance • Ways to teach young people the financial skills they need—even if nobody taught you • Strategies for staying present during stressful family moments (holiday season, we see you) Before You Hit Play, Ask Yourself: • When was the last time you listened to understand instead of just waiting for your turn to talk? • What relationships in your life would improve if you were actually present instead of mentally writing your grocery list? • Are you teaching the young people in your life the money skills you wish someone had taught you? • Does your investment strategy match your actual risk tolerance—or just what sounded good on TikTok? • What uncomfortable conversations are you avoiding because you don't know how to navigate them? Got a communication breakdown you're trying to fix—financial or otherwise? Drop it in the comments. The basement's got your back. Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Pop quiz: If your health insurance premiums keep climbing, should you just go catastrophic and pocket the savings? Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and CFP Anna Allem tackle that exact question, along with a handful of other money decisions that keep Stackers up at night. From navigating healthcare coverage gaps to figuring out when (and how) to withdraw from a 529, this Monday mailbag episode is packed with the practical advice you need, served with the basement humor you've come to expect. The health insurance conversation gets real: what catastrophic plans actually cover (spoiler: less than you think), how to plan for the gaps, and whether gambling on your health is ever a smart financial move. Then Anna breaks down the 529 withdrawal strategy that saves you headaches at tax time, and the crew tackles a listener who's spooked by market volatility and wondering if it's time to bail. But it wouldn't be Monday without some chaos—Joe's cat decided to add drama to the morning, Doug brings trivia about counterfeit currency (because of course), and the gang updates you on the charity challenge where Stackers can support financial literacy and maybe win some prizes in the process. Plus: OG delivers movie reviews to help you figure out what's actually worth your streaming time this week. What You'll Walk Away With: • The truth about catastrophic health plans—when they make sense and when they'll leave you exposed • How to handle healthcare coverage gaps without gambling your financial future • The smart way to withdraw from a 529 so you don't accidentally trigger taxes or penalties • Why market volatility isn't a reason to panic—and what to do instead of bailing on your portfolio • How diversification and rebalancing keep you sane when the headlines get scary • A reminder that financial planning (like cat wrangling) rarely goes exactly as planned This Episode Is For You If: • You're staring at rising health insurance premiums and wondering if there's a better way • You've got a 529 but aren't sure how to actually use it without screwing up • Market dips make you nervous and you want to know if you should be doing something • You're tired of generic financial advice and want real answers to your specific questions • You believe learning about money should involve at least a few laughs (and maybe some cat stories) Got a Question for the Basement? Drop it in the comments or send it our way—you might just hear Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Anna tackle it in an upcoming mailbag episode. And if you want to support financial literacy while competing for prizes, check out the charity challenge details in the show. Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ever feel like you're doing everything "right" with money—but still barely getting ahead? You're budgeting. You're saving what you can. You cut the subscriptions, meal prep on Sundays, and skip the daily latte. So why does it still feel like you're spinning your wheels? In this Greatest Hits episode, Joe Saul-Sehy welcomes Erin Lowry (Broke Millennial), Paula Pant (Afford Anything), and Greg McFarlane (Control Your Cash) to tackle the question nobody wants to ask: What if the problem isn't your spending—it's your income? Erin shares her journey from broke and stressed to financially stable and empowered, and the crew digs into why so many families struggle even when they're following all the "rules." Sometimes extreme budgeting isn't the answer. Sometimes you need to earn more. And yes, that's easier said than done—but this episode gives you the roadmap. From practical strategies for saving for retirement when cash is tight, to negotiation tricks that lower your monthly bills, to the hilariously strange side hustles people actually do for extra money (you'll never look at classified ads the same way), this conversation is packed with ideas you can use today. Plus: Classic basement banter, a "Spider Pig" serenade, Tony Romo's birthday, and all the tangents that make Stacking Benjamins feel like hanging out with friends who happen to know a lot about money. What You'll Walk Away With: • Why you might feel behind even when you're doing everything the experts tell you to do • Erin Lowry's framework for moving from "broke" to financially confident (and why it's not just about willpower) • When to focus on cutting costs vs. when to focus on earning more—and how to know the difference • Practical retirement savings strategies that work even when your cash flow is tight • Negotiation scripts for lowering your internet, phone, and other monthly bills (yes, they actually work) • Creative (and sometimes bizarre) ways people make extra money that you've probably never considered This Episode Is For You If: • You're exhausted from budgeting and feel like you're sacrificing everything but still not getting ahead • You wonder if you're just bad with money—or if something else is going on • You've cut expenses as far as they'll go and need new strategies • You're curious about side hustles but don't know where to start (or what's actually worth your time) • You need a reminder that struggling financially doesn't mean you're doing it wrong—sometimes the system is just rigged FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/stop-worrying-start-saving-greatest-hits-week-1761 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Here's what nobody tells you about building wealth: it's not about finding the perfect investment or timing the market. It's about doing boring things consistently until they're not boring anymore—they're just your life. In this Greatest Hits episode, Joe Saul-Sehy and OG revisit a 2023 conversation with Jonathan Clements, the beloved former Wall Street Journal personal finance columnist and founder of Humble Dollar who passed away recently. We're resharing this episode to honor Jonathan's legacy, his gift for making complex ideas simple, and the joy he brought to every conversation about money. Jonathan's book, My Money Journey, features 30 real stories from real people who built financial freedom—and the lessons are surprisingly simple (which doesn't mean easy). In this conversation, Jonathan breaks down what separated the people who made it from the people who kept spinning their wheels: steady habits, ruthless simplicity, and the kind of resilience that lets you keep going when life throws curveballs. From emergency funds that actually saved people to the rent vs. buy debate that reveals more about your priorities than your budget, this conversation cuts through the complexity to show you what actually matters. Jonathan's wisdom feels even more valuable now—a reminder that the best financial advice isn't about chasing trends, it's about building a life that works for you. Joe and OG also tackle listener questions, including whether to relocate for a better job and how to balance saving for tomorrow without sacrificing today. Plus: Doug's trivia, a Key & Peele-inspired TikTok minute, and proof that the best financial teachers leave lessons that last long after they're gone. What You'll Walk Away With: • The money habits that showed up in almost every success story from Jonathan's book (spoiler: none of them are sexy) • Why simplicity beats complexity in investing—and how to stop overcomplicating your portfolio • The rent vs. buy question reframed: it's not just about math, it's about what kind of life you want • How to balance aggressive investing with the safety net you actually need (not the one Instagram tells you to have) • Why emergency funds and health insurance are the unsexy heroes of every financial success story • What "margin for error" really means—and why it's the difference between surviving setbacks and being destroyed by them This Episode Is For You If: • You're tired of chasing the next "hot" investment strategy and want to know what actually works • You feel like everyone else has figured out money except you (spoiler: they haven't) • You want to hear real stories from real people, not just theory from talking heads • You're trying to balance living well now with saving for later—and feeling stuck in the middle • You believe the best teachers are the ones whose lessons outlive them Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Here's a wild idea: What if the thing holding you back isn't your bank account, your age, or your circumstances—it's just the story you've been telling yourself? Joe Saul-Sehy and OG sit down with Colin O'Brady, four-time world record holder and endurance athlete who's done things most people would call impossible: solo trek across Antarctica, row across the Drake Passage, and yes, take a 12-hour walk that changed his entire perspective on what humans are capable of. Colin's not just here to tell adventure stories (though those are incredible). He's here to talk about the mental game—the part where you convince yourself to take the first step even when the finish line seems impossibly far away. Sound familiar? Whether you're staring down a cross-country expedition or trying to figure out if you'll have enough saved for retirement, the challenge is the same: push past the voice that says "I can't" and prove to yourself that you can. Then Joe and OG bring it back to the basement with a listener question about Roth vs. Traditional 401(k) contributions—because financial endurance is just as important as physical stamina. They break down how to think long-term about taxes, flexibility, and building a retirement plan that actually fits your life. Plus: Neighbor Doug delivers trivia that proves even world record holders have to earn their laughs in the basement. What You'll Walk Away With: • What Colin O'Brady's 12-Hour Walk reveals about breaking through your mental limits (and how it applies to money decisions too) • The mindset shift that separates people who attempt big goals from people who actually achieve them • Smart strategies for balancing Roth and Traditional 401(k) contributions based on your timeline and tax situation • Why flexibility matters as much as discipline—whether you're planning an expedition or planning retirement • Permission to set goals that scare you a little (because that's usually where the good stuff happens) This Episode Is For You If: • You've been telling yourself you "can't" do something but wonder if that's actually true • You want inspiration that comes with actual tactics (not just motivational fluff) • You're trying to figure out the Roth vs. Traditional 401(k) question and want a clear answer • You believe your best life is out there, but you're not sure how to build toward it • You need a reminder that big transformations start with small, intentional steps FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/conquer-your-mount-everest-greatest-hits-week-1759 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Want to know what keeps retirees up at night? It's not what they did—it's what they wish they'd done ten years earlier. Joe Saul-Sehy is joined by Jill Siriani (Frugal Friends), Jesse Cramer (The Best Interest), and Doc G (Earn & Invest), who all pull up chairs in the basement for a powerhouse roundtable on the five regrets that show up again and again when people hit retirement. These aren't hypothetical "what-ifs"—they're real stories from a real CFP, sharing tales about people who wished someone had told them sooner. From botched investment allocations that left people either too risky or too conservative, to tax mistakes that cost tens of thousands, to the heartbreaking pattern of people who saved everything but never actually enjoyed their money—this conversation gets real about what actually matters when you're trying to retire with confidence (and joy). The good news? Every single one of these regrets is avoidable. The panelists share what to do now so you don't become one of these stories later, including the estate planning moves that take ten minutes but save your family years of headaches, and why the biggest retirement regret isn't financial at all—it's emotional. Plus: Doug's trivia challenge pits the panel against each other for bragging rights, because even serious money talk deserves a little competition. What You'll Walk Away With: • The five regrets that show up over and over in retirement—and the specific moves that prevent each one • Why your investment allocation in your 40s and 50s might be setting you up for regret in your 60s • Tax strategies that keep more money in your pocket (because giving Uncle Sam extra is nobody's retirement dream) • The simple estate planning steps most people skip—and why your family will thank you for not skipping them • How to give yourself permission to actually enjoy your money instead of hoarding it out of fear This Episode Is For You If: • You're decades from retirement but want to avoid the "I wish I'd known" moments • You're closer to retirement and worried you've missed something important • You want to hear top financial minds debate what actually matters (spoiler: they don't always agree) • You're tired of generic retirement advice and want to hear what real retirees actually regret • You believe retirement should be about living well, not just having enough FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/top-5-retirement-plan-regrets-1758 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Here's a question: If everyone's buying annuities right now, does that mean you should too? Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug tackle that exact question in this week's episode—but first, they're starting with the basics. Because before you can figure out complex financial products, you need to nail the fundamentals. And who better to teach them than Karen Holland, founder of Gifting Sense, who's made it her mission to help kids (and their parents) understand money in ways that actually stick. Karen breaks down how to teach the next generation about "need vs. want," why middle schoolers need to understand the real cost of "cool," and how financial literacy can be empowering instead of intimidating. Whether you've got kids or just want a refresher on the money basics you wish someone had taught you, this conversation is the reset button you didn't know you needed. Then things get timely: annuity sales are booming, and everyone's suddenly got an opinion. But are annuities the safe harbor they're marketed as, or just another way to lock up your money with fees you don't understand? Joe and OG cut through the sales pitch to help you figure out when annuities make sense—and when you're better off walking away. Plus: Doug delivers "life-changing" trivia (his words), there's an iHeart Music Festival giveaway tied to financial literacy, and you'll get your weekly dose of basement wisdom served with laughs. What You'll Walk Away With: • Karen Holland's framework for teaching kids financial literacy that actually changes behavior (not just lectures that go in one ear and out the other) • Why annuity sales are exploding right now—and the questions you MUST ask before signing anything • The difference between annuities that solve real problems and annuities that just create expensive ones • Financial habits that work at any age—whether you're teaching a 12-year-old or retraining yourself • How supporting financial education can score you iHeart Music Festival tickets (because doing good shouldn't be boring) This Episode Is For You If: • You want to teach kids about money but don't know where to start (or worry you'll mess it up) • Someone's pitched you an annuity and you're not sure if it's brilliant or a trap • You've heard annuities are "safe" but want to understand what you're actually giving up • You believe financial literacy is a gift worth giving—to your kids, your community, or yourself • You want money advice that doesn't talk down to you or assume you already know everything FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/raising-money-for-financial-literacy-1757 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Nobody plans for their finances to get tight. But here you are, staring at your bank account, wondering if you should panic now or wait until next Tuesday. Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug are here to talk you off the ledge—and give you an actual plan for when money gets squeezed. Whether you're facing a layoff, dealing with reduced hours, bracing through a government shutdown, or just trying to make your paycheck last until payday, this episode is your financial storm shelter. The good news? You don't need to have everything figured out perfectly to make it through. You just need to know what to do first, what can wait, and how to keep your head (and your budget) together when everything feels uncertain. From building an emergency fund that actually works for your life to eating well on a ramen budget (spoiler: it's possible), this crew breaks down the practical moves that keep you afloat. Plus: Doug delivers trivia, the gang tackles the Voices for Good Charity Challenge (because even in tough times, small acts of giving matter), and they dissect a TikTok money tip that's... well, let's just say not all financial advice should be followed. What You'll Walk Away With: • The first three moves to make when money gets tight—before the panic spiral starts • How much emergency fund you actually need (hint: it's probably less than you think to get started) • Budget-friendly tactics for groceries, utilities, and keeping yourself fed without living on instant noodles • What to do about insurance and loans when cash flow slows down (and which mistakes cost you later) • Why small acts of generosity matter even when you're struggling—and how they help you too • A reminder that financial storms are temporary, but the skills you build weathering them last forever This Episode Is For You If: • Money feels tighter than it used to and you're not sure what to do about it • You want to build a safety net but don't know where to start (or how much is "enough") • The economy feels shaky and you want to feel prepared instead of panicked • You're tired of generic advice like "just save more" and want actual tactics • You need a pep talk wrapped in practical wisdom—because optimism without a plan isn't helpful FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/the-importance-of-emergency-funds-1756 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Pop quiz: What's scarier than a haunted house? Opening your credit card statement after a "just this once" shopping spree turned into a six-month spiral. Joe Saul-Sehy and Neighbor Doug gather 'round the basement campfire with Doc G (Jordan Grumet from Earn and Invest), Jesse Cramer (Personal Finance for Long Term Investors), and special guest Emily Egashira—AKA Your Friend Em from TikTok and Instagram fame—to share the financial horror stories that still wake them up at night. We're talking ghostly car-leasing nightmares, investment decisions that refuse to stay buried, and the kind of money mistakes that haunt you long after Halloween is over. But here's the thing about financial horror stories: they're only scary if you don't learn from them. Every tale in this episode comes with the lesson that could've prevented it—the red flag that got ignored, the advice that should've been followed, the moment when "this seems like a bad idea" got drowned out by "but everyone else is doing it." From impulse purchases that turned into long-term regrets to the financial advice that sounded great... until it didn't, this crew proves that the scariest monsters aren't in the movies. They're in our bank accounts, our retirement plans, and that subscription we forgot to cancel three years ago. Plus: Doug delivers Halloween trivia with a full-moon twist, because even financial terror deserves a side of fun. What You'll Walk Away With: • Real financial horror stories from people who lived to tell the tale (and learn from it) • The common thread in most money disasters—and how to spot it in your own life • Why car leases, "great investment opportunities," and "everyone's doing it" should always make you pause • How to turn your own financial frights into lessons instead of letting them haunt you forever • The confidence to say "no" when something feels off, even if you can't explain why This Episode Is For You If: • You've ever made a money decision you immediately regretted (welcome to the club) • You want to learn from other people's expensive mistakes instead of repeating them • You've got a financial skeleton in your closet and need to know you're not the only one • You appreciate brutal honesty wrapped in humor—because laughing at financial pain is cheaper than therapy • You're ready to face your money fears instead of hiding from them until tax season FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/money-nightmares-wallet-portfolio-credit-1755 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
You know what's truly terrifying? Realizing you and someone you share money decisions with have completely different ideas about finances—and you're both convinced you're right. Joe Saul-Sehy and OG welcome Doug and Heather Bonaparte, a CFP and business partner duo who've mastered the art of not killing each other over finances. And when you work together AND live together? Let's just say they've had plenty of practice navigating the financial frights that haunt any relationship where money's involved. Whether you're married, dating, splitting rent with a roommate, or partnering on a business venture, the same money monsters show up: the "fair split" debates, the family expectation zombies that won't stay dead, and those vampiric spending habits that drain shared accounts when you're not looking. Doug and Heather share what actually works—the timing tricks, the tone shifts, and the teamwork strategies that keep financial conversations from turning into horror shows, no matter who you're talking to. This isn't about becoming perfect financial partners overnight. It's about exorcising the money demons before they possess your most important relationships—romantic, professional, or otherwise. Plus: Joe and OG stir the cauldron with Halloween movie talk and trivia, because even the scariest conversations are better with a little basement humor. What You'll Walk Away With: How to start money conversations without summoning the spirits of past arguments (works for spouses, roommates, business partners, you name it) Doug and Heather's hard-won strategies for navigating disagreements when money and relationships overlap Why "financial transparency" isn't about policing every purchase—it's about understanding each other's money ghosts The three things any financial partnership needs to align on before the little stuff stops haunting you Permission to be messy while you figure this out (even CFPs have money fights) This Episode Is For You If: You share financial decisions with ANYONE—a partner, roommate, business associate, or family member Money conversations feel like walking through a haunted house blindfolded Someone else's financial habits make you want to scream louder than a horror movie victim You're tired of being cast as the villain every time you want to discuss shared expenses You need proof that even professionals who literally do this for a living still have to work at it FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/money-communication-horror-stories-1754 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What's scarier than a haunted house? Looking at your retirement account after ignoring it for five years. Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Doug welcome back Chuck Jaffe (Money Life with Chuck Jaffe) for his legendary annual Halloween visit—and this year, he's bringing two treats to the basement. First up: Chuck's Halloween Money Game for kids. Picture this: trick-or-treaters can take one piece of candy and walk away... or they can play a game where they might win more candy, actual money, or lose it all. It's economics wrapped in a Snickers bar. Chuck breaks down how each choice teaches kids (and parents) about risk, reward, delayed gratification, and why sometimes the safe bet is actually the smart bet. If you've got kids—or just want a genius way to gamify money lessons—you'll want to steal this. Then things get spooky. Real Stackers share their most bone-chilling financial horror stories: the credit union error that nearly cost someone their house, the coworker's "advice" that turned into a disaster, and the procrastination that haunted someone for years. These aren't fictional frights—they're real mistakes that real people are still recovering from. And every story comes with the lesson that could've prevented it. Plus: Doug's trivia takes a Halloween turn (naturally), and Joe and OG debate whether government incentives are more trick or treat. What You'll Walk Away With: Chuck Jaffe's brilliant Halloween Money Game—how to teach kids about risk, reward, and smart decisions using candy The economic principles hiding in every trick-or-treat choice (and how to explain them without killing the fun) Real Stacker horror stories: the financial mistakes that haunt people for years The red flags that could save you from starring in your own money nightmare Why the scariest financial advice often comes from people who mean well This Episode Is For You If: You want a creative way to teach kids about money that doesn't involve a boring lecture You've ever made a financial decision you wish you could take back You want to learn from other people's mistakes instead of making them all yourself You've got a money skeleton in your closet and want to know you're not the only one FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/frightening-halloween-stories-with-chuck-jaffe-1753 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Here's a question nobody in the FIRE movement talks about: What if you reach financial independence... and don't want to quit? Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, Paula Pant (Afford Anything), and Doc G (Earn & Invest) tackle the idea of Reverse FIRE—people who've hit their number but choose to keep working anyway. And before you roll your eyes, hear them out. Because it turns out that having enough money doesn't automatically make you happy. And for a lot of people, walking away from work means walking away from purpose, identity, and the structure that kept them sane. The question isn't just "can I afford to retire?"—it's "what am I retiring to?" This conversation gets real about the hidden costs of quitting too soon, why some financially independent people feel guilty for wanting to work, and how to think about retirement not as a finish line but as a design problem. Whether you're sprinting toward early retirement or secretly wondering if you'd be bored out of your mind, this episode will make you rethink what freedom actually looks like. Plus: Doug's T-shirt trivia takes a weird turn (as always), and the crew proves that the best financial conversations happen when nobody's trying to sell you a course. What You'll Walk Away With: • Why "enough money" doesn't equal "enough purpose"—and what to do about it • How to think about work after financial independence (hint: it's not all or nothing) • The identity crisis nobody warns you about when you stop working—and how to avoid it • What financially independent people actually do with their time (spoiler: many keep earning) • Permission to want both: financial security and meaningful work Before You Hit Play, Think About This: If money wasn't an issue tomorrow, would you keep doing what you're doing? If the answer is "no"—why are you still doing it? And if the answer is "yes"—what does that tell you about retirement? Drop your take in the comments. The basement wants to know: Are you racing toward FIRE, or are you building something you never want to leave? Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Here's the secret nobody tells you: your money problems probably aren't math problems. Joe Saul-Sehy and OG sit down with Carl Richards—financial planner, New York Times columnist, and the guy behind those brilliant "Sketch Guy" drawings that make money actually make sense. Carl's spent his career helping people untangle their relationship with money, and his big insight? Most of us are overthinking it. Your financial plan shouldn't feel like a calculus final. It should feel like a map you can actually follow. Carl breaks down why emotions (not spreadsheets) drive most money mistakes, how to cut through the noise that keeps you paralyzed, and why the simplest plan is usually the one you'll actually stick to. If you've ever felt like you're "doing it wrong" because your strategy doesn't involve leveraged ETFs or cryptocurrency mining, this conversation will be a relief. Then Joe and OG dive into the options trading debate. Is it a legitimate tool for managing concentrated stock risk, or just financial cosplay for people who watch too much CNBC? They break down when options might make sense, when they're just expensive complexity, and how everyday investors should think about them (if at all). Plus: travel stories, Neighbor Doug's trivia (where he definitely brags about something), and proof that you can get smarter about money without wanting to take a nap. What You'll Walk Away With: Carl Richards' framework for simplifying your financial life—and why "The Behavior Gap" matters more than your rate of return Why the emotions behind your money decisions matter more than the math (and how to work with them, not against them) How to filter out financial noise and focus on the handful of things that actually move the needle The truth about options trading: when it's a smart risk management tool and when it's just expensive gambling Permission to keep your plan simple—even if it feels like everyone else is doing something fancier This Episode Is For You If: You feel like everyone else has figured out money except you Financial jargon makes you want to hide under a blanket You've got a solid income but still feel anxious about your money decisions You'd rather learn through real stories than get lectured by a guy in a suit You want to finally understand why you make the money choices you do (good and bad) FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-manage-your-money-goals-and-life-with-carl-richards-1751 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
You've got questions. We've got two CFPs and a former planner ready to hash it out. Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, Doug, and CFP Anna Allem tackle the money decisions you're actually losing sleep over—and here's the thing: they don't always agree on the answer. That's the point. Should you drain your emergency fund to pay off debt? Is whole life insurance for your kids a smart move or an expensive mistake? How much life insurance do you actually need (not what some calculator tells you)? And when life throws you a curveball—layoff, surprise expense, major purchase—what's the move? With Joe Saul-Sehy's 16 years in financial planning, OG's CFP perspective, and Anna's insights, you'll hear how experienced voices think through these decisions differently—and why your answer might be different than all of theirs. Because the real skill isn't finding THE right answer; it's learning how to make YOUR right call. This episode is for anyone who's ever stared at their bank account thinking, "I know I should do something... but what?" Plus: Doug delivers trivia about the first auto insurance policy (because of course), the gang weighs in on athlete endorsements and reverse mortgages, and there's a TikTok money tip that sparks some debate. What You'll Walk Away With: • How experienced financial minds approach the emergency fund dilemma differently—and what that means for your situation • The whole life insurance debate: when it makes sense for kids and when you're better off elsewhere • A framework for figuring out how much life insurance you actually need—and why the "rules of thumb" don't always work • What to do when your financial plan meets real life (layoffs, surprise bills, major purchases) • The confidence to make a decision even when experts would handle it differently Before You Hit Play, Ask Yourself: What's the one money question you keep Googling but still don't feel confident about? If you're second-guessing your emergency fund, your insurance, or a big financial move, this episode is your permission to stop spinning and start deciding. Got a question we didn't cover? Call in to the show! StackingBenjamins.com/Voicemail FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/answering-your-burning-financial-questions-1750 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Think some people just have all the luck? Think again. Joe, OG, Paula Pant (Afford Anything), and Chris Luger (Heavy Metal Money) break down what separates people who catch breaks from those who don't...and spoiler alert: it's not about being in the right place at the right time. It's about what you DO when opportunity shows up. And before that: how you create the conditions for opportunity to find you in the first place. This episode digs into three moves that make luck happen: staying curious (even when you think you know the answer), being generous (yes, it pays off financially), and staying flexible when life throws you a curveball. Whether you're stuck on a money decision, feel like you're missing opportunities, or just want to stop watching other people win, this conversation will shift how you see "luck." Plus: Doug's trivia gets weird (what even IS a buttload?), the gang debates pumpkin spice season, and you'll hear stories that prove the best financial wins rarely go according to plan. What You'll Walk Away With: The one thing "lucky" people do that creates more opportunities—and how to start doing it today Why helping others might be your best financial strategy (and the science behind it) How to spot opportunities you're currently walking past What to do when your financial plan falls apart (hint: the flexible win) Permission to try something new, even if you're not sure it'll work Before You Hit Play, Think About This: What's one time something good happened to you? ...not because of random chance, but because you were curious, helped someone, or said yes to something outside your comfort zone? That's the kind of "luck" we're talking about. Got a story? We want to hear it. Drop it in the comments or share it in your podcast app. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-find-more-luck-with-your-money-1749 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
You don’t have to command a cruise ship (or a boardroom) to lead with purpose. On this episode of The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug welcome Richard Fain, longtime chairman and former CEO of Royal Caribbean Group, for a conversation that’s not about corporate leadership… but about life leadership. Richard shares timeless lessons he learned from decades steering one of the world’s most innovative companies—lessons that apply just as powerfully to parenting, coaching your kid’s soccer team, running a PTA fundraiser, or simply trying to create more joy at home. You’ll hear how to dream bigger about your own life, build a culture of kindness and excellence in small groups, and turn the ordinary moments around you into opportunities to “deliver the WOW.” Of course, this wouldn’t be the basement without a few money detours. The crew also breaks down new 401(k) rules and annuity updates, debates whether tax flexibility beats fancy planning, and celebrates Doug’s birthday with trivia, laughter, and a few movie reviews along the way. By the end, you’ll walk away inspired to bring a little more vision, creativity, and generosity into every corner of your world. No cruise ship required. What You’ll Learn How to lead from wherever you are: Richard’s lessons on building strong teams, communities, and families. No corner office needed. Turning the ordinary into extraordinary: Simple ways to “deliver the WOW” at home, work, or anywhere people count on you. Dreaming bigger about your life: Why bold vision isn’t just for CEOs; it’s for anyone looking to create meaning and momentum. Financial updates you can use: New 401(k) rules, annuity insights, and practical tips to strengthen your plan. The lighter side of leadership: Trivia, birthday celebrations, and a few fun detours (because we can’t resist). Questions for the Basement What’s one way you could “deliver the WOW” in your own life this week? Who’s a leader in your everyday world (at home, work, or your community) who’s made an impact on you? How can dreaming a little bigger change the way you approach your next financial or personal goal? FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/better-money-habits-with-richard-fain-1748 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
When gold shines, so do the hot takes, and today, the Stacking Benjamins crew dives into what this record-breaking surge really means for your money. Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug kick off the week with their signature Monday salute to our troops before digging into the glittering headlines: gold prices are hitting new highs… but does that make it a smart investment or just financial fool’s gold? From breaking down why gold spikes when markets wobble to questioning whether it’s truly the “safe haven” it’s cracked up to be, the guys unpack the myths, mindset, and math behind precious metals. You’ll also hear fresh strategies for weathering volatile markets, balancing your asset allocation, and staying cool when everyone else is panicking. And of course, Doug drops in with a TikTok Minute, a trivia challenge, and one listener’s wild math-powered success story that somehow involves an Olive Garden. (Breadsticks optional.) So grab your coffee, your calculator, and maybe your lucky coin—because this episode proves that in the unpredictable world of investing, sometimes the smartest move is knowing why you’re holding what you’re holding. What You'll Learn Why gold prices are climbing and what that might signal about the global economy. The myth of “safe haven” assets: When gold works, when it doesn’t, and why diversification still wins. Smart portfolio moves for volatile times—without letting emotions tank your returns. Real-life stories and lessons from Stackers proving that good math (and a little luck) can go a long way. The lighter side of finance: Breadsticks, TikTok, and trivia—because learning about money doesn’t have to feel like homework. Questions You'll Want to Answer: Do you view gold as an investment, insurance policy, or just a shiny distraction? What’s your go-to strategy when markets start getting rocky? Have you ever made a “safe” financial move that didn’t turn out as safe as you thought? FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/gold-and-other-investments-for-bear-markets-1747 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Who says you have to wait until 65 to clock out and start living your best life? On this episode of The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy, Paula Pant (Afford Anything), OG, and special guest Sean Mullaney—author, CPA, and early retirement strategist—explore how to design a life that lets you walk away from the office sooner and happier. From tax-smart withdrawal strategies to dialing in your lifestyle design, this conversation pulls back the curtain on what it really takes to achieve early financial independence. You’ll hear practical steps for aligning your money with your values, structuring your investments for flexibility, and ensuring your plan can survive market dips and surprise expenses. Along the way, the team debates Roth vs. Traditional retirement accounts, shares personal insights from FinCon, and delivers a few laughs (and groans) in Doug’s trivia corner. Whether you’re in your 30s planning a slow exit or in your 50s wondering if it’s too late to pivot, this episode is your guide to crafting a retirement plan that works as hard as you do—without losing sight of the joy along the way. What You'll Learn How to design your early retirement plan: The building blocks of lifestyle design and financial freedom. Tax-efficient investing: When to prioritize Roth vs. Traditional accounts—and why both can play a role. Withdrawal strategies that work: How to avoid tax traps and keep your plan sustainable. The mindset shift: Why retiring early isn’t about leaving work—it’s about moving toward purpose. How to “future-proof” your finances: Guarding against inflation, longevity risk, and unexpected curveballs. Questions to Ponder During Today's Show: What would your perfect day look like if you didn’t have to work tomorrow? Would you be willing to earn less now if it meant retiring five years earlier? What does “enough” look like for you—and how do you know when you’ve reached it? FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/building-your-early-retirement-plan-1746 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What if building wealth wasn’t just about stacking dollars — but also stacking good deeds? In this episode of The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy and OG sit down with Mel Dorman, a powerhouse real estate investor who turned humble beginnings (yes, dumpster diving beginnings) into a thriving portfolio of 34 rental units in just five years. And she didn’t just build wealth — she built community along the way. From negotiating creative seller-financed deals to forging partnerships that benefit both investors and neighborhoods, Mel shares how real estate can be a tool for connection as much as for cash flow. You’ll learn how she leverages relationships, uses alternative financing to scale quickly, and even flips properties without traditional bank loans — all while staying grounded in her mission to help others. But that’s not all: Joe and OG also break down the latest Federal Reserve moves and what they mean for your wallet. And of course, Neighbor Doug drops by with his signature trivia to remind us that building wealth is serious business… but it’s okay to have some fun while you’re at it. What You'll Learn Creative ways to build wealth: How seller financing can unlock deals you never thought possible. The power of purpose: Why combining community impact with real estate investing is a winning formula. Real-world strategies: Mel’s journey from zero to 34 units — and the lessons she learned along the way. How Fed rate changes affect you: What rising (or falling) rates mean for investors and homeowners. Financing myths busted: Why traditional bank loans aren’t the only way to grow a portfolio. Points to Ponder: Could creative financing open doors for your investing goals? How might building stronger community ties improve your financial outcomes? Are you prepared for how interest rate changes could impact your next big money move? This episode isn’t just a guide to real estate success — it’s a reminder that money works best when it works for everyone. Grab a notebook, pour yourself something caffeinated, and join us for a conversation that just might change how you think about wealth building. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/real-estate-investing-in-your-community-1745 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What if the key to a richer life isn’t about chasing the next hot stock or grinding harder — but learning to master the timeless truths of money? In this episode of The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug pay tribute to legendary financial writer Jonathan Clements by revisiting five of his most impactful lessons. These aren’t complicated formulas or secret hacks — they’re the kind of deceptively simple ideas that change the way you think about money, work, and what truly matters. We’ll explore why prioritizing financial stability before passion can actually lead you to a more fulfilling career, how “winning by not losing” may be the most underrated investing strategy of all time, and why patience isn’t just a virtue — it’s a tax strategy. Along the way, we’ll talk about how to strike the right balance between frugality and joy and why living your life may be the best investment you ever make. Plus, we help Stacker Kat tackle a tricky severance situation and share tips on how to put that cash to work without capsizing your financial plan. If you’ve ever wondered how to align your money with a life you actually love, this conversation is the perfect mix of inspiration and actionable wisdom. Grab your coffee mug and settle into Mom’s basement — this is an episode you’ll come back to whenever you need a financial reset. What You'll Learn The real reason you shouldn’t chase passion too soon — and what to do instead How to avoid the most common (and costly) financial mistakes Why patience pays: how time turns taxes into opportunity How to balance frugality with actually living a fulfilling life Smart ways to use severance, high-yield savings, and investing strategies together Points To Ponder: Which of Jonathan Clements’ five money lessons hits closest to home for you? Have you ever faced a tough severance decision like Stacker Kat’s? What did you do? Do you believe financial stability should always come before passion — or is there a time to flip that script? FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/five-pearls-of-wisdom-from-jonathan-clements-1744 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
If your financial plan feels more like a vague wishlist than a real roadmap, this episode is about to change that. Live from the basement of YouTube HQ, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, Paula Pant (Afford Anything), and Jesse Cramer (Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors) roll up their sleeves and dig into the three most common — and costly — mistakes people make with their money plans. Whether you’re just starting out or you’ve been stacking for years, this conversation will help you turn “someday” into a solid plan you can actually follow. The gang isn’t just talking theory — they’re breaking down the real reasons plans fail and how to fix them. From adding actionable next steps (instead of endless spreadsheets and good intentions) to weaving in crucial tax and estate planning moves, you’ll discover how to transform your financial plan into a tool that works for you. And because this is Stacking Benjamins, you can expect plenty of banter, relatable stories, and a trivia detour or two along the way. By the time we wrap, you’ll know how to evaluate whether your plan is truly moving you toward your goals, how to communicate more effectively with your financial pros, and how to stop second-guessing every decision. It’s financial planning with fewer headaches, more confidence, and maybe even a little fun. What You’ll Learn Why most financial plans fail — and how to make yours bulletproof The three crucial elements every solid plan needs (and most are missing) How to incorporate tax strategies, estate planning, and real action steps Smart ways to communicate with your advisor or team about what matters most Questions to Consider How to course-correct if your plan’s gone off the rails Does your financial plan include clear, actionable steps — or just big goals? Have you factored in tax and estate planning, or are you leaving those to chance? Are you confident your plan will work in real life, not just on paper? FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/three-things-missing-from-most-financial-plans-1743 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Think your retirement plan is bulletproof? Think again. In this eye-opening episode of The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug are joined by certified financial planner Jeremy Keil, CFP® to walk you through the steps to building a retirement plan that won’t crack under pressure. From mapping out your spending before you ever leave the workforce to crafting a tax strategy that keeps more money in your pocket, this conversation is your blueprint for making your golden years actually golden. But just when you think you’ve got retirement handled, we throw a curveball: private equity. With giants like Goldman Sachs and T. Rowe Price trying to slip these complex investments into your 401(k), it’s time to ask whether “more opportunity” is really a good thing — or a trap for the unprepared. Joe and OG break down the risks, the realities, and what you need to know before you sign on the dotted line. As always, we serve it all with a side of basement banter — from Doug’s trivia about the first issue of Playboy to a TikTok football moment you didn’t know you needed — plus real-life stories that prove retirement planning is as much about mindset as it is about math. What You'll Learn In Today's Show: The five key steps to building a retirement plan that works for you, not just a generic spreadsheet. Why starting with your spending habits (not investments) can make or break your retirement success. How to prepare for the emotional side of retirement — including those pesky “what now?” questions. The surprising risks of private equity creeping into your 401(k) — and how to decide if it’s worth it. Smart tax strategies to make your retirement money last longer. How long-term care, market volatility, and unexpected expenses should factor into your plan. Questions to Ponder During the Episode (and discuss with other Stackers!) What’s one spending habit you need to understand now to avoid retirement surprises later? How would you react if your employer added private equity options to your 401(k)? Are you planning your retirement based on your lifestyle — or someone else’s idea of “enough”? FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/five-steps-to-a-better-retirement-plan-with-jeremy-keil-1743 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Think the American Dream is slipping out of reach? Think again. In this episode of The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug tackle one of the biggest financial questions of our time: how much does it really cost to live the life you want — and is it still possible? Spoiler alert: it is, but it takes more than a paycheck and a Pinterest board. We break down fresh research from Investopedia, the rising price tag of everything from healthcare to college, and how smart planning (and a little basement wisdom) can keep your dreams from turning into financial nightmares. But this isn’t just another numbers game. Along the way, the gang shares stories from the road — including Joe’s brush with baseball’s most entertaining team — and digs into the strategies that can help you fight inflation, outsmart rising costs, and make compounding interest your best friend. Plus, we tackle big listener questions, from how to choose the right financial advisor to the best ways to set young adults up for success in a tougher economic landscape. And because life isn’t all spreadsheets and savings goals, we round things out with some binge-worthy TV and movie picks for when you’re off the clock. It’s part money masterclass, part basement hangout — and all about helping you take real steps toward your version of the American Dream. What You’ll Learn in This Episode Why the “American Dream” isn’t dead — but why it may look different today. The real costs behind homeownership, healthcare, education, and retirement (and how to plan for them). Strategies for budgeting, saving early, and building systems that make your money work harder. How to vet a financial advisor and what red flags to watch out for. Smart ways to guide young adults toward financial independence. The power of compounding interest and how to use it to your advantage. Questions to Consider (and Discuss with Fellow Stackers) What does the “American Dream” mean to you — and has that definition changed over time? Which costs (housing, healthcare, college, etc.) feel most overwhelming right now, and how are you tackling them? What’s one piece of financial advice you’d give to someone just starting their journey? FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/the-rising-cost-of-the-american-dream-1741 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What if tweaking just a few “knobs” in your 401(k) could mean the difference between retiring with confidence or wondering if you’ll ever stop working? In this spirited episode of The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug are joined by three of our favorite money minds — Paula Pant from AffordAnything, Jesse Cramer from Personal Finance For Long Term Investors, and Lacey Langford from The MILMO Show — to break down everything you thought you knew (and a few things you probably didn’t) about retirement planning. From the basics of employer matches and contribution strategies to the great Roth vs. Traditional debate, we’re exploring the smart moves that can supercharge your 401(k) — and the missteps that can quietly drain your future nest egg. Along the way, you’ll pick up clever tips, a few head-scratching stories, and some beer-fueled trivia that will leave you laughing harder than your HR rep when you ask if “401(k)” is the Wi-Fi password. And because this is Stacking Benjamins, the conversation goes far beyond just investment allocations and tax advantages. We dig into why behavioral traps can derail your savings plan, how military families can maximize their benefits, and why understanding fees is one of the most underrated wealth-building moves you can make. So grab a pretzel, pull up a chair, and let’s talk about how to make your money work harder — so future you can kick back with a stein and say, “I nailed this retirement thing.” How to “tune” your 401(k) like a pro — from employer matches to smart contribution strategies. The real differences between Roth and Traditional accounts (and how to decide which is right for you). Why understanding your 401(k) fees could add thousands to your future balance. How military families can make the most of unique retirement benefits. The biggest mistakes people make with their 401(k)s — and how to avoid them. Plus: A special Oktoberfest-themed trivia showdown and plenty of basement banter. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/tweaking-your-retirement-account-1740 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What if the secret to enjoying your job isn’t grinding harder but stepping back and rethinking how work fits into life? In this episode of The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug welcome special guest Shemin Nurmohamed to unpack the Paris Paradox: balancing work and leisure without sacrificing ambition. From cultural perspectives on downtime to the productivity perks of unplugging, Shemin shows why working less might just help you accomplish more. But that’s not all. What happens when your financial advisor suddenly jumps ship to another firm? The team digs into what it means for your money, your relationship with your advisor, and how to evaluate whether it’s time to follow—or finally shop around. Add in Doug’s trivia, a few stumbles down random rabbit holes, and our community’s contributions, and you’ve got a lively mix of practical advice and classic basement energy. Whether you’re plotting your next vacation or just trying to figure out how to stop your inbox from running your life, this episode offers real-world strategies (and plenty of chuckles) to help you reset, recharge, and refocus. Why time off is not laziness but fuel for better work and sharper decision-making. How cultural differences around leisure can reshape your own approach. What to do when your advisor changes firms (and how to spot a keeper). Practical ways to build stronger connections and communities. The “Two Beers and a Puppy” test: a surprisingly effective tool for evaluating relationships. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-work-less-live-more-and-love-your-job-1739 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ever make a money move in the heat of the moment and wish you could take it back? That’s exactly why a rock-solid Investment Policy Statement (IPS) might be your most underrated financial tool. In this episode, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug peel back the layers on IPSs—why they matter, how they save you from your own impulses, and the role they play in making sure your investment strategy actually sticks. Think of it as your financial GPS, keeping you on course when market turbulence makes you want to grab the wheel. But it’s not just about avoiding panic-selling. The basement crew digs into the nuts and bolts of what a good IPS should include, from setting specific goals to handling liquidity needs and keeping your risk tolerance aligned with your lifestyle. You’ll also hear how rebalancing, governance, and regular reviews can transform your investments from “hope and pray” into a system you can rely on. Along the way, expect the usual SB tangents: a Joan Jett–themed trivia challenge, a TikTok tale about Apple Pay gone wrong, and more than a few moments where Doug forgets he’s not supposed to run the show. By the end, you’ll not only understand how to create (or update) your IPS, but you’ll also see how it connects directly to building confidence in your financial plan. Whether you’re brand new to investing or a seasoned hand looking to sharpen your strategy, this episode delivers the blueprint. Why an Investment Policy Statement is your best defense against emotional investing How to set clear goals, liquidity rules, and risk guidelines for your portfolio The pitfalls most people overlook when drafting an IPS (and how to avoid them) Smart strategies for rebalancing and reviewing your plan without overcomplicating things A cautionary tale from TikTok that reminds us all to keep our guard up with payment apps Listener Q&A on stock sales and the quirks that come with them Questions You'll Begin to Answer During the Episode: Do you have a written IPS, and if so, does it reflect your actual goals—or just what you thought they were five years ago? What emotional triggers most often tempt you to stray from your financial plan? How often do you review your investments, and is it based on strategy—or headlines? FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/simple-steps-for-better-money-management-1738 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What happens when you throw a bunch of money nerds into one room, add microphones, and sprinkle in a little economic chaos? You get this live recording from FinCon in Portland, where Joe Saul-Sehy, Paula Pant, Jesse Cramer, and Matthew Tarr tackle today’s most pressing financial questions head-on—with plenty of laughs along the way. From housing headaches to healthcare hurdles, nothing is off the table as the crew breaks down the issues shaping your money right now. Housing prices got you wondering if you should rent, buy, or just live in your car with an Amazon Prime subscription? We dig into the real trade-offs in today’s market. Worried about a looming recession or high-interest rates eating away at your financial confidence? You’ll walk away with strategies that keep you focused and resilient when headlines try to spook you. And for those plotting an early retirement, the group pulls apart the rising cost of healthcare and why conservative investment strategies may be your best friend. At its core, this episode is about tuning out the noise and zeroing in on what matters: a solid plan, smart decisions, and a community of people who know that money is just the tool—not the destination. Whether you’re trying to hit FI, weather market storms, or simply avoid panic-selling your investments, this conversation from the heart of FinCon will leave you with perspective, strategy, and maybe even a grin. Why renting vs. buying isn’t a one-size-fits-all answer (and what today’s market means for you) How to prepare for recession chatter without losing sleep The ripple effect of high-interest rates on your wallet and investments Smart approaches to healthcare planning in early retirement Practical strategies for building a strong investment plan that outlasts market swings Reflections on community, optimism, and financial resilience from the FinCon floor Points to Chew On: Would you rather own a house in this market—or rent and keep flexibility? How do you personally prepare for recession fears without derailing your long-term plan? If healthcare costs keep climbing, how will that affect your retirement timing or strategy? FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/live-from-fincon-2025-173 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What happens when you stop playing it safe and start playing it smart? In this episode, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug sit down with David Gardner, co-founder of The Motley Fool, to explore how breaking traditional investing “rules” can sometimes lead to the biggest wins. From his early career to building a community of investors who think differently, David shares the lessons that shaped his approach and why focusing on long-term investing (with a dash of joy) is the key to building wealth. This isn’t just theory—David opens up about the real-world evolution of financial advice, the importance of conscious capitalism, and why advisors need to shift from just picking stocks to becoming true guides in an era where investment products are commodities. Along the way, the basement crew mixes in a few unexpected detours (yes, including some movie talk), reminding us that money doesn’t have to be boring to be meaningful. If you’ve ever felt like the “safe” path with your money was leading you in circles, this episode offers a fresh perspective from one of the most influential voices in modern investing. Get ready to rethink the rules, laugh along the way, and come away with strategies to make your portfolio—and your life—more rewarding. Why breaking conventional investing “rules” can sometimes be your best move The evolution of The Motley Fool and its impact on everyday investors How long-term thinking beats short-term noise in building wealth The role of conscious capitalism and why businesses matter beyond profits Why financial advisors need to pivot their focus to guidance, not just products How criticism shaped David Gardner’s career and what he learned from it Points to Ponder During the Episode When’s the last time you broke a “money rule,” and did it pay off—or backfire? Do you believe financial advisors should focus more on guidance than investment selection? What’s one company or stock you’ve stuck with long-term—and why? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What really derails retirement dreams? Spoiler alert: it’s not always the stock market or your 401(k). Sometimes it’s sneaky habits—like leaning too hard on your house as a retirement plan or ignoring how long you might actually live—that quietly gnaw away at your financial future. In this episode, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug dig into the most common middle-class retirement killers and how you can sidestep them. But this isn’t your average checklist of “don’t do that.” The team dissects questionable advice floating around internet forums, debates stock splits and diversification, and even finds time to unravel why owning a cat might make you a magnet for gangster-level problems. Add in Doug’s trivia about a famous singer’s real name, and you’ve got an episode that’s equal parts practical and delightfully unpredictable. Whether you’re worried about stretching your retirement savings or just looking for sharper ways to think about financial advice, this episode offers both reassurance and reality checks. So grab your favorite mug (or maybe your cat), settle into your seat, and get ready to learn how to protect your retirement from the biggest threats—while laughing at the absurdity along the way. What You’ll Learn in This Episode: The habits that quietly sabotage retirement plans (and what to do instead) Why your house may not be the slam-dunk retirement strategy you think it is The risks of living longer than you expect—and how to plan for it How to sniff out sketchy financial “tips” before they lead you astray The surprising traps behind stock splits, diversification myths, and overconfidence Why even well-meaning advice can backfire if you don’t look at the big picture Questions to Ponder (or Debate in the Basement Facebook Group): Which retirement habit do you think trips people up the most—and why? If you had to choose, would you rather rely on your house equity or a diversified portfolio to fund retirement? What’s the worst financial “tip” you’ve ever heard online (or maybe even followed)? FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/habits-that-destroy-middle-class-retirement-dreams-1736 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
If having more money guaranteed happiness, we’d all just set our financial targets, cash the checks, and live joyfully ever after. But as Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, Paula Pant (Afford Anything), and Joel Larsgaard (How to Money) unpack in this lively roundtable, life’s richest rewards often have little to do with your net worth. They explore why some wealthy people still feel miserable, how Benjamin Franklin’s approach to living can still teach us a thing or two, and why optimism may be your secret investing edge. From the science that says peak life satisfaction might just happen around age 70, to the underrated role of good friends in a rich life (financially and emotionally), this episode blends timeless wisdom with modern money smarts. Whether you’re chasing financial independence, already there, or just trying to make sure your journey is as fulfilling as your destination, you’ll find ideas you can put into practice right now. And because this is the basement, expect the conversation to meander into relatable stories, some eyebrow-raising trivia, and a few debates on what balance really looks like when you factor in both spreadsheets and smiles. What You’ll Learn in This Episode: Why money alone won’t guarantee happiness (and what really does) How Benjamin Franklin’s life principles still apply in today’s financial world The connection between optimism and long-term investing success The surprising age when happiness may peak (and what to do before you get there) How to balance financial independence with enjoying the present Why strong social circles are a must-have part of your wealth plan Questions to Ponder (and maybe share your answers with the Basement Facebook Group!): Do you think your happiness will peak at a certain age—or is it more about circumstances? How do you balance saving for the future with enjoying your money today? What’s one small, intentional change you’ve made that had a big impact on your happiness? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What can you learn about leadership from someone who’s served four U.S. Presidents, navigated some of the most intense moments in American politics, and still believes the future depends on building more leaders, not fewer? In this Greatest Hits Week replay, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug welcome David Gergen—former White House advisor, Harvard professor, and author—to the basement for a masterclass on leadership that applies as much to your career and investments as it does to running a country. Gergen pulls back the curtain on life inside the White House, from the early lessons he learned in the Navy to the behind-the-scenes moments that revealed the human side of Presidents. Along the way, he shares what separates great leaders from the rest, how to evaluate leadership in others (and yourself), and why service and responsibility are the cornerstones of lasting influence. Whether you’re leading a team at work, managing your family’s financial future, or just trying to be the kind of person others trust, you’ll find plenty here to sharpen your approach. And because no visit to the basement is complete without some SB-style surprises, you’ll also hear stories of presidential humor gone sideways, a White House prank or two, and reflections on how good leadership isn’t about perfection—it’s about purpose. Plus, the guys tackle a listener question on investing without specific goals, and Doug tests the panel’s trivia chops with a leadership twist. What You’ll Learn in This Episode: How David Gergen defines real leadership (and how it’s changed over time) The telltale signs you’re working with—or for—a great leader Lessons from the Navy, the West Wing, and history’s most memorable leaders Why building leaders is just as important as being one Practical ways to evaluate leadership in politics, business, and investing How a clear sense of service can make you a better investor and decision-maker Questions for you while you listen (share with our Facebook group!): Who’s the best leader you’ve ever worked for, and what made them stand out? How do you evaluate whether someone is worth following—whether in politics, business, or life? What’s one leadership skill you wish more people would develop? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Not all financial advisors are created equal—and some will steer you straight into the rocks while smiling the whole way. In this episode of The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug share the top five warning signs your advisor may not have your best interests at heart. From shady investment recommendations to fee structures that deserve a magnifying glass, we unpack the behaviors and practices that can quietly drain your portfolio. This isn’t just about avoiding bad actors—it’s about knowing what great advice looks like so you can spot the difference. You’ll hear why “fun money” accounts can be a trap, how to sniff out overly speculative pitches, and why transparency isn’t optional when it comes to your financial future. Along the way, we sprinkle in a few stories, historical nuggets, and plenty of those classic “Doug moments” that make a trip to the basement worth your time. If you’ve ever wondered whether your financial guide is truly on your side—or if you just want to sharpen your radar—this episode will give you the practical tools to tell the difference between a trusted partner and a wolf in a well-tailored suit. What You’ll Learn in This Episode The five biggest advisor red flags that should send you running How to evaluate an advisor’s investment recommendations for risk and suitability Why fee transparency can make or break a relationship The subtle clues in an advisor’s office environment and interactions The difference between fun money accounts and dangerous speculation How to ensure your advisor’s plan matches your long-term goals Questions to Think About: When’s the last time you reviewed exactly how your advisor gets paid? Are you clear on the why behind each investment they’ve recommended? Would you feel confident explaining your advisor’s strategy to a friend—or does it sound like a foreign language? This episode originally aired on August 2, 2023. Please disregard any mention of current events. You can find the original show notes here. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-spot-a-subpar-advisor-greatest-hits-week-1732 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ever celebrate paying off a credit card…only to watch your credit score drop? Or ditch your budget for “simplicity” and find yourself ordering takeout three nights in a row? On this week’s episode of The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug welcome Paula Pant (Afford Anything) and Jesse Cramer (Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors) to explore why even the “right” financial moves can sometimes lead you straight into a banana peel. From the hidden traps of credit scores and debt freedom to the way a shiny new credit card reward program can cost you more than you bargained for, this roundtable digs into the ripple effects that don’t make the brochure. We’ll tackle when “optimizing” your plan goes too far, how well-meaning programs can backfire, and why the metric you’re tracking might not be the one that actually matters. Expect sharp insights, lively debate, and tips you can put into action—without getting tangled in the very strategies meant to help you. Because money confidence isn’t just about making the right moves…it’s about knowing what those moves might do next. We'll Cover: Why your credit score might drop after paying off debt—and why that’s not always bad news How “budget hacks” can turn into budget headaches The sneaky ways credit card rewards and government programs can backfire Why tracking the wrong measure can lead to the wrong results Practical steps to sidestep the unintended fallout from good decisions Questions to Ponder During the Episode What’s the most surprising “side effect” you’ve experienced after making a smart money move? Have you ever optimized your budget or investment plan…only to regret it? Which metric do you track most closely in your financial life—and is it actually the right one? FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/unintended-credit-score-consequences-1732 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What happens when you hand the mic to Stackers? You get a mailbag episode loaded with real-life money challenges, surprising lessons, and a few “wait, what?” moments. Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, special guest Anna Allem (a CFP® with her own winding journey into the profession), and Neighbor Doug dig into your most pressing financial questions—no fluff, no jargon, and definitely no shortage of basement-style tangents. This week’s listener lineup serves up a buffet of topics: how to turn an HSA into a stealth retirement account, whether a Roth conversion is the right move (and when), the tricky little details that make or break a trust, and what’s happening in the ever-shifting world of auto insurance. Along the way, we get into the mental game of money—why positive thinking might be more than motivational fluff—and how planning isn’t just about the plan on paper. From Anna’s seasoned perspective to OG’s no-nonsense approach and Joe’s knack for cutting through the noise, you’ll walk away with strategies you can actually use. Plus, we can’t resist a detour into AI at the Wendy’s drive-thru (yes, it’s a thing), proving once again that money talk is always better when you leave room for curiosity. What You'll Learn This Episode: How to decide if a Roth conversion makes sense for your tax picture Ways to supercharge an HSA for long-term wealth (and not just medical expenses) Trust basics you might be overlooking—and why that could cost you. The latest trends in auto insurance and how they might affect your rates Why mindset matters just as much as math in building financial confidence Questions to Ponder (or Argue Over in the Basement) If you were starting an HSA today, how would you use it—medical safety net or stealth retirement account? Have you considered a Roth conversion? What’s the one factor holding you back? When it comes to trusts, do you prefer to keep heirs in the loop or keep plans private until needed? How do you decide when to update your insurance coverage versus just shopping for a better rate? FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/questions-from-the-stacker-community-1730 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Labor Day might be about rest, but in the basement, we’re getting to work on busting some of the most persistent myths in personal finance. Joe Saul-Sehy and OG welcome insurance pro Tony Steuer to unpack the shiny marketing around infinite banking and velocity banking. Spoiler: sometimes “be your own bank” really means “make your insurer rich.” From permanent life insurance pitfalls to the real math behind these strategies, Tony helps separate clever sales pitches from solid financial planning. Then we shift gears to a conversation every parent, grandparent, and future gift-giver will love. Renowned financial journalist Chuck Jaffe joins the crew, fresh from becoming a grandfather, to share how he’s setting his new grandchild up for a strong financial future. Think stock portfolios for toddlers, early Roth IRA strategies, and simple systems that keep family generosity from getting lost in the shuffle. His practical, battle-tested tips will have you thinking differently about the best ways to give kids a head start. Whether you’re looking to avoid costly detours or create generational wealth, this episode is equal parts cautionary tale and inspiration. You’ll walk away ready to dodge financial traps, build smarter for the next generation, and maybe even rethink your own long-term giving plans. Why infinite and velocity banking aren’t the slam-dunk solutions they’re often sold as How to spot the red flags in permanent life insurance pitches Smart, tax-efficient ways to save for children and grandchildren Creative strategies for gifting assets that grow with the child The importance of balancing generosity with your own long-term goals Ideas to Ponder During Today's Episode Have you ever been pitched an “innovative” financial strategy that didn’t feel quite right? What tipped you off? What’s the most meaningful financial gift you’ve ever given—or received—as a child? If you could give one piece of financial wisdom to the next generation, what would it be? FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/permament-life-insurance-and-growing-your-money-1729 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Why wait until your knees creak louder than your rocking chair to start enjoying life? In this episode, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, Paula Pant (AffordAnything) and Neighbor Doug welcome Jillian Johnsrud—author of Retire Often—to share why sprinkling your life with mini-retirements might be the smartest, healthiest, and most joyful move you make before your “official” retirement date. Think of it as giving your future self a head start… without the Medicare paperwork. From negotiating time off without burning bridges, to building a financial plan that lets you step away without panic, Jillian offers a roadmap to hit pause on your career without pressing stop. We explore the balance between health, capability, and the freedom to explore, and how to sell the idea of a mini-retirement to your boss so they don’t see it as a resignation letter in disguise. And because it’s the basement, we also mix in some Labor Day trivia, a few personal experiments with unconventional choices, and just enough playful banter to keep you leaning in. If you’ve ever felt the grind wearing you down but can’t picture walking away forever, this episode will help you reimagine your work-life timeline. Mini-retirements aren’t just for the wealthy or the whimsical—they’re for anyone ready to start living a retirement-worthy life now. How to pitch a mini-retirement to your boss without triggering an awkward HR meeting The financial prep work that makes time off less stressful and more satisfying Ways to test-drive retirement before the “official” date How to handle the skeptics (at work and at home) who think you’re making a mistake Why health and capability should be part of your retirement timing equation Questions to Ponder While You Listen If you could take 3–6 months off tomorrow, how would you spend it? Would a series of shorter retirements feel more fulfilling than one long one at the end? What’s the biggest barrier—financial or otherwise—keeping you from taking a break? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
If you’ve been running on fumes, juggling work deadlines, family obligations, and maybe even a neglected 401(k) or two, this episode is your permission slip to stop, breathe, and recalibrate. Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug welcome Dr. Danielle McGeough—professor, transformational strategist, and champion of intentional living—into the basement for a conversation that’s part burnout intervention, part life strategy workshop. Dr. McGeough shares how to spot the early signs of burnout before you hit the wall, and how to rebuild your days with personal rituals, playfulness, and values-driven planning. You’ll hear real-world strategies for setting boundaries, aligning work with what truly matters to you, and bringing joy back into your calendar. And because we’re in the basement, we also manage to sneak in some Labor Day trivia, a Broadway tangent, and a solid helping of SB-style banter. And for the Stackers worried about the financial side of burnout, we pivot in the second half to a practical discussion on managing multiple 401(k) plans—because a cluttered retirement portfolio can be just as stressful as a cluttered schedule. From account consolidation tips to understanding your investment options, this is a one-two punch of mental clarity and financial order. How to recognize the red flags of burnout (and stop it in its tracks) Why personal rituals and play can fuel productivity and joy How to align your schedule with your core values Strategies for balancing ambition with sustainability Practical steps for managing multiple 401(k) plans without losing track Why decluttering your finances can boost your mental clarity Thoughts to Ponder During the Episode What’s one personal ritual you could add to your day that would give you energy instead of draining it? Have you ever consolidated old retirement accounts? What made you decide to do it (or not)? How do you know when you’ve hit your “enough” point with work and need to reset? What’s one value you’d like to see reflected more clearly in your daily life? FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-reset-with-clarity-and-purpose-1727 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ever think, “If I just followed the playbook of the ultra-wealthy, I’d be set for life”? Turns out, that’s exactly the kind of thinking that can lead you straight into the arms of a scammer. In this episode, Joe Saul-Sehy and OG break down the traps hidden inside the “invest like the 1%” mantra (and other similar phrases), complete with real-life cautionary tales, including a small-town Ponzi scheme that could’ve been ripped from a Netflix docuseries, and the spectacular belly flop of some YieldStreet real estate bets. But it’s not all doom and gloom in the basement. You’ll also get the scoop on a controversial proposal to let private equity sneak into your 401(k), practical tips for spotting shady pitches before they drain your wallet, and the reminder that a boring-but-solid financial plan beats a flashy scam every time. Plus, the guys field a listener question on long-term care insurance and unpack the often-overlooked basics of HSAs. Between headlines, trivia detours, and a dash of movie talk, this episode arms you with the street smarts to dodge the next “too good to be true” investment opportunity. It’s a masterclass in protecting your money—without having to hide it under your mattress. The psychological tricks scammers use to lure in even savvy investors Why “invest like the 1%” can backfire for everyday Stackers How to evaluate alternative investments (and when to walk away) The risks and realities of adding private equity to retirement accounts Key questions to ask before buying long-term care insurance Why a strong, clear financial plan is your best defense against cons Questions to Ponder During Today's Show: Have you ever been tempted by an investment pitch that felt “exclusive”? Would you want private equity options inside your 401(k)? Why or why not? How do you decide whether an alternative investment is worth the risk? What’s your personal “red flag” that makes you walk away from a deal? FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-avoid-common-rip-offs-1726 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
If you’ve ever wondered whether you should pass on your money now or make your heirs wait for the “big reveal” (cue the dramatic reading of your will), this is your episode. Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug welcome Paula Pant from Afford Anything and Jesse Cramer from Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors to play a high-stakes round of “In or Out” with estate planning and charitable giving. Is anonymous giving a waste of good publicity? Should you set up a donor-advised fund or keep it simple? Is sharing your estate plan with your heirs wise—or an invitation to awkward holiday dinners? This isn’t your average dry legal seminar. Between football analogies, dinosaur jokes, and the occasional jab at Ford’s electric truck sales, our crew digs into the real-life choices Stackers face when deciding how—and when—to pass along their wealth. You’ll hear hot takes, smart strategies, and maybe even a nudge to start that conversation you’ve been putting off. From the practical (avoiding probate, maximizing giving impact) to the philosophical (why give at all, and how much?), this episode blends useful tactics with the irreverent basement energy you know and love. It’s part money talk, part game show, and 100% designed to get you thinking about your financial legacy. The pros and cons of giving now versus after you’re gone How donor-advised funds work and whether they’re worth your time Why anonymous giving might be overrated—or a hidden superpower Ways to avoid family drama by (maybe) sharing your estate plan early How to think about charitable giving as part of your overall financial plan Questions to ponder during the show: Would you rather give now and see the impact, or give later and leave a surprise? How much transparency do you think heirs deserve about your estate plans? If you give anonymously, are you missing an opportunity—or dodging a headache? What would you want your charitable legacy to look like? FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/estate-planning-giving-week-in-or-out-1725 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What if there were a way to make charitable giving easier, more strategic, and—dare we say—more satisfying? In this episode of The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Len Penzo welcome Adam Nash, founder and CEO of Daffy, to demystify donor-advised funds. Whether you’ve never heard of them or you’ve been meaning to set one up, Adam walks us through how they work, why they might be a perfect fit for your giving goals, and how they can help you be more intentional with your generosity year-round. But that’s not all—we also turn the spotlight on an often-overlooked money moment: handling a car insurance claim. From gathering evidence at the scene to negotiating with your insurance company, the team shares smart, practical steps to make sure you don’t leave money (or protection) on the table. And, of course, Len dishes up his trademark personal finance storytelling straight from his new book, mixing in lessons you’ll actually remember with tales you didn’t see coming. If you’ve been thinking about giving more, protecting yourself better, or just want to walk away with some clever, real-world money moves, this episode’s got you covered. Plus, you’ll leave with an extra nudge to make your charitable giving—and your financial safety net—as strong as possible. What You’ll Learn in This Episode: The basics of donor-advised funds and how they can supercharge your charitable giving Key differences between donor-advised funds and traditional giving methods How to prepare for and navigate a car insurance claim from start to finish Smart moves for documenting accidents and protecting yourself against disputes Why diversification in your giving can be as valuable as diversification in your investing How Len Penzo turns everyday money lessons into stories you’ll want to retell Questions to Discuss with Your Fellow Stackers: Have you ever used a donor-advised fund—or would you consider one after hearing this episode? What’s one lesson you’ve learned (the hard way or otherwise) from filing an insurance claim? Do you think giving should be a scheduled part of your financial plan, or something you do more spontaneously? FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/donor-advised-fund-deep-dive-1724 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Estate planning might not sound like the most thrilling topic—but skipping it can create a real mess for the people you care about most. In this episode of The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug sit down with attorney Tim Semro to cut through the noise on wills, trusts, and life insurance. Whether you’ve been putting off writing a will or you’re wondering if a trust is worth it, this conversation will give you a clearer path forward. Tim walks us through the essentials, from the differences between wills and trusts to the sneaky pitfalls that can trip up your beneficiary designations. We also tackle tricky scenarios—like probate headaches, planning across state (or even international) lines, and how to think about life insurance with living benefits. Plus, we swap stories about scams that hit a little too close to home and the simple moves you can take to protect your finances and family. This episode isn’t about scaring you into action; it’s about showing how estate planning and the right insurance can actually bring peace of mind. By the time you’re done listening, you’ll have a roadmap for protecting your family, making smarter decisions with your money, and avoiding the landmines that could derail your plan. And yes, there’s still a trivia break and plenty of the usual basement flavor to keep things moving. What You’ll Learn in This Episode: The key differences between wills and trusts—and when you might need each Why beneficiary designations matter more than you think How estate taxes and probate rules can complicate things (and how to prepare) What life insurance with living benefits is—and when it could make sense Red flags for spotting scams and fraud before they hit your wallet How to align your estate plan with your financial and family goals Questions to Ponder While You Listen (and maybe discuss with us in the Basement Facebook Group): Do you already have a will or trust in place? If not, what’s been holding you back? Have you ever discovered an outdated beneficiary designation (or seen the chaos it caused)? What role do you think life insurance should play in your estate planning? FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/estate-planning-charitable-giving-week-1723 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Some people chase “work-life balance” like it’s the Holy Grail—spending time, money, and mental energy trying to keep work and personal life perfectly split down the middle. But what if that balance doesn’t actually exist? Live from Joe’s mom’s basement (and not nearly as glamorous as it sounds), Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, Paula Pant, and Jesse Cramer pull back the curtain on whether we should be aiming for balance… or something else entirely. In this roundtable, the crew wrestles with the difference between work-life balance, alignment, and integration—and why chasing balance might actually keep you from a truly fulfilling life. You’ll hear personal stories, some hard-won lessons about productivity, and a few well-placed digs at Nautica (including the questionable financial moves Joe made in his youth). And because no basement chat is complete without it, we bring you a trivia challenge you didn’t know you needed. From managing notifications so they stop managing you, to building a life where work and personal priorities don’t compete, this episode digs into the practical steps that help you get more out of both your career and your free time. Whether you’re climbing the corporate ladder, running your own show, or plotting an early retirement, you’ll walk away with tools to rethink how you spend your hours—and why. What You’ll Learn in This Episode: Why “work-life balance” might be the wrong target—and what to aim for instead The difference between balance, alignment, and integration (and why it matters) Practical ways to keep work from swallowing your personal life whole How to reclaim your attention from constant notifications and distractions Mindset shifts that boost productivity and satisfaction in everyday life Lessons from real-life wins and missteps (including Joe’s Nautica saga) FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/all-about-work-life-balance-1722 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ever wonder how to build a career, business, or financial plan that actually lasts — no matter what life throws at you? This week, we’re bringing you lessons from someone who’s done it for more than five generations. Cheryl McKissick Daniel, president and CEO of McKissick & McKissick, joins Joe and OG to share the strategies her family has used to overcome obstacles, land major deals (like the arena in Brooklyn and countless buildings on the historic register of places), and turn connections into opportunities. Whether you’re growing a business, climbing the career ladder, or managing your money, you’ll walk away with practical ideas to strengthen your network, protect your reputation, and keep moving forward. From the art of negotiation to turning big challenges into bigger wins, Cheryl offers insights you can use right now to build momentum. We’ll explore how revisiting your financial plan regularly can help you avoid surprises, why reputation is an asset you can’t afford to neglect, and how a strong team can take you further, faster. Plus, we’ll take a break for our TikTok Minute to look at what happens when your vacation budget disappears in the name of “fun” spending. And in our headline segment, we’ll cover important Medicare and insurance updates that could save you money and headaches later. Here’s what you’ll learn in this episode: How to use your reputation as a currency that opens doors and attracts opportunities Strategies for building a network that works for you (even when you’re not in the room) Lessons from landing multi-million-dollar deals — and how to apply them to your own negotiations Why regularly reviewing your financial plan can save you from costly surprises Smart adjustments to Medicare and insurance that protect your money and peace of mind How to turn adversity into momentum, whether in your career or personal finances A lighthearted look at how “just a little fun” can destroy your budget faster than you think FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/story-about-building-america-1721 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Is your 401(k) quietly working for you… or quietly working against you? In the first half of this episode, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug tackle the most common 401(k) slip-ups that even seasoned savers make—and how to turn yours into a retirement-building machine. Then, in the second half, we turn to a problem many Stackers don’t see coming: going from saving to spending in retirement. Stacker Joel in Cleveland asks how to make the leap without feeling like you’re sabotaging your future. Drawing on OG’s real-world experience guiding clients through this tricky transition and Joe’s research into the psychology of money, we share practical steps to help you spend without guilt, align your withdrawals with your values, and actually enjoy the freedom you’ve worked so hard for. Here’s what you’ll learn in this episode: The most expensive 401(k) mistakes—and how to fix them today Why employer matches are truly “free money” (and how to grab them) Smart moves for rolling over old 401(k)s and navigating vesting schedules The pros and cons of holding company stock in your retirement account Why the saving-to-spending switch can feel so uncomfortable—and how to get past it A simple mindset shift that helps retirees live more fully without blowing their plan How to turn your nest egg into a joy-producing income stream Whether you’re in the middle of your career or staring down your first year of retirement, this episode will help you protect what you’ve built, optimize your plan, and make the most of your money—without second-guessing yourself. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/common-401-k-mistakes-1720 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Get ready for a rapid-fire roundtable packed with personal finance opinions that might challenge your own money playbook. In this episode, Paula Pant (Afford Anything), Jesse Cramer (Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors), and Don McDonald (Talking Real Money) join Joe and OG to declare whether they're in or out on some of the most polarizing financial strategies. Whether you're just getting started or leveling up your financial life, this episode is full of practical wisdom, contrarian views, and a few laughs along the way. Oh—and somewhere in there, we may or may not sneak in a birthday surprise for one of our favorite Stackers. 🎂😉 Why some pros still say "cash only" is best for beginners—and why others strongly disagree The real trade-offs of delaying homeownership in today’s market What types of insurance you actually need (and which may just be money drains) When hiring a CPA is a gamechanger vs. when it's overkill How to evaluate target date funds: genius or lazy? Whether it’s finally time to drop collision insurance on that 15-year-old car How to choose between Roth and Traditional 401(k) strategies The one estate planning move nearly everyone overlooks FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/jeff-lund-birthday-special-1719 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Think negotiation is just for boardrooms and car dealerships? Think again. In this episode, we bring in Paula Pant from Afford Anything to show how negotiating—done well—can level up your finances, your relationships, and yes, even who does the dishes. Paula breaks down why many of us fear negotiation, how to overcome those internal roadblocks, and how setting clear “aspiration” and “reservation” points can lead to more confident conversations (and better outcomes). Whether you’re asking for a raise or trying to avoid unloading the dishwasher for the fifth night in a row, her tactics are practical and empowering. Also in this episode: What most people miss about their workplace retirement plans, and whether adding a managed account is the edge you’ve been missing A viral TikTok proposal on setting your kids up for millions—can it really work, or is it just social media smoke? Doug delivers trivia and 1970s television references like only he can And we remember a cherished interview, David Gergen This episode is packed with useful strategies, real talk, and a few basement detours—including mafia negotiations, Lucille Ball’s business savvy, and a heated debate over nostalgic TV shows. Whether you’re trying to grow your wealth, negotiate more confidently, or just dodge financial TikTok traps, we’ve got something in here for you. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-improve-your-negotiating-skills-with-paula-pant-1718 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Is your grocery bill beefier than your sandwich? This week, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug unpack inflation in a way that only we can—by biting into Len Penzo’s Annual Sandwich Survey. Yes, prices are up, and yes, you can still eat well without triggering a credit card crisis. But it’s not just meat and mustard on today’s menu. We’re also serving a fresh look at 401(k) “leakage”—that drip-drip-drip of hardship withdrawals that's turning your retirement plan into a leaky faucet. You’ll get pro-level insight on how to patch those holes before your future income soaks the floor. And if you’re paying for (or dreading paying for) college, Christine from the Stacker community, who works in higher ed, joins to offer sharp and timely advice on keeping costs in check—from completing the FAFSA to finding overlooked aid. Len Penzo’s Sandwich Index Which sandwiches give you the most delicious bang for your inflation-adjusted buck? (Spoiler: bologna stages a quiet comeback.) 401(k) Trouble Brewing Hardship withdrawals are on the rise. Why it matters, how to avoid them, and what better options exist when life throws you a cash crisis. Tracking Expenses Like a Pro Joe, OG, and Doug explore the subtle ways inflation seeps into your budget—and how paying attention to where your money leaks gives you power back. Higher Ed, Lower Bills Stacker Christine breaks down must-know tips on navigating skyrocketing tuition, including a FAFSA pep talk that could save you thousands. Tuna vs. Roast Beef: The Sandwich Showdown Plus: Is the BLT still king? Can the humble tuna salad hold its ground against the mighty Big Mac? And where does salami fit into the sandwich power rankings? Trivia, Movie Talk, and Park City Tales No Stacking Benjamins episode is complete without a detour or three—from Doug’s trivia trap to stories from the road and screen. Takeaway for Stackers: In high-cost times, it’s the small wins—like swapping in store brands, packing a lunch, or tracking that budget leak—that give you the edge. And while it’s tempting to ignore those tiny cracks in your retirement plan or daily spending, you’re much better off fixing them before the flood. Want to brag about your favorite money-saving sandwich? Drop into the Basement Facebook group and share it—bonus points if it doesn’t involve bologna. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/len-penzo-2025-annual-sandwich-survey-1717 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
You just came into $50,000—no strings attached. Do you crush your debt? Supercharge your retirement? Blow it all on a podcasting-themed backyard grotto? In this episode of The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, Paula Pant (Afford Anything), and Jesse Cramer (The Best Interest) gather around the card table in Mom’s basement to tackle one of the most common “someday” questions in personal finance: What do you do when a windfall lands in your lap? Whether it's an inheritance, work bonus, or prize money (maybe you finally won that game show you keep applying to), the panel explores what smart, emotionally grounded, and goal-aligned decisions look like in the face of sudden cash. Start With the Why Before you touch a dime, the crew walks through the importance of mindset, goals, and not falling into the “I deserve it” trap that has sunk many a lucky winner. Debt vs. Invest vs. Enjoy High-interest debt? Retirement accounts? Travel dreams? The panel weighs each strategy—and surprises us with their personal priorities. Behavioral Finance & Windfall Psychology Why do people tend to mismanage unexpected money? From mental accounting to lifestyle creep, learn the hidden traps and how to sidestep them. The 401(k) Match Dilemma Is it better to max out tax-advantaged accounts or build an emergency fund? The team hashes out smart order-of-operations for stacking your windfall right. Trivia Break: St. Paddy’s Parade Edition Neighbor Doug makes sure you don’t learn too much without a little distraction. Can you guess when the first St. Patrick’s Day parade was held? How They’d Spend It Ever wonder what Joe, OG, Paula, or Jesse would do with an extra 50 grand? From practical moves to guilty pleasures, we get a peek into each of their financial brains. Don’t let windfalls drift into “found money” syndrome—align with your long-term goals first. Paying off high-interest debt = guaranteed return. But balance it with your future-focused investments. Emotional awareness is just as crucial as spreadsheets when a windfall hits. Take a beat before making decisions. Give yourself permission to enjoy some of the money—just make sure it’s intentional, not impulsive. Got a windfall story or dream scenario? Tell us how you’d handle an extra $50K in our Basement Facebook group. Let’s see who would invest it, who would renovate the kitchen, and who would finally launch that mobile alpaca petting zoo. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackikngbenjamins.com/how-to-treat-a-financial-inheritance-1716 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
High school math left most of us staring blankly at the board, convinced compound interest was just a fancy way to say "confusing." But what if math could be fun, relevant, and—dare we say—life-changing? In this episode of The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug welcome economist, education reformer, and documentary filmmaker Ted Dintersmith to the basement for a conversation that makes math feel less like a chore and more like a cheat code for life. Dintersmith, best known for his education advocacy and the acclaimed documentary Most Likely to Succeed, joins us fresh off the release of his latest book, Aftermath—a compelling look at how we rethink learning in a world that’s evolving faster than ever. With over a decade visiting 500+ schools and a deep passion for practical math, Ted shares how skills like estimation, probability, and prediction can help you make smarter decisions—especially when it comes to your money. Why Prediction Beats Perfection Ted explains why being roughly right about your spending, investing, and life planning is more powerful than being precisely wrong. Consumer Math is the Real MVP From family budgets to grocery store run-throughs, Dintersmith makes a case for math that actually applies to your everyday decisions—and shows how parents and educators can teach it at home. A Fourth-Grade Science Test Gone Wrong An unforgettable story about how one exam nearly crushed a curious kid’s confidence… and what it says about how we measure learning. The Financial Advisor Dilemma Solved Joe Saul-Sehy and OG unpack the key differences between bank advisors and independents, including fee structures, fiduciary responsibilities, and what really matters when choosing your financial guide. Lights, Camera, Reform Dintersmith shares the powerful stories behind his documentaries—including Most Likely to Succeed and the upcoming Multiple Choice—and why his new book Aftermath is a must-read for anyone who believes education should prepare us for real life. The Psychology of Math Anxiety and Money Mistakes We explore how bad math experiences lead to financial decision paralysis, and how to rebuild confidence one calculation at a time. Neighbor Doug’s Trivia Takes the Stage Whether it connects to math or not, Neighbor Doug delivers his signature trivia moment with flair—and possibly a tangent or two. Math shouldn’t be a barrier to better money decisions. This episode arms you with a fresh mindset for yourself, your kids, and maybe even your school board. If you’re a math teacher, financial coach, or just someone who once cried over fractions, we want to hear from you. Join the conversation in our Facebook group, The Basement, and tell us: How are you making math practical—or how do you wish you’d learned it? FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/math-that-you-need-in-your-life-1715 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Big changes are coming to the tax code—and that could mean big savings if you know where to look. On today’s episode, Joe, OG, and Doug break down the most important updates in the 2025 tax laws and share smart, simple ways to keep more of your hard-earned cash. Whether you're a spreadsheet-loving tax nerd or someone who still asks, “Wait, do I have to file?”—this episode will help you navigate the new rules like a pro. Here’s what we unpack: The 2025 Tax Overhaul: What changed, what stayed the same, and how it affects your bottom line Credits vs. Deductions: Why that $1 credit might be worth more than a $5 deduction (math, but fun) Above-the-Line Moves: Claim valuable deductions without itemizing New Wins for Givers and Drivers: Above-the-line charitable contributions AND (drumroll…) personal auto loan interest is back! Family Tax Breaks: Expanded dependent care accounts and beefed-up child credits 50 and Thriving: New 401(k) catch-up rules that can help you max out your retirement Listener Mailbag: JJ asks how to contribute more to his 401(k) after age 50—and we bring the strategies The TikTok Minute: Because money wisdom can live on the internet too Doug’s Trivia & Financial Shenanigans™: Of course You’ll walk away with clear, practical takeaways that could add thousands to your bottom line—without needing to read the tax code (you're welcome). FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/upcoming-tax-changes-1714 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What if the scariest part of retirement isn’t running out of money—but losing your sense of identity? This week on The Stacking Benjamins Show, we tackle the fears that hold so many people back from financial independence and a joyful, purpose-filled retirement. Joe Saul-Sehy and Doug are joined by an all-star panel of financial thinkers: Mark Trautman (Mark’s Money Mind) Paula Pant (Afford Anything) Jesse Cramer (Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors) Together, they unpack the emotional, practical, and strategic side of planning your next chapter—whether you're closing in on retirement or still working toward it. The biggest fears about retirement: from running out of money to running out of meaning. The “one more year” syndrome: why it's so tempting to delay and how to break through. Time freedom vs. financial freedom: how to align your life goals with your money strategy. Tactics to conquer fear: income layering, diversified portfolios, annuities, and rental properties. Psychology matters: why no spreadsheet ever solved a midlife identity crisis. Real stories from the panel: wins, struggles, and lessons from guiding others through retirement transitions. Planning for healthcare and long-term care: because your body didn’t get the early retirement memo. Plus, the usual basement mayhem: trivia, playful host banter, and a few unexpected laughs (we won’t call them “funny”—you know the rule). Mark’s Money Mind podcast Afford Anything podcast Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors AARP: Retirement Readiness & Addressing Fear Blog post: “Fear Will Hold You Prisoner. A Diversified Portfolio Will Set You Free.” Retire to something, not just from something. Purpose beats spreadsheets. Understand your income plan. Know where the money will come from, rain or shine. Plan for healthcare now, not later. Medicare, long-term care, and medical surprises deserve your attention. Don’t go it alone. The best plans are ones you understand, but it helps to get advice from trusted sources. Whether you’re on the cusp of calling it quits or still deep in the grind, this episode will help you prepare—not just financially, but mentally and emotionally—for a retirement you’ll love. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/what-is-holding-you-back-from-reaching-your-goals-1713 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 🎧 Dive deeper, grab resources, and check out past episodes at StackingBenjamins.com Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What do your financial priorities look like when you're just getting started... or when you're sitting on $100 million? If you’re still stuck trying to figure out how to max out your Roth IRA and also afford dinner, this episode’s going to walk you through what might be coming next—without promising you a yacht by Tuesday. This week on The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy, O.G., and Doc G (Jordan Grumet) are joined by Nick Maggiulli, Chief Operating Officer at Ritholtz Wealth Management and author of Of Dollars and Data, to talk about lessons from his new book: The Wealth Ladder. Nick breaks down the six wealth levels, from scraping together your first emergency fund to navigating the complexities of generational wealth. They explore: Why increasing your income early on trumps frugality (sorry, coupon clippers). What “wealth plateaus” really look like, and how to recognize when your strategy needs to evolve. The hidden trap of goal obsession, featuring a cameo from world #1 golfer Scottie Scheffler. The true cost of career choices, and why opportunity cost might be the silent killer of long-term growth. Why content and code are two of the most powerful wealth-building levers available (especially when they scale without needing a lunch break). Whether you're stuck in Level 1 or fantasizing about Level 6, this episode has practical, perspective-shifting advice on building wealth—and more importantly, how to enjoy the process without losing your sense of purpose along the way. Stackers don’t just want to make money—they want to master it without letting it become their master. This conversation bridges income, investing, identity, and intention in a way that gives you both clarity and confidence. You might even stop worrying about skipping that $5 latte… or realize it’s time to start coding that app you keep talking about at parties. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/invest-differently-and-move-faster-1712 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What’s the right financial move for you… right now? If you've ever found yourself reading advice meant for a millionaire when you're still trying to crack five figures—or following budgeting tips when your net worth is seven digits—this episode is your custom-tailored financial GPS. In this installment of The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Doug take you rung-by-rung through the wealth ladder—from humble beginnings at $10K all the way to $10 million—and explain how your financial priorities, risks, and strategies evolve as your net worth grows. How to avoid mismatched advice: Why taking financial tips meant for someone in a different stage can set you back instead of move you forward. Net worth brackets and behavior shifts: What you should be thinking about at $10K, $100K, $1 million, and beyond—and what not to worry about yet. When Roth IRA conversions make sense—and when they really don’t: With new legislation impacting retirement tax planning, Joe and OG break down the implications with help from Robert Powell of The Street. Diversification, risk, and behavioral pitfalls: What the pros get wrong and how to stay grounded no matter how big your stack grows. Community-driven insights: From listener milestones to new Stacking Benjamins swag sightings, you’ll hear how Stackers are winning in their own lives. As always, the team weaves in laughter, sarcasm, and that unmistakable basement charm—complete with Doug’s new mug, a calendar confusion history lesson, and a household disaster caused by what can only be described as “revenge rain.” A Robin Williams–themed trivia segment to warm your heart (and test your memory) Batty Betty’s wild TikTok take on relationship finance Practical investing and estate planning ideas that don’t make your eyes glaze over Why You’ll Love This Episode:If you’re trying to level up without falling prey to the one-size-fits-all advice machine, this episode delivers a realistic blueprint. It’s equal parts roadmap and reminder: where you are right now matters more than where someone else thinks you should be. Stacker takeaway? Clarity beats comparison. Especially when it comes to money. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/build-your-wealth-ladder-1711 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ever feel like you're working hard but getting nowhere? You're not alone—and you might be stuck in a productivity trap, not a purpose-driven plan. In this episode of The Stacking Benjamins Show, we tackle the big one: how to avoid wasting your life. (No pressure.) Joe Saul-Sehy kicks things off with a tongue-in-cheek nod to all the ways we fritter away time—before pivoting into a power-packed conversation on building meaningful goals and avoiding common life derailers. He’s joined by two all-star minds in money and behavior: Paula Pant from Afford Anything, who reminds us that "you can afford anything—but not everything," and Jordan Grumet from Earn & Invest, who offers the life-and-death perspective (literally—he’s a hospice doctor) on why we need to act now, not later. Together with OG and Doug, the roundtable unpacks six common ways people unknowingly waste their lives, including: Being "busy" instead of effective Letting fear of failure hijack your plans Overthinking every move Paralysis from too many choices Constant hustle with no progress Indecision dressed up as careful planning You’ll hear hard-earned lessons, subtle mindset shifts, and tips for creating financial and personal momentum. Plus: The surprising link between indecision and regret, backed by Dr. Ellen Langer’s research Smart strategies for eliminating distractions and taking better action The difference between motion and movement—especially when it comes to your goals and your money And, of course, we sprinkle in some classic basement banter, a rowdy trivia throwdown, and Joe’s favorite kind of weekend preview (the kind where no one actually follows their own advice). Why this episode is worth your time: Whether you’re staring down your 2025 goals or still recovering from a rough Q1, this is your shot of clarity. No judgment—just real talk from people who’ve been there, made the spreadsheet, and occasionally lit it on fire. 🎯 You’ll walk away with: A clearer idea of what’s holding you back Practical ways to structure smarter financial goals Permission to stop doing all the things and start doing the right things FULL SHOW NOTES: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-waste-your-time-on-stupid-stuff-1710/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Want to crush your goals and avoid getting crushed by long-term care costs? In today’s episode of The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy and OG are joined by Retired Lieutenant Commander Gary McDermott, a former U.S. Navy officer turned business coach, who brings military-grade discipline to the world of goal-setting and financial success. Whether you’re working toward a promotion, launching a side hustle, or just trying to stay on track past February, Gary shares a field-tested, civilian-approved approach to achieving your biggest financial and personal milestones. From defining SMART goals to building sustainable habits and multiple income streams, this conversation is all about real results—no fluff, no buzzwords. But that’s just the first mission. In the second half, Joe and OG dive into one of retirement’s trickiest topics: long-term care insurance. Is it worth it? When should you buy it? How do you know if it’s right for your situation? Consider this your tactical briefing before walking into a battle you didn’t know you were fighting. You’ll also hear: Why borrowing someone else’s goals is a recipe for burnout. The power of structure and accountability (no drill sergeant required). What “Trump Accounts” are and why you might want to know about them. How to evaluate long-term care coverage before it sneaks up on your plan. Joe’s high-speed review of the new Formula One movie (spoiler: he’s not drafting behind the popcorn). Packed with tactical advice, unexpected laughs, and practical strategies, this episode delivers a full-stack toolkit for Adventurers looking to thrive—financially and personally—in the second half of 2025 and beyond. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-set-and-achieve-your-goals-gary-macdermid-1709 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Still on track to crush your 2025 goals? Or has the year felt more like a Super Mario Kart banana peel moment? In this special mid-year review episode of The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy and OG take a pause from the summer sprint to look back at the most impactful lessons, conversations, and themes from the first half of 2025. Whether you’re rethinking your budget, fine-tuning your risk tolerance, or just trying to remember where you wrote down your resolutions, this is your nudge to hit the financial reset button—with style. From Alex Hormozi’s take on embracing risk and skill-building to JL Collins' wisdom on why buying happiness with money is a flawed formula, this episode pulls powerful insights from our brightest guests so far. We revisit career advice from media powerhouse Bonnie Hammer, dig into intentional spending habits, and reflect on the subtle connection between mindset and long-term success. Oh—and don’t miss a moment of Joe and OG’s always-wise, occasionally-weird banter as they break down topics like: Why goal setting isn’t just for January—and how to mid-course correct before December sneaks up on you. Risk management in real life (not the textbook version). Why mindful consumption isn’t about cutting back, but tuning in. What makes retirement joyful beyond the spreadsheets. How your community can be the most underrated part of your portfolio. If you’ve felt a little off-course—or just want a chance to recalibrate without the guilt trip—this episode delivers practical steps and encouraging reminders to help you make the second half of 2025 your strongest yet. Got goals? Let’s reset ‘em. And if not, we’ve got a few ideas for those, too. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/our-review-of-first-half-2025-1708 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Is your house full of stuff you thought you needed… but haven’t touched since the Obama administration? In this game show-style episode, we're helping you clean house and bulk up your bank account at the same time. Joining Joe in the basement are Paula Pant from Afford Anything, OG, and the man, the myth, the TikTok-famous legend’s grandpa’s best friend: Len Penzo (or as Doug calls him, “America’s Most Unexpected Influencer”). Together, they go head-to-head in a raucous showdown, each offering hot takes on everyday items you should stop buying if you want to save money and ditch the clutter. We dig into: Why some exercise equipment becomes expensive coat racks The hidden costs of seasonal decorations Periodicals, subscriptions, and other budget vampires And a few “who knew?” items that quietly drain your cash You'll also get a dose of trivia, debates about Google's "search decay," and a few personal stories that might sound a little too familiar. Whether you’re decluttering your budget or just here for the basement chaos, this episode is full of laughs, lightbulb moments, and ideas to help streamline your spending. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/decluttering-your-financial-life-greatest-hits-1707 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What if your money could bring you more joy—and less stress? Today, we welcome Ken Honda, Japan’s bestselling personal development guru, to the basement. He introduces us to his concept of “Happy Money,” where gratitude replaces fear, and your relationship with money becomes… well, happier. From early lessons in emotional finance to wisdom from his own mentors, Ken shares how small mindset shifts can lead to big life changes. But before we get zen with our Benjamins, Joe and OG shine a light on the latest investigation into real estate commissions. Are hidden fees quietly draining your wallet when you buy or sell a home? The Justice Department seems to think so. We dive into what’s happening—and what you can do about it. Also in the episode: HSA contribution limits are rising—are you using your health savings account the smart way? A listener wonders if hiring their kids can unlock Roth IRA opportunities (spoiler: it’s not as simple as “just write them a check”). Doug moonshines a trivia question that may or may not involve death (but definitely involves Doug). Whether you’re looking for practical strategies or a new perspective on money itself, this episode brings both insight and inspiration. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/happiness-with-ken-honda-greatest-hits-1706 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Is your home packed with emotional baggage... and maybe a few fondue sets you haven’t touched since 2003? Organizational expert Tracy McCubbin joins us to talk about the emotional side of clutter—why it builds up, how it weighs us down, and what to do when your sentimental stuff is quietly running the show. Meanwhile, Joe and OG dig into another kind of mess: the billions retirees lose by claiming Social Security too early. Timing isn’t just everything—it’s the difference between thriving in retirement and wondering where all the money went. In this episode, we cover: Why sentimental clutter is more than just "stuff"—and how to finally let it go. How donating intentionally can breathe new life into your old things (and clear some mental space). The tough conversations adult kids need to have with parents about downsizing and letting go. Strategies to help you avoid making costly Social Security decisions. A surprisingly thoughtful take on the Taco Bell Hotel (yes, it’s real... and yes, it sold out in minutes). Plus: a listener question, some truly questionable fashion choices, and one more reason not to hoard your retirement benefits—or your holiday dishes. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Happy Independence Day, Stackers! While fireworks boom and flags wave, we're lighting a spark under your financial life. This episode isn’t about tea in harbors—it’s about burning down debt, revolting against lifestyle creep, and rallying your family for a better money future. Joining Joe and Doug in the basement for this full-on financial insurrection: Dorethia Kelly, TikTok titan and money coach, shares how she raised her financial flag as a single mom and became a force for smart money choices. Jesse Cramer of the Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors podcast ditches tired spending habits and charts a course for independence through intentional investing and budgeting. Steve Stewart, longtime SB editor and podcasting Yoda, reveals the pivotal Jeep moment that changed his financial course—and why he's racing OG to mortgage freedom. 🎙️ In this basement-based revolution, you'll hear: The financial “tea party” moments that woke our guests up to their money mess How to declare independence from credit cards, lifestyle creep, and sneaky “Buy Now, Pay Later” traps Tools, mindsets, and support systems that help you keep your financial revolution alive Why tax planning is the financial Boston Tea Party nobody's talking about The trivia showdown no revolutionary should miss: How many grains of silver made a dollar in 1792? (Spoiler: Jesse knows his colonial coinage.) And in the aftershow? We ask the deep questions our Founding Fathers never saw coming, like: why is gambling debt dischargeable in bankruptcy, but student loans aren't? FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/financial-independence-day-2025-1704 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What does it take to turn a bold idea into a billion-dollar brand? Julie Wainwright, founder of The RealReal, joins us to share how she did just that—after enduring some pretty public failures (hello, Pets.com). She talks about navigating the startup world, tackling ageism head-on, and why your past doesn’t define your future. Julie’s story is packed with wisdom on risk-taking, confidence, and what it really means to build something new when everyone else is telling you no. From the boardroom to the resale boutique, she takes us through the emotional rollercoaster of entrepreneurship—plus a few secrets on why luxury goods are more than just a pretty label. Also in the basement: We unpack Jason Zweig’s latest Wall Street Journal column on diversification and why it still matters (yes, even in this market). OG learns a Father’s Day lesson on the golf course (spoiler: not all swings are created equal). Doug manages to work in Margot Robbie. Again. Whether you’re plotting your own business empire or just wondering how someone not only recovers from flaming sock puppet-level failure, but who THRIVES afterward, this episode delivers honest insight with a side of style. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/from-business-idea-to-execution-julie-wainwright-1703/ Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
How much can you really spend in retirement without running out of money—or worse, running out of fun? In this deeper-than-usual dive, Joe Saul-Sehy and OG examine the classic 4% retirement rule and whether it’s time for an upgrade. With new commentary from Bill Bengen, the original architect of the 4% rule, the team explores emerging research that suggests a withdrawal rate closer to 5.5% might be possible—if you’ve got the right mix of investments, a solid plan, and a bit of courage. But we don’t stop there. Because with greater freedom comes greater risk (especially if you're leading with vibes instead of strategy). The guys tackle the sequence of returns risk that can derail early retirement years, and how to build a portfolio that helps you sleep at night—even during a market storm. Meanwhile, Doug drops in with an unexpected (and very British) culinary experience, Joe fields a listener question comparing financial plans to workout routines (is your Roth IRA doing enough reps?), and yes... we revisit our fan-favorite segment on how food waste is wrecking your budget. Why the 4% rule might be too conservative (or maybe just outdated). What diversified portfolios and asset class strategy have to do with a longer-lasting nest egg. How to prepare for market downturns before they happen—and what to do if you're already in one. Why retirement joy isn’t just about spreadsheets—it’s about the psychology of spending with confidence. Which type of green tea is the superior kind (depending on which side of the TikTok aisle you're on). How to reduce food waste and put that extra savings toward your bigger financial goals. If you’re approaching retirement—or even just dreaming about it—understanding how much you can safely spend without sabotaging your future is the question. This episode combines historical insight with today’s market realities to give you the real math and mindset you need to retire well…and maybe even with a smile. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/problems-with-the-4-percent-rule-1702 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Can you really build wealth with a simple formula? Do you need a budget to succeed financially? Should you cut up all your credit cards, or is that just a dramatic TikTok trend? In this episode of The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy is joined by Paula Pant, Doc G (Jordan Grumet), and Jesse Cramer for a roundtable discussion that peels back the truth behind popular advice from so-called financial “gurus.” The conversation is rooted in a provocative blog post by Christine Luken that calls out four common money mantras—and the team dives into each one with classic basement wit, spirited debate, and hard-earned wisdom. Topics on the table: Do you really need a budget, or can you thrive without one? Are rigid financial formulas helpful or harmful? Is willpower the key to financial success—or just a scapegoat? Does cutting up credit cards actually solve your spending problems? Along the way, you'll hear banana jokes (yes, multiple), a heated trivia contest about obsolete technology (looking at you, LaserDisc), and some good-natured trash talk that might just surprise you with how insightful it gets. This episode is packed with nuance, laughs, and practical takeaways for Stackers who are tired of the one-size-fits-all guru approach. Whether you’re team budget or team spreadsheet freestyle, there’s something here for you—plus a solid reminder that when it comes to personal finance, the best advice is the advice that fits your life. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/lies-damn-lies-and-statistics-1701 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What’s the best way to save for a house without wrecking your retirement plan? That’s just one of the big questions Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Mom’s neighbor Doug tackle in this packed episode (number 1700!) of Stacking Benjamins. Whether you're trying to figure out where to park your emergency fund, how to handle inherited IRAs, or how to financially plan as a single adult with big responsibilities (hello, aging parents!), this episode is full of relatable scenarios and actionable strategies. Stackers Torin, VJ, Lori, and Michelle ask everything from: How much is too much in your emergency fund? What happens to inherited IRAs when you're already juggling financial priorities? What should single people be doing right now to prepare for the future? How do you juggle helping aging parents while keeping your own goals on track? Plus, we mix in commentary from Kevin at Edward Jones and longtime listener Ron—offering insights from inside the financial services world and the Stacker community. The guys debate personal finance media narratives, give practical advice for budgeting large windfalls, and reflect on why saving feels easier in theory than in practice. Also covered in this episode: Why financial advice often skips over single individuals—and what to do about it Emergency fund strategies: where to park the money, how much to keep, and how to make peace with the fact it isn’t earning sky-high returns How to prioritize debt, student loans, savings, and investing without setting off a financial anxiety spiral The value of short-term tradeoffs when you’ve got long-term goals All delivered with the basement’s signature charm—where the coffee is lukewarm, the guidance is practical, and the jokes… well, let’s just say they’re dividend-eligible. This episode is a perfect listen for: New Stackers building their financial foundation DIYers trying to juggle competing money goals Anyone who’s inherited assets and doesn’t want to mess it up People who’ve realized adulting is basically managing 14 financial priorities at once and still remembering to bring snacks. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/answering-your-questions-mailbag-1700 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
The robots aren’t just coming—they’re already here. And if you’re not paying attention, they might not just take your job… they could take your personal data too. In this episode of The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Doug dive into the rise of artificial intelligence, exploring whether it’s a threat, a tool, or something in between. If you’ve been wondering how AI will impact your work, your privacy, and your future, this episode is a must-listen. They kick off with a surprising headline: Gen Z workers are sidestepping AI entirely—not by resisting it, but by choosing careers where machines can’t compete (like landscaping and trades), and using AI tools to grow their businesses faster. This sparks a full-on basement debate about how technology has historically impacted jobs, what the next evolution might look like, and whether AI will make our lives easier… or just busier. In today’s show: Why some jobs may disappear—but others are about to explode with opportunity The surprising role AI is playing in blue-collar and skilled trade growth Why being AI-curious (not AI-phobic) is your best financial move New tech tools that supercharge productivity—from transcription wallets to note-taking bots How AI is already transforming education and career paths What to do right now to stay ahead of the AI curve Then the guys shift gears to a more sinister topic: data privacy. CNET recently reported which free AI chatbots are scooping up the most of your personal info—and which are surprisingly respectful. The gang reveals which apps are best to trust, and which are like letting Zuck crash on your couch (bad idea). We’ll also hear from listener John, who wants to hire a financial advisor but isn’t sure where to start. Joe and OG break down how to find the right fit, why fees aren’t the most important factor, and the one question that tells you if someone’s worth hiring. Plus: Doug’s trivia on egomaniacal coin designers A TikTok minute about U2, dating apps, and dad jokes Back porch chatter about Pontiac Azteks, water treatment careers, and IMAX concert pilgrimages Takeaway: AI isn’t just a tech trend—it’s reshaping our economy, our careers, and even how we learn. Whether you’re a Gen Z worker, mid-career professional, or planning your retirement, now’s the time to lean in, explore what AI can (and can’t) do, and secure your future before the bots beat you to it. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/ais-coming-for-your-job-how-to-outwit-the-robots-1699 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
So you’ve scaled the mountain, built the nest egg, and maybe even shouted “I’m done!” across a pristine beach... now what? In today’s Stacking Benjamins episode, Joe Saul-Sehy convenes a roundtable of heavy-hitters to tackle the most misunderstood phase of money management: decumulation—a.k.a. the art of spending what you’ve worked so hard to save. Whether you're staring down retirement or already deep into your golden years, you'll hear candid, practical insights from three financial thought leaders who specialize in making your money last. Joining Joe are Dana Anspach, retirement planning expert and founder of Sensible Money, Karsten Jeske (aka “Big ERN” from Early Retirement Now), and Frank Vasquez, aka Uncle Frank, host of Risk Parity Radio. Together, they bring decades of academic research, professional experience, and plain old common sense to questions like: What’s the real safe withdrawal rate—and why does it depend on more than just spreadsheets? Should you chase simplicity or embrace complexity in managing retirement funds? What role do annuities and guaranteed income play in reducing late-life anxiety? How do you plan for cognitive decline without spiraling into existential dread? What’s the difference between spending confidently... and spending carelessly? You’ll also hear why lumpy expenses, long-term care surprises, and behavioral quirks can trip up even the best-laid plans—and how to bulletproof your strategy now. And yes, we get nerdy. Risk parity, sequence of return risk, and portfolio glidepaths all make guest appearances—but always with your favorite Stacking Benjamins charm and plain-English style. Because retirement doesn’t need to be scary... but it does need to be intentional. Why your investment approach needs to evolve once paychecks stop The strengths and blind spots of the “4% rule” How emotions (not just inflation) affect safe withdrawal strategies When it makes sense to annuitize, and when it absolutely doesn’t How to adjust for cognitive decline in your financial plan (and still maintain autonomy) The “spend conservatively early” myth—debunked Tips for managing healthcare and other unpredictable late-life costs Whether you’re a retiree, a pre-retiree, or a spreadsheet-loving financial independence buff, this deep-dive episode will give you the confidence to manage the second half of your financial life like a pro. This isn't just about stretching your dollars—it's about building a life worth spending them on. So grab your planner, pour a cup of whatever says “retirement-ready” to you, and let’s get smarter (and maybe just a bit weirder) about your golden years. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/create-your-retirement-spending-plan-1698 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What if the most important part of your retirement plan had nothing to do with your 401(k), IRA, or stock portfolio? In this episode of The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy and OG are joined by filmmakers Pete Davis and Rebecca Davis, creators of the thought-provoking documentary Join or Die. They explore how community connection, not cash, may be the ultimate retirement strategy. Drawing inspiration from the late political scientist Robert Putnam (Bowling Alone), the Davises reveal why joining groups—book clubs, church choirs, rec leagues, neighborhood associations—might be more essential to your long-term well-being than your asset allocation. Together with Joe and OG, they unpack the data behind social decline, the healing power of showing up, and what the film Join or Die teaches us about leading a richer life beyond the numbers. Of course, Mom’s Neighbor Doug pops in with trivia that proves he belongs (at least to this show). Whether you’re on the path to retirement or simply looking for deeper purpose, this episode will make you think differently about how you stack your most valuable resource: time. Why joining a club may be just as critical to retirement as saving for it What Join or Die reveals about America’s shrinking social networks How loneliness affects physical and financial health—and how to fight it Why your “portfolio of community” might be the highest-yield investment you ever make Ways to build meaningful connections now—even if you don’t feel like a “joiner” Pete and Rebecca Davis share behind-the-scenes stories from making Join or Die Joe and OG reflect on what gives life meaning after the 9-to-5 ends Surprising data on the link between social capital and financial confidence Doug delivers a trivia challenge about famous clubs (and less-famous neighbors) 📚 Resources & Mentions: 🎥 Join or Die documentary by Pete and Rebecca Davis 📘 Bowling Alone by Robert Putnam 🎙️ Pete Davis’s book: Dedicated: The Case for Commitment in an Age of Infinite Browsing 👟 Your Challenge This Week: Sign up. Show up. Speak up. Whether it's your local book club, PTA, pickleball team, or town council meeting—belonging starts with one yes. 💬 “Retirement planning isn’t just about money—it’s about meaning.” Tune in and learn how to build a life you won’t want to retire from. FULL SHOW NOTES: https:;//stackingbenjamins.com/join-or-die-documentary-pete-rebecca-davis-1697 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
You can’t plan a great retirement if you haven’t first planned what you’re retiring to. In this episode, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug open up Retirement Week in the basement with a Monday that’s equal parts insight, weekend recap, and questionable vehicle decisions. 🚪 Start with the most overlooked part of retirement: your lifestyle vision. What are you actually going to do all day—and will it make you happy? 📊 Then they dive into financial strategy, from coordinating pre-tax, Roth, and taxable funds to dodging sneaky IRMAA fees that show up like glitter—impossible to get rid of and oddly expensive. 🏎️ Thinking about a new car? Joe and Doug wrestle with the age-old question: maintain or upgrade, and how your answer could affect your wallet (and maybe your driveway credibility). 💼 Curious about investment leverage? Meet Basic Capital—a platform that might sound like a good idea… until it doesn’t. Joe and OG explain when leverage can help—and when it’s just risk in a tuxedo. 🎧 Plus: Saluting the troops What not to do when your retirement plan involves TikTok A sneak peek at the Nerdy Round Table And entertainment recs to round out your week like a pro Start your week smarter and get a little closer to a retirement you actually want. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/creating-a-better-retirement-1696 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Markets crashing? Interest rates spiking? Inflation roaring? Welcome to history. This week, we dig into 130 years of stock market meltdowns—from the panic of World War I to the Great Depression, 1970s stagflation, the dot-com collapse, and the 2008 financial crisis—to uncover timeless lessons that can fortify your financial future. Joe Saul-Sehy is joined by Miranda Marquit, Jesse Cramer, and OG to examine how investors have historically responded to chaos... and how you should, too. You'll learn why diversification matters, why panic rarely pays, and why staying the course (even when it’s scary) can be the smartest move of all. Of course, this wouldn't be the Stacking Benjamins Show without a trivia detour that involves mailing children through the U.S. Postal Service (yes, that happened). Buckle up for laughter, insight, and financial takeaways that are as practical as they are entertaining. What WWI, the Great Depression, and 1970s inflation can teach us about investing Why “The Lost Decade” wasn’t a loss for long-term thinkers How to build a resilient portfolio that weathers the storm Our infamous trivia game: How much could a kid weigh and still be legally mailed in the 1920s? A few money-saving hacks, podcast updates, and your weekend preview from the basement Whether you’re a seasoned investor or just building your financial foundation, this episode will leave you smarter, more confident, and—let’s be honest—way more amused than the average market history lecture. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/lessons-from-stock-market-history-1695 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What happens when you mix financial strategy with a healthy dose of cultural commentary? You get Rich Girl Nation. This week on The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy and OG are joined by Katie Gatti Tassin, the powerhouse behind Money with Katie and author of the new book Rich Girl Nation. Together, they unravel the sneaky ways consumerism shows up in our lives—from pricey trends to status-signaling spending—and how it messes with our wallets. Katie dives into the “hot girl hamster wheel” of overspending, the wage gap, and why negotiating your salary (without flinching) is one of the best financial moves you can make. She also offers sharp, tactical advice on job-hopping for higher pay and automating your money to avoid lifestyle creep. Meanwhile, the crew throws in real-life stories, from Cybertruck depreciation to celebrating financial independence in more ways than one. And of course, Doug drops in with a trivia twist that keeps things weird—because it wouldn’t be the basement without a little curveball. 🧠 What You’ll Learn: How to identify and eliminate unnecessary spending that doesn’t align with your values Strategies for negotiating salary like a pro (and when silence says more than words) How to avoid the early adopter tax on flashy new products The role of automation in building sustainable wealth Why understanding depreciation is a game-changer for big purchases Whether you're climbing the corporate ladder or just trying to spend smarter, this episode offers a refreshing mix of real talk and practical advice—served up with classic basement wit and a side of financial independence. Let’s make money moves that actually feel good. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/rethinking-earning-and-spending-with-kate-gatti-tassin-1694 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Is your wallet feeling lighter... but your closet’s full of regret? Joe, OG, and Mom’s neighbor Doug are throwing open the basement door to tackle one of the trickiest parts of personal finance: consumerism. Whether you're a recovering impulse buyer or knee-deep in buy-now-pay-later regrets, this episode’s got your back—and maybe your budget. 💸 Hear real stories about overspending and why value-based spending beats chasing trends. 🛍️ Unpack the rise of Klarna and other buy-now-pay-later services—and the hidden costs that come with them. 🌍 Explore how global economic shifts (yep, we’re going there) could impact your investments. 🎤 And just when things get too real, the team lightens it up with a no-holds-barred burger chain draft. In-N-Out? Five Guys? Wendy’s? Who makes the Stacker cut? Plus: a shoutout to the troops, a TikTok Minute that involves Doug and a questionable egg sandwich, and trivia that’ll make you rethink your next holiday shopping spree. You don’t need to live like a monk—just stop buying stuff you don’t even like. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-break-free-from-consumerism-1693 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Can building wealth be as entertaining as a round of trivia in the basement? We think so—and today’s episode proves it. Joe Saul-Sehy is joined by Doc G, Paula Pant, and Jesse Cramer to play a fast-paced financial game show based on 11 expert-approved ways to grow your wealth. From boosting your income and dialing in your budget to the eternal tug-of-war between paying down debt and investing more, this episode delivers wisdom with a side of basement-brand chaos. But we don’t stop at just the basics. Our roundtable dives into: How homeownership plays into your wealth picture (even if it’s not as sexy as index funds), Why insurance coverage might be your best wealth-preserving move, The truth about improving your credit score without obsessing over every point. Plus, a trivia celebration of 50 Cent’s Vitamin Water payday turns into a lesson in surprise wins—and surprise losses. Whether you're just beginning your wealth-building journey or refining your strategy, this episode brings practical insights, hearty laughs, and a gentle nudge to rethink what really grows your net worth. How to increase your income (without selling essential organs) Budgeting strategies that actually stick Why investing early matters—and when paying off debt takes priority The real ROI of proper insurance coverage A homebuying debate that might ruffle some financial feathers Birthday trivia for 50 Cent and the Vitamin Water deal that made him a legend End-of-episode takeaways you’ll want to write down (or tattoo, if that’s your thing) Stackers, whether you're navigating rainy days or planning for a brighter financial future, today’s conversation will help you stack smarter, live better, and maybe even walk away with a new strategy—or at least a smile. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/our-favorite-ways-to-grow-wealth-1692 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
After Monday’s primer on why your portfolio needs some international flavor, we’re following up with a deeper dive—this time with someone who lives and breathes global markets. Joe Saul-Sehy and OG welcome Joy Yang, Head of Index Product Management at MarketVector Indexes, to talk through how to actually invest beyond U.S. borders. Joy explains how ETFs can help investors capture international growth while minimizing risk—and why country-specific and sector-specific ETFs might just be your new best friend. You'll also hear insights on investing in private markets, the rise of digital assets, and whether private equity in your 401k is a brilliant idea… or a cautionary tale. But don’t worry, the basement stays weird. Doug brings the trivia heat with a Martha Stewart–Eliot Spitzer stumper, and the episode wraps with some creative audience feedback (including one Stackers’ AI-powered school project that caught our attention). Topics Covered: How to diversify globally without overcomplicating your portfolio The power of ETFs for targeting specific markets and sectors What you really need to know before considering private equity in retirement accounts Balancing simplicity with opportunity in a world of shiny investment options The limits of “going big or going home” when it comes to risk and return Stackers, if you’re looking for smart ways to expand your portfolio’s reach—or just curious what index creators think about Bitcoin—this episode delivers insights, laughs, and a grounded reminder: simple can still be smart. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-invest-globally-with-joy-yang-1691 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
How global is your portfolio, really? This week in the basement, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and the gang zoom out from the U.S. markets and take us on a whirlwind trip around the investing world. Spoiler alert: the case for international investing is stronger than you think—and it’s not just about chasing higher returns. It’s about risk reduction, smart diversification, and maybe even admitting that the U.S. isn’t always the world’s MVP. You'll hear how developed and emerging markets fit into a well-balanced portfolio, how correlation works in your favor (yes, this time that’s a good thing), and what history tells us about going global. Joe and OG share practical advice for how to get started, when to rebalance, and how much international exposure might make sense for the average Stacker. Then in the second half, we pivot from markets to money buffers: listener Jeff from Cleveland wonders how to set insurance deductibles based on the state of his emergency fund. We break down how to think about the real return on your rainy-day stash—because spoiler: it’s not about the interest rate, it's about your resilience. To wrap things up, we share timeless wisdom from Stackers across the country on what they’d tell new graduates about money, life, and how not to blow that first paycheck on a jet ski. Why international investing may improve both your returns and your risk profile How much of your portfolio to allocate internationally—and what history suggests What "correlation" really means and why it’s your friend (at least in investing) Risks and common misconceptions of investing overseas How to choose between developed vs. emerging markets Portfolio tools to visualize your asset mix and expected outcomes Why your emergency fund’s best ROI might be peace of mind How to align insurance deductibles with your liquidity cushion What our community of Stackers wishes they had known after graduation FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/making-the-case-for-international-investing-1690 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
This week, we’re getting deep (like, basement-deep) into what it means to flourish. Join Joe, OG, Paula Pant, and special guest Ryan Doolittle as they unpack a brand-new study on happiness. Spoiler: it’s not just about stacking cash. From the influence of childhood experiences to the surprising power of community, autonomy, and faith, this episode asks whether true wealth is more emotional than numerical. Plus, Ryan shares his adventures from his new series Try and Ryan—where he road-tests hobbies that might just add meaning to your retirement (and your Tuesdays). What we’re exploring in the basement: 🌱 What the latest research says about flourishing—and why it’s not just for the rich 👶 How childhood trauma or support plays into long-term happiness ⛪ Religious attendance: a surprising common thread in many “happy” lives 🎯 Autonomy, mastery, and purpose at work—and why they might matter more than promotions 🌍 Why Finland keeps winning the “World’s Happiest Country” race (and what Americans might learn from it) 💰 How financial flexibility might be more valuable than financial freedom 🧓 Gender and retirement happiness: why the experience might not be equal across the board 🛠️ Ryan’s “Try and Ryan” series and how picking up hobbies can boost life satisfaction 🏎️ Also: Trivia mayhem involving the Indy 500, Paula’s cat gets a shoutout, and OG still won’t drive stick 🎙️ Want to be wealthy and well? Tune in for a conversation that’s as heartfelt as it is hilarious—because in the basement, we believe money’s just the fuel. Flourishing is the journey. Show notes: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/money-happiness-and-flourishing-1689/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Turns out, saving $3,000 a year might be easier (and tastier) than you think. This week, we’re dishing up big savings with Bryan Suddith, who turned his family’s runaway grocery bill into a budget-friendly game—complete with freezer hacks, local meat tips, and food waste strategies that actually work. He joins Joe, OG, and guest co-host Len Penzo (yes, that Len Penzo of LenPenzo.com fame) to share how mindful meal planning can make your wallet and your taste buds happy. We’re also talking about a Wall Street Journal piece that reveals why high schoolers are ditching traditional degrees for skilled trades... and landing $70K jobs right out of the gate. Plus, Doug helps us navigate one of life’s most awkward questions: What do you call your friend’s mom? (Hint: it’s not “Linda.”) What’s stacked inside this episode: 🧾 How Bryan gamified his grocery budget and saved thousands—with zero meal-prep burnout 🥩 Freezer hacks, locally sourced meats, and the joys of slow-thawed financial wins 🥦 Food mindfulness: the surprising connection between awareness and grocery savings 🎯 Why budgeting doesn't have to feel like punishment (especially when TikTok is involved) 🎙️ Bryan’s bonus storytelling and public speaking tips for anyone who has to talk to humans 🔧 Trade school is trending: why $70K jobs are showing up before diplomas 🧰 Should your teen consider HVAC over Harvard? We unpack the growing case for skilled trades 🤷♂️ Conan O'Brien, Doug, and the Great Parental Naming Debate of 2025 💡 If you’ve ever overpaid at the grocery store or underestimated a plumber’s paycheck... this one’s for you. Bring your shopping list and your sense of humor—we’ll meet you in the basement. Full Show Notes: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/avoid-food-waste-and-save-benjamins-bryan-suddith-1688/ Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Think you're being lied to at work? You probably are. From boardrooms to bank accounts, this episode pulls no punches. We’re stacking double the wisdom on this special Memorial Day episode, as Joe Saul-Sehy interviews two powerhouse guests: Bonnie Hammer, former vice chair of NBCUniversal and bestselling author, and Dr. Erika Rasure from Beyond Finance. Whether it’s breaking glass ceilings or breaking out of debt, this episode is your roadmap to reclaiming control. Inside the episode: 💼 Bonnie Hammer calls B.S. on the “15 lies women are told at work” — and explains how to rewrite the rules 🎬 Behind-the-scenes of Suits and why even hit shows face wild career landmines 🧠 How your attitude and teamwork can make or break your climb to the top 💬 Dr. Erika Rasure on why 50% of Americans don’t trust themselves with money — and how to start 💸 The real emotional blockers behind budgeting, saving, and staying out of the online cart trap 🧍♀️ Gender and generational gaps: why confidence with money isn’t equally distributed (but should be) 🛠️ Financial “practice weeks” and mindset shifts to get unstuck from shame and paralysis ✅ A simple path to get control over your debt without feeling like you’ve failed Also: Doug delivers his own Memorial Day tribute and trivia, because of course he does. 🎙️ Ready to outsmart bad advice and start building on your own terms? This one’s for you — whether you’re climbing the corporate ladder or clawing your way out of credit card debt (or both). FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/lies-work-and-money-with-bonnie-hammer-and-dr-erika-rasure-1687 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Memorial Day weekend is here, which means it’s officially time to break out the grill, the beach bag… and maybe that travel budget spreadsheet. But don’t worry—this isn’t a guide from travel influencers who hike barefoot with artisanal backpacks. Nope. This episode is brought to you by your favorite money geeks in Joe’s mom’s basement. Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, Jesse Cramer, Crystal Hammond, and Doug gather 'round the card table to share their best budget-friendly travel strategies, hilarious vacation stories, and maybe one or two travel fails. From choosing the right travel companion to navigating airports like a boss, this crew drops loads of practical wisdom for making your summer adventures awesome and affordable. You’ll learn why credit card points can be your best friend, how to pick lodging that won’t make you cry (or bankrupt you), and why packing a toothbrush is a good idea… even if Doug’s trivia makes you question the timing. This isn’t expert advice. These are the musings of people who spend more time optimizing their wallets than their luggage. And that’s exactly why you’ll leave feeling better prepared to tackle your own summer travel—without the jet-setter guilt trip. Kicking off summer with a Stacking Benjamins travel roundtable Real-life travel hacks from people who care more about budgeting than boarding groups Credit card point strategies that actually work Hot takes on hotels, Airbnbs, and airport snacks Why picking the right travel buddy can make or break your trip The one item Doug thinks was more important than nylon (it’s… something) Whether you’re headed to the lake, the mountains, or just your backyard with a cold drink, join the crew for a hilarious and practical celebration of summer travel. Full Show Notes: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/our-favorite-summer-travel-tips-1686/ Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What do cupcakes, frosting, and financial independence have in common? This week in the basement, Stacking Benjamins welcomes legendary personal finance thinker JL Collins, author of The Simple Path to Wealth, to connect the dots between simple investing and sweet, stress-free success. In a lively conversation with Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Mom’s neighbor Doug (who may or may not be launching a frosting-themed protest movement), JL shares timeless wisdom on avoiding complexity, embracing low-cost index investing, and why FU money is more than just a clever phrase—it’s freedom in a bank account. You’ll hear JL’s take on portfolio allocation, debt’s sneaky impact on your future, and how to survive volatile markets without sacrificing your peace of mind. If you’ve ever felt stuck in a soul-crushing job? JL’s got some perspective you’ll love. Then, in the second half of the episode, Joe and OG shift gears to answer a listener question from Mike. He’s wondering about the efficient frontier—yes, we’re getting fancy now—and wants to know how to move beyond the Simple Path. Joe walks through the different asset classes he thinks about when crafting a diversified portfolio, while OG shares how to think through asset allocation as your wealth and confidence grow. Whether you’re curious about real estate, international investing, or just how much to hold in bonds, you’ll walk away with a clearer picture of what your portfolio could look like after “graduating” from JL’s foundational advice. Why keeping it simple beats chasing trends What “FU money” really means—and how to get it The truth about withdrawal rates and why they matter When debt becomes a dream killer Tips for navigating market downturns without panic How to find freedom without spending a fortune JL’s surprisingly profound parable about a monk, a minister, and money Doug’s hot take on the great frosting vs. cake debate A deep dive into the efficient frontier and how to set up your asset allocation beyond VTSAX Joe Saul-Sehy and OG’s thoughts on portfolio construction for seasoned investors JL’s insights have inspired millions on the path to financial independence—and now it’s your turn. Tune in, take notes (or don’t, we’ll recap it in the 201), and remember: sometimes the sweetest success starts with doing less. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/the-simple-path-to-contentment-with-jl-collins-1685/ Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Is it summer already, or is that just our theme park budget melting in the sun? Either way, we’re kicking off the season with our annual guide to roller coasters, churros, and how not to hurl after one too many loops. Theme Park Insider’s Robert Niles returns to share the biggest news in amusement park land—from a new Disney park in Abu Dhabi (what?!) to Universal Orlando’s game-changing Epic Universe. But what’s a summer kickoff without a good ol’ whiplash reminder that your brain can’t be trusted when it comes to investing? Joe Saul-Sehy and OG dive into Jason Zweig’s latest insights about how our market “memory banks” mess with decision-making, and why 2008 probably wasn’t as scarring as your gut tells you. And yes, Doug's trivia ties it all together—with corn dogs, naturally. How to actually save money at theme parks without having to sleep in a costume closet. The surprising reason a $1,400 day at Disney might be your own fault. Which new coasters (and old favorites) are worth the detour this year. Why your gut—and your "market memory"—could be sabotaging your investments. The last time the stock market went down multiple years in a row (hint: not 2008). What Robert’s favorite underrated U.S. parks are (spoiler: Dollywood shows up, again). How to strategically splurge or save at the parks—merch fans, avert your eyes. 🎢 This one has thrills, chills, and the occasional spreadsheet. Just how we like it. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/welcome-summmer-2025-with-robert-niles-1684/ Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What really moves the needle on your happiness—making more money or saving more of what you’ve got? This week, Joe Saul-Sehy and OG are joined by Paula Pant, Jesse Cramer, and the guy who still owes money on his Beanie Baby collection—Doug—for a roundtable filled with bold financial takes and even bolder choices. It’s a rapid-fire round of “either-or” dilemmas, and while nobody gets voted off the island, a few sacred cows are gently tipped over. Should you max out your retirement account or finally slay your student loans? Ditch credit cards for cash? Bet your future on crypto or keep it stuffed in a fireproof mattress? Our panel debates these decisions and shares real-life stories of what’s worked—and what’s blown up like a microwaved burrito. Of course, it wouldn’t be The Stacking Benjamins Show without a detour or two: we dig into financial hoarding (how many dusty envelopes is too many?), reveal why your credit score might be your best frenemy, and serve up some vintage airplane trivia, just to keep things classy. So whether you're team "Earn More" or team "Cut Back," this episode delivers the kind of guidance that helps you feel a little more confident making your next money move—even if it’s just saying no to another financial “shortcut.” Topics covered include: Why more income might not be the golden ticket The case for ditching your credit card (and why that makes Doug twitchy) Saving vs. investing vs. spending like you’re already retired What financial hoarding reveals about your mindset Index funds vs. individual stocks: which one should get your long-term commitment? The never-ending crypto debate (now with 12% more existential dread!) How obsessing over your credit score may or may not ruin your weekend If you’re figuring out how to balance today’s latte with tomorrow’s freedom—or you just want to feel smarter about money than your cousin Gary who “invests in vibes”—this one’s for you. And remember, no matter how much you earn or save, the real ROI is tuning in with the Stackers each week. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/the-happiness-debate-1683/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ever feel like money is a never-ending game of not enough? Today, we're rewiring that thinking. Our special guest, Leisa Peterson—author of The Mindful Millionaire and now The Money Catalyst—joins us to talk about abundance, scarcity, and how to stop living life like you're budgeting for armageddon. (Hint: It's okay to order the nice wine now.) Joe Saul-Sehy and OG also shine a light on the resurgence of alternative investments. Is it innovation... or just Wall Street’s way of sneaking in high fees through the back door? Plus, we roll into Doug’s trivia, a TikTok Minute that flips the script on a certain “draft pick,” and, of course, a few stories that prove—yet again—that golf is no game for the frugal. “Am I YOLO-ing or just broke?” Why framing matters more than frugality From scarcity to satisfaction: How one moment in Paris changed Leisa’s relationship with money You call that a tip? The surprisingly deep conversation behind street musicians, champagne, and generosity Alternative investments are back (again?) Why your advisor might pitch you on ditching the market... and why you should think twice Personal growth through fiction: Leisa's surprising journey from nonfiction burnout to a book that might just fix your wallet and your heart When the camel arrives with a skeleton on its back: Doug’s trivia gets weird (and somehow financial) TikTok Minute: What happens when a 50-year-old thinks he just got drafted into the NFL OG’s rule of thumb: Volatility isn’t the villain—it’s the entrance fee 🪄 PS: Boston-area Stackers! Joe’s coming your way May 20th. Get all the meetup deets at stackingbenjamins.com/meetup 🎧 Listen now and start living (and spending) like abundance is already yours. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What do most millionaires have in common? No, it’s not a yacht named “Compound Interest.” It’s mindset. In this episode, Joe Saul-Sehy and OG kick off Mindset Week by welcoming Sam Dogen, the Financial Samurai himself, to help you start your journey toward a million-dollar net worth—one intentional step at a time. Sam shares why building wealth is less about luck and more about grit, clear goals, and a killer savings rate. He explains why $250,000 is the magic milestone where compounding takes over, why your “why” is more important than your budget, and how a simple house-to-car ratio can reveal whether you’re cruising toward financial freedom or stuck in the valet lane. You'll learn: Why your first $250,000 is the hardest (and most critical) How to find your “why” and let it drive your money decisions Why some people crush millionaire goals while others stall out The pros and cons of prioritizing student loan payoff How real estate, entrepreneurship, and mindset play a role in long-term success Plus, Doug delivers trivia about the world’s most millionaire-dense country (hint: it’s not the U.S.), and Joe announces a live event with Boldin’s Steve Chen to help you master retirement planning tools. All that and a wink toward OG’s dream car obsession (which definitely didn’t come from the after-show... wink wink). 💥 Want to level up your financial thinking? This episode is your launching pad. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-start-on-your-financial-journey-with-financial-samauri-sam-dogen-1681 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
If your grocery bill has you doing double-takes at the checkout line, you’re not alone—and this episode of The Stacking Benjamins Show is packed with practical ways to take control of your food spending. Joe Saul-Sehy is joined by Janice Torres of the Yo Quiero Dinero podcast, regular contributor OG, and the always-frugal Len Penzo to serve up real-world grocery hacks that help you stretch your dollars without skimping on flavor or quality. You’ll learn: How meal planning can shrink your bill (and your food waste) When buying in bulk pays off—and when it’s just a trap Why pre-packaged foods might be eating up your budget Which apps help you unlock store discounts and cash back And whether starting a garden is actually worth it for your bottom line We also dig into freezer strategies, the art of cutting back on meat without feeling deprived, and a few guilty pleasure restaurants that somehow always find their way back into our budgets. It’s a money-saving roundtable that’s equal parts helpful and hilarious. Come for the grocery hacks, stay for the side dishes of personality. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Your burning questions fuel this episode! Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and special guest Christine Benz of Morningstar unpack some of the biggest questions facing investors today—especially those just starting out. We kick things off by diving deep into target date funds. They promise simplicity—but do they deliver long-term results? We explore when they work, when they don’t, and what you should consider if they’re part of your portfolio. Then Christine shares a graduation-season masterclass in financial advice: How to begin investing, even when you feel behind Why lifestyle creep is the silent killer of wealth The importance of building habits now that will serve you for decades Resources and reading recs that can actually move the needle for new grads (and not-so-new grads) We also answer listener questions on: Whether refinancing your mortgage is still a smart move How global shifts in labor and supply chains may impact your finances And why it’s time to give your favorite retirement calculator a second look And somewhere in all this… someone may or may not reveal a dream dinner scenario that involves a pair of country music legends. But, you know, that part probably didn’t happen. Probably. Whether you're just graduating, recalibrating, or rethinking your strategy entirely, this episode is your invitation to stack smarter—and have a little fun while you do it. Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Joe Saul-Sehy sits down with bestselling author Jen Sincero, the powerhouse behind You Are a Badass and You Are a Badass at Making Money. If you've ever felt stuck in financial quicksand or caught in a loop of scarcity thinking, Jen brings the fire (and the funny) to help shift your mindset and start building wealth from the inside out. You’ll hear: How Jen went from living in a garage to becoming a seven-figure entrepreneur The mindset shifts that changed her relationship with money—and could change yours Why self-talk and affirmations aren't fluff—they're your financial launchpad Simple ways to start reprogramming how you think, spend, and save The importance of consistent investing—even when you’re not feeling confident We also touch on: Why your HSA might be a secret investing weapon What to know as tax deadlines approach (and how not to panic) A listener’s creative approach to investing—and how OG and Joe weigh in Plus: marathon filming, TV mishaps, and trivia surprises from Mom’s neighbor Doug If you're ready to stop playing small with your money and start stacking like a badass, this episode will give you the mindset—and motivation—to get going. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/you-are-a-badass-at-making-money-greatest-hits-week-1678 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Buying vs. renting: it’s one of the most emotionally charged—and financially misunderstood—topics in personal finance. This week on The Stacking Benjamins Show, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and guests Jesse Cramer and Chris Luger enter the ring to challenge the conventional wisdom behind homeownership. It’s not just a polite chat. It’s a full-on basement debate where no side goes unchallenged. You’ll hear: The surprising math behind renting—and why it’s not “throwing money away” What most homeowners don’t budget for (and pay dearly for later) Why buying a house might be one of the best—or worst—decisions you ever make How lifestyle, mobility, and flexibility factor into long-term wealth The emotional traps, practical benefits, and tough tradeoffs on both sides Plus, Mom’s neighbor Doug gets into full trivia-host mode with a Star Wars challenge, and we sprinkle in some good-natured jabs, marketing wisdom, and a reminder that there’s no one-size-fits-all answer. If you’ve ever bought a home, sold one, rented, or even thought about doing any of the above—this episode will make you think twice. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/renting-vs-buying-forever-1677 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Retirement might be the goal, but the journey? Full of curveballs. On today’s episode, Joe Saul-Sehy is joined by special guest co-host Len Penzo of LenPenzo.com, along with OG and Neighbor Doug, for a no-holds-barred look at what really derails retirement plans—and how to build a strategy that can handle the chaos. From unexpected job loss to rising long-term care costs, adult kids moving back home, and even changing relationship dynamics, this episode dives into the often-overlooked risks that can chip away at your retirement dreams. Inside the episode: What to consider when evaluating long-term care insurance How job instability late in your career can throw off your timeline The growing trend of adult children impacting their parents’ retirement Grandparents becoming full-time caregivers—and the financial toll that brings Relationship shifts and widowhood in retirement Downsizing, austerity planning, and staying financially flexible Plus, our TikTok Minute features Gary V on why taking a step backward might be the smartest move forward. And as always, Doug brings the trivia heat—this time, with a nostalgic nod to a certain potato-headed toy. With Len Penzo in the basement, the insights (and squirrel references) are extra sharp. Prepare to laugh, learn, and rethink what “retirement ready” really means. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/four-things-that-can-derail-your-retirement-plan-1676 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
When it comes to living your best financial life, good health isn't a nice-to-have—it’s a must-have. In today’s episode, we welcome Angelo Poli from MetPro, who shows us why smart fitness and nutrition choices are just as important as smart money moves. Drawing on insightful listener questions, Angelo shares: How consistent habits—not extreme diets—build the foundation for long-term health The real scoop on intermittent fasting, the carnivore diet, and other trending fads Practical ways to lower blood pressure, boost energy, and keep momentum even when life gets busy Why managing your wellness is one of the most powerful ways to protect your future earning potential and enhance your quality of life Because stacking Benjamins isn't just about saving—it's about having the health and energy to enjoy them. Later in the show, Joe and OG tackle smart financial strategies for uncertain markets: How to choose the right financial advisor when fear is everywhere What really matters in your long-term financial plan Why stability and experience will always outperform hype And finally, we dig into Home Equity Lines of Credit (HELOCs)—what they are, when to use one wisely, and how to avoid the common traps. This episode is all about stacking smarter—your wealth, your health, and your life. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/improve-your-health-and-your-finances-in-2025 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What do zipper injuries, holiday party mishaps, and servant leadership have in common? They’re all part of today’s wide-ranging look at careers—what to do, what not to do, and how to make your next move smarter (and safer). Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Neighbor Doug are joined by contributors Sandy Smith, Jesse Cramer, and a few classic career stories from the SB vault. Together, they explore: The surprising power of likability in the workplace How consistency and personal branding can open big doors Why some leadership styles flop and others inspire The real-life career missteps that made us all a little wiser A closer look at the Elevate Conference, which champions financial literacy for Black women And of course, it wouldn’t be a basement episode without a trivia challenge. This time, Doug delivers a stat that’ll make every listener squirm—let’s just say it involves zippers and emergency rooms. Whether you're climbing the corporate ladder, considering a leap, or just trying to avoid HR’s bad side, this episode packs in real advice and memorable stories from people who’ve been there, done that, and got the awkward email to prove it. Smart moves, cautionary tales, and Doug’s very specific warning about pants—this one's got it all. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/improve-your-career-trajectory-1674/ Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
How do you stand out in a competitive workplace—without shouting or burning out? In this episode, Joe and OG sit down with Lorraine K. Lee, a sought-after keynote speaker and former LinkedIn and Prezi leader, to dig into the real strategies behind building a career brand that lasts. Lorraine shares what she’s learned from coaching thousands of professionals, plus her own journey from behind-the-scenes to center stage. She introduces her EPIC framework—a smart approach that helps you craft a standout career identity built on: Experiences Personality Identity Community You’ll also learn: How to advocate for yourself without being “that person” The power of thoughtful feedback (and how to actually get it) Tactical tips to master Zoom meetings, digital presence, and virtual impressions Why embracing your differences can give you a serious edge in your career And after the career conversation? We shift into Stacker-style financial clarity—covering key money decisions people face during uncertain times: Should you wait to buy a home, or pull the trigger now? What do tariffs mean for your next car purchase? How should you approach investing when the market’s wobbling? From personal branding to practical budgeting, this episode gives you the tools to think clearly, act strategically, and build a future you’re proud of—no matter the economy. This one’s packed with high-leverage insights. Bring a notepad. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Today’s episode blends career strategy with financial know-how, because who says you can’t build your personal brand and your balance sheet at the same time? Joe Saul-Sehy and OG explore what it really means to shape your professional reputation—from the way you show up in meetings to how you set (and measure) your career goals. Whether you're climbing the ladder, shifting industries, or mentoring others, this episode delivers practical ways to take control of how you're seen and what you stand for at work. Inside this conversation: The “RAVE” model for boosting your brand Why being a cheerleader for your colleagues makes you a standout How appearances and visibility (yes, even your Zoom background) impact your path Real-world tips for growing your influence without bragging—or burning out We also get into the intersection of tech and money: Is AI ready to replace financial advisors? (Short answer: not quite.) What metrics every financially literate person should understand And why your credit card points strategy might need a second look Plus, Doug breaks out a trivia challenge involving coin collecting, and we unravel the very weird truth behind the 1 cent piece. Whether you’re building a career, managing your money, or trying to do both with a little more polish—this episode’s packed with insights that stick. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/your-career-brand-sb1672 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Some people master reinvention. They move from one stage of life to the next with confidence, purpose, and an eye on long-term success. What if your financial plan could do the same? In today’s roundtable, Joe is joined by Alyssa Maes, Roger Whitney (The Retirement Answer Man), and OG to talk about what it takes to build wealth that lasts—not just through one season of life, but through all of them. 🎯 Inside the episode: What starting strong in your 20s and 30s really looks like How to fight lifestyle creep and sharpen your personal brand mid-career Why simplifying cash flow in retirement can be a game-changer The power of habits, automation, and adaptability across all stages And what consistent, thoughtful choices can do for your long-term success The thread running through it all? Knowing who you are, where you're going—and letting your financial decisions reflect that. We also sneak in a bit of trivia involving the most expensive comic book ever sold and a certain pop icon with a track record of breaking records (you can probably guess who). This episode is about more than music or money—it’s about making every era of your life count. Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What Taylor Swift teaches us about strategy, long-term thinking, and building an empire. Taylor Swift isn’t just a pop icon—she’s a master strategist. And in this episode, we unpack exactly how she built a cultural and financial empire with smart moves that offer powerful lessons for any Stacker. Joe Saul-Sehy sits down with Kevin Evers of Harvard Business Review Press to explore: How Taylor’s early partnerships set her on a path most artists never get to walk Why a clear vision—and the discipline to stick to it—can be a superpower How she turned frustration into creative fuel and conflict into leverage The surprising role MySpace and radio tours played in her initial success And what her story teaches us about marketing, risk-taking, and ownership But the show doesn’t stop there. Joe and OG also dive into: Grant Cardone’s 401(k) comments and whether his hot takes hold up The risks and rewards of real estate What crypto storage, insurance, and documentation mean for your financial safety net Plus, Mom’s neighbor Doug jumps in with a tax-themed trivia challenge—and a few surprising family stories to bring it all back home. Whether you’re a Swiftie, a strategist, or someone just trying to make smarter money moves, this episode delivers sharp takeaways and fresh perspectives. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/all-about-taylor-swift-business-genius-1671 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
It’s Taylor Swift week in the basement, and we’re kicking things off by looking at the business behind the beats. Joe, OG, and the gang pull back the curtain on the intentional, savvy moves that took Taylor from breakout teen artist to industry powerhouse—and why her playbook might just work for your financial life, too. We’re talking about more than album drops. This episode covers: The power of controlling your own creative output Why strategic collaborations and timing matter How to avoid your own “sophomore slump”—in music or investing The underrated value of clarity, consistency, and small-but-steady improvements Then, we take a sharp turn toward the world of Roth IRAs, answering a listener question about the five-year rule and clearing up common misconceptions. If you’ve ever been confused by tax rules or unsure when you can touch your money, this one’s for you. Plus, there’s plenty more along the way: A local company stops making yardsticks (and we may be way too interested in that) Salutes to the troops, and a shoutout to basement podcasters A colonoscopy story you didn’t ask for, but will absolutely remember Whether you’re a Swiftie, an investor, or just here for the financial clarity, this episode brings strategy, insight, and unexpected takeaways you can actually use. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/the-strategic-genius-of-taylor-swift-1669 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Feeling anxious about where your money’s going? You’re not alone—and you’re not without a plan. In today’s episode, Joe is joined by OG, Mom’s neighbor Doug, and two sharp minds from the personal finance world: Paula Pant from Afford Anything and Dr. Jordan Grumet from Earn and Invest. Together, they take a deep dive into the many faces of investment risk, from the obvious to the overlooked. Because when it comes to your financial future, the real danger isn’t just volatility—it’s misunderstanding the terrain. Whether you're dipping a toe into international markets, piling into real estate, or wondering if your long-term plan can survive a little inflation, this episode will help you better understand the risks that matter—and avoid the ones that don’t. 💡 What’s inside: Why market risk feels scary—but often isn’t the real danger How liquidity and time horizon risks can quietly erode your strategy The danger of overconcentration (ahem, putting all your eggs in one ETF) What inflation, reinvestment, and credit risk mean for your future How to navigate longevity and foreign investment risks without flinching And of course, the basement wouldn’t be the basement without a few detours—including a surprise milkshake debate and Doug’s trivia segment that takes a sharp left into apple peels, Johnny Appleseed, and questionable coalition logic. If you’re ready to face the real dangers of investing—and stop fearing the ones that don’t deserve your attention—this episode’s got you covered. Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Market volatility, overthinking portfolios, and why simple might be smarter. Trade wars. Tariffs. Tumbling markets. When headlines scream and your portfolio wobbles, what’s a Stacker to do? Today, we tackle how to invest confidently during uncertain times—without overcomplicating your strategy or losing sleep. We start by breaking down smart ways to manage volatility, whether you’re just getting started or already a seasoned investor. Then we dig into a great question from Stacker Ryan: should you stick with a diversified portfolio or choose a one-stop fund solution like those from Dimensional or Avantis? 🧠 In this episode: How to hedge against market swings without panicking Why keeping it simple could beat fancy fund strategies What most investors get wrong about stock market “danger” The power of a long-term mindset and how it pays off Tips for building confidence in your own investment decisions We also take a break for the TikTok Minute (yes, we found another gem), and Doug brings a trivia challenge that'll take you back to the dawn of the space race. And later, we open the mailbag: A listener asks how to plan solo for retirement ...and also wonders how much is too much for an emergency fund It’s a full basement session—investing insights, listener Q&A, and a few unexpected left turns. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/talking-about-taxes-and-tariffs-in-your-investment-plan-1667 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Tariffs got you sweating? We’ve got the strategy (and the LaCroix) to help you chill. Markets are wobbling, headlines are screaming, and you’re wondering if your portfolio is about to implode. Take a deep breath—and head down to the basement. In this episode, Joe Saul-Sehy, OG, and Mom’s neighbor Doug tackle the turbulence triggered by recent tariff changes. While others panic, we’re pouring the coffee and walking you through how to think smarter (and sleep better) during uncertain times. 🔍 Inside the episode: What recent tariff changes actually mean for your money How to protect your investments when markets get shaky Why doing nothing might be the smartest move The behavioral traps investors fall into—and how to avoid them Reassurance, real talk, and your weekly dose of Doug Whether you’re tempted to sell it all or just want a little peace of mind, this episode gives you tools to stay cool, stay invested, and stay the course. Because in the basement, we don’t panic—we plan. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Entrepreneurship, financial anxiety, and a guinea pig (yes, really). When you’ve got a stuffed guinea pig on your desk and a mic in front of you, it’s only a matter of time before you talk about that one time you ate guinea pig in Peru. (Spoiler: It was pretty good.) That’s how we open today’s show—but from there, things get real. Today’s main event features Rudy Mawer, founder of 60 Day Hustle, who joins Joe Saul-Sehy to share his incredible story. Rudy grew up in a modest home in England, raised by two world-class triathletes who pushed him to pursue excellence. He didn’t come from wealth—but he did build it, and fast. Rudy opens up about: His path from sports scientist to serial entrepreneur The role mentorship and strategic networking played in his success Why legacy matters just as much as hustle His latest documentary project and what drives him today Then, we turn to a conversation sparked by actor Seth Rogen’s recent interview with Dax Shepard. Rogen confessed he’s spent years saving out of fear—and maybe missed out on life in the process. So we ask: Are you hoarding cash out of anxiety? What happens when your savings plan becomes a cage? And how can Stackers find balance between security and spontaneity? Finally, we wrap up with one heck of a weather report. Mom’s neighbor Doug recounts the epic ice storm that left him snowed in, powered down, and questioning all his life choices. (Okay, maybe not all of them—but definitely his chainsaw strategy.) As always, Doug brings the trivia heat (and a little airline history), and we share some listener reflections that tie it all together. It’s a jam-packed episode—from financial fear to frozen driveways—with a little Peruvian culinary adventure tossed in. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-get-moving-on-your-money-goals-rudy-mawer-1666 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Is good debt a myth? Should we all chase FIRE? The basement panel weighs in. In today’s Financial Concepts Friday roundtable, Joe brings the basement crew together for a lively “In or Out” debate on some of the most polarizing personal finance topics out there. Are we in or out on the idea of “good debt”? Do budgets really matter when you’re just starting out? Should you talk about money with your friends and family… or is that still taboo? Joining Joe are three financial thinkers who aren’t afraid to stir the pot: Paula Pant from Afford Anything Jesse Cramer from The Personal Finance for Long Term Investors Show OG from our own basement think tank (and planning headquarters) Together, they dig into: Whether any debt can actually be considered good If living without a budget is a fast track to financial regret—or freedom The upside (and awkwardness) of open money conversations How FIRE goals like retiring by 35 sound… and feel, once you really unpack them Plus, Mom’s neighbor Doug drops by with a trivia challenge that’ll have you laughing (and maybe yelling at your speaker). And of course, we wrap up with reflections that’ll leave you both entertained and a little bit wiser. So grab a LaCroix from the mini fridge and join us in the basement—this one’s packed with laughs, insights, and hot takes on cold, hard cash. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/personal-finance-most-controversial-questions-1665 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ever been told to buy the biggest house you can afford... to “motivate yourself”? Or to skip insurance because “nothing bad will happen”? Yeah—us too. And we’ve got some thoughts. In this episode, Joe, OG, and Doug break down the Top 5 Worst Financial Tips they’ve ever heard—and more importantly, why taking them seriously could leave your finances in a flaming dumpster behind your dreams. From personal debt confessions to debates about extreme couponing, bad budgeting ideas, and the wild world of TikTok money myths, this episode is your roadmap to not falling for advice that sounds smart but… absolutely isn’t. In this episode: Why “buying big” won’t necessarily inspire you—it might just bankrupt you Skipping insurance to save money? We’ll show you how that plan ends Should couples really share just one checkbook? We investigate The great emergency fund vs. credit card debate When DIY everything turns into Why Did I Try? How the satire in The Joneses movie is secretly more real than you think Listener Q&A: Impact investing, private debt financing, and what it means to be an accredited investor Plus, a surprise TikTok moment, OG's thoughts on calendars, Doug’s history of April Fools’ disasters, and much more You’ll laugh, you’ll learn, and by the end, you’ll be a whole lot more confident dodging bad advice in the wild. 🎧 Tune in and stack smarter by skipping the “advice” that could sink your stack. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/our-top-five-money-saving-solutions-1664 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Is financial literacy missing from your life like that sock you swear went in the dryer? Tiffany Aliche, AKA The Budgetnista, is here to help you find it—minus the lint. She shares her journey to financial wholeness and takes us behind the scenes of her brand-new PBS special. Meanwhile, Joe and OG break down why financial education starts with community (not overpriced guru courses), why ‘Buy Now, Pay Later’ is the financial equivalent of eating fast food in your car—feels great now, but you’ll regret it later—and how even a trip to Texarkana can teach you a thing or two about money. Plus, a story involving World War II espionage that somehow made its way into the mix. Here’s what’s on tap this week: Kicking off Monday with a solid dose of grumpiness (and a passionate store-brand rant). Hanging with The Budgetnista—Tiffany Aliche takes us behind the scenes. Why financial literacy isn’t just about numbers—it’s about community. The sneaky financial traps that might be eating your wallet alive. Tiffany’s PBS special—how she tackled stage fright and delivered a knockout show. Headlines that made us go “Wait, WHAT?!”—including Klarna and DoorDash teaming up. ‘Buy Now, Pay Later’—why it’s like borrowing money from Future You (and Future You is not happy about it). Mortgage strategies, financial independence, and the art of dodging debt. Could you survive a week on cash only? One of us is trying (and maybe crying). Food waste: it’s not just bad for the planet—it’s silently draining your bank account. Upcoming meetups, tax tips, and basement-style money wisdom you can actually use. And if you stick around long enough, well… who knows what else might show up? FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/budgetnista-financial-literacy-1663 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ever fallen for an investment that seemed like a sure thing... until it wasn’t? You’re not alone. Today, we shine a light on some of the worst investment advice out there—and help you steer clear of it. Joining Joe at the roundtable are: Paula Pant from Afford Anything Jesse Cramer from Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors And Don McDonald, financial pro and former astronaut (not really, but just go with it) from Talking Real Money. Infinite banking and other shiny traps – What sounds like genius often comes with fine print you’ll wish you’d read. Penny stocks and the illusion of easy money – Spoiler: if it feels like a shortcut, it's probably a detour. Equity-indexed annuities and their slick sales tactics – When someone tells you there’s “no downside,” maybe run. Gut feelings vs. data – The panel weighs in on trusting instincts vs. trusting actual math. Teachers and 403(b) plans – A quick peek behind the curtain at one of the most overlooked problem areas in personal finance. How not to invest – A rundown of red flags and hard-won wisdom from people who’ve seen the worst up close. Meanwhile, Doug brings the trivia thunder with a question about sitcom salaries—and things quickly go from Big Bang to big bucks. Whether you’ve made a misstep or are just trying to avoid one, this episode will help you tune out the noise, spot the nonsense, and build a smarter, more resilient investment plan. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/our-least-favorite-investments-1662 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ever wondered how the top financial minds avoid disaster while the rest of us are busy panic-Googling “best investments 2024”? Today, Joe welcomes Barry Ritholtz of Ritholtz Wealth Management down to Mom’s basement for a conversation that flips typical investment advice on its head. It’s not about what to do—it’s about what not to do if you want to grow your money without losing your sanity. Barry shares battle-tested insights from his years in the trenches, covering everything from behavioral finance to market psychology and how to avoid falling for trends that make great headlines but terrible portfolios. Also in this episode: Subscription hacks you didn’t know you needed (and yes, even that one you've been ignoring since 2021). How market history can be your secret weapon—if you actually pay attention to it. Tech innovations in finance and why Barry says they're both exciting and a little terrifying. Productivity gains, AI, and whether the future is a robot that trades ETFs for you while you nap. A peek into Barry’s latest book and the big idea that might shift how you think about investing. Doug creates yet another national holiday—because what the world needs now is Bow Chicka Wow Wow Day. Stacker mailbag time! We’re diving into job loss strategies, building bulletproof emergency funds, and yes, getting into the weeds with buffer ETFs. The never-ending showdown: remote work vs. office life—where do Stackers land? And of course, Doug’s trivia will challenge your financial knowledge and possibly your respect for faux holidays. Whether you’re a seasoned investor or just now figuring out what a 401(k) actually does, this episode brings the insight, laughs, and community you’ve come to expect from the basement. 🎧 Tune in and stack smarter—with fewer missteps and a whole lot more fun. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/getting-your-investments-right-with-barry-ritholtz-1661 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What do weddings, wineries, and Whoppers have to do with smart investing? This week, Joe, OG, and Doug kick off the episode with stories from the road—including a surprise credit card confession that somehow involves a Burger King (because of course it does). But then the gang shifts gears and dives into real money talk, breaking down investing wisdom from the legendary Barry Ritholtz. From navigating market cycles to keeping your emotions in check, Barry’s top 10 tips serve up the kind of grounded, no-BS advice your portfolio will thank you for—especially the next time the market gets jumpy or the headlines go haywire. They also tackle what politics really mean for your investments (spoiler: maybe less than you think) and why getting your expectations right could be the most important investment decision you make. Stick around to hear a listener question that hits close to home: How should you invest for an 84-year-old mom? It’s a multigenerational money moment that brings the discussion full circle. Here’s what you’ll learn: Why market cycles matter (and how to avoid getting whiplash) The hidden dangers of investing with your heart instead of your head What Barry Ritholtz says about predicting political impacts on your portfolio How to set realistic return expectations (and why that’s surprisingly freeing) A practical investing strategy for elderly parents—without the jargon Plus: Doug’s trivia takes a nostalgic turn into the wild world of Beanie Babies FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-not-to-invest-1660 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ever wonder why some people crush their financial goals while others keep hitting snooze? Today, we’re talking about the secret sauce behind sticking to a financial plan—and no, it’s not just “wanting it more” (though that helps). Joining Joe in the basement is OG, alongside personal finance expert Jesse Kramer from The Best Interest and CFP Dana Anspach from Sensible Money. Together, they’ll break down why staying financially motivated is harder than it looks—and how to actually keep yourself on track, even when life (or a killer sale on Amazon) tries to derail you. We’ll explore why people resist financial planning (hint: it’s not always laziness), how goal-setting psychology plays into money habits, and why tracking your finances can be as powerful as tracking your fitness. Dana shares the surprising link between logging your retirement balance and saving more, while OG and Jesse tackle the age-old debate: should financial advisors be more like sports agents—pushing, coaching, and sometimes delivering the tough love? Plus, we dig into why writing things down actually works (seriously, it’s science) and how a simple mindset shift can help you finally take action. And of course, what’s a Friday without Doug’s trivia? This week, Doug takes us back to the boxing ring with a question about the legendary Joe Louis—and the sucker punch that is junk fees. ? Our roundtable throws their best guesses into the ring, but who will come out on top? Play along and see if you can take home the trivia belt! This was a great finish to a week of talking motivation and drive! From the seven steps to dynamic drive to sports agent Molly Fletcher on Wednesday and this discussion, it's a well-rounded week that should help you get up and go...even if you think YOUR get up and go got up and went. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/motivation-habits-and-planning-1659 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ever feel like you're stuck in a rut, spinning your wheels, or just running low on motivation? Today, we crack the code on sustaining drive and avoiding complacency with former sports agent Molly Fletcher, who’s worked with some of the biggest names in sports and has been dubbed the female Jerry Maguire. She breaks down the fine line between contentment and coasting, plus shares keys to staying at the top of your game—from managing energy to embracing adversity like a pro. But wait, there’s more! Len Penzo (yes, of LenPenzo dot com fame!) joins us as guest co-host, bringing his usual mix of wisdom, dry wit, and probably a few thoughts on sandwich prices. And if you think motivation is tough, try navigating the world of credit—because while ambition is great, bad credit can still trip you up. From student loan pitfalls to practical credit repair tips, we cover what younger folks (and honestly, all of us) need to know about keeping those numbers in check. In this episode: Molly Fletcher on Peak Performance – Lessons from a top sports agent on how to stay motivated without burning out. Complacency vs. Contentment – Are you stuck or simply satisfied? Molly breaks it down. Managing Energy Like a Pro – Tom Izzo swears by it, and so should you. Credit Crash Course – What happens when student loans go delinquent, and how to fix the damage. The Living Without Credit Debate – Is a debt-free life possible, or just a financial myth? Doug & OG’s Ski Slope Disaster – A story of poor decisions, gravity, and bruised egos (hilarious in retrospect). Len Penzo's Tips for Improving Credit Scores – Because nobody budgets quite like Len. Whether you need a motivation boost, a credit check-up, or just a good laugh at Doug’s expense, this episode has you covered. 🎧 Tune in for wisdom, financial hacks, and some après-ski storytelling you won’t want to miss! FULL SHOW NOTES: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/find-your-dynamic-drive-molly-fletcher-1658/ Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ever start a new financial goal feeling unstoppable, only to lose momentum when life gets in the way? Staying motivated isn’t just about working harder—it’s about working smarter. Today, Joe and OG take a deep dive into Dynamic Drive, the key to keeping your financial momentum going without burnout. We’ll break down the seven essential pillars—mindset, energy, discipline, curiosity, resilience, connection, and confidence—so you’re ready to hit the ground running when we welcome former sports agent Molly Fletcher on Wednesday. 💰 In this episode: Why motivation fizzles out—and how to make it last The seven keys to Dynamic Drive (and how to apply them to your finances) How milestones and energy management keep you on track Tax strategies for selling shares—FIFO, LIFO, or average cost? Which method helps you keep more of your hard-earned Benjamins? What cowboy fencing teaches us about peak performance (yes, that’s a thing) Plus, Doug serves up a sports trivia challenge—because what’s financial motivation without a little fun? 👉 Listen in now and get fired up—without burning out! FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-create-a-sustainable-drive-1657 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ever feel guilty about that $7 airport coffee or the mystery fees that somehow turn your $15 DoorDash order into a $40 financial regret? You’re not alone. This episode, Joe Saul-Sehy is joined by Paula Pant (Afford Anything) and Justin Peters (The Struggle Is Real) to unravel the sneaky ways convenience drains our wallets. In this episode: Airport Food: The Ultimate Financial Heist – Why does a sad turkey sandwich cost more than a steak dinner? We investigate. Concert Tickets & Junk Fees – You found $50 tickets… but somehow the total is now $127? Yep, we’ve been there. The True Cost of Convenience – From Uber Eats to express shipping, when is paying extra worth it—and when are we just being lazy? Trivia Time: Pie Day Special! – Who knew McDonald's pie sales could spark heated debate? Well, now we all do. Wedding Costs Gone Wild – Creative ways to cut costs without making your guests eat ramen. The Ben Franklin Effect & Social Hacks – Want better connections without breaking the bank? Turns out, old Ben had some wisdom on that, too. All this, plus some hilarious personal finance confessions that will make you feel better about your last impulse buy. 🎧 Tune in, laugh, and learn how to keep more of your Benjamins! FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/places-we-know-were-overpaying-1656 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Choosing the Best Tax Software for Your Needs Tax season is here—so which software should you trust with your hard-earned Benjamins? Eric Rosenberg from The College Investor joins us to break down the best options, whether you're a side hustler, crypto investor, or just looking for a free filing solution. Will TurboTax take the crown again, or is there a surprise champ? You might be shocked by which software stands out this year. H&R Block’s virtual tax prep – If you want real humans to double-check your numbers, this might be your go-to. Which tax software works best for unique situations – Side gigs, stock trading, crypto investments… different situations call for different solutions. Navigating Tax Day without the stress – Tips to avoid last-minute panic and make sure you’re not leaving money on the table. Crypto scams and meme coins – Because tax season isn’t stressful enough without adding that mess into the mix. Meanwhile, Doug serves up world-famous trivia with a nod to classic children’s books, beloved authors, and sing-song rhymes. Plus, we take a detour into sector betting, market trends, and—of course—movie recommendations. If tax season feels overwhelming, this episode breaks it down, keeps it light, and helps you pick the right software to file with confidence. Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ever wondered if working for yourself could be the game-changer your finances need? Grant Sabatier thinks so, and today, he’s diving into the realities of entrepreneurship—from smart strategies to potential pitfalls. Where to start if you’re considering entrepreneurship – Not every side hustle is a winner, so how do you know if this path is right for you? The power of systems and constraints – Why guardrails and structure matter more than unlimited freedom. Pricing strategies and finding customers – Because even the best ideas need paying customers. Entrepreneurial misconceptions – Spoiler: It’s not all Ferraris and private jets. Can your wedding be a tax deduction? – We explore the entertaining but highly questionable ways some people try to make this work. Meanwhile, Doug serves up trivia on the highest-grossing console game ever (bet you won’t guess it). And if you stick around long enough, let’s just say there may or may not be a discussion about a comedy movie that turns financial struggles into pure entertainment. But, you know… no promises. If you’ve been toying with the idea of starting your own thing, this episode is packed with insights, real talk, and a few surprises along the way. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/unlock-your-inner-entrepreneur-with-grant-sabatier-1654 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Feeling the pressure to constantly tweak your investments? Today, we uncover the surprising benefits of financial inaction with insights from CFP Dana Anspach, Len Penzo, and OG. We dive into the wisdom of sometimes doing nothing—because, as it turns out, sitting on your hands (financially speaking) can be a power move. Why lazy portfolio management might be the smartest strategy you’ll ever adopt (spoiler: it involves less work). The power of downtime—turns out, stepping away from your money might actually make you richer. Why your future self will thank you for setting up auto-pay (hint: fewer late fees, more naps). The sneaky ways peer pressure messes with your finances—and how to keep the Joneses from running your budget. When rebalancing your portfolio is necessary…and when it’s just a fancy way to micromanage yourself. A wildly unexpected insurance claim (because finances are never boring in the basement). Oh, and Doug’s got a trivia question about a particularly controversial activity that was banned—because, apparently, not everything fun is legal. Stick around for weekend plans, final thoughts, and maybe even a surprise or two (because we like to keep you on your toes). This episode originally aired on June 10, 2022. Please disregard any mention of current events. The original show notes can be found here. Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
A great financial plan isn’t just about numbers—it’s about creating a roadmap that turns dreams into reality. Today, Joe and OG take a trip down memory lane, reflecting on their favorite parts of building a great financial plan. Whether you're tackling long-term goals, fine-tuning your tax strategy, or simplifying complex decisions, they’ll walk you through the key elements that turn financial chaos into a well-oiled machine. Breaking down big goals into bite-sized wins – Because climbing a financial mountain is easier when you focus on one step at a time. The magic of tax strategies – Why a little planning now can keep more Benjamins in your pocket later. Risk management done right – Avoiding financial pitfalls so your plan stays strong, no matter what life throws your way. The power of simple solutions – Complexity doesn’t always mean better. Sometimes, the best financial strategies are the easiest to execute. The role of a financial guide – Whether you DIY your plan or bring in an expert, knowing when to get guidance is a game-changer. Meanwhile, Doug tackles a ‘Winnie the Pooh’-inspired predicament (honey jars may or may not be involved) and drops some surprising trivia on the massive market value of antidepressant drugs. If you’re ready to streamline your financial life and celebrate your progress along the way, this episode is packed with insights, strategy, and a few unexpected twists. This episode originally aired on January 18, 2023. Please disregard any mention of current events. The original show notes can be found here. Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ever felt overwhelmed by buying a car or managing your time? You’re not alone. Today, we tackle both topics with expert insights and a few unexpected surprises along the way. Car buying decoded – Joe sits down with Phil Reed, Senior Consumer Editor at Edmunds, to break down the best strategies for buying new or used cars, leasing vs. buying, and negotiating with dealers like a pro. The ultimate time management playbook – Paula Pant, Dominique Brown, and returning guest Carrie Smith share real-world productivity hacks—whether you're self-employed, working 9-to-5, or just trying to make better use of your day. Avoiding social media missteps at work – The team dives into the do’s and don’ts of posting while employed. Email overload? Phone calls running your life? – Smart strategies to take control of your inbox and stop wasting time on endless calls. Celebrity wealth secrets and entertainment picks – Because financial wisdom can come from surprising places. A roadside hawk encounter?! – An unexpected story that proves you never know what’s coming next. With practical advice, engaging discussions, and a few twists you won’t see coming, this episode packs in everything you need to take control of your finances and your time—without taking life too seriously. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
If disaster struck tomorrow, would your financial essentials be ready to grab and go? Today, Joe—along with contributors Paula Pant from Afford Anything, Jesse Cramer from Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors, and our resident expert OG—assemble the ultimate financial go bag. Meanwhile, Doug handles his usual duties as announcer, trivia master, and general chaos instigator. The must-have documents – Passports, Social Security cards, insurance policies... what belongs in your bag, and what can stay in the filing cabinet? Cash vs. digital access – How much should you keep in physical cash? And is gold really a smart emergency asset, or just a really heavy way to slow yourself down? Estate planning and emergency preparedness – The financial moves today that can make a crisis less stressful later. Password managers: genius or a liability? – We debate whether your digital keys should be stored in the cloud, on paper, or tattooed in invisible ink. Trivia showdown: Doug tests the team’s knowledge with a question that (probably) has nothing to do with financial preparedness. Campus co-op stores and Harvard history—why are we talking about this? You’ll find out. If you’ve been meaning to get your financial house in order for emergencies, this episode has everything you need to build your own financial go bag—without overpacking. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/your-financial-go-bag-1650 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Is your insurance setup rock-solid, or are you unknowingly leaving gaps that could cost you big time? Today, we break down the essentials of managing risk in our no-nonsense (but totally entertaining) insurance guide. How much coverage do you really need? We tackle the must-haves and the unnecessary add-ons that might just be draining your wallet. Auto, home, life, and disability insurance—what’s essential and what’s overkill? We walk through the key policies that keep you protected without breaking the bank. Oddball insurance policies—are they worth it? From pet insurance to that ‘just in case’ coverage you saw on late-night TV, we separate the smart buys from the money traps. A TikTok minute that perfectly sums up the difference between dogs and cats. Trust us, you’ll relate. Listener questions: Breaking up with a financial advisor—when it’s time to walk away and how to do it right. Insurance company showdown: Who’s the biggest player in the game, and does size really matter? DIY money moves: How to take over your own investment accounts without making costly mistakes. Stackers, this episode is packed with tips, laughs, and real-world insights to help you protect what matters—without wasting a dime. Don't miss it! Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ever feel like your budget is running you instead of the other way around? Today, we’re bringing in Shaun Morgan from The Teacher Money Show and Kristin Wade, budgeting coach at My Budget Coach, to help you flip the script. They’ll share how tracking your expenses is the first (and easiest) step toward financial freedom, why budgeting shouldn’t feel like punishment, and how to make your money work without the guilt. But wait—there’s more! We’re diving into creative ways to gamify saving, some unexpected solutions for real estate dilemmas (hint: selling isn’t your only option), and why sometimes renting out your home might be the smarter move. And of course, we sprinkle in some personal stories, real-life lessons, and a few side tangents that may or may not include baseball, beer trends, and an ode to Steve Jobs. What’s Inside Today’s Episode: Budgeting Basics: How to make your spending work for you. Tracking Expenses 101: The first step toward a stress-free financial plan. Finding the Right Budgeting Tools: What actually works? Gamifying Your Finances: How to make saving and budgeting fun (yes, fun!). Accountability & Motivation: Why most people quit budgeting—and how to stick with it. Turning Real Estate Woes Into Wins: If your house won’t sell, here’s what to do next. Renting vs. Selling: When keeping your home might be the smarter play. Running a Business on a Budget: The hidden costs and how to stay profitable. Community Shoutouts & Listener Feedback: Your wins, your questions, and more. Random Topic: Cancun adventures and off-the-cuff fun. Key Takeaways from the Episode: ✔️ Budgeting doesn’t mean restriction—it means intentional spending. ✔️ Tracking your money is like using a GPS—it keeps you from getting lost. ✔️ Real estate has more options than just “sell or stay put.” Renting could be a game-changer. ✔️ You don’t have to budget alone. The right tools and accountability partners make all the difference. ✔️ Even Cancun has budgeting lessons. (Or at least a few good stories.) Tune in now and take the first step toward mastering your budget—without making it feel like a chore. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-take-control-of-your-budget-1648 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Is it time to break up with international stocks? They’ve been underperforming U.S. markets for years, so should we finally call it quits, or is there still hope for a global comeback? On today’s episode, Joe, OG, Paula Pant, and Jesse Cramer dig into the great international investing debate. Are international funds a lost cause? The panel unpacks why they’ve lagged U.S. stocks and whether diversification still makes sense. Beyond stocks: Exploring other asset classes—private equity, real estate, commodities, and collectibles (because who doesn’t want to invest in Beanie Babies and vintage lunchboxes?). The $3 coin mystery: Yep, that was a thing. And yes, it’s as weird as it sounds. Election results and wooden nickels: The intersection of money, history, and questionable currency choices. Weekend plans and podcast highlights: Because investing is important, but so is having fun. Of course, it wouldn’t be a Stacking Benjamins episode without some friendly debate, expert insights, and the occasional off-the-wall tangent. Tune in for a laid-back but insightful conversation on making smart investment decisions! FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/is-international-investing-dead-1647 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ever experienced the gut-wrenching moment of losing a job—or worried about what you’d do if it happened? Today, we tackle how to prepare, what to do immediately, and the smartest moves to protect your finances if your job ever disappears. From building an emergency fund to making the most of employer benefits, we’ll walk you through the steps to keep your financial house in order when life throws a curveball. But that’s not all. Estate planning gets a shake-up thanks to the new Secure Act 2.0, and we’re diving into what it means for inherited Roth IRAs (hint: the government has new rules, and you’ll want to know them). And because we can’t resist a good detour, we also explore the real cost of horse ownership (spoiler: it’s more than just hay money) and why tide pooling is more financially educational than you’d think. All that, plus trivia, TikTok wisdom (or nonsense), and plenty of lively discussion from the basement crew. What’s Inside Today’s Episode: Job Loss Survival Guide: How to prepare before, during, and after a layoff. Emergency Fund Essentials: Why you need one (and how much is enough). Navigating Employer Benefits: Making the most of what’s available before you leave. Secure Act 2.0 & Estate Planning: The new rules around inherited Roth IRAs. Trivia & The TikTok Minute: Because questionable financial advice is always worth dissecting. Horse Stackers & Expensive Hobbies: Ever wonder what it really costs to own a horse? We break it down. Tide Pooling Adventures: A financial lesson wrapped in sea creatures and crashing waves. Key Takeaways from the Episode: ✔️ Job security is a myth—be ready. Build that emergency fund, update your resume, and keep networking. ✔️ Your employer’s benefits might be your hidden lifeline. Know what’s available before you walk out the door. ✔️ Secure Act 2.0 changes estate planning. If you’re inheriting a Roth IRA, don’t assume the old rules apply. ✔️ Horses aren’t just expensive—they’re financial black holes. But that won’t stop people from trying. ✔️ Tide pooling might be the best investment lesson in disguise. Patience, observation, and avoiding getting pinched—it’s practically a stock market metaphor. Tune in now to make sure you’re financially prepared—whether it’s for job loss, estate planning changes, or just the unexpected expenses of a very expensive hobby. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/spring-cleaning-your-estate-plan-1646 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Feeling stuck in your financial plan—or maybe just in life in general? Whether it’s your money, career, or day-to-day habits, a little innovation can go a long way. Today, we’re breaking down how to rethink and restructure your approach to financial planning and work-life balance using lessons from Microsoft (yes, the Xbox folks). Dean Carignan and JoAnn Garbin insights on how to build a system for innovation—because the best financial plans (and lives) aren’t built by accident. Meanwhile, a woman was scammed out of her savings, and a major financial company had to pay a fine—even though they didn’t actually rip her off. What happened? And what does it mean for how we protect our own money? We’ll break it all down. Elsewhere in the episode, we discuss why trusted contact forms are crucial for safeguarding elderly relatives’ finances, how OG wants you to rethink your daily money habits, and why the Xbox case study holds lessons for designing a better financial plan. Plus, Doug has thoughts on podcast innovation, trivia, and—because it wouldn’t be a proper basement gathering without it—a hot take or two. What’s Inside Today’s Episode: A Woman Gets Scammed, But Who Pays the Price? A big financial firm faces a fine—without actually doing anything wrong. The Xbox Case Study: What Microsoft’s innovation strategy can teach you about structuring your financial future. Financial Planning Innovations: Why thinking like an engineer (or a game developer) might help you build a better plan. Rethinking Your Everyday Financial Habits: OG’s take on how small changes lead to big results. Trusted Contact Forms & Safeguarding Elderly Relatives: A simple but powerful tool to prevent financial disasters. Charitable Giving Strategies: How to give smarter, not just more. Doug’s Trivia Time: A deep dive into financial (and podcast) innovation—because why not? Building a Network in Retirement: Why relationships matter just as much as money when designing your post-work life. Key Takeaways from the Episode: You can’t just wing it with your finances. Microsoft doesn’t build Xbox consoles on a whim—your financial future needs the same level of structured innovation. Don’t assume big financial firms will protect you. A major company had to pay up even though they weren’t the scammers—learn how to protect yourself before something happens. Small financial tweaks can make a massive difference. Just like product innovations, incremental changes in your money habits can lead to big wins over time. Retirement isn’t just about the money. You need a network, a purpose, and a strategy—or you’ll find yourself wealthier but bored out of your mind. Tune in now to learn how to bring structured innovation into your finances, career, and life! FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/the-importance-of-innovation-1645 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Love is in the air—and so are overpriced flowers, extravagant dinners, and some serious credit card regrets. In today’s episode, we tackle the financial pressure of Valentine’s Day and show you how to keep the romance alive without setting your wallet on fire. Joining us are financial pros Jesse Cramer, Sarah Catherine Gutierrez, and Len Penzo, who help us break down: The shocking reality of Valentine's Day spending – Who’s dropping the most cash, and is it really worth it? Avoiding post-holiday financial heartbreak – Strategies to celebrate without swiping yourself into debt. Creative alternatives to overpriced traditions – Ditch the $200 steak dinner and try these fun, budget-friendly ideas instead. The cost of love – From babysitting fees to restaurant markups, where is your money really going? Romantic gestures that don’t break the bank – Because a handwritten note might just score you more points than a last-minute gas station bouquet. The key to financial harmony in relationships – Talking money before someone drops a fortune on a gift they think you’ll love (but don’t). Listener tips and budget-friendly adventures – Stackers share their best ideas for a Valentine’s Day that’s memorable and affordable. Plus, we’ve got trivia, technical mishaps (because what’s love without a little chaos?), and some surprise financial wisdom that might just save your next date night. Stack your love life and your Benjamins—tune in now! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Just when you thought Wall Street had run out of ways to package up risky investments and slap a shiny label on them—here we go again. Today, Joe and OG break down yet another overcomplicated, high-fee, and completely unnecessary financial product. Whether it’s preying on investor fears, promising market-proof returns, or just outright nonsense, we’ll help you spot the warning signs before you end up with a portfolio full of regret. But that’s not all. A viral TikTok tip about hiring your family members for tax benefits has been making the rounds, so we’ll dive into whether this is actually a genius tax strategy or just another case of the internet handing out half-baked financial advice. Plus, a listener asks about breaking into financial planning, and we lay out what it really takes—beyond the certifications and credentials (spoiler: sales skills matter). And Doug brings us a trivia question about one of the greatest art heists in history, proving that sometimes the best investment is knowing how to disappear with the Mona Lisa. Also: Joe saw ‘Wicked’ and has thoughts—mostly about how much better Wonka was. What’s Inside Today’s Episode: The Latest Wall Street Gimmick: A financial product you definitely don’t need. Understanding Risky Investments: How to tell if an ETF, structured note, or annuity is actually worth your time. Hiring Family for Tax Benefits: A TikTok tax hack that might actually work—if you follow the rules. Trivia Time with Doug: One of the most famous art heists in history. Breaking Into Financial Planning: What it takes to switch careers and make it in the industry. Community Feedback & Upcoming Episodes: A sneak peek at what’s coming next (including our Valentine’s Day special). Episode Highlights: What’s in a Name? The ridiculous branding that makes bad investment products sound good. Bitcoin Meets Structured Protection: The ETF that no one asked for but someone, somewhere, will buy. Hiring Your Kids for Tax Savings: A loophole with some very real fine print. How to Become a Financial Planner: Beyond certifications—why understanding people (and sales) matters. Doug’s Trivia: If you could steal any piece of art, what would it be? Asking for a friend. Joe’s ‘Wicked’ Review: Spoiler: Wonka was better. Huge Resource Mentioned in This Episode: Want to learn more about structured investments? (Just kidding, you really don’t.) Tune in now and learn how to dodge the latest Wall Street nonsense while making smarter money moves. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/new-crypto-etfs-1643 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Swipe right on financial stability or get ghosted by your savings? While Joe's mom yells upstairs about who left the empty milk carton in the fridge (seriously, who does that?), we’re diving into the messy, complicated, and sometimes hilarious world of your relationship with money. Are you in a stable, long-term commitment with your finances, or are you stuck in a toxic on-again, off-again affair with impulse spending? Special guest Shannah Game, certified financial planner and author of Unraveling Your Relationship with Money, joins us to decode the emotional baggage we bring to our bank accounts. Meanwhile, Doug swears he’s figured out how to “game” the stock market using AI—spoiler alert: it involves a Magic 8-Ball. We also tackle some questionable dating preferences (because who doesn’t want to know if their financial habits make them swipeable?) and unpack the latest market shake-ups. In this episode: 🏈 Super Bowl takeaways and why Doug insists commercials count as “investing research” 💰 Your financial habits might just be the biggest red flag in your dating life 🎙️ Shannah Game on money, mindset, and making smarter choices 💔 Rollercoaster relationships—with your wallet and beyond 🧐 Money manifestos: How to rewrite your financial story (without Mom intervening) 🤖 AI's impact on investing, and why OG isn't buying it (literally) 📈 How to keep your portfolio from ghosting you 🤯 Hidden track: Doug’s latest deep dive into bizarre facts—this time, dinosaur vomit Will your money habits lead to a lifetime of wealth—or will your wallet break up with you via text? Tune in and find out! FULL SHOW NOTES: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/relationship-with-money-financial-habits-sb1642 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Is automating your finances the key to effortless money management, or a one-way ticket to financial autopilot disaster? Paula Pant, Jesse Cramer, and Doc G join us to navigate the fine line between automation genius and accidental money mayhem. Done right, automation saves you time and stress. Done wrong? You might be funding a forgotten gym membership for the next five years. 😬 What’s Inside This Episode? 💰 The Power of Automation – How strategic automation can make your financial life simpler, more efficient, and stress-free. 🤖 What to Automate & What to Keep Manual – Should you set bills to auto-pay, or will that lead to mysterious charges on your credit card? 📊 High-Tech Money Tools: Are They Worth It? – Todoist, Notion, and other techy automation tricks—are they game-changers or just digital clutter? 💡 Personal Automation Hacks – How the panel automates their finances like pros (without losing control of their money). 🎭 The Dark Side of Automation – Horror stories of overdraft surprises, vanishing paychecks, and auto-pay regret. 📢 Stacker Debate: Should You Automate Everything? – The great automation showdown—when automation helps and when it hurts. ✨ Special Bonus: The Worst Things to Automate – Some things should NEVER be on autopilot. Find out what financial automation fails made our list. Takeaways for Smart Stackers: ✅ Automation = Freedom (When Used Wisely). The right balance saves you time while keeping you in control. ✅ Auto-pay is great—until it isn’t. Track subscriptions and bills so you don’t end up paying for things you don’t use. ✅ Manual check-ins keep you financially sharp. Even with automation, you need to review your money regularly. ✅ Tech tools can help—but they’re not magic. The best system is the one you actually use. 🎧 Hit play now and rethink your approach to automation before it outsmarts you! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What do scammers, fancy doors, and Twinkies have in common? Turns out, more than you think! Today, Joe, OG, and Doug take you on a wild ride through financial scams, fraud prevention, tax implications of dual residency, and... the surprising link between door quality and financial stability. (Yeah, we didn’t see that one coming either.) What’s Inside This Episode? 🕵️♂️ Scams, Scams Everywhere! – From identity fraud to the trendy new "deed theft" scam, learn how to protect yourself before a scammer claims your house faster than you can say "that wasn't in the budget." 💳 Fraud-Proofing Your Finances – Why setting up credit monitoring, checking your bills, and paying attention to sketchy emails can save you thousands in headaches. 🚪 The TikTok Minute: What Do Soft Close Doors Say About Your Wealth? – Is your financial future written in the way your doors shut? Find out why door noises might reveal more about your bank balance than your credit score. 🧾 State Taxes & Dual Residency: The Sneaky Costs of Living in Two Places – Thinking about snowbirding to Florida or keeping a backup home in another state? We break down what you NEED to know before state tax authorities come knocking. 🤖 Password Security & The Quantum Computing Takeover – Is the future of passwords doomed? What you should be doing now to keep your Twinkies—and your bank accounts—safe. 🍕 Pizza Cutting Controversy & Nostalgic Minivan Stories – Because what’s a Stacking Adventures episode without a little debate, a little reminiscing, and a whole lot of questionable opinions on pizza slicing? 🍰 Twinkies Trivia: A Deep-Dive into the Snack That Never Dies – Have scientists unlocked the secret of Twinkie immortality? More importantly, should Twinkies be considered part of a solid financial plan? (Spoiler: probably not, but let’s discuss.) 📢 Stacker Questions & Community Fun – Helping a listener navigate dual residency tax headaches + a special meetup announcement! Takeaways for Smart Stackers: ✅ If it sounds too good to be true, it’s a scam. Seriously. Trust your gut, not the email from "Prince Jeff of Nigeria." ✅ Your finances need monitoring, just like your snack stash. Set up credit alerts and check your accounts weekly to avoid surprises. ✅ Moving states for tax savings? Do the math first. Dual residency isn’t always the loophole people think it is. ✅ Twinkies may last forever, but financial security requires maintenance. A solid money plan beats a stockpile of snacks (but only slightly). 🎧 Hit play now for a mix of financial wisdom, scam-prevention tips, and just the right amount of Twinkie-fueled fun! Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Retirement planning isn’t about waiting until 65—it’s about setting yourself up for a life you love starting right now! Today, Certified Financial Planner Benjamin Brant joins us to challenge traditional retirement thinking. What We Cover: ✅ Retirement planning starts now, not later – Why waiting to plan is the biggest mistake you can make. ✅ Dream big, but expect some ‘bad data’ – How testing financial plans (and life plans!) helps you refine your future. ✅ Why trust beats performance in financial planning – A new study shows that your advisor’s returns matter less than their integrity. ✅ The Monte Carlo simulation debate – What this financial tool actually tells you (and what it doesn’t). ✅ Childhood dreams, stand-up comedy, and time travel? – How revisiting past joys can shape a meaningful retirement. ✅ Choosing the right financial advisor – The #1 factor to look for before handing over your portfolio. Key Takeaways: 💡 Retirement isn’t a number—it’s a mindset. The earlier you start thinking about what brings you joy, the better. 💡 Financial planning isn’t perfect science. Bad data, trial-and-error, and adjusting your plan over time? Totally normal. 💡 Trust is your biggest investment. A good financial advisor isn’t just about returns—they’re about guidance you can rely on. Grab your favorite drink (coffee, bourbon—you choose!) and let’s stack some wisdom for your future self. 🎧 Hit play now and start building your best retirement today! FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/find-your-fulfillment-in-retirement-Benjamin-Brandt-1639 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ever dreamt of quitting your job early and sipping piña coladas on a beach? Before you tell your boss what to do with that job and start booking your one-way ticket to paradise, today’s roundtable might make you think twice. Join Jesse Cramer from The Best Interest, Paula Pant from Afford Anything, and our own OG as they break down the case against early retirement. The gang’s here to challenge the “quit work, retire early” dream and explore whether it’s really as awesome as it sounds—or if there are a few catches you haven’t considered. The conversation gets into the nitty-gritty of why early retirement might not be the smooth ride some people think it is. From the psychological toll of too much free time to the unexpected financial hurdles, our panelists share the real stories behind the headlines. What’s the balance between financial freedom and a fulfilling life? Can you really retire early without regret, or does the cost of quitting work too soon outweigh the benefits? And don’t forget about Doug’s wicked trivia challenge! FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/the-case-against-early-retirement-1638 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ever wondered if you’re better off building your own target date fund instead of relying on a one-size-fits-all option? We’re diving into whether crafting your own investment mix is worth the effort, potentially saving you fees and giving you more control over your portfolio. But even the pros get it wrong sometimes—just ask Vanguard. We’re covering the major settlement they’re facing over misleading statements about taxes and target date funds, proving that even the big guys make costly mistakes. Meanwhile, a listener asks a great question about balancing tax optimization with financial flexibility—because what good is a perfectly tax-efficient plan if it ties your hands when you need cash? Plus, Doug takes us back to the origins of the gasoline-driven automobile, and there’s even an unexpected run-in with a Supreme Court justice (because why not?). And of course, we’ve got a TikTok moment that’ll have you questioning life choices and a few financial misconceptions that might just make you rethink your approach to money. What’s Inside Today’s Episode: Vanguard’s Costly Mistake: The settlement every investor should know about. Understanding Mutual Fund Taxes: How taxes sneak up on your investments. DIY Target Date Funds: Pros, cons, and when to consider building your own. Trivia Time with Doug: The surprising story behind the gasoline-driven car. The TikTok Minute: Financial advice that may (or may not) be worth your time. Financial Flexibility vs. Tax Optimization: Finding the balance in your strategy. Community Announcements & Meetups: Where to find us next. Episode Highlights: Vanguard’s Legal Trouble: What happened, and what it means for investors. Mutual Fund Taxation: Avoiding unexpected tax bills. Should You Build Your Own Target Date Fund? We break down the numbers. Listener Q&A: How to stay tax-efficient while keeping access to your cash. Doug’s Trivia: Who REALLY built the first gasoline-powered car? An Unexpected Supreme Court Encounter: Because that’s just how things go around here. Resources Mentioned in This Episode: Learn more about Vanguard’s target date fund settlement in our show notes: https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/vanguard-target-retirement-trouble-1637 Read up on mutual fund tax strategies and more by signing up for our 201 newsletter! https://stackingbenjamins.com/201 Tune in now and get the insights you need to build a smarter investment strategy—without falling into costly traps. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
What’s really standing between you and your financial goals? In today’s mentor, Jessica Moorhouse—financial counselor, podcast host, and author of Everything But Money—joins Joe to dive into the mental and emotional side of managing money. Jessica shares her journey with therapy, how relationships shape our financial habits, and the role of self-talk in creating a healthier money mindset. Whether you’re feeling stuck or just want a fresh perspective, this interview offers practical tools to help you take control of your financial future. In our headline segment, we explore the concept of a “no-buy” list—a clever strategy one woman used to pay off $34,000 in debt. Learn how gamifying financial goals can make saving more manageable—and even fun! Whether it’s cutting back on unnecessary spending or finding creative ways to save, this segment will inspire you to rethink how you approach your financial challenges. Here’s what we cover today: Saluting our troops—and wondering why Doug still doesn’t have a Navy Federal mug Meet Jessica Moorhouse: Financial counselor, podcast host, and author of Everything But Money Unlocking the connection between your money mindset and financial success with Jessica How Jessica’s personal journey and therapy shaped her healthier money mindset Unpacking how emotions and relationships impact financial habits Understanding rational vs. irrational guilt—and how it affects your money decisions Recognizing irrational guilt and why it’s critical to tackle it Celebrating financial wins and overcoming the fear that holds you back Jessica’s book Everything But Money—and why it’s a must-read for anyone improving their financial mindset Sneak peek: What’s next on the More Money Podcast with Jessica Moorhouse Doug’s historical trivia: Financial lessons from the past Gamifying financial goals: Make saving and investing fun and rewarding Real-life success stories: The No Buy Challenge and how it helped pay off $34,000 in debt Join our community: Upcoming meetups and ways to get involved Final thoughts and takeaways: Simple actions you can start today to improve your financial mindset FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/changing-your-money-self-talk-jessica-moorhouse-1636 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Do financial boogeymen haunt your dreams? You’re not alone. Today, we’re diving into the worries that keep even the most seasoned finance nerds up at night. From concerns about index fund concentration to the fear of market manipulation and obsession with asset allocation, this episode tackles it all with insight and a healthy dose of perspective. Joining Joe and OG in the basement is an all-star panel: Paula Pant from Afford Anything, Jesse Cramer from Best Interest, and Dr. Jordan Grumet from Earn and Invest. Together, they’ll share strategies to conquer financial fears by staying calm, focusing on the big picture, and sticking to sound investment principles. And don’t miss the kickoff of the year-long Stacking Benjamins Trivia Challenge! It’s packed with brain-busting questions, lively debates, and, yes, the occasional cat butt reference (because it’s still the basement, after all). What’s Inside Today’s Episode: Meet the Contributors: Paula, Jesse, and Dr. Grumet join the crew. Index Fund Concentration: Are index funds too risky? The panel weighs in. Addressing Financial Fears: From market scams to fraud and manipulation, here’s how to keep your cool. Trivia Challenge Kickoff: A brand-new Stacking Benjamins tradition begins. Market Efficiency and Insider Trading: Can you really beat the market? Asset Allocation Obsession: Why overthinking your portfolio can be your worst enemy. Upcoming Episodes: What’s next on the Stacking Benjamins calendar? Highlights from the Episode: Index Fund Concentration: The crew discusses whether having too much of the market in a few big players is a recipe for disaster. Financial Fears: Practical advice for keeping anxiety at bay when market volatility hits. Market Scams and Frauds: How to spot them and protect yourself. Trivia Time: A heated debate over billionaire counts, complete with unforgettable banter. Asset Allocation: Tips for avoiding paralysis by analysis and focusing on long-term strategies. Resources Mentioned in the Episode: Learn more from Paula Pant at Afford Anything. Explore Jesse Cramer’s insights at Best Interest. Dive into Dr. Jordan Grumet’s conversations at Earn and Invest. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/financial-worries-and-what-to-do-about-it-1635 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Tune in now and learn how to leave your financial fears in the dust while keeping your money goals on track. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Feeling like the stock market is a high-stakes game of pinball lately? Not sure how to steady your hand when it comes to retirement accounts? In this episode, we tackle the rollercoaster of market volatility with actionable strategies to keep your retirement plans on track. Learn how to create an Investment Policy Statement, whether a Roth IRA still deserves a spot in your portfolio, and smart ways to withdraw from retirement funds without triggering costly mistakes. Plus, discover why trying to time the market is like predicting the weather with a Magic 8-Ball. Doug shares a tale involving a Chinese couple and some financial advice that’s worth sticking around for. Whether you’re building financial independence or refining your retirement strategy, this episode has you covered. What We Cover Today: Market Rollercoaster Madness: Stock, Bitcoin, and why patience pays off. Creating an Investment Policy Statement: Stay calm and strategy on. Listener Q&A: Chris from Georgia asks about retirement withdrawals. Roth IRA Reboot: Is it still a go-to for your portfolio? Financial Headlines: Why tuning out the noise can save your sanity. Trivia Time with Doug: A historical nugget tied to financial wisdom. Highlights from the Episode: Market Volatility Analysis: Stocks and Bitcoin – what’s up, what’s down, and what you should do about it. Listener Question: Tapping retirement accounts – the dos, don’ts, and what-ifs. Investment Philosophy: Why having a policy statement is the ultimate stress reliever. TikTok Minute: A social media take that’ll have you rethinking the advice you see online. New Year’s Resolutions: Money nicknames, quirky goals, and strategies for staying on track. Closing Remarks: Key takeaways to help guide your financial decisions. Resources Mentioned in This Episode: Sign up for our Free Weekly Newsletter for insights, tips, and resources: https://stackingbenjamins.com/201 Join us at our Upcoming Meetups to connect and learn more: https://stackingbenjamins.com/meetup. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/stock-market-volatility-beginning-of-2025-1634 Tune in now and take the first step toward turning market madness into financial confidence. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Feeling overwhelmed by debt or unsure how to navigate the fast-paced world of financial advice online? We’ve got you covered! This episode features Debt Relief Advocate Natalia Brown from National Debt Relief, who shares practical tips to climb out of financial trouble and steer clear of predatory practices. But that’s not all—we dive into the Wild West of TikTok crypto advice, where nearly 70% of content is misleading enough to derail your financial plans. Joe and OG break it all down with their trademark insight, helping you sort fact from fiction in the world of digital finance. Here’s what you’ll learn: Tackling Debt: Natalia Brown’s strategies for overcoming financial stress and avoiding common traps. Crypto Caution: Why TikTok might not be the best place for your financial advice (and what to watch out for). Credit vs. Stability: The difference between obsessing over credit scores and focusing on long-term financial health. Digital Disclaimers: How transparency (or lack thereof) online can impact your wallet. And of course, no episode is complete without Doug’s trivia to keep things lively and unpredictable. Whether you’re tackling debt, dabbling in crypto, or just trying to stay informed, this episode will leave you with actionable advice and a fresh perspective on navigating today’s financial challenges. Tune in and take the first step toward a more confident financial future! FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/how-to-eliminate-debt-once-and-for-all-natalia-brown-1633 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ready to ring in the new year with a twist? On this episode of Stacking Benjamins, we consult the one and only Magic 8-Ball to make our bold predictions for 2025. Will the stock market be riding high, or is it headed for a tumble? What’s next for Bitcoin, and can Taylor Swift’s love life predict the future? Join Joe, OG, Len Penzo, and Mindy Jensen as they tap into the 8-Ball’s mystical power (or maybe just have a laugh trying) to forecast the year ahead. But before we get too caught up in the crystal ball, we take a look back at last year’s predictions. The 8-Ball hit some big marks, like predicting Nvidia’s rise, but it also missed a few. Along the way, Mindy shares her early (and hilarious) experience with Berkshire Hathaway, sparking a fun conversation about investing wisdom. And of course, Len brings his signature humor, diving into everything from crypto to drones to the wild world of Taylor Swift fandom. If you’re in the mood for financial insights, pop culture predictions, and a whole lot of fun, this episode is for you. Whether the Magic 8-Ball is on the money or way off the mark, you won’t want to miss our 2025 forecast. Grab your popcorn, sit back, and join us for an episode packed with surprises! FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/magic-8-ball-2024-recap-2025-predictions-1632 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.StackingBenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Can you save too much? Spoiler alert: absolutely. On today’s episode, Joe, OG, and Neighbor Doug tackle a financial pitfall many Stackers don’t think about—oversaving. Yes, socking away cash for the future is important, but at what cost? People often work extra hours, miss family dinners, skip vacations, and end up with regret instead of memories. The real tragedy? You can’t deposit lost time back into your bank account. We’ll share stories of people who saved so much they missed out on the life they were saving for, and we’ll dive into strategies to strike a better balance. From stress-testing your financial plan to understanding your personal inflation rate, we’ve got the tools to help you live for today and plan for tomorrow. And of course, we’ve got Doug’s trivia, a TikTok minute that might make you laugh out loud, and plenty of basement banter to keep things light. What’s Inside This Episode Opening: Joe, OG, and Doug kick things off with a mix of jokes, announcements, and OG’s latest attempt to seem cooler than he is. The Real Cost of Oversaving: Stories of people who worked too hard, saved too much, and missed the moments that really mattered. How to Avoid Regret: Strategies to prioritize both your financial goals and your quality of life. Taking Breaks to Save Your Sanity: Burnout isn’t just bad for your mental health—it’s bad for your wallet too. The TikTok Minute: Doug’s take on energy conservation (or as he calls it, “saving money with style”). Trivia Time: Doug’s question of the day—proof that you never stop learning in the basement. Listener Question: How do you plan for retirement when inflation keeps messing with the math? Joe and OG break it down. Stress-Testing Your Financial Plan: Find the cracks now, so your future self doesn’t have to. Amazon Purchases vs. Amazon Stock: A fun exercise that might make you rethink those impulse buys—or laugh at them, at least. Wrapping Up: Final thoughts, laughs, and a classic basement sendoff. Don’t Miss Why the “save everything” mentality can lead to serious regret—and how to avoid it. A hilarious dinner story involving Joe’s nephews and a lesson in why you never leave Doug in charge of the menu. A nod to Hell or High Water—because what’s a day in the basement without a classic callback? Join the Fun Ever feel like you’re missing out because you’re too focused on saving? Share your story with us, and let’s talk about finding that perfect balance. And don’t forget to tune in on Friday for more laughs, lessons, and, of course, Doug’s dubious wisdom. FULL SHOW NOTES: https://stackingbenjamins.com/are-you-saving-too-much-for-retirement-1631 Deeper dives with curated links, topics, and discussions are in our newsletter, The 201, available at https://www.stackingbenjamins.com/201 Enjoy! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices