Mel Robbins interviews AI expert Allie K. Miller about how everyday people can practically use artificial intelligence to save time, make money, and improve their lives. Allie explains what AI and generative AI are in simple terms, outlines four main ways to interact with AI tools, and shares concrete examples from travel planning and cooking to job searches and caregiving. They also address risks and concerns such as hallucinations, job loss, over-reliance, data privacy, and environmental impact, while emphasizing that learning to use AI now is crucial, especially for women and knowledge workers.
Brene Brown discusses how vulnerability, courage, and emotional "armor" shape our lives, relationships, and leadership. She shares personal stories from a chaotic Texas childhood, her long-term marriage, and caring for her mother with dementia, illustrating how shame, fear, and control patterns develop and how they can be changed. The conversation also explores power and politics, systems thinking, responsibility of large platforms, connection and belonging, and the practical skills needed to build trust, recover from failure, and live more bravely.
Rachel Cruze and Dr. John Deloney take live calls about personal finance decisions, focusing on getting out of debt, avoiding family entanglements with money, and choosing long‑term peace over short‑term comfort. Callers grapple with unaffordable car loans, oversized mortgages, backsliding after becoming debt‑free, how to ask for a raise, whether to file bankruptcy, and how to support kids through college without loans. The hosts emphasize personal responsibility, selling assets when necessary, clear boundaries with friends and partners, and following a step‑by‑step plan toward financial stability and freedom.
Hosts Jade Warshaw and George Kamel take live calls about money and life issues including parents overspending on gifts while in debt, job loss and career transitions, caring for aging relatives, and navigating debt as young adults. They also address marital disagreements over cars, career changes, and large inheritances, along with practical guidance on budgeting, housing decisions, tithing, and basic estate planning. Throughout, they stress boundaries, avoiding new debt, increasing income, and making unified, thoughtful decisions within families.
Hosts George Campbell and Dr. John Deloney take live calls from listeners navigating complex financial and relational situations, from family members stealing student loans to deciding whether to finance cars, sell rental properties, or downsize homes. They emphasize paying cash, prioritizing peace over complicated financial arbitrage, facing hard family conversations, and putting basic needs first during crises like job loss, medical emergencies, and government shutdowns. Several callers share intense life transitions, including divorce, small-business struggles, and the sudden death of a spouse, and receive step-by-step guidance on stabilizing their finances and planning the next chapter.
The hosts explore the concept of a "good death" and how modern hospice care aims to provide comfort, dignity, and holistic support to people who are terminally ill. They trace the history of hospice from its modern origins with Cicely Saunders and Florence Wald through the creation of the Medicare hospice benefit, explain how hospice works today, and discuss its strengths and structural problems, including caregiver burdens and for‑profit abuses. The episode closes with practical end-of-life planning advice and a listener mail segment on Gen Z communication and the "Gen Z stare."
Dave Ramsey and Dr. John Deloney take live calls about money, relationships, and life decisions, helping listeners navigate complex family financial dynamics, marriage conflicts, debt payoff, and housing choices. Callers ask about parents borrowing from children, financial infidelity in a new marriage, a veteran trapped in an unsustainable VA jumbo mortgage, and how to handle inheritance after elder financial abuse. The hosts emphasize integrity, unified decision-making in marriage, avoiding new debt, using community and church support, and focusing on long-term financial freedom over short-term fixes.