Ken Coleman and Jade Warshaw co‑host a caller-driven episode focused on getting control of money by facing fear, shame, and relational pressure around finances. Callers discuss massive consumer and business debts, student loans, divorce settlements, housing decisions, and family dynamics around borrowing and lending money. The hosts emphasize practical baby steps, strong boundaries, living below your means, and choosing long-term freedom over short-term comfort or appearances.
Dave Ramsey and co-host Jade Warshaw take calls from listeners facing intense financial situations, from a young couple buried under $1.3 million in mostly business debt to people wrestling with car purchases, payday loans, and complex relationship money dynamics. They emphasize avoiding risky business and consumer debt, listening to internal red flags, setting firm boundaries when helping others, and aligning financial decisions with long-term goals and emotional health. The episode also covers topics like life insurance coverage, child support resentment, hiding wealth from a fiancée, grief after losing a sibling, and why 50-year mortgages are a dangerous political gimmick.
Sean walks through roughly a decade of business attempts-from a sushi restaurant and wristband dropshipping to a biotech venture and a series of social and messaging apps-before finally finding success with a high school Fortnite esports league that was acquired by Twitch. He then explains how his approach to project selection, learning, and risk changed, leading to a streak of more straightforward wins and a portfolio doing tens of millions in revenue. The conversation shifts into money, defining "enough," the idea of a second mountain focused on creative work and meaning rather than more wealth, and ends with a light segment about Halloween, parenting, and family traditions.
This call-in episode of The Ramsey Show features listeners seeking guidance on issues ranging from getting out of consumer and student loan debt to navigating financial infidelity, divorce fallout, and complex family dynamics. George Kamel and Dr. John Delony emphasize focused intensity on a single financial goal, the debt snowball method, and clear relational boundaries while discouraging debt consolidation schemes and emotionally driven financial decisions. The conversations also explore how money intersects with trauma, parenting, adult children supporting parents, and succession planning in a family business.
Steven interviews Natalie, an entrepreneur who has co-founded two nine-figure companies, Cardone Ventures and Tenex Health, and worked directly with over 15,000 business owners to grow and scale their organizations. She explains her frameworks for goal setting, hiring, communication, time management, and sales, and contrasts the mindset and behaviors of the top 1% with those who struggle to build wealth. The conversation also explores hard work versus burnout, respect versus likability, AI-enabled opportunities, the coming women's wealth transfer, and the importance of believing you can learn any skill you need.
Hosts George Campbell and Rachel Cruze take live calls from listeners navigating difficult money decisions that are tightly intertwined with family dynamics, relationships, and life transitions. Callers ask about everything from a 20-year-old pressured by her parents to buy them a nicer house, to high vehicle and student loan debt, to whether an aging parent should invest or stay in cash, and how to handle condos, weddings, and grad school. Throughout, the hosts stress boundaries, rapid debt payoff, clear communication in relationships, and prioritizing long-term financial stability over short-term comfort or people-pleasing.
Hosts Rachel Cruze and Jade Warshaw take live calls from listeners about insurance, debt, car purchases, student loans, home buying, career changes, weddings, and family financial decisions. They contrast whole life and term life insurance, argue strongly against car loans and other consumer debt, and walk callers through the Ramsey Baby Steps framework. Throughout the episode they emphasize peace and freedom over mathematical optimization, encouraging listeners to live below their means, avoid debt, build emergency funds, and be honest with partners about money.
Ken Coleman and George Kamel host a call-in episode focused on getting control of money through budgeting, increasing income, and making hard lifestyle choices to get out of debt. Callers wrestle with irregular income, large student loans, credit card debt, car and housing decisions, work-family balance, and how to handle financial entanglements with relatives or partners. Bear Grylls joins in-studio to discuss his faith and his new book retelling the life of Jesus as an action-filled narrative aimed at people who may never read the Bible.
The host outlines five "guaranteed" ways to live a miserable life-avoiding deep friendships, remaining indecisive, neglecting goals and tracking, constantly switching projects, and trying to beat the stock market by picking individual stocks-and then explains how doing the opposite leads to a happier, more successful life. He uses philosophical ideas, psychological experiments, personal stories, and financial data to illustrate how close relationships, decisive action, clear goals, long-term focus, and simple index-fund investing compound over time. The episode concludes with a concise recap of the five positive behaviors listeners should adopt.
Host Clay Fink interviews author Morgan Housel about his book "The Art of Spending Money, Simple Choices for a Richer Life," focusing on how money intersects with happiness, expectations, and independence. They discuss why more money only increases happiness under certain psychological conditions, the dangers of status-driven spending and social debt, and why contentment and autonomy matter more than sheer net worth. In a closing segment, Clay shares his own biggest lessons from the book, including using savings to buy optionality, the power of contrast, and the hidden costs of tying identity to possessions.
Stephen and Morgan Housel discuss why most financial advice focuses on saving and investing while almost nothing is said about how to spend money in a way that actually improves life. Morgan explains the psychology behind spending, status, envy, trauma around money, and argues that true wealth is more about independence and contentment than income or possessions. They also challenge the myth of passive income, explore inequality and social media's impact on expectations, and examine how to minimize future regret through clearer values and better decisions.
Host Stig Brodersen and co-host William Green have a wide-ranging quarterly Richer, Wiser, Happier discussion on universal truths, money and happiness, and the role of books and teachers in living well. They explore epistemic humility, cultural and psychological differences in values, and how these insights apply to investing decisions. They also examine research on income and happiness, how wealth can and cannot improve life, and share their own reading habits and spiritual influences that shape their thinking about how to live.
The host lays out four "rules of money" that he used to go from being broke in his twenties to making his first million by 30 and later building a net worth of $30 million. He explains how to pick and master one of four core money-making skills, convert that skill into equity via code, content, or capital instead of renting out time, adopt a long-term perspective that is impatient with action but patient with results, and deliberately move closer to ambitious peers and industry hubs to accelerate progress. Throughout, he illustrates the rules with concrete examples from his own life and from figures like Mr. Biso, Warren Buffett, Steve Jobs, Elon Musk, Alex Ramosi, and Steve Martin.
Mel Robbins interviews financial author Morgan Housel about why financial success is primarily about behavior, expectations, and patience rather than income, education, or math. They explore how comparison, moving goalposts, and status-driven spending keep people broke, and contrast that with using money as a tool for independence and contentment. Housel lays out simple, practical habits-like checking your accounts daily, saving something every time you're paid, and investing patiently-that anyone can adopt regardless of starting point.