• Ep 250: The problem with hearing “AI” and assuming your career is over
    Mar 31 2026

    This week, we’re talking about what’s really going on in the AI layoff era, and why the way you interpret that moment matters almost as much as the layoff itself.

    If all you hear is “a robot replaced me,” it’s easy to spiral, panic pivot, and start solving the wrong problem. But if you know how to read the room, you can make smarter decisions about your career, your money, and where to go from here.

    Losing a job is already disruptive enough. The last thing you need is to turn it into a full-blown crisis about your worth. If this episode hit home, leave a review, share it with somebody who needs it, and subscribe so you don’t miss the next one.

    In this episode, we cover:

    • Why “because AI” doesn’t always mean a robot directly replaced your job
    • The 3 different things companies might mean when they blame AI
    • How to tell the difference between an actual workflow change and plain old cost-cutting
    • Why panic pivoting can get expensive fast
    • What to look at first if you’ve been laid off
    • Why becoming AI-capable matters more than becoming an “AI expert”
    • How to reposition your experience without throwing away your strengths
    • Why “AI-first” language doesn’t always mean your job or industry is cooked
    • Why layoffs hit your identity so hard, and how to stop making it worse

    Connect with Julien and Kiersten on our website, Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube.

    Join our email list to get updates from us, opportunities for discounts, freebies and a quick rundown on the relevant financial and career news impacting your life.

    Get our book Cashing Out: Win the Wealth Game by Walking Away, named 2023 best overall book about investing by Business Insider and one of the best personal finance books by Forbes

    If you would like to learn more about investing, check out our newest class, Making Money Grow

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    39 mins
  • Ep 249: We asked Gen Z about money. Their answers were a wake-up call
    Mar 24 2026

    We spent a week talking to hundreds of high school seniors about money, and they gave us more hope than we expected. Underneath the stereotypes about “kids these days,” we found a generation that already understands more than adults give them credit for, while still being dangerously underprepared for some of the biggest financial decisions of their lives.

    So this week, we’re talking about what stood out after speaking to 400+ students across 5 high schools in the Chicago area and what parents, teachers, and honestly all of us should take from it.

    They knew saving mattered, they had opinions about frugality, and some were already working jobs. There were a few who were already gambling, and way too many were about to sign student loan paperwork without fully understanding what they were agreeing to.

    If you’ve got a teenager, a future college student, or a young person in your life who thinks money talk is boring, this episode might help you reach them a little differently. This conversation isn’t just about teens. It’s about what happens when financial education is too late, too shallow, or too disconnected from real life.

    In this episode, we get into:

    • Why so many teenagers understand everyday saving but still don’t understand student loans
    • The shocking number of students already seeing gambling as a real way to make money
    • How “frugal” stopped being an insult and started sounding practical
    • Why kids were more engaged than the grownups who usually sit through money talks
    • What they got wrong about the biggest expenses in adult life and why that matters
    • The difference between knowing stocks exist and actually understanding investing
    • Why buy now, pay later needs to be explained as credit, not convenience
    • What this experience taught us about Gen Z, money, and the adults responsible for filling in the gaps
    • How parents can use AI to make money lessons click for kids who seem uninterested

    Links:

    • Other experts mentioned in this episode: Chris Corinthian, Berna Anat, Yanely Espinal, Dr. Paris Woods

    Connect with Julien and Kiersten on our website, Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube.

    Join our email list to get updates from us, opportunities for discounts, freebies and a quick rundown on the relevant financial and career news impacting your life.

    Get our book Cashing Out: Win the Wealth Game by Walking Away, named 2023 best overall book about investing by Business Insider and one of the best personal finance books by Forbes

    If you would like to learn more about investing, check out our newest class, Making Money Grow

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    45 mins
  • Ep 248: We need to talk about sports gambling
    Mar 17 2026

    There’s a casino in everybody’s pocket now, and it’s wearing a jersey.

    This week’s episode is about sports gambling, why it’s exploding right now, and the data that should make you pause before you normalize it in your house, your group chat, or your relationship.

    We promise this isn’t an anti-fun sermon, it’s a reality check. If you’re someone who sports bets but has real limits in place…tell us what’s working. And if you’ve seen this start “small” and turn into something bigger in your life or somebody you love… drop a comment. People actually read them, and somebody needs that story.

    We get into:

    • Why “it’s just entertainment” doesn’t hold up
    • The fantasy sports gateway
    • The uncomfortable overlap between sports bettors, crypto people, and day traders
    • The stats that made us go: oh… this is a public health issue (debt, missed bills, payday loans, bankruptcy spikes)
    • How this isn’t “just a men’s issue” anymore and why women’s growth in betting makes total sense
    • The darker stuff no one wants to talk about: mental health, domestic violence spikes, and what happens after “a devastating loss”
    • Why we think gambling needs to be part of modern financial literacy the same way drugs/alcohol were when we grew up
    • What to do if you suspect it’s becoming a problem (and why the hotline is not the solution people think it is)

    Links:

    • Watch - VICE documentary: “The Sports Betting Boom”
    • Watch - Money on the Table - Season 3, Episode 3 - Luck is not a plan
    • Read - My Year as a Degenerate Sports Gambler

    Connect with Julien and Kiersten on our website, Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube.

    Join our email list to get updates from us, opportunities for discounts, freebies and a quick rundown on the relevant financial and career news impacting your life.

    Get our book Cashing Out: Win the Wealth Game by Walking Away, named 2023 best overall book about investing by Business Insider and one of the best personal finance books by Forbes

    If you would like to learn more about investing, check out our newest class, Making Money Grow

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    38 mins
  • Ep 247: The Student’s Guide to Financial Freedom with Dr. Paris Woods
    Mar 3 2026

    Most money advice for students is either condescending or delusional, and this episode is neither. This one is for the students…and for the parents, aunties, mentors, and big cousins trying to help without lecturing.

    Today I’m joined by Dr. Paris Woods, bestselling author of The Black Girl’s Guide to Financial Freedom and the new Student’s Guide to Financial Freedom. We talk about what she saw growing up in St. Louis, the “education is the ticket” promise, and why getting out of poverty isn’t the same as building wealth.

    If you love a young person, send them this episode and then follow up with, ‘did you listen?’

    We cover:

    • The debt traps waiting for you the moment you turn 18
    • The minimum payment trap and why “on-time payments” can still keep you stuck for years
    • Why “adulting” starts with a credit limit — and how cards + BNPL get marketed like free money.
    • Sticker price vs. net price: How to find your real college cost before you commit
    • Creating a “gap plan” with scholarships + grants + schools that meet need + a realistic part-time job so loans aren’t the default
    • Dreaming as a strategy and finding the answer to “what would you do if you knew you couldn’t fail?”
    • The importance of building a Freedom Fund so you can take the trip, start the business, or pivot without panicking

    Links:

    • Order The Student’s Guide to Financial Freedom
    • Follow Dr. Paris Woods: @AuthorParisWoods + ParisWoods.com

    Connect with Julien and Kiersten on our website, Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube.

    Join our email list to get updates from us, opportunities for discounts, freebies and a quick rundown on the relevant financial and career news impacting your life.

    Get our book Cashing Out: Win the Wealth Game by Walking Away, named 2023 best overall book about investing by Business Insider and one of the best personal finance books by Forbes

    If you would like to learn more about investing, check out our newest class, Making Money Grow

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    43 mins
  • Ep 246: New Money, New Problems: Finding advice you can trust with Brenton Harrison, CFP
    Feb 23 2026

    This week, we’re joined by Brenton Harrison, founder of New Money New Problems. Brenton is a financial advisor who works with first- and second-generation high earners. We’re talking about how to tell the difference between quality financial advice and misinformation/scammy advice, making sense of what you hear online, and why not all “good advice” is good for YOU.

    And because we live in the real world where creators and advisors both exist, we get into the relationship between financial influencers and financial advisors, where each one can actually help, where each one can fall short, and why it doesn’t have to be “versus”

    We get into:

    • The difference between first-generation wealth and first-generation high income (and why it matters)
    • Why first/second-gen high earners can be underserved even when they’re making good money
    • The #1 thing Brenton wishes high earners knew sooner
    • Why financial literacy doesn’t automatically fix the emotional + social reality of money
    • The disclaimer we wish more financial creators would use
    • Why “tax hack” content is so seductive and why it can be flat-out dangerous
    • Why market-timing myths survive
    • What a strong advisor relationship should produce in the first 60–90 days, and what you should look for
    • Why a bad experience with one advisor doesn’t mean you should quit the entire lane forever
    • Brenton’s take on robo-advisors, AI, and how tech can help without replacing real planning

    Links:

    • Visit Brenton’s website and book an initial meeting
    • Connect with him on Instagram or LinkedIn
    • Subscribe to his YouTube channel
    • Listen to the New Money, New Problems podcast


    Connect with Julien and Kiersten on our website, Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube.

    Join our email list to get updates from us, opportunities for discounts, freebies and a quick rundown on the relevant financial and career news impacting your life.

    Get our book Cashing Out: Win the Wealth Game by Walking Away, named 2023 best overall book about investing by Business Insider and one of the best personal finance books by Forbes

    If you would like to learn more about investing, check out our newest class, Making Money Grow

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    46 mins
  • Ep 245: The simplest way to talk about money without making it weird
    Feb 17 2026

    There are two sentences that can ruin a perfectly normal evening – “We need to talk”, and its evil twin, “We need to talk about money.” Even if your relationship is good, that phrasing makes it feel like somebody’s about to get graded.

    Even when things are fine, nobody wants to be the person who turns a decent Tuesday night into a full relationship audit. So this week, we’re introducing a better way: small doors. These are quick, low-stakes, real-life openings that normalize money talk without turning it into a whole thing.

    And the best part is, they’re not just for couples. Small doors can be used with parents, siblings, friends, or any relationship where money differences create distance

    We get into:

    • Why “we need to talk about money” is basically a panic alarm for most people, even if they’re in good relationships
    • The difference between avoiding conflict and avoiding judgment, weirdness, and role shifts
    • Why money conversations work better as appetizers than a full-day “financial summit”
    • What “small doors” actually look like in real life (aka: our kid’s expensive cherry habit 😭)
    • How tiny, specific moments create safer openings than “we need a budget”
    • The 3 rules for small doors
    • How to treat your partner’s first reaction as data, not a personal attack
    • What to do when the issue isn’t the money, it’s the pattern of how you talk about money
    • Why tone is basically the WiFi of the conversation
    • Why you should practice the repair as much as the conversation

    Links to helpful past episodes:

    • Episode 222 - Why we don't share everything (and what we do instead)
    • Episode 207 - 3 practical tips for couples living on one income

    Connect with Julien and Kiersten on our website, Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube.

    Join our email list to get updates from us, opportunities for discounts, freebies and a quick rundown on the relevant financial and career news impacting your life.

    Get our book Cashing Out: Win the Wealth Game by Walking Away, named 2023 best overall book about investing by Business Insider and one of the best personal finance books by Forbes

    If you would like to learn more about investing, check out our newest class, Making Money Grow

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    30 mins
  • Ep 244: Overcoming Financial Trauma with Rahkim Sabree
    Feb 9 2026

    This week we’re talking to Rahkim Sabree, author, financial trauma educator, and the person who basically put “financial trauma” on the map for a lot of the internet. His work connects money behaviors to nervous system responses, family systems, and broader cultural and structural realities. His book, Overcoming Financial Trauma, and his whole approach are research-heavy, emotionally honest, and built to last.

    Julien starts this conversation by admitting something most people don’t say out loud. He shares that he delayed inviting Rahkim on the podcast because the conversation would’ve forced him to confront his own financial trauma, and he wasn’t ready to "perform" his way through it.

    From there, this episode goes deeper than “money mindset” and way past generic financial literacy. If you’ve ever felt anxious about money without a clear reason… or noticed your stress spikes around the 1st and the 15th… this one will feel uncomfortably specific, in a good way.

    We talk about:

    • Why “financial trauma” is everywhere right now and how the term gets misused
    • The awkward truth about why healing your money story can feel like disrespecting your parents
    • The money anxiety you normalize until somebody else hears it
    • Rahkim’s house fire and how the “tools” we rely on (education, planning, discipline) don’t always deploy when life is on fire
    • Why money often represents power, freedom, and safety - and how safety shows up after loss
    • Vicarious financial trauma and how you can “catch” money anxiety from what you grew up around
    • How we’re socialized to treat “have-nots” and how that drives status, spending, and fear
    • Physical tells of financial trauma and why the better question is: where do you feel money in your body?

    Links:

    • Get Rahkim’s book, Overcoming Financial Trauma
    • Learn more about his work on Rahkim’s website, Instagram, and LinkedIn page
    • Subscribe to Rahkim’s newsletter on Substack
    • Follow Rahkim’s writing on Forbes

    Connect with Julien and Kiersten on our website, Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube.

    Join our email list to get updates from us, opportunities for discounts, freebies and a quick rundown on the relevant financial and career news impacting your life.

    Get our book Cashing Out: Win the Wealth Game by Walking Away, named 2023 best overall book about investing by Business Insider and one of the best personal finance books by Forbes

    If you would like to learn more about investing, check out our newest class, Making Money Grow

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    57 mins
  • Ep 243: How to stay financially disciplined when life is life’ing
    Feb 4 2026

    Life is life-ing. Prices are up, surprise expenses are regular, and your “simple” money goal keeps turning into a weekly argument with yourself (or your partner).
    In this episode, we talk about why so many people are either going full finance drill sergeant in 2026, or avoiding goals completely.

    We break down what financial discipline actually looks like when your life changes mid-month, and how to build goals that bend instead of break so you can keep moving forward without the mental drama of “I have to be extra strict this week” every week.

    We cover:

    • Why discipline doesn’t transfer cleanly from one area of life to another and why that’s normal
    • Why SMART goals make perfect sense at work, but don’t always work for money
    • The difference between ambitious/hard goals and brittle goals
    • Why “catch-up energy” erases progress even when you’re technically doing “better”
    • When discipline turns into stubbornness (hey, crypto friends)
    • The hidden cost of “perfect” goal frameworks (hello, 75 Hard friends)
    • Why the happiest wealthy people aren’t obsessing over the minutiae
    • The real purpose of goals: options, freedom, and a better life

    Connect with Julien and Kiersten on our website, Instagram, Twitter, and YouTube.

    Join our email list to get updates from us, opportunities for discounts, freebies and a quick rundown on the relevant financial and career news impacting your life.

    Get our book Cashing Out: Win the Wealth Game by Walking Away, named 2023 best overall book about investing by Business Insider and one of the best personal finance books by Forbes

    If you would like to learn more about investing, check out our newest class, Making Money Grow

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    39 mins