The Stacking Benjamins Show
A Wall Street Journal story about a 17-year-old helping his family with financial decisions kicks off a much bigger Stacking Benjamins question: who should you actually trust with your money? Joe, Doug, Paula Pant, Jesse Cramer, and special guest Roger Whitney dig into where great advice comes from, why bad advice often comes from people who love you, and how to build a better filter before you act. Along the way, they talk books, podcasts, family advice, AI, confirmation bias, homebuying myths, index funds, retirement plans, and why "smart" isn't enough. What You'll Walk Away With Why Roger says "advice" has a high bar: real advice should apply to your specific life, not just sound smart in public The difference between information and advice -- and why confusing the two can lead you into trouble Why books often beat random internet advice: they usually have more vetting, structure, and accountability How well-meaning friends and family can still give terrible money advice when they speak confidently about things they don't really understand Paula's advice pyramid: avoid people who profit from outrage, be skeptical of people with no accountability, and seek sources with both expertise and vetting Why AI can be useful as a sparring partner, but not as a substitute for your own thinking or fact-checking The danger of "always" and "never" advice: always buy a house, always max your 401(k), never finance a car, always buy index funds Why renting isn't automatically throwing money away -- and how the price-to-rent ratio can help you think more clearly Why maxing out your workplace retirement plan may not always be the right move, especially when tax flexibility, business investment, or other goals matter more How confirmation bias, present bias, and absolute certainty can fool you into believing your plan is stronger than it is What to look for in your personal board of directors: people you respect, people with a high signal-to-noise ratio, and people who are kind enough to tell you the truth Why Roger says a kind person is better than a merely nice one when you need real feedback Why This Matters Now Financial advice is everywhere: podcasts, books, TikTok, AI, coworkers, relatives, advisors, and confident strangers with strong opinions. The hard part isn't finding advice. It's knowing which advice deserves your attention. This episode gives Stackers a filter for separating useful guidance from noise before the wrong voice gets too close to their money. From the Basement Joe uses a Wall Street Journal piece about a teenage family financial advisor to launch a bigger card-table debate with Paula Pant, Jesse Cramer, and Roger Whitney. The crew builds a money-advice pyramid, debates which financial rules should be ignored, and explores when to trust yourself versus when to bring in your board of directors. Doug celebrates Art Linkletter with Game of Life trivia, Paula admits she's never played it, and OG's trivia lead might get a little more uncomfortable. Resources Mentioned The Wall Street Journal piece by Oyin Adedoyin about a 17-year-old helping his family with financial decisions Roger Whitney -- The Retirement Answer Man podcast Paula Pant -- Afford Anything podcast Jesse Cramer -- Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors podcast Seth Godin -- Linchpin Thomas Stanley and William Danko -- The Millionaire Next Door Robert Kiyosaki -- Rich Dad Poor Dad Robert Cialdini -- Influence Richard Feynman -- Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman! Beth Kobliner -- referenced as an upcoming Afford Anything guest Stacking Benjamins Newsletter, The 201 -- stackingbenjamins.com/201 Stacking Benjamins YouTube channel -- youtube.com/stackingbenjamins See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].
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