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Talk Money Podcast

Podcast de Sherri

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Desarrollo personal y salud

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Because money touches everything.The Talk Money Podcast is a weekly show that explores how money shapes our relationships, choices, culture, and everyday lives. Hosted by Sherri Brown — Financial Strategist & Licensed Insurance Advisor, and founder of Cali Pearl — this podcast breaks down personal finance, modern dating, marriage, divorce, business partnerships, and legacy planning in a way that’s clear, relatable, and judgment‑free.If you’re looking for real conversations about money that actually make sense, you’re in the right place. No jargon. No shame. Just practical guidance for women and families who want clarity, confidence, and a better relationship with money.Topics include:Personal finance and financial wellnessMoney and relationshipsMarriage, divorce, and prenupsBusiness partnerships and entrepreneurshipWealth building, legacy, and estate planningMoney psychology and decision‑makingReal‑life stories about how money impacts everyday lifeWhether you're navigating love, career, family, or your next big decision, Talk Money helps you understand the financial side of the life you’re building — because money touches everything.

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22 episodios

episode The Emergency Exit — Cash You Can Actually Reach artwork

The Emergency Exit — Cash You Can Actually Reach

Most of us believe we have a safety net. And most of us are working with something that will fail the moment we actually need it.  In Episode 20 of Talk Money Podcast, Sherri gives April — and every woman listening — the spare key. Not a credit card. Not a 401k. Not a promise from family. A real, liquid, accessible safety net that does not cost you extra when everything else is already going wrong. This episode gets specific about what liquidity actually means: money you can reach quickly and without significant loss of value. And it names the tools most women are relying on that do not meet that standard — and exactly why they fall short at the moment of crisis. We also go somewhere most financial conversations don’t. We talk about the mindset patterns that drain the foundation before an emergency ever arrives — FOMO spending, the ‘you can’t take it with you’ philosophy, and what those patterns actually cost in a crisis. And we talk about the legacy angle: because the spare key is not just for you. It is the first piece of what you leave behind. This episode also holds history. The Freedman’s Savings Bank. Black Wall Street. The reasons distrust of financial institutions runs deep in Black families — and why those reasons are valid, and why the tools available today are different. The need to protect what is ours has not changed. The tools have. And for the women who grew up in the church — or who simply understand a good parable when they hear one — Matthew 25 is here too. The ten virgins. The oil. The hour no one expected. Your emergency is not going to announce itself. The spare key is how you stay ready. You will leave this episode with a clear definition of true liquidity, a concrete picture of what a real emergency fund looks like, and one specific action step you can take this week regardless of where you are starting from. The book recommendation for this episode is Your Money or Your Life by Vicki Robin.  Episode 20. The spare key. April is ready. Are you? Find all episodes at TalkMoneyPodcast.com [https://www.talkmoneypodcast.com]. Financial guidance and second opinion reviews at CaliPearl.com [https://www.calipearl.com/contact-us].

9 de abr de 2026 - 20 min
episode Episode 19: Your Floor Plan — Spend on Purpose artwork

Episode 19: Your Floor Plan — Spend on Purpose

April’s foundation is poured. The cement is set. And this week, she picks up the floor plan. Episode 19 of April’s Toolbox: Building Your Financial House is about the financial tool most people know they need and almost nobody actually builds: a spending plan. Not a budget — a spending plan. And the difference between those two words is the difference between a document that feels like punishment and one that feels like power. This episode opens where real financial conversations have to start: with a question. Do you know — right now, today — exactly where every dollar of your income goes each month? Not approximately. Exactly. If that question creates even a moment of hesitation, you are in the right place. Host, Sherri, names what most financial content skips: the real reason people don’t write it down is emotional, not logistical. When the numbers are blurry, hope stays alive. Once you put income in one column and expenses in another, the picture becomes real — and real means decisions have to be made. This episode walks you through that moment without shame, and out the other side into clarity. You will learn what a spending plan is and why the reframe from budget matters, how to use the 50/30/20 framework as a reference point, what discretionary income is and where it has probably been going, and how to think about two levers — cutting expenses and growing income — when the plan reveals a gap. Sherri also tells the story of her aunt, a full-time nurse who sells lemon pound cakes on the side, as a reminder that no income idea is too small and that resourcefulness has always been generational. The cultural truth at the center of this episode: Black women are extraordinary planners — for everyone else. Funerals, reunions, church events, community gatherings. The floor plan for everyone else’s house is immaculate. This episode is an invitation to draw one for your own. Book recommendation: Get Good with Money by Tiffany Aliche — the Budgetnista. Warm, practical, and built for real life.  Episode 19. The floor plan. April knows what she’s building. Do you? Find all episodes at TalkMoneyPodcast.com. Financial guidance and second opinion reviews at CaliPearl.com.

6 de abr de 2026 - 17 min
episode The Foundation: Pour It Right the First Time artwork

The Foundation: Pour It Right the First Time

This is the episode where April breaks ground. In Episode 18 of April's Toolbox: Building Your Financial House, host Sherri Brown, introduces the financial concept that separates those who build wealth from those who only earn income — and the one ingredient it cannot work without: time. April's tool this week is cement. Because before you can build anything that lasts, you have to pour the foundation right. And in your financial house, that foundation is compounding. But this episode doesn't begin with a definition. It begins with a question Sherri used to open her financial seminars with: If you had a choice between one million dollars today or a single penny that doubled every day for thirty days — which would you choose? Most people choose the million. By day thirty, the penny becomes $5,368,709.12. From one cent. That math is the entire lesson. Before the math, though, Sherri tells the truth about why so many women — especially Black women — found themselves spending on visibility rather than building toward wealth. Not because of poor character or lack of discipline. Because in a world that demanded proof of belonging before it offered belonging, the right look, the right car, and the right presence were armor. A rational response to an irrational standard. Research confirms what many already know: the psychological and social pressures placed on Black women to conform to standards of beauty and professional presentation carry a real and measurable financial cost. And for generations, nobody sat us down and showed us the math on the other side of that decision. Sherri brings this lesson home with a personal story. Around 2010, she made a quiet decision: she stopped buying Christmas gifts for the adults in her family and started putting that money into an account instead. Starting with just one hundred dollars a year. The family wasn't happy about it. Sitting in a room full of gift-giving and choosing a different path was not easy. But fifteen years of consistency — starting at just one hundred dollars — tells a different story. And she shares the math. She also draws from one of the most enduring books in personal finance: The Richest Man in Babylon by George S. Clason, first published in 1926 and set in ancient Babylon. In it, the wealthiest man in the city teaches that true wealth comes when your gold has children — and those children have children — that work for you without ceasing. In our modern world: invested money earning returns, and those returns earning more returns, until you have built a stream of wealth that flows whether you are working or resting. By the end of this episode, you will understand what compound interest actually is in plain language, why time is the single most important factor in building wealth, how the spending patterns many of us inherited were rational responses to real pressures — and what a different strategy looks like, why starting now with what you have matters more than waiting until you have more, and what one hundred dollars a year, given fifteen years, actually becomes. You will also leave with one concrete action step you can take this week and one question that might follow you for a while. This is part of April's Toolbox: Building Your Financial House — an eight-episode series for Financial Literacy Month. Each episode, April picks up a new tool. This week, she pours the foundation. Listen, then visit CaliPearl.com [https://www.calipearl.com/contact-us] — for financial guidance, a second opinion, and life and health insurance. Whatever door fits where you are right now, it's open.

1 de abr de 2026 - 15 min
episode Why Your Money Mindset Is the Blueprint for Everything You Build artwork

Why Your Money Mindset Is the Blueprint for Everything You Build

I want to ask you something before we get into today’s lesson. What did money mean in the household you grew up in? Was it discussed openly — with intention and clarity? Or was it something that lived in the background, managed quietly, never explained? Was it a source of tension? Something you learned to work around rather than understand? Most of us, if we are being honest, grew up in households where money was managed but never truly understood. Where the system was: here is what comes in, here is what goes out, and Lord willing it balances. And that system — as functional as it was — left us without something essential. It left us without a blueprint. A blueprint is not the house. It is the set of instructions the house is built from. In building, every decision a contractor makes flows from what is on the blueprint. Get the blueprint wrong and it does not matter how hard you work or how skilled you are — the house will not come out right. Your money mindset works the same way. It is the invisible set of instructions you have been following your entire life — about what money means, who deserves it, how it is earned and kept and grown, and whether someone like you is allowed to have it in abundance. And most of us inherited that blueprint without ever opening it up and reading what was inside. What a flawed blueprint looks like It sounds like: ‘I’m not good with money.’ Which usually means: I kinda know what I make and I kinda know what I spend. But here is what every builder knows — you cannot eyeball a foundation. Kinda is not a number. And you cannot find your starting point if you are squinting at it. It sounds like: ‘There is never enough.’ That belief is like trying to build a castle on a five-hundred-square-foot lot. You are capable of the castle. But the blueprint was drawn for a much smaller life. The lot can be expanded — but first you have to recognize that the limitation is in the blueprint, not in you. It sounds like: silence. In many households, money was never discussed — not out of negligence, but out of protection. From shame. From comparison. From not wanting to be the neighborhood resource for everyone who found out you were doing well. But silence has a cost. You cannot get good guidance on a financial picture you will not show anyone. The good news A blueprint can be redrawn. That is not a motivational line — it is a financial fact. The beliefs you carry about money are not permanent. They are learned. And what is learned can be unlearned and replaced with something that actually builds the life you are working toward. Your next move starts with one question: What is one money belief you inherited that might not actually belong to you?  Write it down. Name it. You cannot release what you have not identified.  Three doors. Find yours.  If you are just getting started and need one structured step toward financial clarity — CaliPearl.com is where you begin.  If you have built something and want to make sure it is protected and positioned to last — let’s look at your full picture together.  If you have been working with someone and something still doesn’t feel right — a second opinion is always worth it. You owe that to yourself and to everything you are building.  Visit CaliPearl.com.

31 de mar de 2026 - 14 min
episode Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Global Trade, and What Tariffs Mean for Your Wallet Right Now artwork

Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, Global Trade, and What Tariffs Mean for Your Wallet Right Now

Episode 16 of the Talk Money Podcast — “The Woman at the Table” — is the finale of the March series Invest in Women: The Economics of Leadership, and it closes the month at the largest table in the world: the World Trade Organization. Host Sherri Brown traces the full arc of Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala’s life — from a village in southern Nigeria where she was raised by her grandmother and learned to carry water and cook as a child, through the devastation of the Biafran War, to Harvard, MIT, and a 25-year career at the World Bank. The episode follows her two tenures as Nigeria’s Finance Minister, including her landmark negotiation cancelling and restructuring $30 billion of national debt, her confrontation with oil subsidy fraud, and the moment anti-corruption opponents kidnapped her 83-year-old mother to pressure her resignation. Ngozi did not resign. Her mother freed herself and came home. The episode gives this moment its full cinematic and emotional weight, using it to illustrate what it costs to hold the line — and what it means to come from women who refuse to be stopped. The episode builds a direct, clear bridge between Ngozi’s work at the WTO and the financial realities your audience is navigating in 2026: rising gas prices driven by Strait of Hormuz tensions and the mechanics of global oil pricing; tariff-driven price increases on imported goods, illustrated through real Temu price examples; and the emerging impact of declining American brand favorability on content creators and small business owners with international revenue. The financial close addresses two concrete action areas: emergency fund preparation calibrated to current economic volatility (six to twelve months for variable-income earners), and income diversification as a structural protection against over-reliance on any single employer, platform, or revenue stream. The episode closes the full March series with a reflection on every woman featured — the pattern of showing up in rooms not designed for them, of being vetoed and returning, of building something that outlasts every title — and lands on the identity statement that has threaded through the entire month: the economics of leadership is not just the title. It is the years before it. It is the cost of the work. It is the decision to show up anyway.

25 de mar de 2026 - 23 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
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