The Stacking Benjamins Show

How to Plan the Perfect Theme Park Trip Without Wasting Your Money or Your Day (SB1844)

1 h 6 min · 20 mei 2026
aflevering How to Plan the Perfect Theme Park Trip Without Wasting Your Money or Your Day (SB1844) cover

Beschrijving

Every family knows the feeling. You spend $1,000 to get everyone to the happiest place on Earth, and by 1:30 someone's crying, someone's sunburned, and somebody just paid $18 for a hotdog. Robert Niles from Theme Park Insider (the site that Robert jokes AI is pulling all its theme park data from) comes back to the basement to help you avoid that fate. This year he's also got strong opinions on which park is winning summer 2026, and it's not the one you'd expect. What You'll Walk Away With * Why the biggest theme park mistake families make has nothing to do with the park -- and everything to do with who's in the crew going with you * Which park Robert says is winning summer 2026 -- including a brand-new attraction that combines rollercoaster, dark ride, and water ride into one experience * The quick game: lightning lane passes, VIP tours, park hoppers, character breakfasts, fireworks packages, meal plans -- worth it, skip it, or depends? * Why Tokyo DisneySea is boss-level theme parking -- and the specific 10-minute window that determines whether you get on the top rides or wait four hours * The sleeper parks most families overlook -- including one with a water park included in the ticket price and another that Herschend hasn't bought yet * How to use the Theme Park Insider community to find the actual strategy for any park before you arrive -- written by real visitors, not AI * Why sit-down air-conditioned lunch in the middle of a hot park day might be the best $40 you spend all summer * The over-planning trap -- and why having a plan matters less than being willing to abandon it * What a Netflix show taught CNBC about health insurance deductibles -- and why one in four Gen Z adults still doesn't know what a deductible actually is * The HSA trap hiding inside high-deductible health plans -- and why choosing the cheaper plan can end up costing you far more Why This Matters Now Summer is when families spend real money on experiences that either become great memories or expensive regrets. A little planning separates the two more than most people think -- and the same principle applies to health insurance. Both conversations in this episode are about making sure the money you spend on your family actually delivers what you paid for. From the Basement Robert Niles from Theme Park Insider joins Joe and OG to kick off summer 2026 -- and Joe finally confesses that going to Dollywood last year changed his life. The headline segment tackles a CNBC piece inspired by the Netflix show Beef, which turns into a genuinely useful conversation about deductibles, HSAs, max-out-of-pocket numbers, and when the high-deductible plan is actually the wrong choice. Doug arrives with Formula Rossa trivia and a strongly worded editorial about what counts as a complete meal. The back porch features perhaps the best parenting post the basement has ever produced. Resources Mentioned * Theme Park Insider -- themeparkinsider.com; reviews, trip planning guides, and community discussion boards * Beef on Netflix -- referenced for the deductible explainer segment * CNBC health insurance article by Annie Nova -- linked at stackingbenjamins.com * Stacking Benjamins Newsletter (The 201) -- stackingbenjamins.com/201 * Stacking Benjamins Vault -- stackingbenjamins.com/vault * Stacking Benjamins Community -- stackingbenjamins.com/basement 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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aflevering Where Are You Drawing the Line? How Smart Spenders Decide What to Cut and What to Keep (SB1845) artwork

Where Are You Drawing the Line? How Smart Spenders Decide What to Cut and What to Keep (SB1845)

Prices are up. Budgets are tighter. And people are making some surprising choices about what stays and what goes. The woman skipping the new laptop and the graduation dress is still booked for a Disney cruise, a Bruno Mars concert, and a trip to Lake Erie. It turns out inflation doesn't just squeeze your wallet -- it forces a conversation about what you actually value. Joe, OG, Paula Pant, and Doc G dig into where people are drawing the line, why experiences outlast stuff in the happiness research, and what each of them refuses to give up no matter what. What You'll Walk Away With * Why people cut the easy stuff first -- and why that strategy relieves anxiety without actually solving the budget problem * The research behind experiences vs. stuff: why the memory of a trip gets rosier over time while objects depreciate in more ways than one * Doc G's spending happiness continuum -- from stuff to experiences to becoming a better version of yourself, and why the last one costs the least * Why OG's DoorDash experiment was a two out of ten in year-to-date success -- and why four people pulling the rudder in the other direction matters * The "build from zero" budget reframe that feels more empowering than cutting from the top down * One roundtable member's rule that nothing is ever truly off the table when cash gets tight -- including the house and the private school * What each panelist will never go cheap on -- and one answer involving prescription medications that lands differently than you'd expect * The expenses that are dead to each of them -- and where Joe, OG, Paula, and Doc G land on first class flights and DoorDash * Why the client who cut all Christmas spending had the best holiday season of their life * Papa John's quarterly earnings data that tells you exactly how inflation is changing behavior at the menu level Why This Matters Now If you're in your 40s and you've started quietly trimming things -- streaming services, delivery apps, clothing budgets -- but haven't touched the bigger stuff, this episode names what's actually happening. The question isn't whether to cut. It's whether the things you're cutting are the ones that matter least. That's a values conversation, not a math conversation, and this roundtable is one of the better ones the basement has had. From the Basement Joe, OG, Paula Pant, and Doc G dig into a Wall Street Journal piece on how Americans are changing their spending habits -- and the conversation quickly becomes about what money is actually for. OG reports that his attempt to eliminate DoorDash from the family budget has been going poorly. Doc G went to Bali in coach. The year-long trivia competition takes a dramatic turn as OG's precise mathematical reasoning leads everyone to the wrong answer -- and Doc G wins by going lower. Johnny Carson's guest host strategy turns out to be the missing variable nobody accounted for. Resources Mentioned * Wall Street Journal -- "Where Americans Are Drawing the Line on Price Increases" by Rachel Wolff; linked at stackingbenjamins.com * Afford Anything podcast -- Paula Pant; Joe joins most Tuesdays for listener Q&A * Earn and Invest podcast -- Doc G (Jordan Grumet); recent episode with Carrie Jorn Grimes on The Joy of Money * Stacking Benjamins Vault -- stackingbenjamins.com/vault * Stacking Benjamins Community -- stackingbenjamins.com/basement 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].

22 mei 202655 min
aflevering How to Plan the Perfect Theme Park Trip Without Wasting Your Money or Your Day (SB1844) artwork

How to Plan the Perfect Theme Park Trip Without Wasting Your Money or Your Day (SB1844)

Every family knows the feeling. You spend $1,000 to get everyone to the happiest place on Earth, and by 1:30 someone's crying, someone's sunburned, and somebody just paid $18 for a hotdog. Robert Niles from Theme Park Insider (the site that Robert jokes AI is pulling all its theme park data from) comes back to the basement to help you avoid that fate. This year he's also got strong opinions on which park is winning summer 2026, and it's not the one you'd expect. What You'll Walk Away With * Why the biggest theme park mistake families make has nothing to do with the park -- and everything to do with who's in the crew going with you * Which park Robert says is winning summer 2026 -- including a brand-new attraction that combines rollercoaster, dark ride, and water ride into one experience * The quick game: lightning lane passes, VIP tours, park hoppers, character breakfasts, fireworks packages, meal plans -- worth it, skip it, or depends? * Why Tokyo DisneySea is boss-level theme parking -- and the specific 10-minute window that determines whether you get on the top rides or wait four hours * The sleeper parks most families overlook -- including one with a water park included in the ticket price and another that Herschend hasn't bought yet * How to use the Theme Park Insider community to find the actual strategy for any park before you arrive -- written by real visitors, not AI * Why sit-down air-conditioned lunch in the middle of a hot park day might be the best $40 you spend all summer * The over-planning trap -- and why having a plan matters less than being willing to abandon it * What a Netflix show taught CNBC about health insurance deductibles -- and why one in four Gen Z adults still doesn't know what a deductible actually is * The HSA trap hiding inside high-deductible health plans -- and why choosing the cheaper plan can end up costing you far more Why This Matters Now Summer is when families spend real money on experiences that either become great memories or expensive regrets. A little planning separates the two more than most people think -- and the same principle applies to health insurance. Both conversations in this episode are about making sure the money you spend on your family actually delivers what you paid for. From the Basement Robert Niles from Theme Park Insider joins Joe and OG to kick off summer 2026 -- and Joe finally confesses that going to Dollywood last year changed his life. The headline segment tackles a CNBC piece inspired by the Netflix show Beef, which turns into a genuinely useful conversation about deductibles, HSAs, max-out-of-pocket numbers, and when the high-deductible plan is actually the wrong choice. Doug arrives with Formula Rossa trivia and a strongly worded editorial about what counts as a complete meal. The back porch features perhaps the best parenting post the basement has ever produced. Resources Mentioned * Theme Park Insider -- themeparkinsider.com; reviews, trip planning guides, and community discussion boards * Beef on Netflix -- referenced for the deductible explainer segment * CNBC health insurance article by Annie Nova -- linked at stackingbenjamins.com * Stacking Benjamins Newsletter (The 201) -- stackingbenjamins.com/201 * Stacking Benjamins Vault -- stackingbenjamins.com/vault * Stacking Benjamins Community -- stackingbenjamins.com/basement 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].

20 mei 20261 h 6 min
aflevering Too Much of One Stock? How to Diversify Without Blowing Up Your Tax Bill (SB1843) artwork

Too Much of One Stock? How to Diversify Without Blowing Up Your Tax Bill (SB1843)

You wake up, check your portfolio, and realize one stock has quietly become your entire retirement plan. Maybe it came from an employee stock purchase plan. Maybe Grandma left you a pile of Apple shares. Maybe you bought NVIDIA in 2012 because you liked the graphics card and forgot about it. However you got here, the problem is the same: one company now owns you. Joe and OG walk through exactly how to unwind it -- slowly, tax-efficiently, and without making the emotional decisions that cost people the most money. What You'll Walk Away With * The four ways people end up with concentrated stock -- and which one has the easiest fix that most people skip entirely * Why inheriting stock is actually the best time to diversify -- and the step-up in basis rule that eliminates most of the tax bill * The conveyor belt strategy for employee stock purchase plans that keeps you collecting the discount without piling up company risk * Why "I'll just grow around it" almost never works -- and the math behind why your stock tends to outpace your ability to diversify around it * The question Joe asked every client in this situation: which outcome would upset you least -- and why that's the right starting point * RSUs as a paycheck, not a loyalty pledge -- and the mental reframe that makes it easier to sell * What the Merck/Vioxx story teaches about why the tax bill is almost never the real reason to hold concentrated stock * When a slow systematic sell makes sense versus ripping the Band-Aid -- and how to decide which one you can actually live with * The estate planning mistake that turns a free inheritance into a massive capital gains bill -- and why the $1 trick backfires every time * The insurance planning framework OG and Anna walk through: life, disability, long-term care, and property/casualty -- including the umbrella policy most people skip Why This Matters Now If you've spent years building something -- through your career, through conviction, through an inheritance -- the last thing you want is to lose it all because one company had a bad quarter. The diversification conversation feels complicated, but the framework is simpler than most people think. The hard part isn't knowing what to do. It's making the decision when the stock is moving and your emotions are loud. From the Basement Joe and OG dig into concentrated stock risk -- how people get there, what it actually costs them, and the five strategies for getting out without making it worse. OG and Anna return for episode two of their financial basics series with a full insurance planning walkthrough -- including the disability insurance gap most people don't know they have. Doug arrives with Mount St. Helens trivia and a dryer situation that may or may not involve auto parts. Stacker Molly's car repair HSA story gets a full investigation and a satisfying resolution. Resources Mentioned * Stacking Benjamins Basics Guide -- season one and season two workbooks free at stackingbenjamins.com/basicsguide * Stacking Benjamins Newsletter (The 201) -- stackingbenjamins.com/201 * Stacking Benjamins Vault -- stackingbenjamins.com/vault * Stacking Benjamins Community -- stackingbenjamins.com/basement * Yahoo Finance / CNBC insider trading tracker -- referenced for monitoring executive stock sales 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].

18 mei 20261 h 5 min
aflevering The Habits That Actually Make Millionaires (SB1842) artwork

The Habits That Actually Make Millionaires (SB1842)

What actually separates people who build lasting wealth from everyone else? Not the tips. Not the apps. The habits. Joe put the question to a panel of financial planners, coaches, and bloggers -- and turned it into a game. Seven habits, three rounds, two points up for grabs. Monica Scudieri, who paid off $257,000 in debt and reached financial independence in 10 years, joined OG and Jesse Cramer to find out how well the conventional wisdom matches what actually works. What You'll Walk Away With * The seven millionaire habits Kiplinger identified -- and which ones the panel nailed, missed, and argued about * Why continuously educating yourself about money remains one of the highest-leverage habits at any income level * The networking truth wealthy people understand that most people don't -- and why "who not how" changes everything about how you approach your career and finances * Monica's story: how she turned a divorce, $257,000 in debt, and three rounds of unemployment into financial independence in a decade * Why living below your means isn't about deprivation -- it's about creating the margin that makes every other habit possible * The pay yourself first argument that actually holds up when your budget is genuinely tight * Why OG thinks waking up early is the worst advice in personal finance -- and what he thinks actually matters instead * The book recommendations that shaped each panelist's financial philosophy -- including a deep dive on why passive investing still wins * Why diversifying your income streams landed on the millionaire habits list -- and what that looks like in practice * The complete list of seven habits, revealed at the end -- including the two the panel never guessed Why This Matters Now Millionaire habits get discussed constantly and followed inconsistently. The gap isn't usually knowledge -- it's the unsexy reality that these habits have to run in the background for years before the results become visible. This roundtable is worth listening to not because the list is surprising, but because the people talking about it have actually lived it. From the Basement Joe, OG, Jesse Cramer, and Monica Scudieri from Grab Your Slice play two rounds of the millionaire habits game while the year-long trivia competition quietly shifts -- Monica guesses closest on a 1940 McDonald's complete meal price and earns Paula Pant's first point in a while. OG extends his lead. Jesse goes 0 for the day and seems fine about it. Doug intervenes on the trivia question to add a milkshake, which turns out to be decisive. Resources Mentioned * Grab Your Slice of Financial Independence by Monica Scudieri -- available wherever books are sold * Monica Scudieri financial coaching -- schedule a free 30-minute call at grabyourslice.com [https://grabyourslice.com] * Personal Finance for Long-Term Investors -- Jesse Cramer's podcast, wherever you listen; upcoming two-part series on the 14 risks retirees face * Automatic Wealth by Michael Masterson -- recommended by Monica as her foundational book * A Random Walk Down Wall Street by Burton Malkiel -- recommended by Jesse * The War of Art by Steven Pressfield and Essentialism by Greg McKeown -- recommended by OG * The Truth About Money by Ric Edelman -- recommended by Joe * Networking With the Affluent by Dr. Thomas Stanley -- referenced in discussion * Stacking Benjamins Vault -- stackingbenjamins.com/vault [https://stackingbenjamins.com/vault] * Stacking Benjamins Community -- stackingbenjamins.com/basement [https://stackingbenjamins.com/basement] * Stacking Benjamins "Benjamins After Dark" Meetups -- stackingbenjamins.com/BAD [https://stackingbenjamins.com/BAD] 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].

15 mei 20261 h 0 min
aflevering Beth Kobliner on the Money Basics That Still Work 30 Years Later (and the New Traps Nobody Warned You About) SB1841 artwork

Beth Kobliner on the Money Basics That Still Work 30 Years Later (and the New Traps Nobody Warned You About) SB1841

Thirty years ago Beth Kobliner wrote the book that a generation of financial planners handed to their clients' kids. The core advice still holds. But the world around it has changed dramatically -- frictionless spending, gambling apps disguised as investment platforms, and a housing market where the average first-time buyer is now 40. Beth comes back to the basement with an updated edition of Get a Financial Life and a clear-eyed take on what's harder now, what's easier, and what was always just common sense. What You'll Walk Away With * Why the shift to invisible, frictionless money has made spending harder to track -- and the two-week experiment that fixes it without turning into a second job * The yours, mine, and ours account system for couples where one person saves and one person spends -- and why autonomy is the key to avoiding money resentment * Why putting a price tag on your goals changes your spending behavior more than any budget ever will * The biggest mistake first-time home buyers make right now -- and the math on why a 10% down payment often beats waiting for 20% * Used versus new car: the $20,000 gap that makes the decision simple -- and the negotiation script that puts you in control at the dealership * Student loan reality check for 2026 -- what's changing by July, where to run the numbers, and who qualifies for public service loan forgiveness now that it's actually working * Why paying off a 22% credit card is mathematically equivalent to earning 22% guaranteed -- and what that means for how you prioritize your money * The gambling platform statistic that should alarm every parent of a 20-something: 25% of Gen Z and millennials consider online gambling an investment * The annuity conversation most advisors won't have honestly -- what they're actually selling, what the fees really cover, and the two use cases where they might actually make sense * Why an annuity inside an IRA is, in OG's words, an abomination -- and the three questions to ask before signing anything Why This Matters Now Whether you're in your 40s and wishing you'd read this at 22, or you're handing it to someone who just graduated, the fundamentals Beth laid out three decades ago are still the fastest path to financial stability. What's changed is the noise around them -- and the sophistication of the products and platforms designed to get in the way. From the Basement Beth Kobliner joins Joe and OG to walk through the 30th anniversary edition of Get a Financial Life -- covering homes, cars, student loans, debt, and the new financial traps that didn't exist in 1996. The headline segment digs into a CNBC piece on why retirees are thinking about annuities wrong, which turns into one of the more honest annuity conversations the basement has had. Doug arrives with Spice Girls trivia that everyone over 35 finds embarrassingly easy. The meatloaf debate breaks out at the end and resolves nothing. Resources Mentioned * Get a Financial Life by Beth Kobliner -- 30th anniversary edition available wherever books are sold * Beth Kobliner -- bethkobliner.com [https://bethkobliner.com] * studentaid.gov -- loan simulator and repayment plan options * Edmunds and Kelley Blue Book -- invoice price research before car negotiations; edmunds.com [https://edmunds.com], kbb.com [https://kbb.com] * CARFAX -- used car history reports; carfax.com [https://carfax.com] * Carvana, Autotrader, CarGurus -- used car shopping platforms * CNBC annuities article by Greg Iacurci -- linked at stackingbenjamins.com * JP Morgan Guide to the Markets -- referenced in discussion; search "JP Morgan Guide to the Markets" * Stacking Benjamins Newsletter (The 201) -- stackingbenjamins.com/201 [https://stackingbenjamins.com/201] * Stacking Benjamins Vault -- stackingbenjamins.com/vault [https://stackingbenjamins.com/vault] * Stacking Benjamins Meetups -- stackingbenjamins.com/meetup [https://stackingbenjamins.com/meetup] * Stacking Benjamins Community -- stackingbenjamins.com/basement [https://stackingbenjamins.com/basement] 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].

13 mei 20261 h 18 min