• From $19,000 a Year to Financial Freedom (Joseph Moore)
    May 22 2026

    Joseph Moore grew up in rural South Carolina, the son of an electrician who worked during the day and went to school at night. Money wasn't discussed in his house (there wasn't enough of it to make conversation).
    Today, Moore is a historian and author of the national bestseller How to Get Rich in American History: 300 Years of Financial Advice That Worked (& Didn’t) who achieved financial freedom in his mid-40s. But the path there was anything but straight: a detour through seminary, a near-financial disaster in 2008, and a decade spent asking the question that would define his career — where does our financial advice actually come from?
    Chris Hill talks with him about:
    - The $56.56 mortgage payment that haunted his grandfather and shaped Moore's relationship with debt
    - Why developing a "peasant mentality" about money is not all bad
    - How marriage, more than almost anything else, predicts financial success
    - What the animated movie Ratatouille gets right about wealth and talent
    Discover Mar Mar, the chili garlic flavor that goes on everything. Go to ilovemarmar.com and use the promo code “MONEY” for 10% off .
    What's your favorite movie or TV series about money? Tell us at info@moneyunpluggedpod.com.
    Opening clip – “Fiddler On The Roof”

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    32 mins
  • Betting on Yourself: The Financial Reality of Going Solo (Marc Goldman)
    May 15 2026

    For nearly two decades, Marc Goldman was the voice of the Marine Corps Marathon — running marketing, communications, and sponsorships for one of the most prestigious road races in America. Five years ago, he walked away from that stability to launch Event Voice, his own announcing and event strategy business.
    In this conversation, Marc and Chris Hill explore:
    - Why the pandemic became the catalyst for a career leap Marc had been quietly building toward for years
    - How he thought through the financial reality of trading a steady paycheck for the uncertainty of solo entrepreneurship
    - A money philosophy he and his wife established on their 1st date
    - The way "Die With Zero" by Bill Perkins changed how he thinks about saving, spending, and the purpose of money
    - What it's like to announce the Berkshire Hathaway 5K in Omaha, where runners arrive from every corner of the world united by their faith in Warren Buffett
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    What is the last thing you splurged on? Tell us at info@moneyunpluggedpod.com.
    Opening clip – “Ocean’s Eleven”

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    38 mins
  • Why Less is More in Investing and Life (Ben Carlson)
    May 8 2026

    Ben Carlson has a simple philosophy when it comes to money — and life: less is more. He writes it in every book he signs. It sounds obvious, but most people never actually live it.
    He’s the co-host of Animal Spirits and author of the brand-new book, Risk and Reward: How to Handle Market Volatility and Build Long-Term Wealth.
    Chris Hill talks with Ben about:
    - The lesson his late brother Jon taught him about risk and money
    - Growing up in Michigan with frugal parents and a dad whose only financial advice was "never carry a credit card balance"
    - What it was like to sit in the room during the 2008 financial crisis and watch the smartest people he'd ever met choose fear over opportunity
    - Why he gave his wife a PowerPoint presentation about investing before they got married — and how far she let him get
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    What is the last thing you splurged on? Tell us at info@moneyunpluggedpod.com.
    Opening clip – “Mad Men”

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    29 mins
  • The Hardest Money Skill Nobody Talks About (Dan Caplinger)
    May 1 2026

    Dan Caplinger has spent most of his career helping people understand money — first as a tax and estate planning attorney, then as a longtime writer at The Motley Fool. But the financial lessons that shaped him most started long before any of that: skipping school lunch to save a few dollars, counting coin rolls with his mom, and learning the hard way that a $60 Pac-Man game isn't what a nine-year-old thinks it is.
    Chris Hill talks with Dan about:
    - What the billable-hours model of law firms taught him about misaligned incentives
    - How he and his wife structured their finances before getting married
    - One change he would make to the US tax code
    - The money lesson he wishes he'd learned at 19
    Discover Mar Mar, the chili garlic flavor that goes on everything. Go to ilovemarmar.com and use the promo code “MONEY” for 10% off.
    What's your favorite movie or TV series about money? Tell us at info@moneyunpluggedpod.com.
    Opening clip – “Wall Street”

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    33 mins
  • Skin in the Game: Why Your Investments Should Match Your Convictions (Brian Stoffel)
    Apr 24 2026

    What if the stocks you believe in the most are the ones you actually own? Brian Stoffel spent years as a teacher before stumbling into investing — and one experiment changed everything. After reading Nassim Taleb's Skin in the Game, he went back and coded 300 of his own articles into two buckets: companies he wrote about positively that he owned, and companies he wrote about positively that he didn't. The results were striking. The stocks he owned outperformed the market. The ones he didn't own underperformed — by a wide margin.
    Brian talks with Chris Hill about what that experiment taught him about conviction investing, why he looks for companies that get stronger under stress, and what his unconventional path (from rural Iowa to DC classrooms to Costa Rica) taught him about the relationship between money and the things that actually matter in life, as well as:
    - The reason he actively avoided money for most of his early life
    - A mistake with whole life insurance he made as a 1st-year teacher
    - What Nassim Taleb and a small Iowa college basketball team have in common
    - Why he doesn’t “fight the universe”
    Find more from Brian at LongTermMindset.co
    What’s your favorite movie or TV series about money? Tell us at info@moneyunpluggedpod.com
    Brew Markets is the best wrap-up of the day on Wall Street. Sign up for FREE at BrewMarkets.com/money
    Opening clip – “Heist”

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    30 mins
  • How a Music Teacher Went From $50 on Robinhood to Hosting an Investing Podcast (Jeff Santoro)
    Apr 17 2026

    In January 2020, Jeff Santoro deposited $50 into a Robinhood account and started buying penny stocks. He had no idea what he was doing. Two months later, the pandemic hit — and he suddenly had a lot of time to figure it out.
    Santoro spent 12 years teaching music and has spent the past 13 as a school administrator. He is also the co-host of Investing Unscripted, a podcast he built from scratch (with Jason Hall) after becoming obsessed with investing in his 40s. His path there runs through a false sense of security about his pension, a wife who quietly knew more about money than he did, and a data obsession that started in high school when he was tracking every dollar he spent on Quicken.
    Chris Hill talks with Jeff about:
    - How having a pension made him dangerously complacent about saving and investing for decades
    - Catching both Charlie Munger's last Berkshire Hathaway meeting and Warren Buffett's last as CEO (neither time intentionally)
    - The one financial rule he's given his kids that he wishes someone had given him at their age
    - Why being “penny wise and pound foolish” is the category of spending he regrets most
    What's the last thing you splurged on? Tell us at info@moneyunpluggedpod.com.
    Want to instantly improve your cooking? Go to dizzypigbbq.com and use the promo code “MONEY” to get 10% off your 1st order.
    Opening clip – “The Big Short”

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    32 mins
  • He Gave Himself a PhD in Investing — One Audiobook at a Time (Brian Feroldi)
    Apr 10 2026

    Brian Feroldi grew up in Rhode Island as a born saver — the kind of kid who hoarded his lunch money candy rather than eating it, just to watch his collection grow. His dad was a CFO. His mom raised money for the ALS Association. Nobody sat him down and explained how investing worked. That part he had to figure out on his own.
    A financial educator, YouTuber, and author of the book Why Does the Stock Market Go Up?, Brian joins Chris Hill to talk about the long road from money-illiterate college graduate to one of the most-followed investing educators on the internet. He shares:
    - Why he chose his college major purely to save $5,000 a year in tuition — and why the classroom demographics sealed the deal
    - How 40,000 miles a year on the road became an unlikely PhD in business and investing, while his coworkers listened to Howard Stern
    - What Charlie Munger understood about incentives that most investors still get wrong — and why stock-based compensation at most public companies is completely broken
    - Why he regrets his MBA (and it’s not because of the money it cost)

    What is something you bought that makes you happy? Tell us at info@moneyunpluggedpod.com.
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    Opening clip – “Neal Brennan: 3 Mics”

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    29 mins
  • He Cashed Out His 401(k) to Pay for a Round of Golf. He Understands Compounding Now. (Jason Hall)
    Apr 3 2026

    Jason Hall grew up in rural Georgia watching his dad treat money the way most people treat a hot potato — get it and spend it as fast as you can. Nobody talked about saving. Nobody talked about investing. The plan, such as it was, was to fix up a beat-up old truck his grandfather gave him, pulling parts from the junkyard ten miles down the road, and figure the rest out later.
    Co-host of the Investing Unscripted podcast and a contributor to The Motley Fool for over a decade, Jason joins Chris Hill to talk about the long, expensive road from that junkyard to genuine financial clarity. He shares:
    - Why dropping out of college to sell electronics at Circuit City felt like the smart move — and how money locked him into a career path he never planned on
    - The moment his girlfriend's savings account and an unauthorized speaker purchase nearly ended their relationship before it really began
    - How he cashed out his 401(k) to pay for a round of golf with two guys whose names he can't remember — and what that decision is worth in today's dollars
    - The conversation he had with his wife before walking away from a six-figure sales job to write about investing for half the pay
    What's the last thing you splurged on? Tell us at info@moneyunpluggedpod.com
    Go to ilovemarmar.com and use the promo code “MONEY” to get 10%.
    Opening clip – “Nate Bargatze: Hello World”

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    33 mins