Kiersten here. This week’s episode is a solo one, and it’s inspired by a book I just finished called The Art of Spending Money by Morgan Housel. If you’re familiar with The Psychology of Money, you already know Morgan’s style: short chapters, clean sentences, and big ideas. This new book is about spending but not the kind most people are struggling with. In this episode, I unpack: Who this book is really forTwo core takeaways that stuck: the psychology of contrast and the sustainability...
All content for rich & REGULAR with Kiersten and Julien Saunders is the property of rich & REGULAR and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Kiersten here. This week’s episode is a solo one, and it’s inspired by a book I just finished called The Art of Spending Money by Morgan Housel. If you’re familiar with The Psychology of Money, you already know Morgan’s style: short chapters, clean sentences, and big ideas. This new book is about spending but not the kind most people are struggling with. In this episode, I unpack: Who this book is really forTwo core takeaways that stuck: the psychology of contrast and the sustainability...
Ep 232: Introducing ‘Eat Better’ | The series that helps you cook without losing your mind
rich & REGULAR with Kiersten and Julien Saunders
44 minutes
2 months ago
Ep 232: Introducing ‘Eat Better’ | The series that helps you cook without losing your mind
Food prices are up (again), takeout is 4x more expensive than eating at home, and yet somehow..dinner still ends up on your doorstep. That’s exactly why we created Eat Better, a new video series that makes home cooking feel doable, even if you're not “a cooking person.” In this episode, we're breaking down why so many people aren’t cooking at home, and what it really takes to change that. Julien talks about how 20+ years of cooking at home and 7 years as a pro chef shaped our latest project, ...
rich & REGULAR with Kiersten and Julien Saunders
Kiersten here. This week’s episode is a solo one, and it’s inspired by a book I just finished called The Art of Spending Money by Morgan Housel. If you’re familiar with The Psychology of Money, you already know Morgan’s style: short chapters, clean sentences, and big ideas. This new book is about spending but not the kind most people are struggling with. In this episode, I unpack: Who this book is really forTwo core takeaways that stuck: the psychology of contrast and the sustainability...