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Auctioneer at podium, art in background

The Painting Bought For Under $2,000—Before Becoming The Most Expensive Work Of Art Ever Sold At Auction

Most people walk past old paintings without giving them a second thought. Some end up in attics. Others gather dust in storage rooms. But every once in a while, a forgotten piece of art turns out to be something extraordinary. This is the story of one painting that went from near-obscurity to rewriting auction history.
July 6, 2026 Jesse Singer
Worried woman holding apartment keys

I finally broke up with my boyfriend, but my landlord refuses to remove me from our lease. Now I can’t rent anywhere else. Is that legal? What do I do?

I broke up with my boyfriend. I want out. But both our names are on the lease. My landlord won’t remove me—and now I can’t get approved elsewhere because I’m “already on a lease.” Am I financially trapped? Here’s what’s actually happening—and what you can realistically do.
February 20, 2026 Jesse Singer

How To Invest At Any Age

It's never too late to start investing in your retirement, and we've got all the best tips and tricks help you!
February 14, 2025 JK
Confused couple with HOA notice

The HOA approved my renovation, but now says it violates updated rules. Can approvals be reversed after work begins?

You got the approval and did the paperwork. You hired contractors and maybe even lived through the noise and mess. Now, out of nowhere, the HOA tells you the renovation violates updated rules and needs to change or stop.
February 16, 2026 Quinn Mercer
Woman worried about renovations

I want to renovate our kitchen before selling to increase the home’s value, but my husband says we won’t recoup the cost. Is he right?

You’re about to sell, and your instinct is clear: update the kitchen, boost the value, sell for more. Your partner, on the other hand, says you’ll spend a fortune and never get it back. So, who’s right?
February 25, 2026 Quinn Mercer
Woman concerned about pay app

I was tricked into sending money through an app, but my bank won’t dispute the charge because I “authorized” it. Is there any way to get my money back?

You didn’t get hacked. You didn’t have your card stolen. You sent the money yourself, because someone convinced you to. Now the bank says the charge was authorized, so there’s nothing they can do. Unfortunately, this is one of the hardest types of fraud to reverse, but “hard” doesn’t mean “impossible”.
February 25, 2026 Peter Kinney
man in dilemma standing in a living room with documents; a stressed woman in background

My sister keeps calling me selfish because I won't co-sign her mortgage. Am I protecting myself or abandoning family?

Few money requests feel as emotionally loaded as a plea to co-sign a mortgage. It can sound like a simple act of trust, but the legal and financial consequences are anything but small. If your sister says you are selfish for saying no, the real question is whether you are refusing a favor or taking on a major debt you do not control.
July 3, 2026 Carl Wyndham
Internalfb Image (4)

My friend says paying cash at small businesses should always get you a discount. Is that expectation still realistic in 2026?

Your friend’s claim has a certain old-school charm. Hand over bills, skip the card machine, and surely the shop owner should knock a little off the price. In real life, though, whether that expectation is realistic depends on card fees, state rules, business costs, and the merchant’s own pricing strategy.
July 3, 2026 Miles Brucker
Internalfb Image (5)

My landlord wants to increase my rent because my girlfriend "always stays over." She's not on the lease, can they just change the rent like that?

Your partner moves in, the groceries double, and suddenly your landlord says the rent is going up. It feels personal, but the answer usually comes down to the lease, local law, and whether your building is covered by rent rules. In many cases, a landlord cannot simply invent a new charge halfway through a fixed-term lease unless the lease or the law allows it.
July 3, 2026 Carl Wyndham
Career crossroads: College vs Influencer life

My daughter wants to quit college to become a full-time influencer after earning $8,000 in one month. Should I support her?

One big paycheck can make college look optional. If your daughter earned $8,000 in a single month as a creator, it is understandable that she is suddenly questioning lecture halls, tuition bills, and student debt. But a flashy month is not the same thing as a durable career, and the numbers behind influencer income tell a more complicated story.
July 2, 2026 Miles Brucker
Family at yard sale

A Family Bought A Small Bowl At A Yard Sale—It Turned Out To Be Worth Almost 1 Million Times What They Paid For It

Most yard-sale shoppers hope to find a bargain. Maybe an old lamp worth a few hundred dollars or a vintage toy that collectors love. One family in New York found something much, much, much bigger. Well, what they found wasn't that big...but its value was enormous.
July 2, 2026 Jesse Singer