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Generational disagreement in a living room

I’m sick and tired of hearing my grandkids whine about how the system isn’t fair. Whatever happened to taking personal responsibility?

Spend five minutes scrolling through TikTok, Reddit, or X and it’s everywhere. Younger workers saying wages are rigged. Twenty-somethings insisting homeownership is impossible. Every career setback framed as systemic. The villain is always the system. Boomers are starting to wonder when it became the only suspect—and whether personal responsibility quietly left the room.
March 6, 2026 Jesse Singer
vintage game console

Old Video Game Consoles That Sell For Thousands

Old game consoles used to be stashed away in closets or sold at yard sales for a few bucks. But today? Some of them are collector goldmines.
October 13, 2025 Allison Robertson

The Most Bizarre Things That Sold High At Auctions

Whether it’s pure nostalgia, obsession, or just plain curiosity, these bizarre items prove that, at the right auction, anything can become a treasure.
March 31, 2025 Binet
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
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

I’m the only woman in an office full of men who constantly make “jokes” about my appearance. I thought we were beyond this in 2025. What should I do?

You walk into work, and before you’ve even logged in, someone comments on your outfit. Another chimes in with a “joke” about your body. Everyone laughs, except you. It’s 2025—shouldn’t we be past this? Spoiler: we’re not.
September 11, 2025 Jesse Singer
Finance

Tricks To Survive On A $2000 Budget

The first time you’ll have only to use $2,000 for an entire month, you might panic. Rent, groceries, bills—how is this supposed to work? But instead of drowning in stress, you can get creative. If you don’t know, it’s time to find out, starting with your mindset.
February 14, 2025 Peter Kinney

I drove for a rideshare company part-time and never got a 1099. Will the IRS expect a tax return from me?

Driving part-time for a rideshare company seems like an informal way to make a bit of extra money, but when tax season comes and no 1099 arrives, it can cause uncertainty.
March 6, 2026 Sasha Wren

I was arrested recently, and the officers didn't let me turn off my running bath. It flooded my house. Can I sue the department for damages?

If you were arrested while a bath was running and your home flooded, can you sue the police department? Learn how negligence, government immunity, and property damage laws affect your legal options.
March 5, 2026 Jack Hawkins
Upset frustrated young man reading bad news

I took a 7 year car loan to get lower payments. Now I'm paying mostly interest. Help?

Seven-year car loans can feel like a lifesaver when you’re standing at a dealership trying to make the monthly numbers work. Stretching a loan to 84 months can knock hundreds off the payment compared to a shorter loan, which suddenly makes a pricey car feel doable. But a year or two later, many drivers notice something frustrating: most of their payment seems to be going toward interest instead of the balance.
March 6, 2026 J. Clarke

Financial “Advice” That Sounds Smart—But Can Land You In Trouble.

There's no shortage of financial advice out there, but some of it can end up costing you, even if it sounds smart.
March 5, 2026 Quinn Mercer
Worried man with official bank letter

I just got a letter from my bank saying my account activity looks suspicious, but I didn’t do anything wrong—what happens next?

The letter sounds serious. Words like “suspicious activity,” “review,” or “compliance” jump off the page. Even if you know you haven’t done anything illegal, it’s hard not to panic. So what does this actually mean—and what happens now?
March 5, 2026 Jesse Singer