• Resumen

  • This is Moneywise, a podcast where host Sam Parr is joined by high-net-worth guests to explore exclusive insights into personal finance and lifestyle tailored for other high-net-worth people, or those on their way. They'll get radically transparent about the numbers, revealing things like their burn rates, portfolios, and spending habits. Who is Sam Parr? Sam is a serial entrepreneur and the co-founder of The Hustle, which he sold to HubSpot in 2021. He's also the co-host of one of the world's top podcasts for entrepreneurs, My First Million. Known for his insightful business acumen and candid communication style, Sam Parr continues to be a prominent figure in the world of media and entrepreneurship. Sam's newest and biggest venture yet is Hampton, which he co-founded in 2022. This podcast was made for the Hampton community, a private, highly-vetted, peer membership community for founders and CEOs of fast-growing, tech-enabled startups.
    © 2024 Hampton
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Episodios
  • $10M and Total Freedom, I Left the Family Empire to Build My Own
    Apr 22 2025

    127 founders (net worth: ~$1M–$100M+) opened up their personal books. Want to see how your finances stack up? https://www.joinhampton.com/wealth-report

    Shane Cultra walked away from his family's five-generation nursery business—triggered, in part, by watching Succession. Along the way, he built up a $10M net worth, stacked Bitcoin, turned a blog into a domain empire, and made peace with a father who didn’t speak to him for a year after he left.


    Here’s what we talk about:

    • How Shane went from pit trader to plant farmer
    • The domain side hustle that cashflows $300K+ a year
    • Breaking down his $10M net worth: Bitcoin, land, stocks, and side gigs
    • Why his dad thought success would make him lazy
    • The real cost of working with family—and why he’d still do it all over again
    • How Succession mirrored his life and led him to finally walk away
    • The awkward equity breakdown: 33%, but no control
    • Selling a blog for $75K and going all-in on digital real estate
    • Why he’d rather make $18K for himself than $100K working for someone else
    • Letting his daughter fail—and why that’s the lesson his dad never learned
    • His exact monthly spending: $5,600/month, no mortgage, travel-heavy lifestyle
    • From Porsches to a two-door Bronco: redefining what rich looks like
    • $4M in stock holdings (including a $10K Apple investment for his daughter that grew to $400K)
    • Why he's not pushing the family business to the next generation—and what legacy really means


    Cool Links:

    • If you’re a founder or CEO with $3M+ in revenue or funding, or you’ve sold a company for $10M+, check out Hampton: https://www.joinhampton.com/
    • If you want a cool podcast like this one, check out Lower Street https://www.lowerstreet.co/

    Chapters:
    A Family Legacy in Crisis (00:00)
    Shane's Financial Journey (00:31)
    The Nursery Business Dynamics (04:51)
    Shane's Early Career and Return to Family Business (09:12)
    Navigating Family and Business Conflicts (11:49)
    The Importance of Land Value (16:25)
    Venturing into Domain Names (17:27)
    The Unexpected Offer: Selling My Blog (21:07)
    Family Tensions: Side Income and NFTs (21:43)
    Measuring Wealth: Personal Stories (23:01)
    Leaving the Family Business: A Tough Decision (24:59)
    Reconciliation and Moving Forward (30:42)
    Advice for Founders with Kids (33:41)
    Financial Overview and Spending Habits (35:37)
    Final Thoughts on Family Legacy (39:10)



    This podcast is a ridiculous concept: high-net-worth people reveal their personal finances.

    Inspired by real conversations happening in the Hampton community.


    Your Host: Harry Morton

    • Founder of Lower Street, a podcast production company helping brands launch and grow top-tier podcasts.
    • Co-parents a cow named Eliza.


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    43 m
  • $13M But Zero Cash: Why Net Worth Is a Lie
    Apr 15 2025

    If you're a founder doing at least $3M/year in sales, check out Hampton: https://www.joinhampton.com/.

    Mike Brown built an oil & gas empire, scaled his net worth to nearly $20 million, but ended up cash poor, losing $1.8M in a failed bet, and borrowing money from his wife to pay taxes. Now, he’s rebuilt his fortune, redefined what wealth really means, and is living a life designed around freedom, not just big numbers.

    Here’s what we talk about:

    • How Mike went from $2K in his bank account to making millions in oil & gas deals
    • The "gold rush" mentality that led him to reinvest everything and regret it
    • Why he thought $100M was the magic number (it wasn’t)
    • The dangers of illiquid assets and chasing wealth at all costs
    • Losing $1.8M on a distressed e-commerce acquisition
    • How divorce and bad bets forced a complete financial rethink
    • Mike’s personal framework for financial freedom (12 months of liquidity, 5–7 years cash cushion, escape velocity)
    • Why liquidity and cash flow > net worth
    • His full portfolio breakdown today: fixed income, oil & gas, index funds, and zero angel investing
    • The mindset shift: from "grow at all costs" to "invest for safety and joy"
    • What it really feels like to sell your Lamborghini and love it
    • How he's building a life he never wants to retire from — and helping other founders do the same

    Cool Links:

    • Hampton https://www.joinhampton.com/
    • Lower Street https://www.lowerstreet.co/
    • Mike’s Wealth Business https://unbreakablewealth.com/

    Chapters:
    (00:00) Introduction to Mike Brown's Financial Journey
    (02:36) Mike's Early Life and Money Lessons
    (05:07) Navy to Entrepreneurship: The Million Dollar Deal
    (07:24) The Gold Rush: Rapid Wealth Accumulation
    (16:54) The Downfall: Divorce and Financial Struggles
    (19:23) The E-commerce Disaster: Losing It All
    (22:28) Rebuilding and Relying on Support
    (24:55) Rebuilding with Cash Flow
    (25:42) Lessons from Failure
    (27:02) Current Portfolio Strategy
    (28:41) Cash Flow and Investments
    (31:11) Financial Freedom Levels
    (33:53) Personal Monthly Burn and Joy
    (36:17) Redefining Wealth and Happiness
    (42:12) The Irony of Wealth
    (47:24) Final Takeaways and Community

    This podcast is a ridiculous concept: high-net-worth people reveal their personal finances.
    Inspired by real conversations happening in the Hampton community.

    Your Host: Harry Morton

    • Founder of Lower Street, a podcast production company helping brands launch and grow top-tier podcasts.
    • Co-parents a cow named Eliza.

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    51 m
  • I Asked 100+ Millionaires If Money Makes You Happy
    Apr 8 2025

    If you're a founder doing at least $3M/year in sales, check out Hampton: https://www.joinhampton.com/.


    There is no amount of money that will make you happy. There is also no amount that will stop making you more happy.


    Both of those things are true.


    Our producer is not rich. But she has talked to 100+ people who are, and she (I) has learned a lot about your kind (is that wrong to say?).


    In the Moneywise pilot, we asked the question “at what point will more money stop making you happy”. Turns out, that was a pretty stupid question. So in this episode, we’re fixing that.


    This is an episode of Moneywise unlike any other. This is a solo essay-style inside-outsider's take on wealth and happiness, based on the past year of peaking behind the curtain at what truly makes millionaires lives better… and worse. Backed up by quotes from our guests and of course, real studies.



    Here’s what we talk about:

    • Money doesn’t make you happy. It can only remove stress.
    • The “happiness number” is a myth but knowing your “freedom number” changes everything.
    • Most people don’t want money, they want the freedom they think money will give them.
    • Hitting your financial goal won’t feel like you imagined.
    • Founders often feel lost post-exit because they unknowingly traded hope for cash.
    • Wealth adds new stress.
    • Money can’t buy you meaningful experiences, and you need to stop thinking it can.
    • If you expect money to do the emotional heavy lifting in your life, you will never be satisfied.
    • Money is the key, not the door. It unlocks your potential but it won’t add anything more to your life.

    Cool Links:

    • Hampton https://www.joinhampton.com/
    • Lower Street https://www.lowerstreet.co/

    Chapters:
    (00:00) Introduction and Confession
    (00:35) Reflecting on 50 Episodes
    (02:24) Revisiting the Happiness Threshold
    (03:09) Money as a Subtractive Tool
    (03:48) The Freedom Number vs. Happiness
    (05:07) Studies and Research on Wealth and Happiness
    (14:39) The Hedonic Treadmill and Wealth's Paradox
    (17:45) Hope and the Entrepreneur's Journey
    (25:26) Concluding Thoughts and Freedom Numbers


    This podcast is a ridiculous concept: high-net-worth people reveal their personal finances.

    Inspired by real conversations happening in the Hampton community.


    You Host - Jackie Lamport

    • Not really the host, but the producer.
    • Wrote this sentence.
    • Older than I appear, I promise.


    References:

    • Kahneman, D., & Deaton, A. (2010). "High income improves evaluation of life but not emotional well-being." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 107(38), 16489-16493. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1011492107
    • Jebb, A. T., Tay, L., Diener, E., & Oishi, S. (2018). "Happiness, income satiation and turning points around the world." Nature Human Behaviour, 2, 33-38. DOI: 10.1038/s41562-017-0277-0
    • Killingsworth, M. A. (2021). "Experienced well-being rises with income, even above $75,000 per year." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 118(4). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2016976118
      Link, B. G., Phelan, J., Bresnahan, M., Stueve, A., & Moore, R. E. (1995). American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 65(3), 347-354. DOI: 10.1037/h0079653
    • Donnelly, G. E., Zheng, T., Haisley, E., & Norton, M. I. (2018). "The Amount and Source of Millionaires’ Wealth (Moderately) Predicts Their Happiness." Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 44(5), 684-699. DOI: 10.1177/0146167217746340
    • Luthar, S. S., & Becker, B. E. (2002). "Privileged but Pressured? A Study of Affluent Youth." Child Development, 73(5), 1593-1610. DOI: 10.1111/1467-8624.00492.

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    33 m
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