The American Dream Costs $4.4M, Trump & Elon Unite, Google Faces Regulation

34m
In this episode of Weekly Business News, host Ryan Alford, Chris Hansen and Brianna Hall tackle some of the most pressing issues in business and current events. The trio dives into the political landscape, focusing on Donald Trump, Elon Musk, and the Department of Justice's potential breakup of Google. They also discuss McDonald's lawsuit against major meatpackers over price inflation, exploring its impact on the fast food giant and consumers. With a blend of humor and sharp analysis, the conversation covers the economic ripple effects of rising meat prices and the growing challenges of attaining the American dream.

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Runtime: 34m

Transcript

Speaker 1 This is Right About Now with Ryan Alford, a Radcast Network Production.

Speaker 1 We are the number one business show on the planet with over 1 million downloads a month,

Speaker 1 taking the BS out of business for over six years in over 400 episodes. You ready to start snapping necks and cashing checks? Well, it starts right about now.

Speaker 2 What's up, guys? Welcome to Right About Now.

Speaker 2 It is our weekly business news of the week.

Speaker 2 Whatever the hell else we get into you never know what road we're going down here on right about now it's october 11th 2024 joined as always here in studio we have saw your ice behind the board we've got breonna hall what's up brianna hey how's it going hey it's going it's going

Speaker 2 what's up chris

Speaker 2 what's good brother oh Hey, you got your umbrella ready? I hope you got your wind farm started or something. I don't know.

Speaker 2 Can we turn any of this madness into positivity? I know, not to make light of it, it's just gotten so sad with all the destruction. I know it's coming through at any moment.

Speaker 2 We record here a couple days early before this releasing on Friday. So how's Miami handling it? We're good.
We should be good to go. It's going to really be on the Gulf Coast, get slammed.

Speaker 2 Yeah, I know your parents are in that area. You're on the text thread.
Yeah, my dad's sending videos right now. It's starting to roll roll in.

Speaker 2 So pray for the best and sending good vibes out to everybody that's being affected by this.

Speaker 2 Yes, by the time this is airing, we will have known the devastation, which it looks like is unavoidable, unfortunately. It's just going to be, I hope, and Chris, you'd know this better than me.

Speaker 2 I feel like the other one was somewhat prepared for. I don't know that we knew in the Carolinas that it was going to come up as high as it did, as strong as it did.

Speaker 2 But I mean, I guess if you're ever going to be ready for it, they're ready for this one. I don't know how much planning you can do, though.
Yeah.

Speaker 2 Now, everyone I know for the last two, three days has been planning. Even in Miami, where we're expecting some, like Trader Joe's was mad house last night.

Speaker 2 You know, I heard, literally, I heard the staff saying, like, oh, we don't even get restocked till Friday. So,

Speaker 2 I mean, people are doing what they can. And

Speaker 2 I read before, and again, some of these stats are meaningless now that it's already hit for when this airs, but 1,500 gas stations were already out of gas, I guess, today.

Speaker 2 Yeah.

Speaker 2 It's wild. Do you guys, in Miami, are people going crazy with gas, or is that mainly just in that Tampa area? Definitely Tampa, Sarasota.
I know my dad told me yesterday they were out of gas.

Speaker 2 We've been fine as far as I can see. I mean, maybe today, but it's looking like Miami is really just going to get some wind, a little rain.

Speaker 2 I think a lot of people were preparing last night. Yeah.

Speaker 2 Well, hopefully they're as prepared as possible, and let's hope for the best.

Speaker 2 And our thoughts with anyone that's struggling with whatever came through and especially here in the Carolinas where there's still, you know, it's like we can't sort of get over one and you don't, you don't want to share the stage of the attention.

Speaker 2 Like you wish you could have a little bit of gaps here so that, you know, the people in the Carolinas can sort of still get the support that they need. I think they will.

Speaker 2 As Americans, we'll, we'll take care of everybody. But, you know, I know there's a lot of struggling still happening, especially in North Carolina where the devastation has been crazy.

Speaker 2 So thoughts out with everyone.

Speaker 2 And to turn it, yay, we like to bring about action positivity and things that are going on. So we're going to try to focus on that today, at least just telling you more of what's happening around.

Speaker 2 And look,

Speaker 2 if I would have kicked off the show in a positive way, and I didn't even wear a hat today, but if I would, it would have been one of these guys.

Speaker 2 Brandon Bills, longtime official sponsor of Right About Now and Ryan Alford, always been a hat guy and always thought I kind of knew what, okay, my favorite hat is best hat, all that.

Speaker 2 And then it's probably five or six years ago, got introduced to Brandon Bills. And I was like, you know, it was kind of like when I met the first one, the first girlfriend, the first real love.

Speaker 2 I was like, it was the first hat that I think I actually loved. It was like, fit perfect.
I'm a flat bill guy. And I'm like, you know what? I think I found the one.
Then we worked out. We got married.

Speaker 2 And you know what? Unlike some marriages, this one hasn't fallen apart because this is quality.

Speaker 2 This is made right here in the U.S., right here, where you can know your brand will stand out just like ours does. We've got it on our Vibe Science gear.

Speaker 2 We've got it on right about now, social house gear. Every brand and business that I'm involved in has branded Bills merch.
And let me tell you, I get compliments on it every time.

Speaker 2 And everybody goes to send me one of those. So we do.
And look, at the end of the day, you want your brand to stand out. You want it to have premium stuff.
I will say this.

Speaker 2 I see some 40s and 50-degree weather forecasted for the weekend here. That's hoodie time for us in South Carolina.
If it's 50, I probably have a hoodie on, especially at night.

Speaker 2 So I'm going to be rocking that branded bill hoodie. And again, get your brand standing out.
Send it. It will generate business and interest in your company.

Speaker 2 Go to brandedbills.com, click that custom button. You'll thank us for it.
And again, I talk about the quality of their merch. Their design team is super badass.
Fashionable, they make your logo pop.

Speaker 2 They got patches, different things they could do on the hoodies and the hats. So

Speaker 2 take my word. Ryan Alford endorses Branded Bills, BrandedBills.com, official merchandise sponsor of right about now.
Miss Brianna, what's on our agenda today?

Speaker 3 Hey, guys.

Speaker 3 So today we're talking everything from, you know, business news, what's going on in a little bit of the political landscape, not too much this time, but our first news article here is talking about Trump returning to Butler, Pennsylvania, where the assassination attempt took place, and he went back with Elon.

Speaker 3 So, fans of that duo were kind of, you know, enjoying seeing them together.

Speaker 3 And I did see, I don't know if you guys saw this on X, but Elon had tweeted a picture of him kind of jumping in the air. And he said something like, this is a very autistic expression that I'm making.

Speaker 2 I think he is autistic.

Speaker 3 So he's on the spectrum at some point.

Speaker 3 So I thought that was really funny.

Speaker 2 I don't care who you vote for. I mean, that's why I hate to say we're a free country.
You know, I do care, but I don't, it's your decision.

Speaker 2 But comparing and contrasting Donald Trump and Elon Musk, there's some excitement. I talked about it before.

Speaker 2 I thought like the Democratic campaign or convention might have had more emotion and interest and all that. But now I feel like comparing Kamala, you know, on trying to answer non-answer questions

Speaker 2 and sometimes Donald Trump just saying too much. Like you've got one candidate that's not saying anything, and then another one that's clearly not a lifelong politician that probably says too much.

Speaker 2 And you've got Elon Musk, the last person that I would have expected,

Speaker 2 dark MAGA.

Speaker 2 You know,

Speaker 2 it's just, I don't know, hard to believe. And, you know, I try to like back my way into thinking, like,

Speaker 2 if

Speaker 2 Elon Musk is a highly, highly intelligent person. And

Speaker 2 I would think, you know, given like what we talked about with his electric cars and all this, where it's sort of like this left-leaning for the longest time, what would be his motivation if he didn't really believe and in his intelligence that one candidate was better than the other?

Speaker 2 He doesn't really gain a lot from this.

Speaker 2 So anyway, Chris, I don't know what you think about about those two on stage. I love it.
I mean, we've talked about it before. It's a wild duo.

Speaker 2 I mean, and kind of what you said, where for someone who runs, you know, the most successful electric car company on the planet to be endorsing Trump, you

Speaker 2 it's not necessarily pro-electric energy, right? We've talked about this before.

Speaker 2 And I know Elon's talked about, you know, his son and feeling like he lost his son to, you know, the transgender movement and the hormone blocker type stuff.

Speaker 2 So with all that being said i think it's a very exciting duo that you

Speaker 2 a year ago you would have never expected for sure but america's wild right now but i think it's uh it's an exciting time and i'm glad elon is is endorsing trump yeah and ultimately i think i think of elon as more like your classic independent probably

Speaker 2 and yes you know that's where i fall and good push for our other sponsor Independent Center. If you really want to talk about policies instead of politics, that's where you need to go.

Speaker 2 Independentcenter.org.

Speaker 2 They're doing some polling now. I was just looking at the difference between

Speaker 2 how Gen Z might ultimately make or break the election, how many people turn out and where they vote. They do a lot of polling.

Speaker 2 They do a lot of information that you're not going to get from the right or the left.

Speaker 2 That's really, truly about policies, taxation, different things that are happening that don't have the spin of right or left, but are just factual. And that's ultimately what you get.

Speaker 2 That's why I'm an independent. That's why I support Independent Center.
Go sign up for their newsletter, independentcenter.org. I've also got the link in my bio.
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Speaker 2 Learn what independent thinking is. Look, at the end of the day, it's about

Speaker 2 being American isn't about being forced into two boxes. Blue, red, blue, red, right? That's two choices.

Speaker 2 No, it's about being free, independent, making the decision that makes the most sense for the policies you believe in. Let's go check them out.
Independentcenter.org.

Speaker 2 Yeah,

Speaker 2 I don't know what this all means at the end of the day at the voters, you know, the office or a poll place.

Speaker 2 It sure feels to me

Speaker 2 like Trump's got the momentum here. And I'm really, again, just using a lens of non-bias because of where I'm voting this year, I really mean this.

Speaker 2 If I watch her on these shows, like how odd and how disconnected she feels. You only vote for Kamala if you hate Trump.

Speaker 3 Yeah.

Speaker 2 I mean, and that's why, that's all you ever hear. Like, I haven't, there's not a single person that tells me why Kamala.
It's just why not Trump. So, I mean, sometimes you're running from something.

Speaker 2 harder than you're running to something.

Speaker 3 I, I don't know. Like, I have been kind of delving into this this week.
You know, Kamala Harris has been super busy. She has had a series of high-profile media appearances this week.

Speaker 3 So she went on the Call Her Daddy podcast. She was on CBS's 60 Minutes.
She is kind of out and about. She shared a beer on, you know, screen with Stephen Colbert.
And it's just really interesting.

Speaker 3 I feel like she is masquerading around as everyone's best friend or like the fun aunt. And it's just like, I don't know, there's not a lot of depth there.

Speaker 2 No, it's the metaverse, man. It's not real.
It's like, it is

Speaker 2 AI.

Speaker 2 Artificial intelligence is,

Speaker 2 yeah, it's what it feels like.

Speaker 2 I.e.,

Speaker 2 made up.

Speaker 2 I'm sorry. I wish there was like six other candidates sometimes.
You know, so like we had like all this selection of choice, so it wasn't just so binary. So that I wish, but we don't, and

Speaker 2 she ain't it. Sorry for me.

Speaker 3 I wish, I do wish that there were more candidates. Um, Chris, do you have any thoughts to share before we move on to our next tech-related article?

Speaker 2 The only one thing I've heard outside of disliking Trump is she's a woman. Yeah.

Speaker 2 And I, and look, I look, that's cool. I'm going to say something.

Speaker 2 I don't know if I, if I

Speaker 2 did not want Nikki Haley ahead of Trump, but I liked Nikki Haley in a lot of ways. And I want and support a woman becoming president.
I think a woman will make an amazing president one day.

Speaker 2 It just ain't her.

Speaker 3 Has to be the right woman. You know.
Yeah. It wasn't Hillary.

Speaker 3 I think we all can explain that.

Speaker 2 It's the same thing like with Barack Obama. You know,

Speaker 2 I supported Barack. I voted for Barack Obama once, and I don't mind saying that.

Speaker 2 Like, then once I sort of, certain things came and I was, I think, maturing as an adult business person and seeing some of the true impacts of some of the voting.

Speaker 2 Like, I don't, I didn't support necessarily everything after the fact, but I thought it was time. Like, it didn't matter if it was an African-American.
It doesn't matter if it's a woman.

Speaker 2 It just needs to be the right one, the right person, period.

Speaker 2 And I just, but I don't, she's just, there's, there's something amiss here

Speaker 2 or a lot.

Speaker 2 I just can't vote for someone because I hate someone else.

Speaker 3 Yeah, 100% agreed. And I think at the end of the day, I mean, everybody has to dig into like the policies that they believe in and the things that they believe in.

Speaker 3 But voting one way or talking about somebody one way just because you hate something so much, it's just not healthy. I mean, there's a little bit of open-mindedness that needs to happen.

Speaker 2 Yep.

Speaker 2 Moving on. Moving on.

Speaker 3 DOJ's Google breakup remedy puts tech world on notice. So the Department of Justice is considering breaking up Google because Google has quite, I mean, a monopoly on the search engine market.

Speaker 3 So the DOJ has outlined several remedies, including breaking up parts of Google's business, limiting its contracts that favor Google search, and potentially forcing Google to share its search data with competitors.

Speaker 3 So here's a quote. It says, breakups are hard to do.
It's an unusual remedy and doesn't occur very often from the former FTC commissioner, Mr. Thompson.
So what do you guys think about that?

Speaker 3 I mean, we use Google day in and day out.

Speaker 2 I don't know.

Speaker 2 It's like, I understand,

Speaker 2 I'm knowledgeable enough to understand why they would consider something like this, but I don't necessarily agree with it. It's like, now, do I think they should wield the power that they do at times?

Speaker 2 No, but it's complicated. And,

Speaker 2 you know, the company has invested and done things and built this competitive advantage. And so, is the government's job to break that part because they've been too successful?

Speaker 3 It's a really good question.

Speaker 2 And I don't, I don't sit here. I think anyone that sits here and like fell on a sword of like

Speaker 2 what the exact right answer to this is, because I understand both sides of it. It's just my personal opinion is you just don't mess with the success.

Speaker 2 You just need to be having not control, but there does need to be an understanding of what they do and don't wield power over.

Speaker 2 And they can't be meddling in elections and,

Speaker 2 you know, helping hold back information and things that we've heard.

Speaker 2 Like that's when you start doing that and it's proven then maybe you deserve to be broken up but if you're not doing that i don't think by the fact of your success alone it's the government's place to divide your company up but i don't know chris what's your thoughts i'm i've got mixed feelings as well i mean i i don't like the idea of a monopoly right but

Speaker 2 And I do think Google has been, you know, super powerful. They've have a lot of people's data.
I don't know if they've been honest with that. You know, they can kind of drive information, right?

Speaker 2 So I would like to see more competition so you could see maybe different access to information.

Speaker 2 But let's be real, I mean, it's kind of like a little too late to break up this party. And it says that in that quote, like,

Speaker 2 you know, radical and sweeping, it doesn't occur often. I mean,

Speaker 2 I would have to imagine Google is probably so ingrained in every part of our country's tech systems, government, everything

Speaker 2 that it's like, kind of like, yeah, this sounds ideal, right?

Speaker 2 But I'm sure Google is very tied in with our military, our financial systems. There's no way it's not.
So it's kind of like,

Speaker 2 my question is, how much of the government is run by Google in a way, probably, with the technology being used? Yeah.

Speaker 2 Or some subsect of Google, right?

Speaker 3 Yeah, it's definitely interesting.

Speaker 3 And you brought up the data, you know, and the consumer impact and, you know, how a breakup would also alter like you know how all that consumer date consumer data is handled and you know if there were more players in the marketplace would that mean that data was potentially more compromised or you know would it be more secure it's definitely a lot of questions that are above my pay grade i just think there have been competitors but they just haven't been as good as google so are we gonna penal we're gonna penalize Google because they developed a superior product

Speaker 2 and it's remained superior over the competition. Yeah.
I was saying the same thing.

Speaker 2 When forced me to switch from Yahoo or Netscape, I just naturally.

Speaker 2 Yeah.

Speaker 2 It was easier to use. The results seemed more accurate.
Like I'm thinking back to when I first, you know, 10, 15, whenever it was,

Speaker 2 years ago, switched. It's because, like, I'm a Mac guy.
But the Safari browser sucks.

Speaker 2 Maybe it sucks now because I'm just used to Google and the familiarity, but I can tell you when I made the switch, it was because it was just light years better, faster, more easy to navigate, and just a better overall experience.

Speaker 2 And so

Speaker 2 we're going to penalize a company that continued to make a dominant product that then became a quasi-monopoly because the competition sucked and couldn't develop a feature that beat them out. Yeah.

Speaker 2 That doesn't seem right either. Now, I get, you know, like

Speaker 2 we start talking about things that become so powerful, it deserves a bigger discussion than just the nuance that I just described, which is why I do think, unfortunately, though I don't love regulation, but

Speaker 2 sometimes you get too big, you're going to have to have some third-party, non-biased people making sure you're playing by the rules and doing the right things and not using your platform and your data for nefarious reasons.

Speaker 2 But I just think about like if I develop being a business owner and I come out with a product ahead of anyone else, I keep it better than anyone else,

Speaker 2 and as long as I'm doing that on the up and up,

Speaker 2 then someone's gonna come in and take, go, nah, you've been too good for too long, baby. Get out of the way.
We gotta, we gotta spread this pie around.

Speaker 2 I don't know.

Speaker 2 I don't know if I'd be, I'm not okay with that. Yeah.

Speaker 2 But I, but I also get that this is a lot of sensitive information and a broader thing than just like a pizza shop you know that just happens to have better tasty pizza than someone else it's more complicated than that but you got to be careful this is a slippery slope i'll just say that it's very interesting in this article it said here that um some of the other major entities include like meta social media and you know if they're going to start breaking up and regulating google what's the stop you know where where does it end?

Speaker 2 Yeah.

Speaker 3 Definitely interesting.

Speaker 3 Our next article is coming to us from ABC News and is the main reason why I have to read the news articles today to tell you that McDonald's sues the top meat packers for allegedly, allegedly colluding to inflate the price of beef.

Speaker 3 So McDonald's is suing four of the largest U.S.

Speaker 3 meat packers, Tyson, JBS, Cargill, and National Beef Packing Company, accusing them of colluding to inflate beef prices through anti-competitive measures.

Speaker 3 So this kind of goes back to the monopoly thing, right? So, you know, monopoly of Google, monopoly of meat packers.

Speaker 3 The government has to regulate, and this, you know, article is talking about McDonald's suing for regulation purposes, but

Speaker 3 breaking up monopolies is a tool, right, to ensure that markets remain competitive, consumer-friendly, and free from domination of any one single entity.

Speaker 3 I think that it's interesting from a business standpoint. What do you guys think on? Is it fair?

Speaker 3 What do you guys think about McDonald's and the meat packers, right? There's inflation questions here with the price of beef.

Speaker 2 I'll say this on a lighter note.

Speaker 2 Not going where you think. Not going where you think.
But there was like a 1980s campaign by Wendy's, I believe. Where's the beef?

Speaker 2 We might get back to that because they have to use less beef. You're going to be like, you know, that burger that has like, you know, the little old ladies that went there is like, where's the beef?

Speaker 2 And because the patties were so small. So maybe we'll get another campaign like that from this.
But with that said, nothing like I like talking more about than meat packing deficiencies.

Speaker 2 And Chris is better informed on that topic than me. But I'll give you my opinion.

Speaker 2 So

Speaker 2 I don't know enough about the meat packing dishes to know, like, truthfully

Speaker 2 to know, like, okay, if they're really, if they really have controlling that much power to control the meat costs. But I also have a hard damn time feeling sorry for McDonald's.
Yeah.

Speaker 2 You know, like,

Speaker 2 any of it was somebody else. It's like they're.

Speaker 2 I thought.

Speaker 3 Brian, I thought you were our resident meat expert because every time that we're in studio or in office, he's always eating like steak.

Speaker 2 That's what I had before I came, actually.

Speaker 2 I had some top round that had been seasoned, and it was just pure meat. Nothing else.
I eat like 16 ounces. Yeah.

Speaker 3 Yeah. He eats like three steaks.

Speaker 2 I'm a carnivore. Three steaks a week.

Speaker 2 Like 20. Oh, my God.

Speaker 2 Probably 10.

Speaker 3 I never eat steak.

Speaker 2 Oh, yeah. I mean, I ate the equivalent of three steaks this morning.

Speaker 2 No, not, it's not all fancy steak either. Some of it, like the top round I ate was not that expensive.
It was like the same price like ground beef. But like, yeah.
You need one of those.

Speaker 3 Have you seen those bumper stickers?

Speaker 2 They're like beef. It's lits for dinner.
Oh, yeah.

Speaker 2 That's what I was saying. Back to, go, yo, if you're listening, go on YouTube and look up Where's the Beef? The campaign.

Speaker 2 I can't remember if it's as funny now as it was then, but it was funny. Like this whole day, where's the beef? Anyway, because the patties were so small, the buns overtook the entire thing.

Speaker 3 Chris, how many steaks are you eating every week?

Speaker 2 Probably like five. Jesus.
Sweezy guy. I bought seven last night and two dozen eggs for my hurricane prep.
Seven ribos.

Speaker 2 We already ate four of them this morning. Storm might have gotten into one.

Speaker 2 I'll eat like two steaks a day sometimes. I'm like,

Speaker 2 I mean, I couldn't do that.

Speaker 3 Yeah. Maybe I need to get on like a steak kick.
I don't, I never eat steak.

Speaker 2 I know some girls doing carnivore diet that are

Speaker 2 telling me good things about it. I'm not on carnivore, but

Speaker 2 I am a carnivore, but I'm not on carnivore. It's not all I eat.
Not all I eat.

Speaker 3 Okay, moving on.

Speaker 2 You know,

Speaker 2 I just don't know that I have an opinion on necessary or know the meat market well enough to know. I just think

Speaker 2 ultimately

Speaker 2 I have a a hard time feeling sorry for McDonald's,

Speaker 2 but I don't know enough about the economics of this particular situation to like speak from an educated standpoint on it.

Speaker 2 I don't know, Chris, of you know, with all your meat packing history, if you uh

Speaker 2 I just see some big number settlements, so that to me tells me like there's probably some some questionable activities going on if they're settling for $221 million.

Speaker 2 That doesn't happen by mistake. I mean, lawyers are good, but not that good.
So,

Speaker 2 like you said, man,

Speaker 2 they all want bigger profits. McDonald's is pissed because they're losing business, because they're raising prices and they're losing business, right? Yeah.
Their margins are going down.

Speaker 2 Meatpackers probably are affected, but when it says it's going back to 2015 and they're talking about the COVID supply chain, it's like, dude, 2015 was

Speaker 2 way before that. It's funny you say that, Chris.
I was thinking the same thing. I was like,

Speaker 2 how long are we going to have to hear about the COVID impact? Like, is it going to be like 2031, and we're going to be like, you know, we're still dealing with the. And I know, look,

Speaker 2 it was a major event. I'm not putting light on it.
I know that it still has impact, but it's just, come on, man. Like, I wish I could use that as an excuse.

Speaker 2 Well, you know, I didn't pay my employees this week, still deal with COVID impact. And I mean, what?

Speaker 2 Would that be cool? No, that wouldn't be cool. It's like, all right.

Speaker 3 I, I mean, it is kind of fascinating when you look at where the the economy and where the world is in this, what are we, five years, almost five years post-COVID, right? Next year is 2025.

Speaker 3 So it's a long, we were quite a ways removed from COVID at this point. And I feel like things are still a little bit wonky, but like mostly back to normal.
Yeah.

Speaker 3 Speaking of normal, I have an article here from USA Today that says, dream on. The American Dream now costs $4.4 $4.4 million over a lifetime.

Speaker 3 I thought this was really interesting to include just as we kind of, you know, have listeners from all different walks of life, whether they're an entrepreneur or they're just starting out or they're a business owner or they own a multi-million dollar company.

Speaker 3 It's always good to kind of get a handle on where the economy is and what does it cost your employees to have that American dream.

Speaker 3 What does it cost you and your family members and the people that you love? So pretty expensive expensive these days. Ryan, we've got to double the raising two kids budget for you.

Speaker 2 Yeah, four kids. So that'd be

Speaker 2 1.6

Speaker 2 mil on the raising the kids. And wedding, I don't know.
Is that like your own wedding or is it like for your kids?

Speaker 3 The wedding budget seems low to me.

Speaker 2 Yeah, exactly. I'll say this.
The biggest number I saw here that was like, whoa, inflation of costs. A report done in 2023

Speaker 2 estimated that the American dream was 3.4 million, a one mil increase. In a year.
In a year.

Speaker 2 That's

Speaker 2 a different way to think about that. Like, hey, your dream in your mind just got a million dollars more expensive.
In a year.

Speaker 2 Because, like,

Speaker 2 of what?

Speaker 3 Inflation. I mean, it's inflation, but, like,

Speaker 3 where does that inflation come from?

Speaker 2 Yeah.

Speaker 3 And how do we fix it?

Speaker 2 With your vote.

Speaker 2 Yeah.

Speaker 2 But hey, vote the same, stay the same.

Speaker 3 Vote the same, and it'll be $2 million next year.

Speaker 2 Exactly. You can get more.
If you like that, you like the way that tastes, you can get more. It's all you can eat, baby.

Speaker 2 Eat some more. You want some more of that? A financial planning expert's trusted board is a saving and investment.
Okay, yeah. I mean, I get it, but

Speaker 2 4.4 mil.

Speaker 2 I mean, that American dream's getting expensive. American Dream.
I mean, I think I like that America Dream, that baby. Isn't there a doll named American Doll? The house.
American Girl Doll.

Speaker 2 American Girl Doll? Oh, yeah. She did.

Speaker 2 Getting pricey to be that American Dream. You know, I don't know why tying those two things together, but it's like the first thing I think of is like,

Speaker 2 think about that gift. Like when your baby's born, the new gift you're giving them,

Speaker 2 like their first gift, day one. Here you go.
4.4 mil. Yeah.
Just for you.

Speaker 2 That's an IOU. You might want to hold on to that one.

Speaker 3 Go triple down on the 529 or something. Yeah.
Well, Chris, it's a good day to be a dog, Dad.

Speaker 2 Telling me, man.

Speaker 2 1.6 mil.

Speaker 3 The pets only cost 37,000.

Speaker 2 That's fine with me. I want another dog.
You can tack me double on that pet expense. It's all the other stuff I'm good on.
Like, I'm good right now. Yeah.

Speaker 2 I mean, 37,000.

Speaker 2 I don't know if this reflects the true inflation of dog costs and how much I see people that they spend on their dog. Most people spend like two grand on the dogs now.

Speaker 2 It seems like if they're, you know, any kind of one of these hyperallergenic breeds, hyperallergenic, don't say that right.

Speaker 2 Yeah. Two grand for that.
They got the dog food. I've seen the dog food.
Look, it's the real food commercials. You see that delivered stuff on TV? It's like, how much

Speaker 2 more than what you pay for your own food?

Speaker 3 Farmer's dog or something. Yeah.

Speaker 2 I bet if you polled like the 20 people closest to me that have dogs, they spend half that 37 a year. They might spend $18 a year on their dogs.
That seems low for like lifetime on pets.

Speaker 2 I'm sure it's just averaged out because not everyone has a pet, but more people have pets than don't now.

Speaker 3 Yeah, I definitely think like it just depends. Like, right?

Speaker 3 My dogs were, I think we spent 10 to 15,000 on my dogs in the first year we had them.

Speaker 3 It's between like how much they cost to buy them and then my one dog ate like a puppy pee pad when he was like six weeks old. I'd get like

Speaker 3 all the things, you know.

Speaker 3 All right, let's see.

Speaker 3 Ryan, do you want to finish out with anything?

Speaker 2 Oh,

Speaker 2 I don't think so. I think we're good.

Speaker 3 We're going to keep it light today, guys.

Speaker 2 Keep it light. We got a hurricane in.

Speaker 2 Know a lot of people out there are thinking about that. Oh my God, I got to be on my leg.

Speaker 2 Where did that come from?

Speaker 2 Get

Speaker 2 Do those even sting? It looks like a moth.

Speaker 2 The big ones that get burrow holes.

Speaker 2 Thanks.

Speaker 2 I hate bees and yellow jackets. Me too, bro.
I got stung so many times.

Speaker 2 I sat on them before, got stung in my ass.

Speaker 2 What the hell's happening?

Speaker 2 The world's crumbling.

Speaker 2 I'm like, what?

Speaker 3 Okay, would you like to close us off?

Speaker 2 Sure.

Speaker 3 You need a, well, where are your drops?

Speaker 2 All right, I think that's all for today.

Speaker 2 Chris, any final words there from Miami? Everyone have a great weekend and sending good vibes to all the

Speaker 2 Hurricane Warriors

Speaker 2 for sure. Brianna.

Speaker 3 Buzz.

Speaker 2 Be all you can be.

Speaker 2 Very good. We appreciate everyone.
RyanisRight.com. Find all the highlight clips, the full episode, and a link to our YouTube.
You got to watch these episodes to really get the full impact.

Speaker 2 If you know what I'm saying, we appreciate you. Take care out there.
Take care of one another. We'll see you next time on right about now.

Speaker 1 This has been Right About Now with Ryan Alford, a Radcast Network production. Visit RyanisRight.com for full audio and video versions of the show or to inquire about sponsorship opportunities.

Speaker 1 Thanks for listening.