Sometimes having all the right credentials doesn't translate into making smart money decisions. A recent episode of "Financial Audit" featured Paige, a 26-year-old from Austin, Texas, whose financial disaster left viewers stunned. Here's someone with not one but two degrees in economics, raised by a financial advisor, who somehow manages to spend hundreds more than she earns every month while thinking platform service fees are tax withholdings.
The Numbers Don't Add Up
Paige works at Lululemon (LULU) earning $17.50 per hour for roughly 30 hours weekly. She supplements that income by walking dogs through Rover (ROVR). Her combined pre-tax monthly income hits approximately $3,900. The problem? She's burning through over $5,200 each month.
When host Caleb Hammer tried to nail down her actual earnings, Paige couldn't provide a clear answer. "Maybe I just did my math wrong," she offered weakly. Asked directly if she knew how much she makes, she simply replied "no." This is where things get interesting, or concerning, depending on your perspective.
The confusion extended to basic concepts like taxes. Paige genuinely believed Rover was withholding taxes from her gig work payments. Hammer's response cut straight to the point: "When have we ever seen taxes being taken from us with the company's name and the word 'fee' after it?"
Perhaps most revealing was her decision to spend $717 on a flight to Switzerland for a ski vacation while already drowning in credit card debt. When Hammer suggested canceling the trip to stabilize her finances, Paige smiled and responded, "But I want to go."
Hammer didn't mince words. "Are you dumb?" he asked after hearing her justifications. "I'm sorry, like, legitimately, are you not smart?"
The Spending Problem
Paige describes herself as frugal, which might be the most optimistic self-assessment of the year. She regularly thrifts, dines out frequently, and accumulates credit card charges at an alarming rate. In a single month, she charged over $2,600 to a credit card from just her day job income, exceeding what she actually earned.
Her explanation for the chronic overspending? "I just didn't realize I was spending so much money." Hammer's response captured the frustration: "You have a master's degree in economics. You're not stupid. So stop acting like it."
The debt situation is equally problematic. She's carrying a $17,000 car loan on a 2019 Subaru Crosstrek with monthly payments around $350. On top of that, she's maxed out both a Chase credit card and a Citi Double Cash card, with at least one accruing interest charges.
"I think you can only spend on a debit card. You don't know how money works. You need to close your credit card," Hammer told her bluntly. "With your credit card, you just overspend and you're destroying your life."
The employment situation added another layer. Despite holding a master's degree, Paige admitted she hasn't been seriously job hunting. Hammer checked her LinkedIn profile and found minimal recent activity. When she mentioned applying to six jobs weekly, he shut that down immediately. "Minimum six a day, 10 a day," he instructed.
A Puzzling Regression
In what might be the episode's most ironic twist, Paige has accumulated about $15,000 in retirement savings across a Roth IRA and 401(k). These accounts were set up five years ago with her father's guidance. "My dad invested it for me," she explained.
This revelation prompted Hammer's most pointed question: "So why were you in a better place at 21 than you are at 26? What made you regress to a child?"
The parental support continues today. Her father covers her phone bill and occasionally sends $100 as "sweet treat" money when she's having a rough day. Paige dismissed this as insignificant, which didn't sit well with Hammer. "Hundred bucks is a lot of money. You have no respect for the dollar," he said.
The Intervention Plan
Hammer laid out a strict recovery plan. Set aside $400 monthly for taxes on her gig work. Limit grocery spending to $300. Eliminate all non-essential purchases. Close the credit cards entirely. And most importantly, treat job hunting like a full-time job with at least six applications daily if she wants to escape retail work.
His final assessment was harsh but clear: a financial score of just 1 out of 10.
By the episode's end, Paige seemed to grasp the severity of her situation and appeared receptive to making changes. Whether that translates into actual behavioral change remains to be seen, but at least the wake-up call has been delivered.