Choiceology with Katy Milkman

A Comedy of Economic Errors

29 snips
May 4, 2026
Ulrike Malmendier, a UC Berkeley finance professor studying how big economic events shape risk, and Frank Ferrante, actor known for portraying Groucho Marx, share vivid stories. They discuss Groucho’s rise, the 1929 crash that wiped him out, and how major crises leave lasting caution. Conversations then shift to research showing lifetime experiences steer investing and risk attitudes.
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ANECDOTE

Katrina Forced A Permanent Move Inland

  • Marla Jones Newman fled Hurricane Katrina and permanently moved inland to Littleton, Colorado to avoid future water-related disasters.
  • She still keeps emergency water and two generators ready, showing how a single disaster reshapes lifelong preparedness.
ANECDOTE

Groucho Marx Was Scarred By The 1929 Crash

  • Groucho Marx lost nearly everything in the 1929 crash after investing on margin and never fully trusted stocks again.
  • He shifted to bonds and cash, avoided the postwar bull market, and even folded his beret to dodge coat-check fees.
INSIGHT

Lifetime Market Exposure Predicts Stock Participation

  • Ulrike Malmendier finds lifetime exposure to stock market returns predicts whether people invest in stocks, beyond wealth or education.
  • A richer lifetime market experience raises stock participation by about a third in her Survey of Consumers analysis.
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