
Conversations with Tyler Andrew Ross Sorkin on Market Bubbles, Banking Rules, and the Real Lessons of 1929
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Feb 4, 2026 Andrew Ross Sorkin, award‑winning financial journalist and DealBook founder, discusses 1929, leverage, and banking rules. He and Tyler debate whether 1929 prices were justified. They unpack margin calls, Fed choices, Glass‑Steagall origins, bank consolidation, narrow banking and stablecoins, retail access to private funds, and how history shapes modern regulation.
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Family Memory Of A 1929 Witness
- Sorkin's grandfather witnessed October 1929 and never bought stocks again, showing lasting personal trauma from the crash.
- That memory illustrates how individual losses shaped investment culture for decades.
Glass-Steagall Had Political Motives
- Glass-Steagall's origin was politically complex and opportunistic, not a pure safety reform.
- Sorkin found influence and maneuvering by powerful bankers shaped the 1933 banking separation law.
1920s Built Modern Consumer America
- The 1920s transformed mass media, consumer credit, and urban architecture, shaping modern American life.
- Sorkin highlights radio, magazines, and John Raskob's credit-driven strategies as foundations of today's economy.




