Zohran Mamdani slams World Cup ticket prices: "It's like a mortgage."
"You know, we... I share the same view that football at its core is a working person's game."
"You know, even Arsenal... the story of Arsenal is munitions workers putting six pence aside and founding this club."
"And yet the ticket prices that we see... it's as you say..."
"You'd have to give up something that is near and dear to your life to have a chance at these prices..."
"Because we're not just talking about hundreds of dollars."
"We're talking about thousands of dollars."
"And the commodification of the game."
"And so, yes, we were very proud to secure a thousand tickets at fifty dollars because I made very clear that one of the good historical practices in World Cups has been reduced-price tickets for residents of the host cities."
"And I was able to go watch a game with some of those winners."
"I sat next to a woman who works for our city government."
"She happened to win in this raffle."
"Three hundred thousand New Yorkers applied."
"She pulled up her phone and showed me a Facebook status she posted when the US won the right to host, describing going to a game as a bucket-list."
"And that's what it should be."
"Working people should be able to be a part of it."
"Instead, it feels like, with so much of the sport that we love..."
"...it's just a mortgage being repurposed for a ticket."
Dave Ramsey tells a man to SELL his mother's house.
"The way you need to think of this is this is saving your marriage, by the way."
Dave: "Mom, I love you and I've done more for you than I should have and I put myself and my future family in jeopardy because of you and you continue to misbehave with this."
"My bills are not being paid."
"You're destroying my credit and my future."
"We're selling the house."
"Little brother, if you don't want to sell it, you can buy me out."
"Ready, set, go."
"Because your little brother's codependent like you were until something woke you up."
"This is you stood up."
"I'm a 27-year-old freaking man with a backbone."
"And this is madness."
"The madness ends."
"You can either do it voluntarily or I'll have a judge make you sell the house."
"We are selling the house."
"It's not an option."
Dave Ramsey tells a family earning $140,000 a year: "You are broke people."
"You got the baby step one. Okay. Then we're going to list all these debts, smallest to largest. We're going to pay minimum payments on everything but the little one.
We're not going to see the inside of a restaurant unless you're working there as an extra job and you're not going to go on vacation.
You are broke people that make $140,000 a year and you need to clean up this $70,000 worth of stupidity before you do anything else.
Stupid butt car loans and all this other mess you've got. And you got to get disgusted about it and attack it and attack it and attack it to where your friends think you've joined a cult."
Caller: "I agree. Um, the one thing I did wanted to mention is, um, like the one car loan, we owe $2,000 on it. So that'll be gone in like the next four months."
Dave Ramsey: "No, no, no. It doesn't take four months to pay off $2,000 when you make $140."
Caller: "Oh, you do that the first. Yeah, I agree. I totally agree with that."
Anthony Joshua admits he made the same money mistake most successful people make.
"What keeps me humble as well is understanding my tax position. That is something which young athletes really need to consider when they're coming up in the game is, uh, wealth management."
"Because as much as, like, you guys do a great job, it's also up to me to maintain and manage."
"And that was what I said to you when we first spoke is it's always been like a battle of two identities."
"One is just pure boxing. I don't care about tax. I don't care about that."
"But the other one is also you need to plan for your future."
"You know, getting the right hiring process, dealing with specialists..."
"That's why I think, for me... oh yeah... you can't be the best at everything."
"I can't be the best boxer in the world and also be the best financial adviser."
"No... it's just not going to work."
"So, be patient with all that."
"But that's why I've shut down all the businesses."
"I've got advice from the Hearns."
"I've sat down and spoke with them at length, other advisers, and we all agreed is boxing is your number one."
"If you're looking at business, boxing is your number one."
Dustin Poirier finally explains what REALLY happened at the airport.
"Part of me getting in trouble at the airport was... I just felt... I tried to help him out, and he's back out on the street. It's like he almost doesn't want help.
And I was just kind of... on Father's Day, I was travelling to work, and I just couldn't stop thinking about my father.
I started drinking in the airport, and that's kind of what led to the incident.
When I feel like that... I've been going to therapy and stuff like that. Years ago I started going to therapy, and when I started feeling better, I stopped practising everything I learned through therapy.
Then I felt that feeling again... I guess you'd call it depression. I just didn't feel well.
And when I feel like that, I know I shouldn't drink.
But I drank anyway.
Not that my father... anything's an excuse. Obviously, I did what I did.
But I knew better in that moment when I'm feeling like that... to drink or do anything.
Alcohol has never benefited me, especially in times like that when I'm mentally not at my best."
Dustin Poirier explains what depression actually feels like.
"When it hits me... it hits me hard."
"It's like everything has its own gravity pulling me towards the negative."
"It's like a cloud in my head that I just can't get out from under."
"When it hits me, it's bad."