“Wall Street Warriors”
I’m generally not into reality shows. But this one right here, this one’s the real deal.
Unlike my previous recommendation of Mad Men, this is not suited for a broader audience. And it won’t win an Emmy any time soon. It takes you behind the scenes of “Wall Street” — that term, that place that has such a negative implication. It takes you into the heart of the intensity, the greed, the intelligence, the diligence, the risk, the reward and inescapable anxiety that these “wall streeters” face day-in and day-out. As season one’s intro states, “Wall Street takes the brightest people and smashes them into the pavement on a regular basis.” One day, you could be up $1M the next day you could lose it all and be under, -$2M. 
One person from this show (season one) that trips me out is this guy: Timothy Sykes. Within a span of three years (starting his Freshman year in college), he turned $12,000 into $1.65 million. I repeat. 12K to 1.65M. An astronomical return. (If Jay-Z takes his money and doubles his stack; Timothy Sykes takes his money and raises it to the second power. Now that’s G$). All off trading micro-cap stocks (way harder, riskier strategy than your buy-and-hold, run of the mill strategy). 
But beware. After watching this show, you may be encourage to shovel your savings into the equities market. But at this point, even some top tycoons of wall street are under right now. You’re better off just watching this show, and leaving your money your savings account. But if you’re interested, check it out through Hulu.com.

“Wall Street Warriors”

I’m generally not into reality shows. But this one right here, this one’s the real deal.

Unlike my previous recommendation of Mad Men, this is not suited for a broader audience. And it won’t win an Emmy any time soon. It takes you behind the scenes of “Wall Street” — that term, that place that has such a negative implication. It takes you into the heart of the intensity, the greed, the intelligence, the diligence, the risk, the reward and inescapable anxiety that these “wall streeters” face day-in and day-out. As season one’s intro states, “Wall Street takes the brightest people and smashes them into the pavement on a regular basis.” One day, you could be up $1M the next day you could lose it all and be under, -$2M. 

One person from this show (season one) that trips me out is this guy: Timothy Sykes. Within a span of three years (starting his Freshman year in college), he turned $12,000 into $1.65 million. I repeat. 12K to 1.65M. An astronomical return. (If Jay-Z takes his money and doubles his stack; Timothy Sykes takes his money and raises it to the second power. Now that’s G$). All off trading micro-cap stocks (way harder, riskier strategy than your buy-and-hold, run of the mill strategy). 

But beware. After watching this show, you may be encourage to shovel your savings into the equities market. But at this point, even some top tycoons of wall street are under right now. You’re better off just watching this show, and leaving your money your savings account. But if you’re interested, check it out through Hulu.com.