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Money, Power and Wall Street, Part One (full documentary) | FRONTLINE



In the 2012 award-winning series Money, Power and Wall Street, FRONTLINE tells the story of the struggles to repair the economy after the 2008 financial crisis, exploring key decisions, missed opportunities, and the uneasy partnership between leaders of government and finance.

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In part one of Money, Power and Wall Street, FRONTLINE correspondent Martin Smith interviews leading bankers, government officials and journalists to chart the epic rise of a new financial order—and the trouble that followed. As Wall Street innovated, its revenues skyrocketed, and financial institutions of all stripes tied their fortunes to one another. Smith probes deeply into the story of the big banks—how they developed, how they profited, and how the model that produced unfathomable wealth planted the seeds of financial destruction.

FRONTLINE’s veteran financial and political producers Michael Kirk (The Choice 2020: Trump Vs. Biden, United States of Conspiracy), Martin Smith (The Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia, The Pension Gamble), Marcela Gaviria (The Virus: What Went Wrong?, Separated: Children at the Border) and Tom Jennings (Right to Fail, Opioids Inc.) team up to present this Emmy Award-winning documentary series.

#Documentary​ #MoneyPowerWallStreet

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Major funding for FRONTLINE is provided by the Ford Foundation. Additional funding is provided by the Abrams Foundation; the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation; Park Foundation; and the FRONTLINE Journalism Fund with major support from Jon and Jo Ann Hagler on behalf of the Jon L. Hagler Foundation, and additional support from Koo and Patricia Yuen.

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41 comments
@JakariaHusain-u6l

😊please Sar please give me Wark visa

@JunlaiAiguo

Every crash/collapse brings with it an equivalent market chance if you are early informed and equipped, I've seen folks amass up to $1m amid economy crisis, and even pull it off easily in favorable conditions. Unequivocally, the collapse is getting somebody somewhere rich.

@smith7388

39:19 now in my finance class this was taught but as a black person im like this is not true! When blacks move into white communities prices go down.

@CornellSandifer

CDO's you can sprinkle powdered sugar on a turd, at the end of the day it's still shit!

@RonaldGonzalez-l9h

Wilson Jason Williams Charles Taylor Frank

@plannerjoy

I don’t understand what happened to all that housing that was abandoned? Or is it owned now by a corporation that snapped it up at a super cheap price?

@plannerjoy

In NYC housing prices barely declined during 2008-2009. In 2024 of course the prices are purely insane.