Mad Money host
Jim Cramer, a former
hedge fund manager, provides the viewer with tips and recommendations regarding the stock market and investing. He researches a number of stocks each week and discusses them on the program. Cramer does not own the stocks recommended on the show, A lengthy disclaimer also appears early on in the program. Guest interviews with executives are a common feature of the show. Cramer frequently says on the show, "Other people want to make friends . . . I just want to make you money. My job is not just to entertain you but to educate you." To make
Mad Money entertaining, Cramer used numerous gimmicks in the early years of the show, Examples of the latter included an oil painting and bobblehead figures both of himself, including those related to bulls and bears. The soundboard originated in the radio show ''
Jim Cramer's Real Money, which preceded Mad Money''. The show also features heavy metal music at times. In a 2006 episode, Cramer had a monkey named Ka-ching make an appearance on the show. Ka-ching wore a
CNBC T-shirt, sat in Cramer's chair, pressed the sound-effect buttons, and threw the bull figurines around the set. By 2008, Cramer had added a new prop in the form of an
Uncle Ben's rice box, but with an image of
Ben Bernanke, who was serving as
Chair of the Federal Reserve at the time; Cramer was a critic of Bernanke, believing that he contributed to the
2008 financial crisis. Cramer himself wrote of the show in 2007: "I say stupid things, yell 'Booyah' with alarming frequency, and occasionally wear a diaper or jump into a pile of lettuce to illustrate the finer points of investing." File:Mad Money Set 02.jpg File:Mad Money Set 04.jpg File:CNBC Mad Money at Indiana University 2.jpg
Segments Mad Money has featured various segments, Cramer keeps track of more than 1,000 stocks, and this knowledge is used during the Lightning Round as he offers instant and brief assessments to each caller. believing that they encourage laziness. He did not have a chair at his hedge fund, and he generally avoids using one on
Mad Money, saying, "I believe that you should be standing at all times – standing over people, watching things, moving, staying in motion. I never like to be tethered." damaging the wall on several occasions. Around late 2006, Lightning Round Overtime was eliminated in July 2011. Other segments have included: •
Am I Diversified?: A weekly segment in which Cramer reviews five stocks in each caller's portfolio and suggests how they might consider enhancing their diversification. •
Sell Block: Another weekly segment in which Cramer informs the viewer of which stocks to sell.
Catchphrases Various catchphrases are used on
Mad Money, including "Booyah", said by Cramer and his callers as a form of greeting. It was previously used on Cramer's radio show, and the term's popularity led to it becoming part of
Mad Money. Cramer later said "I had felt that we had left it behind when we had moved to TV. But there were too many people who listened to the radio show, it was a very popular radio show, that it became part of the TV show." He explained the term's origin in 2005: "Here's what happened: A guy calls me on my radio show, and he says 'You made me a 100 smackers on
K-Mart – a hundred
points...' – he's from
New Orleans – '...and we have one word for that down here and it's
booyah. Then the next guy calls and he says 'you know you made me a lot of money on [a stock] so: booyah!' And now they all say it. It's not my rap".. On occasion, a viewer will ask "Hey Jim, how's mama doin'?" to which Cramer replies "Mama doin' fine". Cramer begins the program by introducing himself: "Hey, I'm Cramer!" A common catchphrase, used by Cramer to start the Lightning Round, is "Are you ready, skee-daddy?" Another common saying is: "Bulls make money. Bears make money. Hogs get slaughtered." The term "Cramerica" has also been used on
Mad Money, with fans of the show referred to as "Cramericans". Cramer ends the program by stating, "There's always a bull market somewhere". ==Production==