A podcast about how tax works and how tax doesn't work from
@ForemanTaxLaw
and
@FRBLaw
. Not legal advice; attorney advertising. Party down with vigor & candor.
I just finished recording episode 4 of How Tax Works, which is about Ordinary and Necessary business expenses under IRC sections 162 and 212. Up next will be episode 5, which will be a discussion of substantiation (Cohan Rule!) and stories stories stories.
The next two episodes have been recorded. I will discuss equity compensation, including options (ISOs & NSOs), RSUs & RSAs, SARs and Phantom Equity, Equity Grants, and Profits Interests. To be released August 19 and... hmm maybe August 26 to avoid Labor Day?
Episode 5: How Tax Works: Ordinary & Necessary Business Expenses: home office deduction, family trips to the Pumpkin Patch, hiring your children, and a proposed new name for the so-called Augusta Rule (and how it interacts with IRC 162):
Episode 5 has been recorded. In addition to being informative and educational, I reference Calvin & Hobbes, mention Babe Ruth, and disparage a golf tournament!
I just finished recording episode 4 of How Tax Works, which is about Ordinary and Necessary business expenses under IRC sections 162 and 212. Up next will be episode 5, which will be a discussion of substantiation (Cohan Rule!) and stories stories stories.
THE NEXT EPISODE WILL BE RELEASED TOMORROW. In it, I do what Speech Pathologists call "eat" a word, which is something I have been doing since I was a child. Bonus points if you can find the word!
The episodes on IRC 162 - ordinary & necessary business expenses have been recorded, edited, and named. Episode 4 will be posted on July 22 and episode 5 will be posted on August 5.
Episode 3 will be about residency for individual income tax purposes, which is an area of tax that I find much more interesting than basically anyone else.
The episodes on IRC 162 - ordinary & necessary business expenses have been recorded, edited, and named. Episode 4 will be posted on July 22 and episode 5 will be posted on August 5.
@taxtherapist505
@kjb_cpa
@cordes_tax
You can't be a resident in NY without a PPA, and we wouldn't spend multiple decades fighting like the FTB did. The difference is there *are* people who live in NY but pretend they don't.