Some people are born into a rich family and inherit millions of dollars. Other people aren't wealthy by birth and need to work hard to earn their own millions. That latter group can be divided further by job, into groups of white-collar millionaires and blue-collar millionaires. It's those blue-collar workers who have worked their way up the money ladder who are the focus of his half-hour series. The docuseries profiles men and women who have made their fortunes through a can-do mindset and hard work, often having to roll up their sleeves -- metaphorically, at least, if not literally. The show also highlights how they spend their hard-earned money when having fun off the clock.
A concrete pourer who's gone from sleeping in a shack to kicking back in a mountaintop mansion; a young woman who's turned her childhood love of horses into a seven-figure steed empire; two best friends throw away junk.
A Texas man who makes a killing cleaning up stuff that can kill; an exterminator who squashes bugs all the way to the bank; a couple that made a fortune glitzing up the grimy tattoo industry.
A migrant farmhand goes from working the fields to cultivating his own auto empire; a married couple spins alpaca wool into solid gold; an aspiring rock star hopes to find his fortune in the music biz.
A man strikes it rich in the oil business without ever finding a drop; a taxidermist turns big game into big bucks; an immigrant comes to America and finds a wealth of opportunity.