Comming to the (slight) defence of the Bradleys
First off, Debt Diet part II shows the changes the families made the first week. Anyone that's ever had a diet knows that the first week is the hardest. Habits are hard to break, things come up that you don't plan for (2 office b-days in one week = lots of cake, for example) and after the 4th day you just want a donut so bad that you'll kill for one. Budgeting, for the Bradley's, is like a 500 pound man trying his hardest not to stop at Krispe Kreame on the way to work. Some days are just going to be easier than others!
One key to sucessful dieting is allowing yourself a treat now and then. Yes, you're 100 pounds overweight, but if you don't have a piece of candy now and then, you're just going to cave one day and eat the whole dang box. Same thing with budgeting, you've got to allow a treat now and then or you're going to go nuts with the Master Card and wipe out any progress you've made.
As for the hair, I don't just think it's an "AA women NEED hair treatments". I think it could also be a cultral thing or a family tradition, to the extent that Lisa Bradely honestly thinks of hair as a "need" and not a "want". Her grandmother and mother most likely went to the salon every week and she just can't fathom not going herself. In her mind, it just isn't an option. It's going to take some time for her to really realize that she needs to cut back or find other options for her hair, or make sacrifices in other areas to allow her to continue these appointments.
Another point, some people said that this family needs to downsize the house and take the money and pay down some of their debt. This is NOT as easy as it sounds. If they are in a hot housing market, they may not be able to downsize because there is nothing to downsize TO (this would be a likely senario where I live). And even if they could, who's going to give them a mortgage with a credit rating like theirs? Plus, moving costs money they don't have, the kids would have to change schools, and whoe knows what else. It may come down to having to sell the house, but it should be a last ditch effort, not the first thing they try. If there is a way to fix their mess without having to sell the house, I say they try it first and see how they do.
There is definatly some deeper issues involved here, and a certain amount of denial about how bad off they really are, and I think they can and should work harder. But I say give this family a few more weeks before jumping all over them. They didn't get into this mess overnight and they won't get out of it overnight, either.
PS- Also, depending on where they live, $102,000 a year GROSS, puts you in the middle class. Around where I live, you can't afford a house in a decent school district on that kind of money. I should know, DH and I together make about that, and we can't even afford a TOWNHOME in the suburb I grew up in. We had to buy a house in a town that has one of the worst school districts in the state, and even that was a stretch. Between the mortgage and property taxes, $102,000 a year doesn't buy much in these parts, not if you don't want to be house poor.