<p>In the first essay, I present a parsimonious consumption-based asset pricing model that explains the pricing of equity index options. The model has two key ingredients, a recursive utility function that overweights left-tail outcomes and a process for endowment volatility that allows for shocks with different persistence levels. The utility function produces a high price for tail risks and allows the model to replicate the implied volatility smirk in times of high uncertainty, during which extreme events are more likely. In times of low uncertainty the smirk arises due to mean reversion in volatility, which results in substantial volatility feedback and a conditional return distribution that is strongly left-skewed. The presence of multi...