Kayal and Company
What's on the Cut Sheet with Rich Zeoli and Jimmy Failla Joins and Knicks Fans are Animals
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489 episoder
Trump’s “Really Big News
before Nick signs off. Dawn’s Big Three begins early with Trump’s Pennsylvania Defense and Innovation Summit, proposed investments, skilled manufacturing jobs and Jamie Dimon’s backing for Philadelphia shipbuilding. Dawn’s Big Three continues with the Pennsylvania summit and the prospect of billions of dollars flowing into defense manufacturing, the Navy Yard and regional shipbuilding. Dawn examines the need for welders and other skilled workers while discussing the chance to restore Philadelphia’s place in American naval production. The first Big Three story connects national security, local jobs and private investment. The second Big Three story covers Todd Blanche’s attorney-general confirmation hearing, with Chuck Grassley supporting the nominee and Dick Durbin attacking Blanche’s loyalty to Trump. The crew reacts to Blanche telling Trump, “I love you, sir,” and argues that demanding bosses often receive intense loyalty from people who meet their standards. The third story features 12-year-old Philadelphia student correspondent Bella Gonzalez interviewing MLB stars, followed by the growth of professional softball, MLB’s investment in the AUSL and emotional All-Star Game moments involving cancer survivors, children riding bicycles onto the field and “America the Beautiful.”
A $25K Morning
The audience pushes the Ben to the Shore total past $25,000, and Nick faces questions about whether he has trained enough for the ride. We then return to the Cyclospora outbreak as Taco Bell removes certain ingredients in affected areas. Symptoms, hospitalizations, produce washing, lettuce, cilantro and antibiotics all enter a discussion that quickly becomes one of the morning’s wildest stretches. Fight Club nearly fails before the featured video even plays because Jimmy Kelly selects the wrong intro. The resulting producer argument becomes a contest of its own before the crew finally judges a parking-lot brawl. Bathroom supplies and parasite preparation then keep the chaos moving after the winner is chosen. Trump’s promise of “really big news” about elections turns the discussion toward the SAVE America Act, foreign interference and the need to protect future contests rather than relive only 2020. Another donation lifts the first-responder fundraiser,
The Jersey Mikes Birthday Story
The Jersey Mike’s dispute by asking when customer frustration becomes outright entitlement. A second workplace story follows as a Louisiana Chili’s employee says he is fired after refusing to use a coworker’s chosen name, “Fish,” instead of her legal name. We debate whether workers should avoid needless conflict for the sake of a paycheck or refuse language they believe is being forced upon them. The conversation shifts to DEI programs that disappear publicly and return under softer labels such as “community belonging.” We play a congressional clash between Summer Lee and Brandon Gill over medical education, equal rights and race-based training, then discuss university offices that change names without changing their mission. Penn Medicine’s decision to stop gender surgery for patients under 19 adds another example of institutions reacting to federal pressure and legal risk. Joe Biden’s “Earth Rider” brewery comments bring back questions about his decline and the press coverage surrounding the 2024 election. Tom Homan then explains that the ICE vehicle-stop pause is temporary and designed to improve agent safety rather than end arrests, leading the crew to reconsider parts of the policy. We close the hour with the California truck driver who receives four years and eight months after a crash kills three people, plus a caller’s disturbing account of a school-bus crash involving a driver with an expired learner permit.
27% Trust
We examine Gallup’s finding that only 27% of Americans express strong confidence in 14 major institutions, including Congress, the press, public schools, organized religion, banks, police, health care and the criminal justice system. We connect that collapse to COVID mandates, censorship, shifting medical guidance and years of failed promises from Washington. Dawn frames the problem as broken trust, while Shawn argues that Americans should become less dependent on institutions that repeatedly fail them. The political discussion moves to limited government, public-school control, medical incentives and the gap between the House and Senate on Republican priorities. We compare Mike Johnson’s ability to move legislation with John Thune’s tougher arithmetic and the compromises forced by thin congressional margins. The crew also considers how Republican infighting could affect the midterms even when voters broadly support the party’s border and economic goals. A Politico piece sparks a discussion about the 1990s, anti-establishment music and the forces that later feed Trump’s rise. Shawn explains why he rejects Bush-era Republican politics, while the crew compares nineties prosperity with modern debt and the socialist movement’s appeal to frustrated voters.
Philly’s All-Star Hangover
We start with Shawn Farash filling in for Greg Stocker, a failed YouTube-chat prediction about Shawn’s red flannel and the National League’s lifeless All-Star Game loss. We give Philadelphia fans credit for showing up while wondering why national coverage keeps falling back on Pat’s, Geno’s, Boys II Men, Rocky and the Santa Claus story. We also check the Ben to the Shore fundraiser as the audience closes in on a new $25,000 mark. Dawn reports on a heat index approaching 110 degrees, wildfire smoke from Canada and outdoor youth activities being shortened for safety. We cover the Roxborough shooting in which a retired firefighter and Vietnam veteran remains charged with murder while DHS identifies the dead contractor as a British national allegedly tied to a traveling fraud group. Other stories include the House vote for permanent daylight saving time, a sulfuric-acid attack in Jersey City, Philadelphia’s ICE vigil and the Supreme Court’s request for more security funding. The Big Take begins with June inflation coming in below forecasts, Kevin Hassett’s case for lower costs and Nick’s reminder that Biden-era price increases remain baked into household budgets. We move to record Manhattan rents, Democratic affordability promises and Chamath Palihapitiya’s account of changing his view of Trump. The hour closes with a heated debate over ICE temporarily suspending most vehicle stops, Susan Collins’ role in the decision, body cameras, vehicles used as weapons and whether the administration is giving protesters a political win.
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