The Neal Larson Show

7.8.2026 - Gas Prices & Gratitude | AI Fact-Checking Debate | Ashton’s Cricket Swarm

1 h 24 min · 8. juli 2026
episode 7.8.2026 - Gas Prices & Gratitude | AI Fact-Checking Debate | Ashton’s Cricket Swarm cover

Beskrivelse

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2390029/fan_mail/new] The show bounced between international uncertainty, national political intrigue, and a very Idaho-style local headache. Neal and Julie dug into the fast-moving situation with Iran—skeptical that any “deal” or ceasefire can hold as long as the current regime remains in power, while also acknowledging how limited and risky America’s options are if the goal is protecting U.S. forces and interests without sliding into a larger war. They also reacted to President Trump’s comments tied to NATO and Europe, especially his argument that Europe’s immigration and energy decisions are putting its future at risk—and his broader message that longtime U.S. defense guarantees have enabled European dependence. Domestically, they unpacked Scott Jennings’ claim that he recently spoke with Mitch McConnell, pushing back on online rumors about McConnell’s condition while also arguing that the public deserves clearer “proof of life” through credible, on-camera journalism. The episode also spotlighted viral local and cultural moments: the blow-up and firing of a Grand Teton Mall security guard caught screaming and getting physical over filming (with Neal emphasizing the need for context, while still calling the behavior unacceptable), online speculation swirling around celebrity relationships, and the growing pressure campaign for Maine Senate candidate Graham Platner to exit the race—framed as a party-control problem and another example of political elites trying to override voters when a nominee becomes “inconvenient.” Listener interaction rounded it out: a call about gas-price perspective and a timely, vivid on-the-ground report about Mormon cricket swarms near Ashton—complete with road hazards, crop concerns, and plenty of Neal-and-Julie humor. --- ## 2. Highlights - Neal’s blunt take on Iran: ceasefires and “deals” won’t solve the problem while the current regime stays in power—yet “bomb everybody” isn’t a serious option either.   - Scott Jennings says he spoke with Mitch McConnell for 17 minutes—Neal isn’t buying that as enough to calm “proof of life” doubts and calls for a credible on-camera interview.   - The Grand Teton Mall security-guard meltdown goes viral—Neal wants more context, but says the firing was the right move after the screaming and physical escalation.   - A listener pushes back on constant gas-price whining, sparking a bigger gratitude-vs.-complaint discussion—and a reminder to be skeptical of questionable links and sources.   - Maine’s Graham Platner drama: Neal and Julie argue party leaders want him gone because he’s unelectable (and maybe uncontrollable), not out of moral outrage.   - “Mormon crickets” invade Ashton/Island Park: a caller describes cannibal behavior, slick roads, and the popcorn-like sound of driving over them—followed by rapid-fire (sometimes edgy) Mormon-cricket jokes. Let’s talk advertising. When you want to advertise on the radio, you call the station, right? But what about Facebook, Instagram, Hulu, Disney+, Peacock, and other streaming platforms? You could try clicking around, reading books, or taking online courses to figure it out—or you can let us handle it. At Sandhill Media Group, we’re your local experts in both radio and digital marketing. Visit SandhillMediaGroup.com today.

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episode 7.9.2026 - Platner Exits | Stegner Launches Gov Campaign | Shelley RecipeGate cover

7.9.2026 - Platner Exits | Stegner Launches Gov Campaign | Shelley RecipeGate

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2390029/fan_mail/new] Thursday’s show bounced between national politics, Idaho’s governor’s race, and a surprisingly sticky local controversy—while still making room for the truly important work: Julie’s ongoing hunt for the perfect “better-than-a-Cabbage-Patch” doll for her upcoming granddaughter (and a detour into whether chocolate hummus is a real thing). Neal and Julie unpacked the sudden exit of Maine U.S. Senate candidate Graham Plattner, questioning how parties keep ending up with candidates who feel “crafted” and inauthentic—and why Democrats keep swinging and missing when they try to package a “masculine” messenger for collectivist politics. The conversation also touched on the “movement” rhetoric, John Fetterman’s blunt reaction, and the broader pattern of party power-brokers overriding voters when a candidate becomes inconvenient. Back home, they turned to Idaho’s independent gubernatorial candidate John Stegner and the challenge voters face evaluating a longtime judge with limited public positions—while also flagging the “doctor retention” messaging as a proxy debate over abortion policy and the coming ballot fight. The show mixed serious notes with sharp humor: a mini-rant about why liberal talk radio tends to fail while podcasts thrive, a tense moment drawing a hard line with an antagonistic texter, and then the unexpected “RecipeGate” saga involving the Shelley Senior Citizen Center—complete with cease-and-desist drama and Neal and Julie offering to personally help copy and return disputed recipes to end the whole mess. --- Highlights - Neal and Julie dissect Graham Platner’s exit from the Maine Senate race—down to the oddly staged video choices and why his whole presentation felt “engineered.”   - John Fetterman’s hot take (“the trash took itself out”) sparks a broader debate about why parties keep nominating candidates that don’t match the moment.   - A pointed (and funny) breakdown of why liberal talk radio has repeatedly flopped—while long-form podcasts can reward sloppy claims and “Wild West” incentives.   - The show draws a firm line with a recurring antagonistic texter after an accusation of lying: “Put up or shut up.”   - Idaho politics: independent gubernatorial candidate John Stegner enters the spotlight, with Neal and Julie probing what voters can actually learn about a judge’s real policy positions.   - “RecipeGate” erupts in Shelley: cease-and-desist letters, alleged withheld recipes, and Neal and Julie offering to broker a peace deal—return the recipes and the story goes away. Let’s talk advertising. When you want to advertise on the radio, you call the station, right? But what about Facebook, Instagram, Hulu, Disney+, Peacock, and other streaming platforms? You could try clicking around, reading books, or taking online courses to figure it out—or you can let us handle it. At Sandhill Media Group, we’re your local experts in both radio and digital marketing. Visit SandhillMediaGroup.com today.

9. juli 20261 h 25 min
episode 7.8.2026 - Gas Prices & Gratitude | AI Fact-Checking Debate | Ashton’s Cricket Swarm cover

7.8.2026 - Gas Prices & Gratitude | AI Fact-Checking Debate | Ashton’s Cricket Swarm

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2390029/fan_mail/new] The show bounced between international uncertainty, national political intrigue, and a very Idaho-style local headache. Neal and Julie dug into the fast-moving situation with Iran—skeptical that any “deal” or ceasefire can hold as long as the current regime remains in power, while also acknowledging how limited and risky America’s options are if the goal is protecting U.S. forces and interests without sliding into a larger war. They also reacted to President Trump’s comments tied to NATO and Europe, especially his argument that Europe’s immigration and energy decisions are putting its future at risk—and his broader message that longtime U.S. defense guarantees have enabled European dependence. Domestically, they unpacked Scott Jennings’ claim that he recently spoke with Mitch McConnell, pushing back on online rumors about McConnell’s condition while also arguing that the public deserves clearer “proof of life” through credible, on-camera journalism. The episode also spotlighted viral local and cultural moments: the blow-up and firing of a Grand Teton Mall security guard caught screaming and getting physical over filming (with Neal emphasizing the need for context, while still calling the behavior unacceptable), online speculation swirling around celebrity relationships, and the growing pressure campaign for Maine Senate candidate Graham Platner to exit the race—framed as a party-control problem and another example of political elites trying to override voters when a nominee becomes “inconvenient.” Listener interaction rounded it out: a call about gas-price perspective and a timely, vivid on-the-ground report about Mormon cricket swarms near Ashton—complete with road hazards, crop concerns, and plenty of Neal-and-Julie humor. --- ## 2. Highlights - Neal’s blunt take on Iran: ceasefires and “deals” won’t solve the problem while the current regime stays in power—yet “bomb everybody” isn’t a serious option either.   - Scott Jennings says he spoke with Mitch McConnell for 17 minutes—Neal isn’t buying that as enough to calm “proof of life” doubts and calls for a credible on-camera interview.   - The Grand Teton Mall security-guard meltdown goes viral—Neal wants more context, but says the firing was the right move after the screaming and physical escalation.   - A listener pushes back on constant gas-price whining, sparking a bigger gratitude-vs.-complaint discussion—and a reminder to be skeptical of questionable links and sources.   - Maine’s Graham Platner drama: Neal and Julie argue party leaders want him gone because he’s unelectable (and maybe uncontrollable), not out of moral outrage.   - “Mormon crickets” invade Ashton/Island Park: a caller describes cannibal behavior, slick roads, and the popcorn-like sound of driving over them—followed by rapid-fire (sometimes edgy) Mormon-cricket jokes. Let’s talk advertising. When you want to advertise on the radio, you call the station, right? But what about Facebook, Instagram, Hulu, Disney+, Peacock, and other streaming platforms? You could try clicking around, reading books, or taking online courses to figure it out—or you can let us handle it. At Sandhill Media Group, we’re your local experts in both radio and digital marketing. Visit SandhillMediaGroup.com today.

8. juli 20261 h 24 min
episode 7.7.2026 - Graham Platner Fallout | Flags and Fear | Classrooms Get Political cover

7.7.2026 - Graham Platner Fallout | Flags and Fear | Classrooms Get Political

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2390029/fan_mail/new] Neal Larson and Julie Mason opened with the escalating political fallout in Maine surrounding Democratic Senate candidate **Graham Platner**, arguing the party’s sudden rush to distance itself looks less like “new information” and more like a power-and-polling calculation. They walked through why prominent Democrats and major donors previously excused a long list of controversies, why the latest allegation appears to be the breaking point, and why the calendar matters: if Platinum exits soon, Democrats still have a narrow window to swap in a new nominee against **Susan Collins**. From there, the conversation broadened into culture and institutions—especially how political symbolism is being weaponized. Neal and Julie pushed back hard on **Sunny Hostin’s** comment that neighborhoods with lots of American flags can feel “unsafe,” framing it as an irrational—and divisive—assumption about fellow citizens. They also dug into Idaho’s classroom display law (**House Bill 41**) and a set of recent complaints involving “In God We Trust,” “Everyone is welcome here,” and a **peace flag**, using those examples to argue for de-politicizing taxpayer-funded classrooms. The hour also featured a local event call-in, a blunt discussion of education funding and accountability (including administrator pay controversies), a sober update on the **Charlie Kirk** assassination preliminary hearing, and a quick, humorous detour into sports and extreme heat forecasts—complete with “Chatty Coats” weather fact-checking. --- Highlights - Neal and Julie argue Democrats didn’t “fail to vet” Graham Platner—they knowingly rationalized his baggage until the race looked unsalvageable.   - A sharp takedown of Sunny Hostin’s “too many American flags = unsafe” claim, with Neal calling it an emotion-driven paradigm that unfairly slanders neighbors.   - Idaho classroom display disputes under **HB 41**: “Everyone is welcome here,” a peace flag, and the legal exception for “In God We Trust.”   - Education funding rant: “How much is enough?”—the show compares school funding demands to a menu with no prices, pointing to administrator pay headlines (including a $150,000 bonus controversy).   - Day two of the **Charlie Kirk assassination** preliminary hearing: the judge’s visible reaction to the video evidence and the defendant’s odd courtroom demeanor. Let’s talk advertising. When you want to advertise on the radio, you call the station, right? But what about Facebook, Instagram, Hulu, Disney+, Peacock, and other streaming platforms? You could try clicking around, reading books, or taking online courses to figure it out—or you can let us handle it. At Sandhill Media Group, we’re your local experts in both radio and digital marketing. Visit SandhillMediaGroup.com today.

7. juli 20261 h 28 min
episode 7.6.2026 - America 250 Pride | Marxism “All the Things” | Reflecting Pool Media Fight cover

7.6.2026 - America 250 Pride | Marxism “All the Things” | Reflecting Pool Media Fight

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2390029/fan_mail/new] Neal Larson and Julie Mason kick off the Monday show coming off a massive America 250 weekend—sharing local and national highlights, quick personal stories from the holiday, and a broader reflection on why celebrating the country so often comes with an unnecessary “America isn’t perfect, but…” qualifier. Neal argues that constant caveats concede ground to critics, and the conversation rolls into a bigger warning about Marxism/collectivism: the seductive “promise of everything for everyone” and the way leaders often exempt themselves from the sacrifices they ask of the public. From there, the hour weaves through a mix of politics and culture: New York City’s thermostat-at-78 suggestion from Zohran Mamdani (and the hypocrisy claim that City Hall doesn’t follow it), a lively tangent on the USA’s World Cup situation and the “red card” reversal (including Trump trying to take credit), and a few lighter moments like Taylor Swift’s marriage timing. The second hour turns sharper—reacting to an intense NEA chant (“we have to win all the things”), an update on Idaho’s abortion initiative signatures likely making the ballot, discussion of a multi-day Utah preliminary hearing in the Charlie Kirk assassination case and the court’s handling of graphic exhibits, plus a swirl of national headlines: a Gavin Newsom inner-circle investigation that appears to have begun under the Biden DOJ, the media’s fixation on the Lincoln Memorial reflecting pool controversy, Paul Pelosi’s latest reported car incident, and the FCC’s equal-time inquiry into *The View* and whether it can credibly claim to be “news.” --- ## 2. Highlights - Neal pushes back on the “America isn’t perfect, but…” framing—arguing Independence Day shouldn’t come with a built-in apology. - Zohran Mamdani’s “set your AC to 78” request sparks a hypocrisy debate after claims that City Hall stays far cooler. - World Cup confusion, red-card drama, and Trump credit-taking—plus Neal and Julie accidentally crowdsourcing seven different kickoff times. - The NEA’s Becky Pringle chant (“we have to win all the things”) gets called out as revealing the union’s real priorities. - Idaho’s abortion initiative reportedly turns in ~110,000 signatures, with Secretary of State Phil McGrane signaling it’s very likely headed to the November ballot. - Live audio from the Utah Charlie Kirk assassination case preliminary hearing underscores how long and graphic the proceedings may be—and why the judge wants limits on what gets broadcast. Let’s talk advertising. When you want to advertise on the radio, you call the station, right? But what about Facebook, Instagram, Hulu, Disney+, Peacock, and other streaming platforms? You could try clicking around, reading books, or taking online courses to figure it out—or you can let us handle it. At Sandhill Media Group, we’re your local experts in both radio and digital marketing. Visit SandhillMediaGroup.com today.

6. juli 20261 h 26 min
episode 7.2.2026 -- NLS Special Independence Day, Reading of the Declaration of Independence cover

7.2.2026 -- NLS Special Independence Day, Reading of the Declaration of Independence

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2390029/fan_mail/new] Neal Larson and Julie Mason leaned into a lighter, holiday-minded Thursday show ahead of the Fourth of July, mixing friendly banter (block party plans, travel to Salmon, food debates, and a running riff on everything from kebabs to Doritos) with a sincere invitation for listeners to share short “greetings for America.” They also explained why they *weren’t* diving into a fast-moving local viral controversy—acknowledging they were aware of it, but stressing a preference to avoid speculation and personal-life drama unless it clearly crosses into public duties or official wrongdoing. The heart of the hour came from listener calls that turned the conversation toward gratitude, assimilation, and warnings about socialism/communism from those with personal or family experience under those systems. Callers described what American life looks like through the eyes of immigrants and refugees, emphasizing safety, opportunity, and the importance of passing civic understanding to the next generation. The tone shifted from playful to reverent as one caller urged families to read the Declaration of Independence—prompting Neal to read key passages on-air, a moment that grounded the episode in the meaning behind the holiday and the responsibilities that come with freedom. --- ## 2. Highlights - Neal and Julie intentionally hit “pause” on hard politics for a day—then immediately found themselves in a spirited debate over Old Navy “wedding registries,” Doritos rankings, kebabs, and sandwich potato chips. - Neal addressed a local viral story circulating online, explaining why the show wouldn’t amplify allegations and speculation until there’s clearer official confirmation of wrongdoing. - Bill’s call: a powerful immigrant perspective on why the Fourth of July matters, and how people who haven’t lived under socialism/communism often underestimate what it does to daily life. - Bob followed with family history fleeing Russian communists in the Baltics, urging “patriotism with healthy skepticism” and frustration at Americans romanticizing failed systems. - A listener challenged families to read the Declaration of Independence together—leading to Neal reading substantial portions on-air and creating the episode’s most resonant moment. - The show promoted listener “greetings for America” (call-in or recorded link), playing examples and inviting everyone to contribute short tributes for the 250th celebration. Let’s talk advertising. When you want to advertise on the radio, you call the station, right? But what about Facebook, Instagram, Hulu, Disney+, Peacock, and other streaming platforms? You could try clicking around, reading books, or taking online courses to figure it out—or you can let us handle it. At Sandhill Media Group, we’re your local experts in both radio and digital marketing. Visit SandhillMediaGroup.com today.

2. juli 20261 h 25 min