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The Radical Moderate

Podcast by Pat O'Brien

English

News & politics

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About The Radical Moderate

The Radical Moderate cuts through the noise with sharp, practical conversations about how we move forward as a country. Hosted by businessman and author Pat O’Brien, the show brings clarity, candor, and a willingness to challenge lazy thinking. Whether in business, politics, or culture, we need a fresh approach to how we address problems—and this podcast delivers just that. Every week, in just 30 minutes, Pat explores solutions that respect ideals but measure results. This is moderation with teeth: ideas that hold up over time.

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33 episodes

episode Ep. 33 - Pay for Play: The Dangerous Reality of Seven Figure NIL Deals artwork

Ep. 33 - Pay for Play: The Dangerous Reality of Seven Figure NIL Deals

Downtime is a profit leak but operating in a system without rules is an absolute financial hazard. The traditional model of amateur athletics is dead and anyone still clinging to the romanticized idea of the pure student athlete is actively ignoring the billions of dollars driving the machine. John Nabors from Inside Arkansas joins the show to break down how collegiate sports rapidly transformed from a tightly regulated amateur system into an aggressive, corporate entertainment enterprise. We sit down to unpack the structural shifts that permanently altered the landscape of American sports over the last few years. Our conversation hits heavily on how conferences completely stripped the NCAA of its governing power during the pandemic, the sudden legal normalization of pay for play models, and the massive financial strain placed on university athletic departments trying to balance Title 9 compliance with escalating football expenses. John also delivers his secret sauce perspective on the current arms race, explaining why a lack of a professional style salary cap makes the modern NIL landscape completely unsustainable for boosters and schools alike. The unglamorous truth of this transition is that we are setting young athletes up for immense personal failure. When a 21 year old player pulls in millions of dollars on a one year transfer deal without any infrastructure to manage it, the drop off at age 23 into a normal job market is devastating. Viewers will walk away from this episode understanding the raw market economics dictating which sports survive, how the recent Indiana football national championship completely shattered the traditional blueprint for winning, and why the entire collegiate sports ecosystem is operating inside an unstable financial bubble. If you care about sports economics, institutional power shifts, and the reality of name image and likeness contracts, you will get a lot from this. Make sure to subscribe to the Radical Moderate podcast and share this episode with anyone tracking the business side of sports. Which part of the current collegiate business model do you think is the most unsustainable for universities long term? Let us know in the comments below.

20 May 2026 - 31 min
episode Ep. 32 - Multimedia Entrepreneurship: Roby Brock’s Reverse Journey artwork

Ep. 32 - Multimedia Entrepreneurship: Roby Brock’s Reverse Journey

Stability in the media industry is a moving target and most entrepreneurs find out too late that passion doesn't pay the bills. If you aren't willing to listen to the marketplace and pivot your delivery method, you are effectively a hobbyist with an expensive deadline. We are joined by Roby Brock, owner of Talk Business & Politics and Natural State Media, to discuss how he built a durable multimedia empire by working in reverse of traditional journalism norms. We sit down to discuss the tactical shift from video production to long term advertising contracts and how to scale across radio, digital, and print. The conversation covers specific industry hurdles like the "missing middle" of profitable niche content and the logistical weight of high gloss magazine production. Roby shares his "secret sauce" for survival which involves treating journalism as a business first and an art second, ensuring that the infrastructure exists to support the reporting. The unglamorous truth is that many journalistic endeavors are break even propositions at best and the mental toll of delegitimization makes the work harder than ever. You will walk away with a clear understanding of why being "just an editor" is a career dead end in the 2020s and why the ability to crawl through raw data is more valuable than ever. Success in this field requires a thick skin and a willingness to kill your darlings when the cost benefit analysis doesn't lean in your favor.

13 May 2026 - 32 min
episode Ep. 31 - National Stage: Will Arkansas Claim the White House? artwork

Ep. 31 - National Stage: Will Arkansas Claim the White House?

Political dominance is rarely a permanent state, but Arkansas has managed a total transformation from deep blue to solid red in less than a decade. The stakes for 2028 are already high as two of the state's most prominent figures, Senator Tom Cotton and Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders, eye the national stage. In this episode, we sit down with veteran journalist Roby Brock to break down the calculated maneuvers happening behind the scenes in Little Rock and D.C. We get into the tactical evolution of Arkansas campaigning, moving away from "chicken supper" retail politics toward a media-heavy national strategy. Roby Brock provides a boots-on-the-ground perspective on Tom Cotton’s disciplined messaging during the 2014 flip and his strategic choice to remain in the Senate rather than join the Trump cabinet. We also examine Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders' executive record, her deep ties to the Iowa caucus, and how her upcoming book tour serves as a functional launchpad for 2028. Our discussion covers the nuances of "missing-middle" political strategy, the impact of a legislative supermajority, and why JD Vance currently holds the pole position for the Republican succession. The unglamorous truth is that national ambition often comes at the cost of local presence; Cotton has faced criticism for his focus on global foreign policy over Arkansas town halls. Furthermore, while a supermajority allows for swift policy implementation, it often replaces bipartisan compromise with internal party infighting and "foxification" of local issues. You will walk away from this conversation with a clearer understanding of how these two leaders are positioning themselves to capitalize on the post-Trump landscape and the logistical hurdles they face in a wide-open 2028 field.

6 May 2026 - 31 min
episode Ep. 30 - Control Your Brand While Expanding Fast artwork

Ep. 30 - Control Your Brand While Expanding Fast

Scaling a business is the point where most founders accidentally break what they built. Growth often feels like a choice between staying small and high-quality or going big and watching your standards evaporate. John Mautner joins us to break down how he navigated this exact crossroads while taking a simple roasted nut cart from the streets of Orlando to an international stage. We sit down to discuss the mechanics of establishing a business model that survives expansion without requiring the founder to be in ten places at once. We get into the strategic shift from company-owned locations to a controlled licensing model, the nightmare of maintaining product consistency across borders, and the reality of protecting your brand’s "secret sauce" when you aren't the one behind the counter. John explains the specific decision-making framework that allowed him to scale the operation while keeping a tight grip on the customer experience. The unglamorous truth is that rapid growth is often a logistical war of attrition that tests your mental health as much as your bank account. You have to be willing to sacrifice the "ego" of owning every location in exchange for the systems that allow the brand to breathe on its own. Viewers will walk away with a clear understanding of why infrastructure must precede imagination and how to identify the exact moment your business is ready for a global footprint. If you care about operational systems, brand protection, and the transition from operator to owner, you’ll get a lot from this. Please subscribe and share this episode with a founder who is currently hitting a growth ceiling. When you look at your current business model, what is the one task you are most afraid to hand off to someone else?

29 Apr 2026 - 31 min
episode Ep. 29 - Tenacious Global Domination: The Nutty Bavarian Story artwork

Ep. 29 - Tenacious Global Domination: The Nutty Bavarian Story

He quits a good-paying corporate job, builds a simple cart with a copper kettle, and bets everything on the smell of cinnamon sugar in the air. Then reality hits: 100-hour weeks, $10 days, late rent, angry suppliers, and the kind of pressure that makes most founders walk away. We follow John Mautner's early Nutty Bavarian story from a childhood candy-making obsession to a near wipeout on the sidewalks of downtown Orlando, and the exact moment he figures out what’s really broken.  The lesson isn’t “work harder.” It’s “find the real constraint.” John walks through a brutally honest business diagnosis and realizes the product isn’t the problem. The location is. That insight leads to a bold sales move and a live product demo that puts his roasted nut cart inside the Orlando Magic arena, where a captive audience, heavy foot traffic, and event spending change the economics overnight. We talk experiential marketing, pitching decision-makers, and why a sensory demo can beat any brochure.  From there, the conversation turns into practical scaling: writing procedures, protecting quality control, training staff to replicate the process, adding a second cart, and even selling in the stands to unlock more demand. The momentum carries into theme parks as John tests Universal Studios, then expands to Disney, discovering a niche with millions of customers and little direct competition. If you care about entrepreneurship, startup strategy, location-based business growth, and building systems that scale, this story delivers. Subscribe, share this with a friend building a business, and leave a review with the biggest takeaway you’re applying next.

22 Apr 2026 - 30 min
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