Kayal and Company

June 16 2026 Hour 2

38 min · 16 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio June 16 2026 Hour 2

Descripción

7:02:00AM ET — Caller feedback on the Taliban, religious wars, and America’s obsession with the Middle East 7:03:45AM ET — Comparing Trump’s aggressive focus on Iran to the Bush administration’s fixation on Iraq 7:05:30AM ET — The reality of depleted U.S. oil reserves and frustration over gas prices 7:07:15AM ET — Former Trump advisor David Urban warns that a good deal would have been leaked by now 7:09:00AM ET — Why JD Vance is handling the media rollout instead of Trump taking center stage 7:10:45AM ET — How terror funding works and Trump’s strategy to starve Iran of liquidity 7:12:30AM ET — The ultimate consequences of Iran rebuilding its nuclear program and the nuclear threat 7:14:15AM ET — Why Democrats regaining control of the House and Senate is the biggest threat facing voters 7:16:00AM ET — The potential of a Ukraine-Russia peace deal landing before the Iran conflict concludes 7:17:45AM ET — Whether the American public is owed the full text of the Iran agreement right now 7:19:30AM ET — Demanding an end to Middle Eastern funding while American infrastructure falls apart 7:21:15AM ET — Why blind loyalty to political narratives damages deductive reasoning 7:46:00AM ET — Announcing the live broadcast at FOP Lodge 5 to support Families Behind the Badge 7:47:45AM ET — How to secure tickets for the event and preparing for the police charity bike ride

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Kayal and Company!

Empezar

2 meses por 1 €

Después 4,99 € / mes · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts exclusivos
  • 20 horas de audiolibros / mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

489 episodios

Portada del episodio Fight Club, Harvard’s A-Grade Problem, And A Quarter In The Urinal

Fight Club, Harvard’s A-Grade Problem, And A Quarter In The Urinal

More toilet-story aftermath, a Trainspotting reference, and a Los Angeles arrest after a BB gun fires during a naked bike ride. We move through Cory Booker jokes, the Alabama case involving Jessica Folds and Daniel Robbins, then Harvard’s response to runaway top grades. The crew argues that college transcripts lose value when top marks become common, before launching into Fight Club and scoring a video brawl featuring a pool skimmer and a rough stairwell moment. The closing stretch pits broadcast standards against unfiltered podcasts, then caller Lori joins the grade-inflation debate. We finish with Dianna Russini’s Ridgewood bodycam stop, her NFL name-dropping and expired license, the listener vote on Sean’s proposed retraction, and a final sign-off before Dan Bongino’s next appearance.

Ayer48 min
Portada del episodio From A 3,000-Foot Drone Scare To The Mets’ Little League Homer

From A 3,000-Foot Drone Scare To The Mets’ Little League Homer

Cut Sheet starts with the day’s most ridiculous rescue: a California camper falls into a vault toilet after dropping sunglasses. From there, we take on CNN’s Declaration discussion, French heat deaths, Rand Paul’s COVID-origin hearing, a Rush tour call-in, and Kenny Chesney’s stance that a concert crowd deserves an evening away from political speeches. We keep Cut Sheet moving with Supergirl star Milly Alcock’s comments about the character, Bill Maher’s alarm over socialist wins in New York, and reports that a JetBlue flight may have struck a drone near JFK. Matt Rooney then joins, bringing the crew into a sharp dispute over Madeleine Dean’s account of a phone call with Steve Witkoff during an Iran briefing. Rooney and the crew argue over manners, foreign-policy priorities, and how much outrage is real versus manufactured. We also revisit the vault-toilet sunglasses question, keep the 600-like challenge going, and put Sean Farash’s on-air retraction argument to a listener test. Sports and local oddities close the hour: the Mets hand George Springer a Little League homer after a defensive mess, then a Paramus middle school pulls yearbooks after a baby Hitler photo appears. The crew saves a string of stranger items for the final hour, including a naked bike ride arrest, an Alabama homicide case, grade inflation, and Fight Club.

Ayer1 h 12 min
Portada del episodio Election Day Is One Day—So Why Are We Still Counting?

Election Day Is One Day—So Why Are We Still Counting?

We begin with Shawn Farash and Greg Stocker holding down the studio while Nick Kayal travels, and the crew starts with the summer heat, a Strawberry Moon, and anger at the latest mail-ballot ruling. Watson v. RNC becomes the morning’s central legal fight as the crew argues that Election Day ought to mean one actual day, while the Court leaves receipt deadlines to state law. The opening news run also brings the Court’s rulings involving FTC Commissioner Rebecca Slaughter and Fed Governor Lisa Cook, plus a look ahead at birthright citizenship. We cover Luigi Mangione’s newly scheduled federal trial, then turn to the Olney raid that leaves investigators with a strange written item, firearms, chemicals, and hard questions. Before the first big Court reaction, we hit a packed local slate: a Gloucester Township party, a house explosion in Bucks County, Comcast’s company split, and Collingswood’s liquor-sales debate. Phil Almquist delivers a painful Phillies loss, Eagles ticket details, Chris Johnson’s ALS news, and a warning that the holiday stretch could bring heat indices well above 100.

Ayer38 min
Portada del episodio Full Show For June 30 2026

Full Show For June 30 2026

We open with the Supreme Court’s Watson v. RNC ruling, where a 5–4 majority says states may count certain mail ballots received after Election Day. Shawn Farash and Greg Stocker vent about the ruling, size up Amy Coney Barrett’s majority opinion, weigh the Court’s limits on President Trump’s removal power, and anticipate the birthright-citizenship decision. We also get into federalism, the Electoral College, early voting, and what election-law fights look like in state capitals rather than Washington. We keep the local file moving with the disturbing Olney investigation surrounding Eugene Horsch, a written item tied to Ted Bundy, weapons, chemicals, fake IDs, and a 55-gallon drum. We also hit the Hilltown Township house explosion, Gloucester Township’s enormous party, Collingswood’s possible end to its dry-town rule, Comcast’s planned split, and a brutal Phillies loss after a 5–0 lead. Add Chris Johnson’s ALS revelation, a feverish Fourth of July forecast, and a close look at the Strawberry Moon for a packed first hour. Then Cut Sheet takes over: a California camper falls into a vault toilet chasing sunglasses, CNN takes on a line in the Declaration of Independence, and Rand Paul’s Fauci whistleblower hearing lands on the table. We debate Kenny Chesney’s decision to keep politics out of concerts, Supergirl’s latest press tour, Bill Maher’s warning to Democrats, and a possible JetBlue drone strike near JFK. Matt Rooney joins for the Madeleine Dean–Steve Witkoff clash, the Mets’ epic fielding error, Paramus’ recalled yearbooks, Harvard grade inflation, Fight Club, and Dianna Russini’s bodycam embarrassment.

Ayer3 h 21 min