The Neil Haley Show

The Neil Haley Show Featuring Doug Vermeeren, Bobby Ray Shafer, Treyvon Hester, Jessica Sanchez, and Sam Blair

1 h 0 min · 26 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio The Neil Haley Show Featuring Doug Vermeeren, Bobby Ray Shafer, Treyvon Hester, Jessica Sanchez, and Sam Blair

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The Neil Haley Show Featuring Doug Vermeeren, Bobby Ray Shafer, Treyvon Hester, Jessica Sanchez, and Sam Blair Neil opened with filmmaker and transformational leader Doug Vermeeren, often called the modern-day Napoleon Hill, to discuss his film How Thoughts Become Things, a deeper continuation of the conversation started by The Secret. Doug explained that the title's key words are "how" and "become," arguing that the law of attraction is not about wishing a Ferrari into your driveway but about training the brain to recognize the path and then changing your habits to walk it. He stressed that we are shaped by our influences (the TV we watch, music we hear, websites we visit, and the five people we spend the most time with), that clarity and delayed gratification outrank even compound interest, and that AI cannot dream or create for you, so you must lead it. He urged listeners to run their lives like an inverted funnel, operating in their "brilliance zone" and delegating the rest. Find How Thoughts Become Things on Apple TV and other streaming services. Neil then hosted a solo edition of Celebrity Interviews Live from the Grotto with actor Bobby Ray Shafer, beloved as Bob Vance of Vance Refrigeration on The Office. Bobby Ray recalled auditioning on Halloween in Hollywood, turning down the Maytag repairman gig (which his agents preferred) to bet on a show they thought would be canceled, and crafting Bob around three pillars: a confident salesman, a Marine combat veteran of Vietnam, and a true-love devotion to Phyllis that became the show's most unlikely love story. He appeared in roughly 30 episodes, shared his love of old-school supernatural horror (his cult Psycho Cop films) over modern "gore porn," and marveled at the Vance Refrigeration merchandise empire he holds no piece of. He and Neil bonded over basketball and his coaching days, and Bobby Ray closed with a Stoic lesson: confidence is king, and never let others control your emotions. Neil then welcomed former Philadelphia Eagles defensive lineman Treyvon Hester, whom Neil personally tutored from middle school through the SATs and on to the University of Toledo. Treyvon traced his journey from a gray-shirt freshman who had to earn academic eligibility (eventually earning a criminal justice degree), to a three-time All-MAC, four-year starter and team captain, to a 2017 seventh-round draft pick by the Oakland Raiders that reopened the NFL pipeline at Toledo. After being cut by the Raiders under Jon Gruden, he landed with Philadelphia, where he tipped the field goal in the Chicago wild-card game that became the famous "double-doink" miss, cementing him in Eagles history alongside teammates Fletcher Cox, Brandon Graham, Michael Bennett, and Chris Long. Treyvon now coaches at his alma mater, Penn Hills High School, urging young people to be gracious and take advantage of every opportunity. Neil then welcomed America's Got Talent Season 20 winner Jessica Sanchez fresh off her victory. Jessica, who first appeared on AGT at age 10 in season one, shared the emotional whirlwind of being crowned the winner nine months pregnant after 20 years of chasing the dream, thanking her fans and America profusely and previewing what is next: delivering her baby and pursuing music full force. Her message was simple: never give up. Find her on social media as Jessica Sanchez and officialjessicasanchez. Neil closed with director Sam Blair, whose ESPN 30 for 30 installment Berlusconi: Condemned to Win premieres on the ESPN app and ESPN2. Sam explained how Silvio Berlusconi revolutionized European soccer through AC Milan in the 1980s and 1990s, recognizing the emotional power of sport and the connection between soccer, television, and spectacle long before it became a billion-dollar industry. T\

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Portada del episodio The Neil Haley Show Featuring Terrell Owens, Brandy Isadora, and Dr. Gilda Carle

The Neil Haley Show Featuring Terrell Owens, Brandy Isadora, and Dr. Gilda Carle

Neil opened with a re-aired Total Celebrity Show call with six-time Pro Bowl wide receiver and NFL 2000s All-Decade selection Terrell Owens about his run on NBC's Celebrity Apprentice with Donald Trump. T.O. shared how he was a last-minute addition (added two weeks out, while other cast had known for six to nine months) and tried to absorb the show by watching DVDs friends loaned him, his analysis of Kevin Jonas's mistake of trying to play a game within a game on Trump rather than focusing on the project, and the parallels he drew between managing locker-room egos and the boardroom team dynamics. He was playing for the Boys & Girls Club of America (citing Shaquille O'Neal and Denzel Washington as longtime backers) and walked Neil through his "What To Do" T-shirt line (the message that you can build a dream the way kids build a bear, that you can become bigger, faster, stronger if you put in the extra work no one sees), his upcoming clothing line and home decor passion, fantasy receiver camps, and his Super Bowl wix.com commercial cameo alongside Brett Favre, Larry Allen, Franco Harris, and Emmitt Smith. T.O. closed crediting his mom and grandmother in Alexander City, Alabama and his work ethic at UT Chattanooga (asking coaches for keys to the weight room over the holidays when he could not afford to go home) and his routine of hiring a personal trainer to come back to the facility after practice in the pros for the physical condition that he believes is still 15-years-post-football peak today. Find him at TerrellOwens.com. Neil then welcomed award-winning Arizona photographer, author, and Scottsdale Philharmonic cellist Brandy Isadora to walk through her arc from inventing the Bisadora Hip Purse (an engineering patent at age 18) into handbag design, then through her California College of the Arts MFA in creative writing, then into her photography company Isadora Images and her three books: Tattle Tales: Tattoo Stories and Portraits, Mannequins: Stories of the First Supermodel, and the short story collection The Stories of Our Lives. Brandy walked Neil through the dual craft of photography and fiction (image hits immediately, prose unfolds slower), her two non-negotiables on every shoot (lighting and authenticity), and the unexpected lesson from Tattle Tales: tattooed people light up when asked about their ink because most of life people are not asked questions, and the heavily inked ER doctor she interviewed deliberately placed his work in visible spots to break the stereotype that tattooed people cannot be doctors. The Stories of Our Lives, she explained, came back to life during COVID when her mother nudged her to dig out the short stories she had drafted in 2012 in grad school, and the through-line of all her work is hope (a friend's line, "life is an extreme sport," still anchors her). She also gave Neil her client mix today (entertainment headshots, models building portfolios, musicians, authors, and a recent uptick in clients wanting professional dating-site and matchmaker photos). All three books are on Amazon. Neil closed with Dr. Gilda Carle for the Gilda Gram simulcast running through the controversy at Stanford University's commencement, where more than 100 graduating students walked out and chanted "Free, free Palestine" through the keynote address by Google's CEO. Gilda framed it against Google and Amazon's $1.2 billion Project Nimbus contract to provide cloud and AI services to the Israeli government, asked her audience whether commencement was the appropriate venue for a year-long protest that ends up spoiling the milestone for the rest of the graduating class, and tied it to her ongoing concern about the rise in campus antisemitism. Visit DrGilda.com.

23 de jun de 20261 h 0 min
Portada del episodio The Neil Haley Show Featuring John Schneider, Andy Gutman, and Robert Siciliano

The Neil Haley Show Featuring John Schneider, Andy Gutman, and Robert Siciliano

Neil opened with a re-air of the Celebrity Interviews call with Dukes of Hazzard, Smallville, and Tyler Perry alum John Schneider promoting his independent film Like Son, a psychological crime drama starring Don Shanks (Michael Myers in Halloween), Joe Chrest (Stranger Things), and Laura Cayouette (Django Unchained), distributed through John's own platform CineFlix DOD (Digital On Demand, not Video On Demand) launching the maiden voyage stream Thursday at 8 PM Central. Drawing on Denver Pyle's old Dukes set advice that "you have the strength of your ignorance, keep doing it" and his Mount Kisco, New York childhood movie-theater memories, John framed the platform as a way for independent filmmakers to keep most of the check rather than handing it to the Netflixes and Hulus of the world, with a post-screening live Q&A streamed from the studio's screening room mimicking the film-festival experience where the lights come up and filmmakers field questions. The model will roll out for every new release through CineFlix, whether John's own or another independent's. Watch the trailer free at CineFlixDOD.com or via Facebook.com/OnTheSunStudios; the film is also pre-purchasable now. Neil then welcomed Andy Gutman, president of Detroit-area commercial real estate firm Farbman Group (where he has worked 31 years up the ladder from accountant under the late CEO Bert Farbman after his first post-college CPA job went under five days before he graduated Michigan State) and the author of eleven children's books, in to discuss his latest, Business Raccoon. Andy traced the book's origin to a real raccoon on his lawn that he made up bedtime stories about for his daughter Rylee (now grown and working in graphic design specializing in logos), positioned the character as a way to plant the idea early that business can be cool and fun, and walked Neil through the catalog (Charlie the Caterpillar, Be Kind, What Can I Be Today, Even, Stand Tall, Pop Lullaby, Life Lessons from Brilliant Detroit written with kids from the Detroit nonprofit, My First Day of Kindergarten and From Fearful to Fearless both written with kids at Beachwood Elementary). Each book also has an original accompanying song available on Spotify. Recurring character Luna the Bernese Mountain Dog appears in every book and joins Andy at school and parade readings. Andy and Neil traded thoughts on a coworker who died of a heart attack two years before his planned retirement (the catalyst for Andy finally writing the books he had stockpiled), on doing work you love so retirement never has to come, on embracing AI rather than fearing it (Andy's office has ordered a Neo humanoid robot from the California-built first US plant), and on the unfinished autobiography Andy keeps shelving until he finds his voice. Pick up Business Raccoon on Amazon. Neil closed with the Storehouse Media Group simulcast hosted by Sherrie Price Clark welcoming cybersecurity keynote speaker and best-selling author Robert Siciliano (CSP, CSI, CITRMS, architect of the Strategic Human Firewall and CEO of Safr.Me) to break down his framework. Robert defined the Strategic Human Firewall as the mindset shift from "I trust what I see by default" to "I verify everything," walking Neil and Sherrie through situational awareness applied to every ringing phone, text, email, and pop-up; the Human Blindspot (the biological default to trust that organized crime now weaponizes through cyberfraud, an industry that has eclipsed the illicit drug trade in revenue, with 300 billion personal records and 20 billion passwords already on the dark web); and the Kitchen Table Effect where trained employees take security habits home and cement them for life. He gave the basic protection stack any listener can deploy today: a password manager, unique passwords for every account, two-factor authentication on everything, a VPN whenever using hotel or public Wi-Fi, and a credit freeze with Experian,

23 de jun de 20261 h 0 min
Portada del episodio The Neil Haley Show Featuring Dr. Conrad Murray and Pat Riley

The Neil Haley Show Featuring Dr. Conrad Murray and Pat Riley

Neil opened Hour 2 with Dr. Conrad Murray, the cardiologist who served as Michael Jackson's personal physician, calling in to discuss his memoir This Is It!: The Secret Lives of Dr. Conrad Murray and Michael Jackson. Born in Grenada and raised in Trinidad and Tobago (no shoes until age seven), Dr. Murray walked through his 16 years of postgraduate training (Texas Southern, Meharry Medical College in Nashville, Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Loma Linda for internal medicine, Arizona for cardiology, and UCSD for interventional cardiology), his decision to stay in Nevada after patients begged him not to leave a factory-style group practice, and the unforgettable night he made a treatment call for Mother Teresa without realizing who she was until he saw her on CNN the next evening after dozing off on his couch. He recounted being first called to the Jackson home to treat the three children for an upper-respiratory bug, then earning Michael's trust by smoothly hydrating him with a banana bag (Michael had never felt an IV go in so cleanly), and eventually getting him to allow a male podiatrist near his cracked, calloused, fungus-ridden feet so he could finally dance without pain. Dr. Murray detailed the Demerol addiction he says he never knew about (a Beverly Hills dermatologist, Dr. Arnold Klein, allegedly administered the drug 51 times in Michael's final 60 days, with single-day doses reaching 975mg against a 50mg ER norm), the courtroom evidence he disputes (a propofol concentration of 0.04 mcg/mL in the back of Michael's eye, 65 times below the threshold needed to stop breathing, and no measurable level ever found in the brain), the prosecutor's mid-trial alteration of evidence that he believes should have triggered a mistrial, and the contrast between his 2,000-square-foot master suite and the seven-by-five-foot aluminum-fixture cell where he spent two weeks behind bars. With his California, Nevada, and Texas licenses suspended or revoked, Dr. Murray now serves international patients as an advocate from his international licensure, recently helping reduce one uninsured patient's cardiothoracic bypass bill at the University of Miami from $160,000 to $31,000. His parting message: stop complaining about burnt toast and an overdone breakfast, stand up, dust yourself off, and determine your own destiny. Pick up the book on Amazon, BookBaby, or DrConradMurray.com. Neil then welcomed Office Hours co-host Pat Riley for the weekly AI consulting segment. Pat detailed building a brand-new mobile app concept in about 26 hours: he spotted a truck bumper on his commute, dictated a full business plan to Manus, who returned cost estimates, target segments (consumers, plus credit unions for financing), a website, and a Base44-built prototype priced at $49.99 for a 30-day subscription. Neil pushed back on Base44's credit-burn rate, and Pat had his own AI agent Rich pull a live side-by-side comparison: Base44 is best for non-technical founders building fast prototypes and MVPs, while Claude Code is best for developers, real products, and complex custom logic. They also dug into Claude Cowork's new struggle to surface old conversation threads, Perplexity's credit burn versus Manus at $40 a month, the arrival of Opus 4.8, and Neil's continued AI movie-making workflow using ChatGPT's improved image generation alongside Gemini. Pat also shared meeting Cubs catcher and former manager David Ross at a Morgan Wallen concert and promoted Ross's podcast The Lovable Reunion with Anthony Rizzo, built around the 2016 World Series team's 10-year reunion. Pat's audiobook Deception Underway is on Spotify; visit UnderwayBooks.com.

13 de jun de 20261 h 0 min
Portada del episodio The Neil Haley Show Featuring Kate Flannery, Wendy Kronick, Jody Corbet, and Dr. Gilda Carle

The Neil Haley Show Featuring Kate Flannery, Wendy Kronick, Jody Corbet, and Dr. Gilda Carle

Neil opened with Total Celebrity favorite Kate Flannery, Meredith Palmer of The Office, to discuss the new Hulu comedy series All Night, in which she plays high-school principal Saperstein on grad-night lockdown (phones surrendered, leave and you can't come back). Kate revealed that the show's young cast is stacked with former Disney and Nickelodeon talent, including Ally Grant (Anna Gasteyer's daughter on Suburgatory). On The Office, she answered two questions Neil pulled from the show's superfans: Meredith five years later would still be partying and working at Dunder Mifflin (when last seen at Toby and Angela's wedding she was dancing with a guy who might just stick around, plus she was finishing a PhD), and yes she really did lick the hand sanitizer, though crew doctored it with clear gelatin and club soda. She also confirmed her recurring run as Crossing Guard Sandy on American Housewife (with a possible return after the writers' strike), her one-shot as sanitation chief Mean Marge on Brooklyn Nine-Nine, her ongoing voice work on Cartoon Network's OK K.O.! Let's Be Heroes as K.O.'s mom, and her annual Christmas tour with Jane Lynch built around their album A Swinging Little Christmas, with a likely Pittsburgh stop in early December and a run at the Carlyle Hotel in New York. Neil then welcomed early childhood development expert and RIE Associate Wendy Kronick, who has taught Parent-Infant Guidance classes for nearly 30 years, to discuss her interactive children's book This or That: A Busy Morning (co-authored with Susan Beauchene, illustrated by Emilia Manrique Medrano). Built on Magda Gerber's RIE methodology, the rhyming book walks babies and toddlers through a morning routine by offering two real choices at each step ("the ducks or the bows") so even infants as young as five months can become active participants rather than passive recipients. Wendy and Neil dug into respect, predictability, rupture and repair, age-appropriate boundaries, quiet narration over sportscasting (acknowledging feelings rather than distracting with a "pink elephant"), and being a friendly parent rather than your child's friend until they're grown. Available on Amazon and through the RIE website. Neil then welcomed Jody Corbet for the Jesus and Ugly Jody / Storehouse Media Group simulcast, continuing last week's small-business scaling series. Jody walked through the first true full-time hire after a founder has already outsourced bookkeeping, accounting, and social: the question is not who is cheapest but what the founder is actually good at, then hiring the opposite. He flagged the common trap of hiring four people at once on the promise of future sales, the importance of culture fit over resume polish (a $300,000 hire is fine if they live the founder's vision; a butt-in-seat hire never is), the need to know the cash is already in the account before you bring anyone on, and using AI tools across five different models as advisors rather than as decision-makers. Reach Jody at SLS.Consulting or via LinkedIn and X. Neil closed with Dr. Gilda Carle for the Gilda Gram podcast simulcast, walking through the upheaval at CBS News under new boss Bari Weiss as a leadership case study. Gilda traced 60 Minutes veteran Scott Pelley's reported screaming-match exit ("you have no television experience") after 37 years at the network, and the departures of several long-tenured female reporters, alongside the long shadow of Lesley Stahl, as a textbook example of what happens when long-tenured insiders refuse to follow new ownership. She praised Bari Weiss's track record (The Free Press sold to Paramount), reminded listeners that every organization has a pecking order, and asked the audience to think honestly about how they have handled a new leader: kiss up, wait it out, walk out, or give them a real chance.

13 de jun de 20261 h 0 min
Portada del episodio The Neil Haley Show Featuring Kenny Anderson and David Hayes Cox

The Neil Haley Show Featuring Kenny Anderson and David Hayes Cox

The Neil Haley Show Featuring Kenny Anderson and David Hayes Cox Neil opened Hour 2 with NBA All-Star and Georgia Tech legend Kenny Anderson, who walked through his journey from the projects of LeFrak City, Queens to a 14-year NBA career and the upcoming documentary Mr. Chibbs (directed by Jill Campbell, produced with business partner Barry Markowitz of Green Face Productions). Kenny credited his late mother for the structure that kept him in school and on the court, his mentor Vincent Smith (TNT analyst Kenny Smith's older brother) for teaching him how to play point guard the right way, and a supporting cast of family and advisers for steering him away from the streets. He talked about being ranked the number one player in the country in high school at Archbishop Molloy, his two All-American years at Georgia Tech, and his fear of failing his mother, which haunted him even as the #2 overall pick of the 1991 NBA Draft by the New Jersey Nets. He reflected on the early Nets team with Derrick Coleman and the late Drazen Petrovic (and how that ceiling might have looked very different had Petrovic lived), his five-year run with the Boston Celtics where he set up Paul Pierce and Antoine Walker through the Eastern Conference Finals, and the trades from Portland and Boston that took the passion out of him. After his mother died in 2005, at her burial he heard God say enough, retired at 35, briefly played five months in Lithuania, and went back to school to earn his BA at St. Thomas University in Miami in 2010 — a moment he says hit him harder than draft night. He now coaches with his South Florida Elite AAU program, mentors at-risk kids in Florida, and is taking the same slogan into the documentary: basketball is easy, life is hard. The nickname Chibbs came from his mother calling him "cheeks" as a five-day-old, and he carried it all the way through Georgia Tech and the NBA. Visit MrChibbs.com. Neil then welcomed NRA-certified firearms instructor David Hayes Cox to discuss his new safety guide for parents and kids, This Is A Gun: A Safety Guide for Families with Children (ThisIsAGun.org). David, a 20-year firearms enthusiast trained under Scotty Reitz in Los Angeles, made clear up front that he is not a gun advocate but a gun safety advocate, and that he and his bipartisan co-author (on the opposite side of the political aisle) wrote the book for both gun-owning and non-gun-owning families. He walked through the foundational statistics (400 to 500 million firearms in civilian hands in the US, roughly one million sold per month, with 40 to 52 percent of American homes owning at least one) and the parallel safety domains that drove him to write it (swimming lessons drop drowning risk 88 percent, stop drop and roll, Mr. Yuck, electrical outlet covers). His three-step rule for children encountering a firearm is simple and repeatable: do not touch, run away, find an adult, including the courage to say no to a friend who wants to show off a gun. He emphasized that the book intentionally uses life-size illustrations of the most popular concealed-carry pistol on the market today (the Sig Sauer P365) because children whose only mental model of guns comes from Nerf, squirt guns, video games, and Hollywood will see a real small-frame pistol and assume it is a toy. He praised illustrator Joe Ruiz, encouraged parents to skip realistic-looking replicas for younger kids and save BB-gun training for the age when children are ready to learn the four universal laws of gun safety, and reminded listeners that even in the bluest of states roughly 25 percent of homes contain firearms, so the conversation cannot be avoided. Pick up the book at ThisIsAGun.org.

13 de jun de 20261 h 0 min