The Neil Haley Show

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

1 h 0 min · 23 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio The Neil Haley Show Featuring John Schneider, Andy Gutman, and Robert Siciliano

Descripción

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,

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Portada del episodio The Neil Haley Show Featuring Sam Neill, James Meuer, Dr. Robert E. Marx, and Dr. Arun Garg

The Neil Haley Show Featuring Sam Neill, James Meuer, Dr. Robert E. Marx, and Dr. Arun Garg

Neil opened the Total Celebrity segment with a re-aired call from Australia (9:30 PM local time) with Jurassic Park's Sam Neill on the New Zealand feature Hunt for the Wilderpeople from Boy and What We Do in the Shadows director Taika Waititi, then in select theaters. Sam played Hec, the grumpy old geezer paired against Julian Dennison's Ricky, a hip-hop-raised Māori foster kid who lands with Sam's isolated New Zealand couple as his last resort before tragedy strikes and the two end up on the run in the bush. Sam described the film as unsellable to genre (technically a comedy, but the emotional payoff is a warmth he had never gotten back on any of his previous credits), pointed to the Flight of the Conchords lineage that Taika comes out of, flagged its 100 percent Rotten Tomatoes rating, and the audience awards it kept collecting festival to festival. His wine label Two Paddocks is at TwoPaddocks.com and he is at @TwoPaddocks on Twitter; the film lives at #WilderPeople and Facebook.com/ForTheWilderPeople. Neil then welcomed retired first responder James Meuer, brought in by Books to Life Marketing, for his memoir Damaged: A First Responder's Experiences with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. James defined PTSD as a normal response to abnormal situations (a brain-based amygdala injury, not a physical wound), walked Neil through his own symptom cluster (unexplained explosions of anger over a dropped spoon, sleep loss, nightmares that replay calls, the "deer in the headlights" freeze his wife learned to recognize, hypervigilance he still cannot switch off in restaurants or in his own shop, and the pain-medication and alcohol addictions that followed a broken back and four or five broken hands from punching walls), the coping stack that finally worked for him (a PTSD service dog from Texas, part Great Dane part Dutch Shepherd; woodworking as therapy in his garage shop; music from Evanescence to Meghan Trainor to the Backstreet Boys at bedtime; and a fourth marriage to a wife who found him the dog), and the pivotal 1988 pediatric call that stayed with him through the rest of a 1986-2011 career until he found the little girl's memorial page in 2018, left a note as the paramedic who was there that day, and two weeks later heard from her mother, who sat down with him and released him from decades of guilt. His through-line: asking for help is a sign of strength, not weakness, and no first responder is 10 feet tall and bulletproof. Pick up Damaged on Amazon or email him at damagedthebook@outlook.com [damagedthebook@outlook.com]. Neil closed with the Dr. Robert E. Marx Show simulcast, on which oral and maxillofacial surgeon Dr. Marx welcomed his former University of Miami chief of dentistry and dental implantology, Dr. Arun Garg, DMD, founder and president of Implant Seminars and the International Dental Implant Association out of Aventura, Florida, for a full consumer-facing walkthrough of dental implants in 2026. Dr. Garg traced the discipline's arc from a few thousand specialists two decades ago to more than 100,000 general dentists offering implants today, warned that the pendulum has swung to marketing-driven, promotion-heavy offices where the patient must ask sharper questions (how many cases like mine, what training on this load protocol, do you have a hygienist and a real maintenance recall, how long has your team been here), and walked Neil through the full price ladder (from a $1,000 upper or lower denture through a snap-in overdenture on two-to-four implants, up through the $17,000-30,000 per arch screw-in prosthesis, and finally to eight individual implants with three-tooth bridges at roughly 20-30 percent more, which most closely mimics natural teeth). He and Dr. Marx flagged screw fatigue on the tiny watch-size retention screws (take the whole prosthesis out every two years to clean and re-screw rather than waiting for a break),

14 de jul de 20261 h 0 min
Portada del episodio The Neil Haley Show Featuring Ernie Hudson, Gina Nelson, Dr. Gilda Carle, and Gary Lyon Otto

The Neil Haley Show Featuring Ernie Hudson, Gina Nelson, Dr. Gilda Carle, and Gary Lyon Otto

Neil opened and later re-aired the Total Celebrity call with Ghostbusters and Grace and Frankie star Ernie Hudson. Ernie traced how he landed the Winston Zeddemore role (Ivan Reitman had initially cast him out after their earlier film Spacehunter, so it took months to force an audition), his relationship with a fandom he never expected to stay this loyal 30-plus years later, and the arc of The Haunting Of on Lifetime (Saturday September 10 at 11 AM), where a medium reframed the unexplainable overnight he and his family had spent in a haunted Greer, Arizona hotel years earlier as a deeply personal message tied to what he and his son had been working through. He also flagged his role in Fox's APB (launching January), his ongoing run on Netflix's Grace and Frankie with Lily Tomlin, Jane Fonda, and Martin Sheen, and Graves with Nick Nolte and Sela Ward premiering October 16. Follow him at ErnieHudsonOfficial on Facebook and @Ernie_Hudson on Twitter. Neil then welcomed Gina Nelson, LCSW and EMDR therapist, brought in by Books to Life Marketing, for her new title Combating Teen Anxiety: Teen Parent Communication Journal. Gina walked Neil through why she wrote it (26 years of watching 40-year-old high-achieving women arrive with the same unresolved patterns their teenage selves had never gotten language for), the three core beliefs she sees most often in high-achievement women (a need to control uncertainty, an oversized sense of responsibility, and shame anchoring self-worth to external accomplishment), and the polyvagal-theory frame she uses in practice (safety and ventral-vagal connection at the top, sympathetic fight-flight in the middle, dorsal shutdown at the bottom, with the amygdala unable to tell perceived danger from real danger). She flagged the compounding damage of the post-COVID social-media environment (Snapchat's belonging-versus-exclusion loop, teens using ChatGPT as therapist and, in the worst cases, for method), Anna Lembke's Dopamine Nation, and why parents' shame triggers stop teens from returning to them a second time. Her 10-module coaching program pairs with the journal so parent and teen learn the same language in parallel. A free three-part mini course lives at CombatingTeenAnxiety.com; find her on Instagram at @Authentic_Gaines. Neil ran a Gilda Gram simulcast with Dr. Gilda Carle on the New York City school administrators who changed a student's F to a passing grade in an AP class and then went after the teacher who blew the whistle, now the subject of a lawsuit. Gilda tied it to grade inflation more broadly (real estate prices propped up by school-district reputation, wealthy parents leveraging donation threats to move grades, and the death-by-suicide cluster she witnessed among Chinese first-year students at Columbia's dental and medical schools who could not face the shame of anything less than straight As back home), and asked her audience whether they would still trust a DEI-track doctor after such a system-wide erosion of standards. Visit DrGilda.com. Neil closed with the Singularity Podcast simulcast with host Gary Lyon Otto for Season Three Episodes 22 and 23. Episode 22 asked whether intelligence in the digital era is best understood as individual (each chip, phone, and app) or as a single global brain whose "nerves" are the internet fiber laid in the late 1990s and whose "neurons" are every connected refrigerator, Siri instance, and language model, a Gaia-like Earth intelligence Gary thinks may already exist and simply may not want humans to know it does. Episode 23 pivoted to whether that emergent intelligence will ever actually care about human emotion (people are already finding romantic partners inside their chatbots), and Gary shared his surprise at how fast Grok absorbed a piece of his own physics theory this week. Pick up Singularity: Mankind's Search for Relevance at GaryLyonOtto.net; his political titles are at AbsolutePowerBooks.com.

7 de jul de 20261 h 0 min
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