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Graybeard Radio

Podcast de Matt Hempel

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Welcome to Graybeard Radio. My goal is to help us both stay healthy, discover the real value in your decades of wisdom and experience, and turn that into meaningful impact and income—whether in your current career or business, a completely new direction, or retirement. Here's the thing: if you're stuck, overwhelmed, burned out, disillusioned, or just uncertain about what your next steps should be, you don't have to get out of the game entirely. Maybe it's just a slightly different game. Your game, your rules, on your terms. With the right tools, technology, and strategy, you can stay connected to who and what matters most and thrive in this next chapter..... and have a little fun along the way.

Todos los episodios

15 episodios

episode Podcast Intimacy, Real Monetization: Mark Kaye’s Authority Operating System artwork

Podcast Intimacy, Real Monetization: Mark Kaye’s Authority Operating System

In this Graybeard Radio episode, host Matt Hempel sits down with conservative broadcaster, entrepreneur, and now congressional candidate Mark Kaye for a conversation that’s equal parts origin story, masterclass in podcasting, and political why-now. Mark recounts his unusual path—born in Canada, moving to the U.S. at eight, and becoming a passionate naturalized citizen. Early inspiration came from daily Paul Harvey sessions with his dad, followed by film and political science studies at NYU, which sharpened his debating skills. He parlayed hustle into a first radio job in North Carolina (including a notorious swag-and-gift-card blitz), then moved to New Jersey and Washington, DC, where a brush with Don & Mike turned from on-air roasting to collegial respect. Settling in Jacksonville in 2007, Mark transitioned from Top 40 entertainment into political talk radio. A longtime Rush Limbaugh fan, he built a hybrid approach by piping Snapchat audience responses into his early weekend talk show—an innovation that ultimately led to fill-ins for Herman Cain and an unforgettable stint at the 2016 RNC. After Rush’s passing, Mark stepped into the local noon–3 slot before a corporate reshuffle pushed him to rebuild on his own terms. That shift sparked GAIN and Authority Launch OS, his AI-driven operating system for rapidly crafting authority-driven podcasts—complete with positioning, content plans, and monetization pathways. Mark outlines why podcasting thrives: no gatekeepers, intimate on-demand listening, and evergreen assets. He breaks down monetization, from standard revenue shares and affiliates to using interviews as warm, relationship-first sales calls. Finally, he explains his decision to run for Congress in Florida’s 5th District, citing dissatisfaction with Rep. John Rutherford’s speaker vote choices and a belief that his conservative stance and name recognition can make a difference. He closes with hard-won advice to his younger self: learn sales early, because sales drive everything.

16 de may de 2026 - 47 min
episode Astronaut Dreams, Wartime Drills, Real-World Coaching: The Ron Higgs Playbook artwork

Astronaut Dreams, Wartime Drills, Real-World Coaching: The Ron Higgs Playbook

In this episode of Graybeard Radio, host Matt Hempel welcomes back longtime Navy friend Ron Higgs for a conversation that spans decades, oceans, and careers. They open with raw, affectionate memories of life aboard USS America in the early ’90s: sleeping too hot or too cold depending on the sea, water that tasted faintly of jet fuel, and scalding showers that left one crewman with burns.  Against that grit, they recall the beauty—fjords of Norway, the Northern Lights—and the camaraderie of a pre-New Year’s party thrown early, knowing deployment would steal the holiday. The pair revisit Desert Storm’s nerve-wracking moments: a vulnerable Suez Canal transit, high-alert posture through the Strait of Hormuz, and the exhausting cadence of CBR drills. Communications were scarce in the pre-internet era—letters, pay phones, and rare sat calls—intensifying the separation from home.  A fatal helo crash becomes a defining moment for Ron, a reminder that youth and invincibility are illusions. Ron maps his Naval Academy-to-Test Pilot School journey, including becoming a Navy-nominated astronaut candidate before being medically disqualified—a bittersweet peak. Post-retirement, curiosity drew him into startups via an angel group; networking delivered consulting work in the most human ways, like a chance brewery chat.  After a brief COO role ended by COVID, he embraced fractional operations and discovered his groove: coaching engineers and technical leaders through the mindset shifts required for leadership. He tells of an executive who, after a team offsite, owned his shortcomings—proof that real change starts with candor.  The episode crystallizes into practical guidance: introvert-friendly networking (start slow, meet one person, offer help), Ron’s three daily goals (meet, learn, help), and the power of community—especially among veterans. His parting advice to his 25-year-old self is timeless: find a mentor a few steps ahead. Ron now leads Both Management Solutions, transforming technical pros into effective leaders, and remains a generous connector on LinkedIn.

4 de may de 2026 - 1 h 3 min
episode The Canary in the Coal Mine: Software, Young Men, and an AI Transition artwork

The Canary in the Coal Mine: Software, Young Men, and an AI Transition

Host Matt Hempel welcomes Erik Newby, Director of Global Software Engineering at Red Hat, for a candid, forward-looking conversation about AI’s agentic turn and what it means for careers, companies, and culture. Eric’s path—rooted in art and design before growing into global engineering leadership—prepped him to navigate this moment. He describes a recent inflection point as frontier models and new tools pushed AI far beyond chatbots into agents that can genuinely orchestrate work. Software, he says, is the canary in the coal mine: LLMs understand code and systems, so developers feel the disruption first. Eric’s advice is direct and empathetic: if your role centers on isolated code typing, move up the stack. Learn systems thinking, problem decomposition, orchestration, critical judgment, and clear communication. Those human-coordinating skills will define the new developer. He’s also transparent about the fear: engineers worry they’re building the very tools that replace them. Leaders, he argues, must set a credible vision, reduce anxiety, and model care. He praises Red Hat’s holistic support—“Family comes first”—as essential to real performance and well-being. The episode widens to young men’s struggles with isolation, stalled relationships, and mental health. Drawing on Jonathan Haidt’s research, Eric warns AI could supercharge attention capture. The countermeasure is old-fashioned but urgent: mentorship, community, and real human relationships. He compares today to the Industrial Revolution: painful in transition, but ultimately an engine of abundance and entrepreneurship. To prove how barriers are dropping, Eric tells a story of dictating feature requests to an AI agent from the beach and testing a working build minutes later. His counsel to youth—develop human skills, find mentors, ask for help, build relationships, and dream big—lands with warmth. Grounded in faith and history’s rhythms, Eric’s optimism is both practical and contagious. He closes with a plug for Shelf Checkout (shelf-checkout.com) and his handle @RaleighAwesome.

9 de abr de 2026 - 37 min
episode Burnout to Endurance: Rebuilding Leadership for the Long Run with Luke Thomas artwork

Burnout to Endurance: Rebuilding Leadership for the Long Run with Luke Thomas

Matt Hempel opens Graybeard Radio by naming its audience and aim: men 50+ who care about health, relevance, and connection—and who want to use technology without losing their humanity. He welcomes guest Luke Thomas, lead pastor of Legacy Church in Knoxville and a veteran of 20+ years planting churches and campus ministries across Texas, Florida, and Tennessee. Luke’s formal training spans biology, chemistry, and human physiology, which later collided with the reality of ministry demands. In 2011, he hit a wall—too sick to lead—triggering a turning point that reshaped everything. Luke recounts being accepted to medical school, becoming a Christian around that same time, and ultimately stepping away from medicine to plant and pastor. The early wins and hard misses taught him that calling without capacity is a trap. His recovery from burnout led him to research stress science across disciplines, self-experiment through training and recovery, and build a coaching and speaking practice centered on leadership self-care. He brings a grounded lens—equal parts science and pastoral wisdom—anchored by endurance racing: ultramarathons, Ironman triathlon, and a commitment to unglamorous rest (including hammock time). Together, Matt and Luke preview Luke’s book on burnout in leadership, especially among pastors. They explore why high empathy and high responsibility often mask creeping overload, how to recognize red flags earlier, and how to rebuild patterns that sustain decades of meaningful work. Expect practical takeaways: physiological basics for energy, boundary-setting that respects relationships, and playbooks for teams to normalize recovery. The heart of the conversation is hope: longevity is possible when leaders align purpose, practices, and pace.

10 de mar de 2026 - 1 h 0 min
episode Stepping into the Breach (Why This Is Our Time) artwork

Stepping into the Breach (Why This Is Our Time)

Host Matt Hempel calls on men in their 50s–70s to “step into the breach” for a generation of young men feeling demoralized by mixed cultural messages about masculinity and real economic pressures—AI-driven job shifts, housing affordability, and a fraught dating landscape. Matt argues that older men share responsibility for staying quiet as the conversation drifted from correcting toxic behavior to dismissing men’s constructive instincts: to build, provide, and protect. He outlines four essentials younger men need now: validation that their instincts are good, a practical map for careers and relationships, hope grounded in lived experience, and leadership modeled through purposeful lives. The episode offers concrete actions—speak up, mentor one young man, document hard-won wisdom (plug: greybeardassessment.com), and keep building as examples. Matt shares a dinner-table story where honesty—wins, losses, and lessons—mattered more than perfection, and a moment telling a 20-something, “You’re not a caveman; you’re a man,” which unlocked visible relief. He frames this as a societal imperative: purposeless men make for an unstable, unproductive culture. He closes with a one-action challenge for the week and a teaser for the next episode, featuring an AI expert on the future of work and the economy.

7 de feb de 2026 - 1 h 0 min
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Muy buenos Podcasts , entretenido y con historias educativas y divertidas depende de lo que cada uno busque. Yo lo suelo usar en el trabajo ya que estoy muchas horas y necesito cancelar el ruido de al rededor , Auriculares y a disfrutar ..!!
Fantástica aplicación. Yo solo uso los podcast. Por un precio módico los tienes variados y cada vez más.
Me encanta la app, concentra los mejores podcast y bueno ya era ora de pagarles a todos estos creadores de contenido

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