The Neal Larson Show

5.19.2026 - ELECTION DAY, Stump Speeches!

1 h 11 min · 19 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio 5.19.2026 - ELECTION DAY, Stump Speeches!

Descripción

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2390029/fan_mail/new] We’re in the final stretch of Election Day with polls open and we’re basically counting down the hours until this thing is done—while still pushing hard for everyone eligible to vote to get out and do it. Neal Larson and Julie Mason remind unaffiliated voters they *can* participate by selecting a party ballot at the polls, and we spend the morning taking rapid-fire “stump speeches” from candidates who call in, email in, or stop by the studio. It’s a mix of serious, heartfelt pitches and a little levity (including an HOA “campaign” speech that honestly deserved its own award), but the common theme is giving candidates one last clean shot to speak directly to voters without getting dragged into constant crossfire. Along the way, we hear closing messages from Rep. Rod Furniss on budgeting, taxes, energy, and committee work; judicial candidate Randy Neal making the case for contested elections and accountability; and legislative candidates including James Lamborn, Julie Ann Young, Aaron Bingham, Julie VanOrden, and Stephanie Mickelsen—each framing service, local priorities, and trust in their own way. We also dig into what’s hanging over a lot of these races: outside spending and “dark money,” how some PACs are transparent and others are essentially pass-throughs from out of state, and the resentment that can follow when voters feel like seats are being bought. We end with a strong reminder: turnout matters (sometimes down to a handful of votes), use the election toolkit/results links, and no matter who wins—Bingham County and the region will need to heal and move forward after a bruising season. ### Highlights - Unaffiliated voters can choose a party ballot at the polls; registered party voters must vote their party ballot.   - Rapid stump speeches from multiple races, plus a few memorable in-studio visits (including Superman).   - Conversation on PAC layers: transparent advocacy vs. out-of-state dark money and pass-through groups.   - Reminder that tiny margins are real in East Idaho—turnout can flip races.   - Tools/results links promoted to help voters find ballots, polling places, and live election-night results. Let’s talk advertising. When you want to advertise on the radio, you call the station, right? But what about Facebook, Instagram, Hulu, Disney+, Peacock, and other streaming platforms? You could try clicking around, reading books, or taking online courses to figure it out—or you can let us handle it. At Sandhill Media Group, we’re your local experts in both radio and digital marketing. Visit SandhillMediaGroup.com today.

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episode 6.10.2026 - NFL Streaming Costs, Track Meet Stabbing Verdict, Faith & “Christian” Labels artwork

6.10.2026 - NFL Streaming Costs, Track Meet Stabbing Verdict, Faith & “Christian” Labels

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2390029/fan_mail/new] Today we bounced between three conversations that all hit the same nerve: what we expect from institutions—and what happens when reality doesn’t match the expectation. First up was Congress stepping into the mess of modern sports broadcasting, where following the NFL can mean juggling a pile of platforms and potentially spending hundreds (even up to $600+ depending on what you count) just to watch the games you want. We’re still not convinced it’s Congress’s job to referee entertainment pricing, but we can at least understand the frustration—especially when hearings highlight how hard the streaming shift is hitting sports bars and small businesses that need reliability, not spinning wheels and frozen feeds. Then we turned to the Carmelo Anthony trial and conviction in Texas stemming from a fatal stabbing at a high school track meet. The self-defense claim hinged on a shove/hand contact, but the discussion came back to a basic point: the ability to walk away matters, and using lethal force in that situation didn’t meet the bar for justification. We also talked about how quickly the public “race-ifies” cases like this—even when the trial itself didn’t center race—and why the bigger lesson is teaching kids how to de-escalate, not escalate. We wrapped with a grab bag of national weirdness: Trump speaking from the Oval Office (and drifting into very Trump construction-detail mode), the ongoing UFO disclosure pressure campaign and why AI-era distrust makes “bombshells” harder to believe, and a surprisingly heated new round in the “are Latter-day Saints Christians?” argument—where we basically landed on: I’d rather live surrounded by God-fearing people than spend my time drawing purity-line boundaries that nobody can ultimately prove. ### Highlights - Why the NFL’s platform fragmentation feels like a paywall maze—and why Congress is suddenly sniffing around it   - The Carmelo Anthony guilty verdict: self-defense claims, walking away, and how the public turned it into a racial flashpoint   - UFO “disclosure” politics in the age of AI: even if they tell us, will anyone trust it?   - The “Mormons aren’t Christian” argument flaring up again—and why that whole fight misses the point   Let’s talk advertising. When you want to advertise on the radio, you call the station, right? But what about Facebook, Instagram, Hulu, Disney+, Peacock, and other streaming platforms? You could try clicking around, reading books, or taking online courses to figure it out—or you can let us handle it. At Sandhill Media Group, we’re your local experts in both radio and digital marketing. Visit SandhillMediaGroup.com today.

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episode 6.9.2026 - Vacation Roadtrip, Faith Identity, GOP Leadership artwork

6.9.2026 - Vacation Roadtrip, Faith Identity, GOP Leadership

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2390029/fan_mail/new] Neal Larson and Julie Mason are back in the studio after Neal’s roadtrip loop through the Northwest, including a strong recommendation to put the Route of the Hiawatha Trail on the bucket list—an easy-to-plan, beautiful ride with a memorable tunnel stretch. From there, the conversation shifts into heavier territory: the Pentagon’s chaplain-faith categorization list that initially placed The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints outside a “Christian” umbrella. Neal walks through why that distinction lit a fuse politically (and personally), how he defines “Christian” in a straightforward way centered on belief in Jesus Christ, and why neither the government nor outside critics are the authority on someone’s faith—while also acknowledging the Pentagon likely approached it as a logistics document and later corrected course. The show then checks in on a Capitol Hill hearing focused on the Southern Poverty Law Center, reacting to testimony and allegations that SPLC money and influence have been used in ways that fuel division, including claims about funding flows tied to extremists and the labeling of mainstream conservative groups. After the break, Neal and Julie bring on Mark Fuller—current first vice chair of the Idaho Republican Party—who announces his run for IDGOP chair. Fuller frames his candidacy around behind-the-scenes “servant” leadership, stricter rule-following, rebuilding stable staffing and fundraising (including recurring small-dollar giving), and managing internal party factionalism through a more collaborative, council-style process rather than winner-take-all “team” politics. ## Highlights - Neal’s takeaways from the Route of the Hiawatha Trail and why it’s worth planning. - The Pentagon chaplain listing controversy and the renewed debate over LDS Christians. - Capitol Hill hearing reactions: SPLC allegations, “manufactured outrage,” and corporate gatekeeping concerns. - Mark Fuller enters the IDGOP chair race, focusing on rules, fundraising, and internal unity-through-process. Let’s talk advertising. When you want to advertise on the radio, you call the station, right? But what about Facebook, Instagram, Hulu, Disney+, Peacock, and other streaming platforms? You could try clicking around, reading books, or taking online courses to figure it out—or you can let us handle it. At Sandhill Media Group, we’re your local experts in both radio and digital marketing. Visit SandhillMediaGroup.com today.

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episode 6.8.2026 - Marine Sniper Journey, License Plate Readers, Community Safety artwork

6.8.2026 - Marine Sniper Journey, License Plate Readers, Community Safety

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2390029/fan_mail/new] Today’s show had a little bit of everything: Julie Mason and Adam Hall held down the fort while Neal Larson was out, and we started with an incredible conversation with veteran Brandon Seine. Brandon walked us through his path from small-town Montana to the Marines—boot camp at Camp Pendleton, infantry life, and the intense sniper indoc process that really tested his limits. He shared what it felt like to go from “peacetime military” to the reality of post‑9/11 deployment, including the early days in Kuwait when they were literally dropped into the desert with almost no infrastructure and waited for the moment things turned real. From there, Brandon explained his transition into private contracting—protecting U.S. interests overseas and later moving into executive protection and then cybersecurity at Microsoft. That career arc helped shape what he’s building now: **HYV Social**, a veteran-founded app designed to solve a real problem—disconnection and isolation—by making it easier for people to find nearby friends and discover events in real time, without ads, without algorithms, and with strong privacy controls (including user-controlled data retention). In hour two, Idaho Falls Police Chief Bryce Johnson joined Julie and Adam to answer listener questions and explain what **Flock** cameras are (license plate readers), how Idaho law limits their use and retention, and why the department believes they’re a major tool for catching violent offenders and solving serious crimes—while also addressing concerns about surveillance, misuse, and accountability. --- ### Highlights - Brandon Seine’s Marines timeline: Montana → boot camp → infantry → sniper indoc → post‑9/11 deployment realities   - How Brandon went from overseas dignitary/security contracting to Microsoft security—and why that led to building **HYV Social**   - HYV Social’s core idea: real-time nearby connections + discoverable events, built to get people off the phone and into real life   - Chief Bryce Johnson breaks down Flock/license plate readers: constitutionality, 30‑day retention, and how they’re used to solve crimes   - Quick hits: Idaho Falls kratom sales ban (city-level), alcohol ordinance cleanup, right-on-red vs red-arrow clarification, and local crime trends Let’s talk advertising. When you want to advertise on the radio, you call the station, right? But what about Facebook, Instagram, Hulu, Disney+, Peacock, and other streaming platforms? You could try clicking around, reading books, or taking online courses to figure it out—or you can let us handle it. At Sandhill Media Group, we’re your local experts in both radio and digital marketing. Visit SandhillMediaGroup.com today.

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episode 6.5.2026 - INTERVIEWS: Nathaniel K Gee, Jay Calderwood artwork

6.5.2026 - INTERVIEWS: Nathaniel K Gee, Jay Calderwood

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2390029/fan_mail/new] On the 50th anniversary of the Teton Dam disaster, we spent the hour walking back through the *whole* story with Dr. Nathaniel Gee—dam safety engineer and author of *Failure and Fortitude* [https://www.amazon.com/Failure-Fortitude-Politics-Shaped-Disaster/dp/1462151345]—starting with why the dam got built in the first place. We talked about the very human mix of ambition and pressure that pushed Teton forward: a political era where every district wanted a dam, elections that turned on local LDS culture as much as policy, and the hard truth that even after authorization, funding could be used as leverage. Nathaniel connects dots most of us only hear in pieces—local oral histories, Washington power plays, and the technical decisions inside the Bureau of Reclamation that set the stage for a project built on notoriously bad geology. From there we got into what went wrong technically (and why): fractured rock, massive grouting surprises, cost and environmental pressures, and a “new” key trench approach that left the core unprotected by proper filtering—basically letting water move material, not just seep. We also talked about what happened when the dam failed on June 5, 1976: the heartbreaking first fatality story, the near-impossible evacuation success that kept the death toll to 11, and what community looked like when 25,000 people needed help immediately—neighbors, churches, and radio becoming the backbone of recovery. We also heard directly from Jay Calderwood, who was on a bulldozer on top of the dam as it gave way—an eyewitness account that still stops you in your tracks. We closed with the question a lot of East Idaho keeps circling back to: could Teton be rebuilt? Engineering-wise, yes—but it wouldn’t be cheap, and the real debate is whether the benefits justify the cost. --- ### Highlights - How political strategy, appropriations power, and LDS cultural dynamics helped push the dam from idea to reality   - The engineering turning point: fractured foundation, unexpected grout needs, and a key trench design without proper filter protection   - Why only 11 lives were lost despite catastrophic flooding—and what that says about warnings, timing, and community response   - Jay Calderwood’s firsthand story escaping the collapsing dam while backing a dozer away from the break   - The rebuild question: a safe dam is possible, but the geology makes “cheap” impossible—so it becomes a benefit/cost fight Let’s talk advertising. When you want to advertise on the radio, you call the station, right? But what about Facebook, Instagram, Hulu, Disney+, Peacock, and other streaming platforms? You could try clicking around, reading books, or taking online courses to figure it out—or you can let us handle it. At Sandhill Media Group, we’re your local experts in both radio and digital marketing. Visit SandhillMediaGroup.com today.

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episode 6.4.2026 - Potato Farming, Social Media, Idaho History artwork

6.4.2026 - Potato Farming, Social Media, Idaho History

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2390029/fan_mail/new] Neal Larson is out traveling with his family, so Julie Mason runs the show with Adam Hall (a.k.a. “HOA Adam / Car Show Adam”) and special guest  Tehren Likes —better known online as the **Rocky Mountain Farmer**. Tehren shares how a simple drone purchase turned into a massive YouTube presence (130,000+ subscribers) by leaning into a niche most farming channels ignored: **potatoes**. The conversation gets real about what farming actually looks like—only a couple months in the tractor, and the rest of the year fixing broken equipment, managing pivots, cleaning ditches, pulling pumps, and trying to keep a high-cost operation moving. They dig into the eye-watering economics: $500k+ tractors, million-dollar machines, and fuel burns that make everyday gas complaints look silly. They also get into the water picture—how rainfall helps, why too much water can rot potatoes, and why drought and water uncertainty still hang over everything, even when you’re under contract and *have* to plant. Tehren explains crop rotation (potatoes into wheat, hay for weed pressure), why Idaho grows world-class potatoes (soil + climate), and where the industry is heading after a brutal pricing year—selling potatoes for pennies compared to break-even. The hour wraps with talk of an Idaho potato grower association forming to help stabilize the future. In the second hour, Julie and Adam preview special upcoming programming for the **50th anniversary of the Teton Dam flood**, then bring in Adam’s daughter **Paisley** to talk about being a paid page at the Idaho Legislature—what she did day-to-day, what she learned seeing government up close, and how school phone policies look from a student’s perspective. --- ### Highlights - How Tehren Likes  built “Rocky Mountain Farmer” by filling a potato-content gap on YouTube   - The true rhythm of farm life: tractors for a season, repairs and maintenance the rest of the year   - Big ag costs: half-million-dollar tractors, million-dollar combines, and $1,700 fuel fill-ups   - Water realities: rainfall benefits, rot risk for potatoes, and ongoing curtailment concerns   - Paisley’s Idaho page experience: committees, floor sessions, and behind-the-scenes Capitol work   Let’s talk advertising. When you want to advertise on the radio, you call the station, right? But what about Facebook, Instagram, Hulu, Disney+, Peacock, and other streaming platforms? You could try clicking around, reading books, or taking online courses to figure it out—or you can let us handle it. At Sandhill Media Group, we’re your local experts in both radio and digital marketing. Visit SandhillMediaGroup.com today.

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