Kayal and Company

The Laborers And The Bureaucrats: Kayal And Company Exposes The Multi-Million Dollar Woke School Grift

3 h 51 min · 23 jun 2026
aflevering The Laborers And The Bureaucrats: Kayal And Company Exposes The Multi-Million Dollar Woke School Grift artwork

Beschrijving

Kayal and Company opens Tuesday's broadcast breaking down a massive, decades-long global health study out of China tracking 41,000 adults. The data completely shatters mainstream public health advice by proving that sitting too little doing manual labor is just as deadly as sitting too much. We dive straight into the local grift as Philadelphia Mayor Cherelle Parker heads to Harrisburg begging for a quarter-billion dollars to renovate aging city schools. We call out the sheer absurdity of this move, pointing out that the city is currently sitting on a projected $770 million economic windfall from hosting six FIFA World Cup matches. Instead of playing political games with tax credit scholarship programs, we demand that politicians start using this historic revenue to finally install basic air conditioning for Philadelphia students. The crew shifts national focus toward the continuous corporate media overreaches and the weaponization of bureaucratic agencies. We aggressively break down ABC’s desperate on-air petition campaign to shield The View from equal-time rules by claiming the daytime talk show represents a "bona fide news program." We passionately defend FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr's efforts to enforce transparency rules and introduce parental warning labels for radical gender identity narratives in children’s programming. Additionally, Matt Rooney joins us on this Rooney Tuesday to dissect the latest cultural betrayals from political pundits, including Tucker Carlson’s sweeping announcement that he will no longer support the institutional Republican Party. We close out the show with a heavy-hitting look at newly unsealed court discovery evidence, including heart-wrenching 911 calls and police bodycam footage tracking the open-and-shut first-degree murder conviction of Carmelo Anthony. Moving over to the nation’s capital, we audit the wild claims surrounding the newly refurbished Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool, where a mysterious 350-foot slit in the lining has triggered massive toxic algae blooms.

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aflevering Full Show For Friday July 3 2026 artwork

Full Show For Friday July 3 2026

We open Kayal and Company on America 250 Eve with Shawn Farash and Ana Hummel running through the strange, funny, and serious stories setting the tone for the holiday weekend. We start in Philadelphia, where the heat wave becomes a major local concern, Congress marks the nation’s 250th birthday at Independence Hall, and new arrests are made in the murder of Penn State student Billy Schmidt. Ana also brings updates on a parasitic illness spreading in multiple states, while Phil Almquist covers the Phillies’ loss to Pittsburgh, the Sixers’ reported moves, and the unbelievable Goodwill find tied to Wilt Chamberlain. We spend a major part of the morning on New York’s heat, Con Edison outages, Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s 78-degree thermostat push, and the optics of Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce’s massive Madison Square Garden wedding happening while other residents sweat through power problems. From there, we dig into Tim Walz’s pardon controversy in Minnesota, AOC’s move in the Michigan Senate race, Donald Trump’s plan for a midterm convention, and a sharp debate over immigration, deportations, worksite raids, birthright citizenship, and how far Democrats have shifted from Barack Obama-era border rhetoric. The show moves from politics to public behavior, with airplane dress codes, a fitness influencer’s flight outfit, a viral plane-yoga stunt, and a Pennsylvania lawmaker kicked off the House floor over a patriotic jacket. We also get into the Barbary Wars, America’s founding, the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool indictment, Fight Club’s roofers’ rumble, a skydiving steak dinner, the Supreme Court ruling on transgender athletes in girls’ and women’s sports, Phil’s This Day in Music History, and a final patriotic handoff to Kathy Barnett before the 10 AM hour.

Gisteren3 h 17 min
aflevering One Brutal Gator Call artwork

One Brutal Gator Call

Politics returns with Jonathan Turley defending Amy Coney Barrett and Sean making the case that Supreme Court justices rule on law, not loyalty to the president who appointed them. The crew also gets into birthright citizenship, the 14th Amendment, mail ballots after Election Day, Europe, immigration, and demographic fears. The hour ends with a horrific Michigan case involving the death of seven-year-old Casper O’Brien, a side conversation about mukbang videos, a woods brawl clip, and another push for first-responder family donations. The final cut-sheet run, starting with Precious Bland, the Miami mother found not guilty by reason of insanity after the bathtub death of her 15-month-old daughter. The crew reacts to the COVID psychosis defense, the court ruling, and Bland saying she wants to rebuild her life. Sean, Anna, and Greg argue that a finding of insanity should still mean long-term confinement when a child is dead. Three is the fatal Florida alligator attack involving Brittany Clark in the Econlockhatchee River. The crew plays portions of the 911 call, reacts to the caller trying to explain that Clark’s arms are badly injured, and criticizes the dispatcher’s line of questioning during the emergency. The story turns into a broader warning about Florida rivers, gator territory, and why nobody should assume open water there is harmless. The final stretch covers a San Diego man filing a $35 million claim after tripping over the metal base of a removed parking meter and suffering severe injuries. The crew debates whether it is a real liability case or just a terrible accident, focusing on exposed hardware, cones, sidewalk hazards, and what any reasonable person should notice. Phil then closes the show with July 2 music history, including Tesla’s Five Man Acoustical Jam, before the crew signs off.

2 jul 20261 h 15 min
aflevering “We’re All Trans” Meets The 78-Degree Thermostat: artwork

“We’re All Trans” Meets The 78-Degree Thermostat:

The cut sheet adds Empire State Building climbers, a peace banner, Trump and a Teddy Roosevelt hologram, NBC explaining the phrase “biological male,” James Talarico on trans athletes, a Texas rally declaring “we’re all trans,” Josh Shapiro trying to answer for far-left candidates, Buffalo canceling downtown Fourth fireworks, Mamdani’s tax pitch, EV power demand, Powassan tick virus cases, and Ben to the Shore fundraising. Heat-dome jokes, audience reaction, and a major polling conversation about pride in America. Sean plays Harry Enten’s CNN numbers showing Republicans remain overwhelmingly proud to be American while Democratic pride drops sharply. The crew argues that America is still the greatest country and the best time to be alive, even as parts of the left sound more interested in grievance than gratitude. The hour moves into health and personal discipline when Sean discusses Medicare access to certain GLP-1 drugs for eligible seniors. That turns into a full crew conversation about slimming drugs, food noise, habits, rebound eating, side effects, fasting, coffee, gym routines, treadmill work, cycling, and Anna’s jiu-jitsu training. Sean and Anna talk about how hunger passes, how delayed breakfast can help, and why people still need structure even when medication helps.

2 jul 202640 min
aflevering How Did It Get There?”: Socialists, Heat Dome Panic, And The Florida Butt-Cocaine Defense artwork

How Did It Get There?”: Socialists, Heat Dome Panic, And The Florida Butt-Cocaine Defense

The 7 AM hour starts with immigration, Colorado, and the growing power of Democratic Socialists. Sean cites reports of large-scale immigration arrests, then moves to Colorado, where Melat Kiros defeats longtime Rep. Diana DeGette in the Democratic primary for the 1st District. The crew plays Kiros’s comments linking the September 11 attacks to American foreign policy and debates the difference between criticizing foreign policy and sounding like America had it coming. Callers and the crew dig into how the Democratic Party moves from liberal to progressive to socialist, with Sean warning that the shift is no longer fringe. Manny Rutinel’s win in Colorado’s 8th District becomes another warning sign because that district is much more competitive. The crew connects low-turnout primaries, DSA organizing, Harry Enten’s Senate math, Maine’s Senate race, and mail ballots after Election Day into a larger argument about why Republicans should not get comfortable. The hour then gets lighter and stranger with Reagan Cox’s Florida butt-cocaine case, her alleged “intimate encounter” explanation, and the crew’s disbelief at the defense.

2 jul 202637 min
aflevering Chris Rabb Torches The Declaration, Mamdani Sets The Thermostat, And Sean Hates The Band Box artwork

Chris Rabb Torches The Declaration, Mamdani Sets The Thermostat, And Sean Hates The Band Box

We begin at 6 AM with Sean Farash, Anna Hummel, and Greg Stocker setting the table for a packed Thursday show. Sean previews Chris Rabb’s Declaration of Independence comments, socialist primary wins in Colorado, and the Florida woman accused of denying ownership of cocaine found during a jail intake search. The crew also starts the morning with vault toilet sunglasses, Anna’s knee trouble from jiu-jitsu, Team USA soccer jokes, and an Amazon Prime gas discount that turns into a rant about retail pricing games. The news run centers on dangerous heat in Philadelphia, one teen arrested in the murder of Penn State student Billy Schmidt, a second suspect still wanted, and the stepfather accused of helping one suspect leave Pennsylvania. Anna also covers Philadelphia extending its heat health emergency, Temple student Bryce Wolfe being killed in a Kelly Drive hit-and-run, Pennsylvania Trooper Michael Pahira being killed on I-81, and medical teams preparing for heat problems at the FIFA Fan Festival. Sports bring Phillies-Pirates, Sean’s Citizens Bank Park band-box complaint, the Sixers acquiring Jaylen Brown for Paul George and picks, and Flyers extensions for Tyson Foerster and Dan Vladar. The hour then turns hard into politics as the crew plays Chris Rabb’s comments about the Declaration, slavery, Indigenous people, stolen land, and reparations. Sean, Anna, and Greg argue Rabb’s message gives voters grievance instead of answers on real costs, while Mamdani’s 78-degree thermostat comments become the morning’s symbol of socialist rules for everyone else.

2 jul 202652 min