Kayal and Company

One-Dollar Crab Fries,

1 h 4 min · 10 jul 2026
aflevering One-Dollar Crab Fries, artwork

Beschrijving

The second half turns to Graham Platner’s exit from Maine’s Senate race after a rape allegation he denies. We separate accusation from conviction, debate due process, and question a replacement system that could leave party officials choosing a nominee after voters cast ballots. Harry Enten’s numbers then show Democratic incumbents facing a rare primary revolt. Pete Ciarrocchi closes the hour with one-dollar Crabfries, the 13th annual fundraiser, scholarships for police families, and support for Families Behind the Badge. We continue the primary discussion with six House Democrats facing defeat, a figure that could reach a 50-year high. The crew compares the energy behind MAGA voters with the Democratic Party’s socialist wing, asks who could pull Democrats toward the center, and considers John Fetterman’s place in that fight. A debate over Nordic economies, taxes, and government services leads directly into Philadelphia’s plastic-bag ban and a survey finding widespread noncompliance. The cut sheet returns to the Fort Wayne arson case before Dawn reports on two children and dozens of animals removed from a Northeast Philadelphia house in deplorable condition. We then hear the much warmer story of Sgt. Travis Henderson, who finds a nonverbal child with autism at a Target and uses toy dinosaurs to gain his trust. Sean connects that response to training, hiring, leadership, and the kind of policing that builds public confidence. A 7-foot-3 officer in Kemah, Texas, gives the crew another lighter moment before the show turns to federal election monitors assigned to jurisdictions in six states. We debate voter rolls, legal eligibility, and public confidence, then play a field-sobriety stop that becomes a comedy bit. A Waymo vehicle reports teenagers carrying toy guns and alcohol, and we stress the danger of realistic weapons during a police stop. The hour ends with Karoline Leavitt’s clash with Kaitlan Collins and Dawn’s account of the pressure conservative women face in television news.

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Alle afleveringen

489 afleveringen

aflevering Rest In Peace Christopher Forsythe artwork

Rest In Peace Christopher Forsythe

The team confirms his identity through local reporting, offers condolences and later speaks with listener Kevin about Forsythe. Phil Almquist closes the Kayal and Company portion with events from music history before Dawn begins Dawn’s Big Three with the June inflation June consumer prices falling four-tenths of a percent and core prices staying flat for the month. We hear Rick Santelli react to the surprise report, compare the yearly readings with the prior month and discuss what the data means for President Trump, Republicans and Federal Reserve chairman Kevin Warsh’s Capitol Hill testimony. The second story concerns Kaitlyn Tracey, a Canadian citizen living in New Jersey who is accused of striking an underage girl on the Point Pleasant Beach boardwalk over clothing that praises Trump and ICE. Dawn details the simple-assault, child-endangerment, harassment and obstruction charges, the ICE detainer and the plea for help posted by Tracey’s husband. The crew reacts to the alleged assault and the husband’s video. The third story begins with Flagler County deputies rescuing dogs and pigeons from the back of a sweltering U-Haul and arresting two men on animal-cruelty charges. Dawn then closes on a happier item: the Freedom 250 Grand Prix, Roger Penske’s White House appearance and the prospect of IndyCars racing near the National Mall. The final minutes mix Penske’s Philadelphia roots, Nick Kayal’s moving-truck memories

14 jul 202635 min
aflevering Matt Rooney Gets There Late artwork

Matt Rooney Gets There Late

Rooney Tuesday begins late because Matt Rooney battles sunscreen, water day and New Jersey road construction. He calls Lindsey Graham’s death a major loss, backs Darline Graham Nordone’s temporary appointment and praises Graham as a senator who appears to leave office without becoming fabulously rich. Shawn’s Trump impression then renames Harrisburg as Trumpsburg while Rooney takes more heat for his arrival time. Fight Club features a street brawl submitted by Gary Stam, followed by a discussion of deception, dating and violence. The Cut Sheet then shifts to Precious Gifts Care Center in Dunellen, where the owner is accused of giving children melatonin during nap time without parental consent. Rooney and the crew discuss possible licensing action, health risks and the rule that no daycare worker gets to medicate a child without permission. The tone changes when St. Kristin alerts the crew that longtime listener Christopher Forsythe appears to be the victim in a South Whitehall house fire.

14 jul 202632 min
aflevering Lindsey Graham’s Successor artwork

Lindsey Graham’s Successor

Cut Sheet begins with Darline Graham Nordone accepting the appointment to finish Lindsey Graham’s Senate term and the first look at South Carolina’s coming Republican primary. We assess Darline Graham Nordone’s emotional remarks, the South Carolina Senate field and which Republican could carry Lindsey Graham’s work forward. The SAVE America Act brings a sharp fight over proof of citizenship and voter ID, with Dawn rejecting claims that married women are unable to update documents. The crew compares voting rules with the identification demanded for travel, alcohol purchases and other daily transactions. The Freedom 250 Grand Prix sends the discussion from election law to race cars flying down Pennsylvania Avenue. We play Trump’s announcement, discuss his ease around athletes and defend IndyCar and NASCAR drivers as real athletes. Local crime returns with the report on Sincere Camps, the execution-style killing of Anshul Kuncha and the question of how violent groups recruit children before they reach their teen years. A Bucks County man’s dating-app match allegedly arrives at his home with wine and water ice after breaking in, which sends the crew into stories about dating sites and political disputes inside families. Later, we question why Graham Platner’s accuser has not filed charges, examine Mamdani’s comments about New York rape data and the state’s expanded rape statute, then close with Roman Butzlaff’s simple wave turning a group of neighbors into a close community.

14 jul 20261 h 3 min
aflevering Maine ICE Fallout artwork

Maine ICE Fallout

We continue the Maine discussion with Senate candidate Nirav Shah’s remarks, competing claims about Guerrero’s status and the crew’s insistence that legal status does not permit anyone to drive at law enforcement. Shawn draws from his own swatting encounter to explain why calm compliance matters, and the crew connects the rapid protest response with Maine’s recent Senate turmoil. Zohran Mamdani’s call to abolish ICE adds fuel to the argument. The conversation then turns to Sheridan Gorman, the Loyola student killed in Chicago, before CNBC’s 2026 quality-of-life rankings take over the hour. CNBC places Tennessee first among the ten worst states to live in, followed by Texas, Indiana, Louisiana and Georgia, while domestic migration data shows people moving into many of those same states. We compare gains in North Carolina, Texas and Tennessee with losses in California, New York and New Jersey. We talk retirement plans, Florida, the Carolinas, remote work and why many residents seek lower taxes and fewer government demands. The crew argues that CNBC’s scoring choices tell a political story that clashes with the movement of actual residents.

14 jul 202638 min
aflevering Kyle Schwarber Gets Robbed artwork

Kyle Schwarber Gets Robbed

We begin with Kyle Schwarber’s Home Run Derby loss to Jordan Walker and Philadelphia’s latest case of joy slipping away at the finish line. The crew debates the magenta bonus ball, Shawn Farash defends his Texas Rangers fandom, and Gary Stam’s flood of Fight Club emails earns him a wardrobe punishment. We also preview the Maine ICE shooting, CNBC’s state rankings, birthright citizenship, the Cut Sheet, Rooney Tuesday and Fight Club. Dawn’s first news block moves from Trump’s planned Strait of Hormuz blockade and the region’s heat alerts to four people shot during a basketball game at James Finnegan Playground. She reports the arrest of 14-year-old Sincere Camps in the killing of pizza delivery driver Anshul Kuncha, then turns to Colin Cassidy’s critical injuries after police say Phillip Prince intentionally strikes him with a Jeep in Glenside. The hour also covers four confirmed microbursts, lingering power outages and preparations for the All-Star Game at Citizens Bank Park. The Big Take focuses on the fatal ICE shooting of Joan Sebastian Guerrero in Biddeford, Maine. We play local reports, protest footage, a witness account and coverage of demonstrations near Senator Susan Collins’ office, while arguing that a vehicle can become a deadly weapon against officers. We also discuss accusations that major news feeds ignored Graham Platner’s earlier controversies, Tennessee’s growing 287(g) participation and the crew’s firm support for immigration enforcement.

14 jul 202654 min