All Episodes

May 13, 2026 29 mins
Scott Petersen joins me after pulling off the upset yesterday.  Then, a glimpse at the PO'd presumed Democratic winner in NE-02.
Listen
Watch
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
A lot of response to the primary election throughout the
show day, and that'll continue a bit into this hour
of the program, because really there were two races that
I felt were other than obviously some of the legislative
races and some of those that only impact pockets here
or there, there were two races that impacted a large

(00:21):
number of voters. And when I say large number of voters,
I mean the embarrassingly small percentage of people who actually
vote in a primary election and then represent the larger
number of voters who then complain that they didn't participate
and they're angry about what the other people did on
their behalf that number. There were two races impacting that

(00:44):
number that I thought were especially contentious and would be
very interested in to follow. Obviously, one the Democratic race
for Nebraska's second congressional district, which right now it appears
that Denise Powell will take down John Cavanaugh in that race,
she has a lead. It's officially too close to call,

(01:05):
but it's looking good for Denise Powell. We talked about
that with Brinker Harding sailed right through unopposed in the
Republican primary there. This is to take over Don Bacon's seat.
And then the other one is frankly not a race
that anyone really has ever paid ahole lot of attention to.
It's secretary of State, the entire state of Nebraska. It's

(01:27):
a big race, is an important one, and it featured
an incumbent eight year incumbent in Bob Evnen, Republican. But
he had a challenger in this Republican primary. That challenger
ended up winning that race, which meant that Bob Evnen,
on his own Secretary of State page had to post

(01:50):
the results that he lost the Republican primary. The challenger
joins us now he is the winner of the secretary
of State's race. A statement here from Bob Evnan conceding
as much. Scott Peterson joins us back here on eleven
ten kfab Scott, good morning and congratulations.

Speaker 2 (02:10):
Yeah, good morning, Scott. I appreciate you having me on.

Speaker 1 (02:13):
I noticed that in this statement from Evnen he didn't
mention you. Did you get a call from him?

Speaker 2 (02:20):
Not yet.

Speaker 1 (02:22):
When you were here on Monday, you wrapped up this
hour with me just as Bob Evnen was coming in
to be on Jean Stothard show. You guys met in
the hall and there was a handshake and some shall
we say, pleasantries were exchanged. I got the impression that

(02:42):
that's really the first time. I'm sure it's not the
first time you guys have met, but that's the first
time you guys have met in this campaign. Am I right?

Speaker 2 (02:51):
No, No, I've known Bob for a long time and
we'd get along great. There's no problem there, absolutely not.
I just thought that we could do better at Secuary State.
You know the issues like I talked about restoring confidence
in the election systems and quite awesome, restoring confidence in leaders.

Speaker 1 (03:07):
You know.

Speaker 2 (03:07):
The other problem we have is people we work hard
and elect people and then they go to Washington or
go to Lincoln to the legislature and they don't do anything.
And people are getting frustrated with that. And as a result,
they're say, white vote and we're losing that confidence in voting.

Speaker 1 (03:24):
We're going to talk some specifics about some things that
you would like to see happen differently on election days
to come. But let's spend a little bit more time
talking strategy, because it's not like you just now are
automatically the next Secretary of State. You do have a
democratic challenger in Sarah Slattery. What do we know about her?

Speaker 2 (03:45):
First of all, I haven't haven't really looked into it
too much. I know that if we do what we're
supposed to do in a campaign, we should have a
big victory in November, and I will work hard and
make sure that we do that. Looking forward to with
a lot of candidates helping a lot of candidates along
the way, it'll be fun to go out and campaign

(04:06):
with people.

Speaker 1 (04:07):
Here's a recent post on the Sarah Slattery for Nebraska
Secretary of State Facebook page said, I'm always shocked when
people try to troll me and say I'm dumb. They
clearly don't know me very well. The attacks on my
character and my intelligence have begun again. If you believe
in me and my hard work for Nebraskans, throw a
few bucks my way. It got twenty one likes, But

(04:28):
you know there'd be a lot of Democrat turnout across
Nebraska here. And when you've got Jim Pillen, our governor,
who received does thousands of votes fewer than Pete Ricketts
or Mike Hilgers in some of these state wide races,
that could be an issue. Obviously, Republicans have a nice
majority in Nebraska, but it seems to me Scott from

(04:52):
a strategy standpoint, to be elected in November our next
secretary of State, you don't so much have to beat
Sarah Lattery and the Democrats. You have to convince the
right now seventy seven and eighty Bob Evnan votes to
then vote for you in November. How do you do that?

Speaker 2 (05:11):
Oh, I think we will have a great opportunity to
do that. You know, right now, you know we have
we have challenges in Nebraska politics. We're divided. We're divided,
you know Trump, people like Trump and don't like Trump,
and locally if people like bacon and some people don't
like Bacon. So I think there's a great opportunity to
help bring that together. I'll look forward to campaigning with

(05:33):
Governor Pillen and Pete Ricketts and Brinker Harding and and
hopefully come together and work hard and really win the
important races in Nebraska. It's going to be a great
opportunity to do that, and I'm looking forward to it.

Speaker 1 (05:45):
How do you feel primary election day went and do
you feel like there was any funny business or something
that should be looked into in the wake of it.

Speaker 2 (05:54):
No, Actually, I think it went pretty much as we expected.
The race was even a little closer than I expected.
But I think Bob's campaign consultant did a good job
of doing what he could with what he had to
work with. Bob was in a very popular candidate statewide,
and a lot of it was because, you know, people
losing confidence and elections. You know, they're still mad about

(06:17):
twenty twenty. They think there were shenanigans in twenty twenty
and they're still not happy with the response to that.
Nobody's been held accountable, and I think finally people are
going to be held accountable in Georgia and Arizona and Michigan.
It's in the courts, the Department Justices doing some things,
and once that starts happening, people are going to start
getting a little more excited about electing people if you

(06:38):
see things that, you know, get things done, hold people accountable,
get some things. The Save Act and the Senate. There's
no reason that doesn't get past. It's an eighty twenty issue,
so they're frustrated that that doesn't get done. So who
knows what's going to happen, But it's going to be
a fun time here through November.

Speaker 1 (06:56):
Not to re litigate this race. He won by ten
points here across this this race is over. But doesn't
the fact that we had a good, smooth primary and
you obviously agree with the results. Doesn't that kind of
blow some of your argument out of the water that
we needed to change and how we do elections in
the state.

Speaker 2 (07:14):
Yeah, we can correct a couple of things. The assault
you guys had on me the other day accusing me
of saying there's voter fraud in Douglas County, there's voter
fraud in Sarvey County. I've never said that. Go look
at my record. I've never said that. I've said confidence
in elections. People don't have confidence in our election systems,
and that's the job of the Secretary State to make

(07:35):
sure they do. And there's all kinds of things you
can do, be transparent and prove that we have great
election systems, and there's a lot of things you can
do for clarification.

Speaker 1 (07:46):
Who was doing an assault on you?

Speaker 2 (07:50):
Well, if you recognize dirty campaigning, dirty campaigning is when
they make things up. Its lies, and you know, negative campaigning.
If I said something, did something and they bring that
out to the public, that's negative. That's okay, But dirty
campaign when you make things up. And when Bran Cruz
came on and he said, accuse me of saying there's

(08:11):
voter fraud in Douglas County, and I think Norris san
Dean from Sarby County said the same thing. Oh I
accused of Sarby County of voter fraud. I never have.
And that's dirty campaigning.

Speaker 1 (08:23):
Like I said, this was a contentious campaign for Secretary
of State, a race that most Nebraskans haven't really paid
very close attention to, but they were paying attention here
Scott Peterson. You saw signs across the state. It was
displayed in the results of this state wide election. Scott
Peterson is your winner from the Republican Secretary of State

(08:44):
race yesterday. He'll take on Sarah Slattery, the Democrat, in November.
I got a few more minutes with Scott here on
eleven ten kfab. This is something where I'm always very
interested when you got someone that says, I know there's
proof of alien life. You've got UFO files and alien autopsies,
and I'm going to get into government and I'm going
to figure it out. Well, you've kind of done that now.

(09:06):
You've been saying like other people have questions about twenty
twenty and we could do this better. You are one
big step closer to getting the keys to these uh
these locked doors. What should you win in November? What
are you going to do to look back at twenty
twenty and take whatever it is you learn from that

(09:27):
forward to twenty twenty.

Speaker 2 (09:28):
Eight and just that. Okay, if I get elected in November,
now it's up to me to actually do what I
say I was going to do. And and I've laid
out a couple of things over the course of campaigning.
I've kind of looked at, you know, the biggest things
that we can do or should push to do or
get done. And one of the things that is corrupting

(09:50):
our elections is that mail in ballots, and we need
to correct Jim Rose. President Trump doesn't like mail in ballots,
and I'll send him some information if he wants to
double check that, but he wants to get rid of
mail in bouts. He says it corrupts our elections. And
in Nebraska we have that same thing. We have thirty
five days of mail in balloting. And what that does

(10:11):
It encourages outside money and outside forces to come into
Nebraska and harvest votes if you want to call it that,
or collect votes, collect Democrat votes, and we lose a
lot of races in Omaha and Lincoln, and the folks
we send to the legislature and some of these power
boards and whatever, they aren't supporting rural Nebraska. They aren't
supporting for life Nebraska, or they aren't supporting a lot

(10:32):
of the Nebraska values that we have a lot of people.

Speaker 1 (10:35):
Well, first of all, if you've listened to this radio
station for any length of time, you know that there
is no correcting Jim Rose, at least nothing that saying.
I tried.

Speaker 2 (10:45):
I offered to have a copy with him, and I
want to like to help him a little bit. But wow,
he gets going and it's like and oh, by the way,
the other one about I want to modernize the election
no touchscreen and voting on your phone. Absolutely not. That's
the wrong way to go. So I don't know where
he came up with that, but I have to have
a coffee and get him.

Speaker 1 (11:06):
Up to speed on some good luck with that. I
tried to correct him as he was saying that. I said, well,
and that Scott, I never got the impression that's what
Scott wanted. But he's coming on here in a few
minutes and we can ask him. I'm glad to get
that clarification. It'll have an impact in November. But as
we look ahead to November, obviously nothing changes between now

(11:27):
and then unless there's a special session of the legislature
and they do things like throw out mail in ballots
and drop boxes across the community. So as you look
ahead of twenty twenty eight, there are some people who
get the impression that Trump and then by vers you
you want to do away with like mail in balloting.

(11:49):
They say, but I live in Arizona during the winter
and I want to vote. I'm in the military. I
won't be able to vote. That's not what we're talking about, right, what.

Speaker 2 (11:57):
Are we talking about? No, No, that's called the true
absentee voting. If the military, absolutely and if mail in
is the best way to get them to vote, that's
what has to happen. And same with people that are
physically unable to get to the polls, absolutely absent de voting.
And even you know in Nebraska some of the counties

(12:18):
are huge and you might live a prohibitive distance from
the polling, Well you should probably qualify for mail in voting.
We could come up with a solution there and actually
make everyone happy because those eleven mail in counties, we
have a lot of those people want to vote in person,
but they can't because somebody decided to go all mail in.
So there's so many things to clean up, and it

(12:39):
will absolutely help Nebraska in the long run.

Speaker 1 (12:42):
Now, as you and I talked about on Monday, you
kind of come from this division in Republican Party politics
in our area and in our state. We talked about
it with the state GOP chair, Mary Jane Trumper on
Tuesday morning. And so now you're on a state wide
ballot with names like Pete Ricketts Jim Pillin, do you

(13:03):
feel like, because there have been some local party officials
who have not endorsed them in their reelection bids, do
you feel like they deserve to be re elected and
people should fill in the ballot for all of you
on November.

Speaker 2 (13:15):
In November, oh, yeah, absolutely, we got a lot of
work to do. You got to help Pete Ricketts get elected,
Governor Pillan get elected, and yeah, yeah, there's got a
lot of good Republicans to go to work and help.

Speaker 1 (13:28):
Out well, Scott, I appreciate your willingness to be on here,
and congratulations to you and Anne. When you found out
you won last night. How did that conversation go with
you and your wife?

Speaker 2 (13:40):
Hey, I was excited because I get to play pickleball
for the first time in about three months. I've been
running around the state like a madman. I haven't played
any pickleball, so I got as soon as I'm off
the phone here, I got another interview, and then I'm
going to go play pickleball.

Speaker 1 (13:51):
It's a beautiful day for it. I hope you're able
to do it outside. I don't know how you get
a court. It's impossible, but Scott, thank you very much.
We'll talk again soon.

Speaker 2 (14:01):
Yeah, thanks for having me on.

Speaker 1 (14:02):
That is your Republican nominee for Secretary of State in
Nebraska and pickleball enthusiast Scott Peterson here on news radio
eleven ten kfab. I thought, from a statewide standpoint, it
was interesting to me that Pete Ricketts, who had a
number of challengers for his reelection bid in the Republican

(14:25):
primary for November, Pete Riggotts picked up eighty two percent
of the vote, one hundred and fifty five thousand plus votes.
But Jim Pillen, who also had a number of people
challenging him in the Republican primary for governor, he got
seventy six percent of the vote, six points and something

(14:49):
like almost twenty thousand votes separating Pete Ricketts and Jim Pillen.
Does Jim Pillen have an issue with roading support? Can
that be rebuilt? Was it just maybe someone like a
John Walls. Hey, you know what, Now that I say

(15:10):
that out loud, I wonder if maybe that had to
do with it the number, because I didn't think about
this until right now. I want how many people went
and voted for Walls on the Republican primary ticket for governor, thinking, oh,

(15:34):
I don't like Jim Pillon, I'm going to vote for
that Democrat Walls. There's a different Walls, that is Lynn Walls,
distant cousin I think by marriage to the Governor of Minnesota,
Tim Walls. Lynn Walls sailed right through the Democratic primary

(15:56):
and she'll take on Jim Pillon in November for the position.
But there is a John Walls, a Republican in that primary,
and he ran second to Pilling with ten percent. I
wonder how many complete blithering idiots out there thought, oh, Wall,
I don't like Pilling, or I'm a Democrat. I don't
have much to vote on here across the state, so

(16:18):
I'm going to choose the Republican Party take it, which
you can do in the primary, just so I can
vote against Jim Pillen and vote for Walls because I
like her. And then they've filled in the bubble for
him Republican John Walls, thinking they were voting for Lynn Walls,
the Democrat. Maybe or it's either that or Pilling has

(16:44):
lost some support and needs to do a good job
of winning over people to go out and vote for
him here in Nebraska. Now does he really?

Speaker 3 (16:53):
I think it's a low information voter, That's what I'm
going with.

Speaker 1 (16:56):
Ye, most issues, most issues loose can be traced back
to that. But I mean, you look at the statewide
races in Nebraska. You got a couple of things at
play here. The Republicans, in terms of those who are
registered to vote and declare themselves Republicans, greatly out distance

(17:17):
the Democrats in the states, so most of the Democrats
don't even put up a candidate, or in the case
of the talking about Pete Ricketts, he'll be taking on
the Democratic challenger in November Cindy Burbank. Cindy Burbank ran
for this position and she got over one hundred thousand votes,
and she will be the Democratic nominee for November unless

(17:42):
and this really shows what's going on with statewide Nebraska
Democratic Party politics. It's thought that because she has said
as much, she'll drop out of the race and throw
her support and that of the party behind independent Senate
candidate Dan Osborne Horn, who was not on the ballot
yesterday and has yet to receive any votes. I don't

(18:04):
know if he's officially even qualified for the November ballot,
but that shouldn't be an issue. But it sounds like
the Democrat in this race one and will drop out
and the entire party will wrap their arms around someone
who only really makes an ovation of the Democrats when
it's time to raise money. Dan Osborne is he likes

(18:27):
some Republican issues, he likes some Democratic issues. He gets
a lot of Democratic money, and now he's got the
full part of the Democratic Party in Nebraska. But tell
me he's not going to caucus with the Democrats if
he's elected in November. Beating Pete Ricketts that'll be a
very interesting race.

Speaker 3 (18:44):
Well, wait a minute, you're confusing me. Is Dan Osborne
a Republican or Democrat?

Speaker 1 (18:50):
Independent?

Speaker 3 (18:52):
I see? I see? Okay, that makes more sense. In
didn't the National Democratic Party try to do this once
with Kamala Harris Tell the Democratic Party who they were
going to be running Welling for.

Speaker 1 (19:07):
That's a little different because Kamala didn't get anyone to
vote for. She was just acclimated to the party platform
to take.

Speaker 3 (19:15):
On the Democratic Party decided the Democrat voted no well
or who would be voted on?

Speaker 1 (19:20):
Who would be in the race the Demo? Yeah, the
Democrats will have a chance at least to go and
vote for Dan Osborne in November, even though he will
not have a D by his name. I see, So
is a look, it's it's in the same ballpark. They
ran someone who would drop out of the race if
she won, just to clear a bigger path for Dan Osborne,

(19:41):
who doesn't want to have that mantle of the Democratic
Party platform in Nebraska. That's a sad state of affairs
statewide for Nebraska. Democrats. Now their better position, and the
thing they're really excited about is Nebraska's second congressional district.
As you know, Don Bacon not running for re election.
Bring harding Omaha City council person had no problem yesterday

(20:03):
because he was unopposed for the republic Republican party position
for this race he'll take on in November. Right now,
it's only about one thousand votes separating Denise Powell and
John Cavanaugh. It's about two points. That's about a little
more than a thousand votes. And that is I mean

(20:27):
right now, it's officially they say there's still a few
more votes out there to count. With a lot of
people in the race, it's not impossible for John Cavanaugh
to come back in this race, but it is not probable.
So it appears that Denise Pod Powell and these remember
her ads, I'm a p Od mom, and I want

(20:48):
to take what do you Pode about? I can't wait
to ask her, and I hope she'll come on this
program and talk here because it appears that Denise Powell
was not only gonna be the Democratic nominee for Nebraska's
second congressional district, but Jim Rose says, in a mid
term election year with a lot of people down on
Trump and Mega and Republicans and gas prizes, up that

(21:11):
Denise Powell will win this race handily in November. I say,
there's a long time between now and November, and we'll
be talking about that and a whole lot more from
now until then. Fox News Update shortly, Scott Voice. There's
Lucy Chapman, whose hair is absolutely perfect today. I love

(21:34):
when you've got the kind of curly I don't want
to say words that might sound they might have a
negative connotation, like frizzy, humid hair is just very very cool.
I love when your hair is like that.

Speaker 3 (21:50):
Why, thank you very much. I appreciate that. It's pretty easy.

Speaker 1 (21:53):
And now here's the part where you then tell me
how much you like my hair like that?

Speaker 3 (22:00):
It's a kind of a blackened pepper. Yeah, what do
you call it? Black and white?

Speaker 1 (22:06):
Pack and pepper, same thing, salt and pepper.

Speaker 3 (22:08):
Salt and pepper. That's what I couldn't think of it. Yeah, Yeah,
salt and pepper. It's been a tough day.

Speaker 1 (22:12):
Yeah, there's a lot more salt than pepper. Kind of
a fan of this hairstyle. I call it the worldly lesbian?
Am I pulling it off?

Speaker 3 (22:21):
Yes? Is there any other style that you could go with? Like?
Is your hair curly. Is it curly? Are you straighten
it every day?

Speaker 1 (22:29):
No? I don't. I had long hair for one year
sophomore year at college. I got a hair cut right
before the year started, and then just didn't get it cut.
And then after a while I was like, Oh, if
I'm just not going to get it cut, I'm going
to go the entire year. And then last week of
school sophomore year of college, I woke up one morning

(22:50):
with hair in my mouth and it was no. It
was still attached to my head, and I said that's enough,
and I went and got a cut that day. Yeah,
it looked terrible then too. It's all looked terrible.

Speaker 3 (23:03):
It looks great. You look you look very young and great.

Speaker 1 (23:08):
Am I allowed to tell you that your hair looks
great when it's all humid and frizzy.

Speaker 3 (23:13):
Well, honestly, it wasn't humid. I just didn't feel like
doing it.

Speaker 1 (23:17):
It looks done. It looks great. Hold your hair really
close to the microphone so we can all see it. Okay.
I hurt my ear.

Speaker 3 (23:29):
I bet you wish you had a camera on that one.

Speaker 1 (23:31):
I hit my temple. I just I wanted to talk
about something other than primary election results. For just a
half second, and now.

Speaker 3 (23:38):
I'd like to talk about it for about a half
a minute.

Speaker 1 (23:40):
Back into it. What your hair? No primary election results? Yeah,
I have a half a minute for you. This is
because I was asking like, well, what is she so
pod about? Denise Powell?

Speaker 3 (23:52):
Are you going to play that ad?

Speaker 1 (23:53):
Yes I am.

Speaker 3 (23:54):
I'm Denise Powell, the daughter of immigrants and one pissed
off mom.

Speaker 1 (23:58):
So she starts off saying, every day he finds a
new way to attack our rights. I'm Denise Powell, the
daughter of immigrants and one ticked off mom. How the
daughter of immigrants Donald Trump is attacking her rights? Are

(24:19):
we talking about immigrants? Because I'm not seeing a lot
of example of President Trump saying, all right, go out
and find immigrants, legal immigrants with status in this country,
and go and attack their rights. And what rights would
those be? Freedom? He's not jailing people, he's not deporting people,

(24:46):
he's not putting people in detentions, and yes he is.
There have been some people with the exact same names
or interesting situations who have momentarily been detained in ice operations.
They c those things up, those people were released. You
know who else that happens to? All the time. Everybody, Yeah,

(25:08):
does this ever happen to you or a friend of
yours where the police suddenly come converging on him and
they're like stop right there, and you're like, what the heck?

Speaker 3 (25:16):
Did I do?

Speaker 1 (25:16):
You know you? I got pulled over once because I
was driving a car that met the vehicle description they
were looking for in this neighborhood. I got pulled over.
My rights were violated. I was briefly detained by a
police right there in my vehicles. They got it sorted out,
and then they explained, all right, well you're not the
guy we're looking for. The reason why we pulled you

(25:38):
over is because of this. I'm like, oh my gosh,
well good luck finding that guy. That's all right, have
a safe night you too. Are these the rights we're
talking about? This happens to people now. If you're talking
about take the word immigrant and they use that for
legal immigrants, ego legal immigrants, friends of immigrants. Did I

(25:59):
said how many pillables that I put.

Speaker 3 (26:00):
In illegal above seven?

Speaker 1 (26:02):
I know you know why? Because I'm distracted right now,
You'll know what it is when I say it off
the air. I just I'm explaining why suddenly my brain
just froze. That's why I started an organization to fight
back against the MAGA extremists, and I thought to stop
the state legislature from passing.

Speaker 3 (26:19):
A total abortion band.

Speaker 1 (26:21):
Now I'm running for Congress to help save democracy for
our kids. Tried to get the legislature not to pass
a total abortion ban, and I want to save democracy
for our kids. And she's there talking to a boy. Yep.
In Denise Powell's world, that boy is going to grow up,
identify as a girl and be able to give birth
and even up to the thirty ninth week of carrying

(26:44):
that child. Thanks to the work of Denise Powell, we
won't have a total abortion band. That's what she is.
This what the blue dot represents. No difference between immigrants
and illegal immigrants, including illegal immigrants who are criminals, no difference.

(27:05):
There should be no limit to abortions in Denise Powell's world.
Is that what we're talking about, And we have to
save democracy for our kids. We don't have a democracy.
We have a representative republic. They keep using that because
they want to make it totally fine to have the
popular vote, which is the big cities in this country

(27:26):
elect the president from now until the end of time,
because that works out better for Democrats. Accept in twenty
twenty four, when some of the same thinking that Denise
Powell's espousing there was then put forth by Biden and
then Harris and rejected by America. Look, Trump's not perfect,

(27:47):
but the American people have said, Yeah, I'm tired of
people coming into this country illegally and given benefits that
I don't get. They're being put up in hotels that
I can't afford, They're getting jobs that aren't going to me.
Their kids are getting in state tuition to American universities

(28:09):
that are across state lines from me that my kids
can't get state in state tuition in a lot of
these colleges. And that's just two states away from me.
But you can come here from three or four countries
away and get in state tuition and benefits I'm that
I'm paying for. It's a taxpayer, and it's time for

(28:32):
a lot of that to stop. Time for all of
that to stop. And that's what Trump said, That's what
he's doing. And now people are like, well, I didn't
know he was going to be mean about it. He's
very mean about it. When the media twists a lot
of these, whether it's ice operations or specific examples that
don't end up being the same story later that the

(28:54):
media gives you right off the bat. A lot of
times those circumstances change suddenly it's like, Oh, he's a
good person. He's never done anything wrong. He's eaten several
people he's but a lot of them were dead. He's
a grave robber. And other than that, though he may,
he coaches baseball and he helps out of Sunday School.
This guy's the absolute best. Granted he drives, drives drunk

(29:17):
to Sunday School a lot that he does. He's going
through a diversion program. But this guy is the best man,
and I can't believe Trump's trying to get rid of him.
So Denise Powell is pod boy. I wonder if she's
still pod She woke up this morning thinking that she'll
probably end up being the Democratic nominee for Nebraska's second

(29:40):
congressional district, and that's got to make her happy, right?
What would make her happy? Winning in November? Perhaps,
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Joy 101 with Hoda Kotb

Joy 101 with Hoda Kotb

Joy is essential. And it's also elusive. You can't order it, borrow it, or simply hope it into life. But now, there's a new and exciting way to start your journey toward a more joyful existence: The Joy 101 Podcast with Hoda! Best known for her Emmy-winning work and co-anchoring Today, Hoda Kotb infuses her authenticity, curiosity, and warmth into conversations with the world’s most fascinating people. Entertainment legends, sport icons, wellness experts, and everyday folks will share how they find, allow, and experience joy. Hoda will offer her own tips and takes on seeking a more balanced, harmonious life. If you're craving inspiration, support, and useful tools to maximize your joy, tune in to these candid, uplifting, and moving on-air chats. Joy after a breakup, joy as an empty-nester, joy after loss, joy as a caretaker — Hoda's new podcast will speak to you. Joy 101 with Hoda Kotb, an iHeartPodcast.

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2026 iHeartMedia, Inc.

  • Help
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • AdChoicesAd Choices