Host J.R. Martinez reflects on Veterans Day, encouraging listeners to move beyond a simple "thank you" by having real conversations with veterans and allowing them to share as much or as little as they wish. He recounts his own journey from enlisting after 9/11, surviving a devastating combat injury, and losing his identities as both soldier and young man, to rediscovering purpose through serving fellow patients, vulnerability, and storytelling. Martinez connects these experiences to the themes of the Medal of Honor podcast, emphasizing the power of simply showing up, the humanity behind acts of heroism, and the importance of veterans telling their stories in their own way.
Actor and musician Gary Sinise discusses his decades-long mission to support military service members, veterans, first responders, and their families through visits, performances, and the Gary Sinise Foundation. He explains how his experiences with Vietnam veterans, his role as Lieutenant Dan, and the post-9/11 wars led him into deep service work, including hospital visits, base tours, mental wellness initiatives, and programs for families of the fallen. Sinise also shares the story of his son Mac's rare cancer, profound faith, and musical legacy, and how Mac's compositions now support the foundation's work and help the family process their grief.
Rachel Cruze and Dr. John Deloney take live calls about personal finance decisions, focusing on getting out of debt, avoiding family entanglements with money, and choosing long‑term peace over short‑term comfort. Callers grapple with unaffordable car loans, oversized mortgages, backsliding after becoming debt‑free, how to ask for a raise, whether to file bankruptcy, and how to support kids through college without loans. The hosts emphasize personal responsibility, selling assets when necessary, clear boundaries with friends and partners, and following a step‑by‑step plan toward financial stability and freedom.
This live episode of The Ramsey Show is recorded in Chicago with hosts taking questions from the audience about money, relationships, and life transitions. Topics include setting financial boundaries with parents, resolving spender-saver conflicts in marriage, supporting low-income communities, navigating mid-journey Baby Steps, and finding meaningful work after a military career. The show ends with a collective debt-free scream and encouragement for attendees who are changing their family trees.
Jack Carr discusses his new novel set in 1968 Vietnam, explaining the extensive historical research and immersive process he used to authentically capture the era and the experience of soldiers on the ground. He and Joe Rogan explore the Vietnam War, media influence on public perception, the decline of reading, the rise of AI in creative work, and the realities of Hollywood adaptations of his books like "The Terminal List" and "Dark Wolf." They also range into topics like stunt work, physical training, security concerns, political polarization, immigration, and the disturbing public reaction to the assassination of Charlie Kirk.
Retired Navy SEAL and former Tier 1 operator DJ Shipley discusses how he structures his days to protect and improve his mental, physical, and spiritual health after years of high-risk combat deployments and severe injuries. He details his rigid morning and evening routines, his strength and conditioning approach with coach Vernon Griffith, and how psychedelic-assisted therapy with Ibogaine and 5-MeO-DMT helped him confront depression, addiction to prescription meds, and suicidality. Throughout, he shares stories from his SEAL career, the toll of loss and survivor's guilt, and his current mission to help veterans, first responders, and civilians develop unbreakable mindsets and bodies.
Guy Raz interviews Craigslist founder Craig Newmark about how a simple email list for San Francisco tech and arts events in 1995 evolved into one of the world's most-used online classified sites. Newmark describes his socially awkward childhood, early work in computer science and the internet, the organic growth and minimalist philosophy behind Craigslist, his decision to hand over leadership to CEO Jim Buckmaster, and his later-life focus on philanthropy in journalism, veterans' support, and animal rescue. They also discuss the disputed impact of Craigslist on newspaper classified revenue and Newmark's belief that he was largely lucky and in the right place at the right time.
Dave Ramsey and Dr. John Deloney take live calls about money, relationships, and life decisions, helping listeners navigate complex family financial dynamics, marriage conflicts, debt payoff, and housing choices. Callers ask about parents borrowing from children, financial infidelity in a new marriage, a veteran trapped in an unsustainable VA jumbo mortgage, and how to handle inheritance after elder financial abuse. The hosts emphasize integrity, unified decision-making in marriage, avoiding new debt, using community and church support, and focusing on long-term financial freedom over short-term fixes.
Taylor Kitsch discusses bowhunting, life in Montana, and the craft and psychological toll of acting in intense, often real‑life roles. He describes deep preparation for projects like "Lone Survivor," "American Primeval," and "Waco," including working closely with Navy SEALs, Native communities, and survivors. Kitsch also opens up about helping his sister through years of severe fentanyl and heroin addiction, founding the Howler's Ridge nonprofit, his father's death and funeral, and broader reflections on veterans, cult dynamics, grief, and the importance of staying uncomfortable and fully committed to challenging work.