411: Tim Pearce—Accuracy Under Fire

411: Tim Pearce—Accuracy Under Fire

LAPD and CRASH Unit veteran Tim Pearce shares stories of fighting gangs in South Central in a post-Rodney King world, including the tragic tale of his police officer wife being shot in the line of duty, which led him to invent an amazing life-saving device that simulates a gunshot wound, which he demonstrates on Chuck.

Jaksot(449)

400:Sabin Howard—Born Cancelled

400:Sabin Howard—Born Cancelled

Master Sculptor Sabin Howard is known as America’s Michelangelo for his work in, and deep knowledge of, Modern Classicism. On September 13, 2024, he will unveil his newest work, the National WWI Memorial in Washington, D.C., called A Soldier’s Journey. Sabin discusses why he believes that great art can be recognized by everyone and should be for “we the people,” why art is inextricably connected to history, and why art tells us what it means to be human.

20 Elo 20241h 21min

399: Jason Alexander—I Thought There’d be More Plumes

399: Jason Alexander—I Thought There’d be More Plumes

The Tony Award-winning actor, director, and podcaster goes deep with TWIHI about everything from his traumatic childhood and dashed dreams of becoming a magician to the Broadway show that made him want to act and his recollections of Stephen Sondheim and Hal Prince.

13 Elo 20241h 36min

398: Victor Davis Hanson—So Goes Glory

398: Victor Davis Hanson—So Goes Glory

VDH is a Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University, a Distinguished Fellow at Hillsdale College, a professor of public policy at Pepperdine University, a nationally syndicated columnist, a bestselling author, AND a fifth-generation California farmer. In his July 29, 2024 article, America’s Lab Rats? (read here: https://victorhanson.com/americas-lab-rats/ ), Victor argues that American society appears to be treating many of its citizens like insignificant lab rats in some kind of social experiment, leading to unintended and harmful consequences. His website. His book.

6 Elo 20241h 19min

397: Bishop W.C. Martin—Hope in Possum Trot

397: Bishop W.C. Martin—Hope in Possum Trot

Bishop Martin and his wife Donna were the inspiration for the film Sound of Hope: The Story of Possum Trot, which details their miraculous journey navigating the foster care system in a small Texas town and how they inspired the parishioners of Bennet Chapel Church to adopt 77 children. Bishop Martin speaks to how this unlikely story became a book and a movie and how it all was accurately prophesized in advance.

30 Heinä 20241h 18min

396: Frank H. McCourt, Jr,—Selected Garbage from Families of Distinction

396: Frank H. McCourt, Jr,—Selected Garbage from Families of Distinction

The American businessman and philanthropist talks about growing up in Boston as a fifth-generation builder, starting his first business collecting garbage at the age of 13, and the mission he’s on to create a new internet by arguing in his new book,  Our Biggest Fight, that we the people’s data should belong to we the people.

23 Heinä 20241h 17min

395: Dennis Quaid—Getting All the Stuff Right

395: Dennis Quaid—Getting All the Stuff Right

The veteran actor and gospel singer recounts his early career, what made him give up his dream of becoming a veterinarian, how he realized he had a problem with cocaine and what he did to fix it, how Jerry Lee Lewis taught him to play the piano, and what it was like playing Ronald Reagan for his upcoming movie. And at the end of the episode—he sings a song! See the trailer for REAGAN HERE.

16 Heinä 20241h 8min

394: Kris Engelstad—Don't Call Her a Philanthropist

394: Kris Engelstad—Don't Call Her a Philanthropist

As trustee of the Engelstad Foundation, Kris has overseen the endowment of over $300 million in scholarships and grants. Kris talks about working as a maid in her father’s hotel on the Las Vegas strip, what she learned from watching him build several Nevada landmarks, and what it’s like to manage a billion-dollar foundation.

9 Heinä 20241h 27min

393: Pete Hegseth—The War on Warriors

393: Pete Hegseth—The War on Warriors

In honor of Independence Day, TWIHI welcomes Army veteran and NYT bestselling author Pete Hegseth, who talks about why civic rituals like parades are so important to convey what we value as a society, how to acknowledge America’s faults while still appreciating her greatness, and how our armed forces are destroying themselves from the inside. Pete’s book is The War on Warriors.

2 Heinä 20241h 8min

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