The US Women's National Soccer Team's loss to Sweden in the round of 16 was the earliest World Cup elimination in the team's history.
U.S. Women Soccer's World Cup Fail, and Consequences of Criminal Behavior, with Clay Travis and Dana Loesch | Ep. 602
The US Women's Soccer team, lost to Sweden in the round of 16 for the first time ever, and Megan Rapinoe was smiling after missing the decisive penalty kick.
The Megyn Kelly Show
U.S. Women Soccer's World Cup Fail, and Consequences of Criminal Behavior, with Clay Travis and Dana Loesch | Ep. 602
The US Women's Soccer team, lost to Sweden in the round of 16 for the first time ever, and Megan Rapinoe was smiling after missing the decisive penalty kick.
TL;DR
The US Women's Soccer team's earliest-ever World Cup exit sparks a wide-ranging debate about woke activism, Megan Rapinoe's legacy, and the costs of prioritizing politics over performance [1] — Megyn Kelly "The US Women's National Soccer Team lost to Sweden in the round of 16 — the first time in team history they failed to reach the quarterfina…" 01:30 . Clay Travis argues that biological males in women's sports represent the single greatest threat to female athletics, backing it up with stark strength statistics [2] — Clay Travis "Men are only 7% taller than women on average, yet they have 57% more grip strength, 65% more leg strength, 90% more upper body strength, an…" 35:40 . Dana Loesch joins to unpack a California 7-Eleven clerk facing prosecution for defending his store from a repeat robber, the Memphis school shooting that was thwarted by locked doors, and Biden's biting German Shepherd. The episode closes with both hosts swapping candid parenting stories about teaching kids to follow through on commitments [3] — Megyn Kelly "Megyn Kelly's 10-year-old son Thatcher wanted to skip a sailing interclub after being hit by a boat, but he had already promised his coache…" 1:24:00 .
Megyn Kelly discusses the US Women's Soccer World Cup failure with Clay Travis, then pivots to crime and progressive politics with Dana Loesch, before closing with parenting stories.
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Before Megyn Kelly's voice enters the picture, listeners are treated to two pre-roll spots: a DR Horton home-buying promotion for their national Red Tag Sales Event and a self-deprecating pitch from Gabby Windy of the 'Long Winded' podcast. Brief but unavoidable, these commercials frame the opening of what will be a wide-ranging, often heated conversation about sports, politics, and American culture.
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Megyn Kelly rarely leads with sports, but this is no ordinary sports story. The US Women's National Soccer Team has been eliminated in the round of 16 against Sweden — the earliest exit in team history — and Megan Rapinoe was caught on camera smiling after missing the decisive penalty kick. [1] — Megyn Kelly "The US Women's National Soccer Team lost to Sweden in the round of 16 — the first time in team history they failed to reach the quarterfina…" 01:30 Clay Travis, live from a team he remembers watching win in 2015, charts the team's transformation from universally beloved champions to polarizing activists, pinpointing the exact moment things went wrong: when the team turned down President Trump's White House invitation after their 2019 title. [2] — Clay Travis "Megan Rapinoe missed the decisive penalty kick against Sweden — and appeared to smile and laugh afterward. Clay Travis says that reaction p…" 04:57 The team's performance tracked their cultural drift: they scored just one goal across their final three matches. Kelly and Travis agree the team's focus on woke activism over winning was both cause and symptom of the collapse — and both are relieved Rapinoe is finally gone.
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Clay Travis paints a picture of the road not taken: the US Women's Soccer team could have stood on the world stage and made a genuinely powerful case for America's role in advancing women's freedom globally. [1] — Clay Travis "The US Women's Soccer team could have used the World Cup stage to champion global women's rights — pointing out that women can play sports …" 10:03 In most of the world, women can't play soccer, drive a car, or choose how many children to have. In 69 countries, you can be imprisoned for being gay — and in 9, you can be killed for it. Rapinoe, as an out lesbian, would face imprisonment or death in much of the world she was competing in. Rick Grenell's tweet, read by Kelly, captures the irony perfectly: the most famous gay athlete in America was using her platform to attack the one country that protected her right to be exactly who she is.
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The Jordan-versus-LeBron comparison isn't just about basketball — it's about cultural authority and the cost of going political. Clay Travis observes that more people watched 'The Last Dance,' the ESPN documentary about Jordan's 1998 Bulls, than watched the NBA Finals that same year featuring LeBron James.[1] Jordan famously declined to get political — 'Republicans buy sneakers too' — and his reward is a sneaker empire that still dominates decades later. Megyn Kelly chimes in that even her young boys revere Jordan and want his shoes, while barely mentioning LeBron. The lesson is simple, Travis argues: woke activism and universal appeal are fundamentally incompatible.
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As if the woke team culture weren't enough, Rapinoe has endorsed biological males competing in women's soccer on her way out the door. But the broader problem is already here: the US Tennis Association's recreational and league rules allow any man to simply self-identify as female and compete in women's divisions — no hormone therapy required. [1] — Megyn Kelly "The US Tennis Association allows men to compete in women's divisions at the recreational and league level simply by self-identifying as fem…" 22:18 Megyn Kelly details the result: transgender player Alicia Rowley has won multiple women's national tennis championships, including the coveted 'Golden Ball' award. Martina Navratilova, the legendary tennis player who shares nothing politically with Kelly, has nonetheless spoken out forcefully: 'Women's tennis is not for failed male athletes, whatever age.' Kelly salutes Navratilova for her courage even while disagreeing with her on nearly everything else.
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Clay Travis doesn't just make a cultural argument — he makes a biological one. [1] — Clay Travis "Men are only 7% taller than women on average, yet they have 57% more grip strength, 65% more leg strength, 90% more upper body strength, an…" 35:40 Despite men being only about 7% taller on average than women, the athletic gap is staggering: 57% more grip strength, 65% more leg strength, 90% more upper body strength, 162% more punching power. This is why we have separate men's and women's sports categories in the first place — without them, women would never win a gold medal in any Olympic event requiring physical strength. Travis argues the asymmetry is profound: no woman has ever gotten rich or powerful by identifying as a man, while men who identify as women are winning women's championships and being nominated Women's Athlete of the Year. Female tolerance, he says, is being weaponized against women — and moms especially need to wake up to what's coming for their daughters.
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The political segment opens with Clay Travis expressing concern not so much that Biden might win, but that Biden might die — leaving Kamala Harris as president, which he calls a civilizational risk. [1] — Clay Travis "Kamala Harris represents this cosmetic diversity idea that everything needs to be perfectly representative of the United States. She's gott…" 43:00 Harris, he argues, is the avatar of 'cosmetic diversity': promoted not on merit but on race and gender, and now being exposed by the gap between her position and her abilities. Meanwhile, Biden is trying to rebrand the economy with 'Bidenomics' talking points, but a New York Times poll shows only 20% of Americans feel good about the economy, while 70% say it's terrible. Both hosts agree Republicans have a winning hand on economics but are fumbling the abortion issue — Clay Travis argues that 80% of Americans hold moderate views on abortion, and Republicans must speak directly to that majority or hand Democrats a crucial advantage in swing states.
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Clay Travis wraps his portion of the show not on a note of doom but of hope. A history nerd who attended Civil War sleepaway camp, he draws a direct line from the 1960s leftward lurch — Nixon, Carter, Reagan — to the present moment. Biden is Jimmy Carter; COVID was the Democrats' Watergate; and the coming Reagan figure will lead America back to the optimistic, broadly prosperous culture both Travis and Kelly grew up in. Top Gun: Maverick's box-office dominance is his proof of concept: there's a massive audience hungry for the America of the '80s and '90s, and that audience votes. The era of woke overreach, he predicts, will end with the 2024 election — and what follows will last for decades.
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The show pauses for a mid-roll advertising break featuring UnitedHealth Group promoting their 'Building Better Health' conversation series and a repeat spot for the Long Winded podcast. These spots bridge the Clay Travis and Dana Loesch segments of the episode.
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The second hour opens with a story that perfectly encapsulates the upside-down logic of progressive criminal justice: a 7-Eleven clerk in Stockton, California — one of America's most crime-ridden cities — was robbed three times in 24 hours by the same man, who on one occasion threatened to shoot him if he intervened. [1] — Megyn Kelly "A Stockton, California 7-Eleven was robbed three times in 24 hours by the same man, who had previously threatened to shoot the clerks. When…" 52:10 On the third visit, the clerk snapped and beat the robber with a stick, the viral video showing a man getting exactly what was coming to him. The robber's injuries? Pain in his leg and shoulder. The police response? Investigating the clerk for assault. Dana Loesch is incredulous: these workers deserve a key to the city, not handcuffs. Both she and Kelly note that the police showed zero interest in the first two robberies — but were suddenly very interested once the victim fought back.
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Dana Loesch connects the Stockton 7-Eleven case to a broader pattern she sees across progressive America: the restorative justice movement is systematically criminalizing self-defense and shaming victims into passivity. [1] — Dana Loesch "From the McCloskeys in St. Louis to Daniel Penny in New York to the Stockton 7-Eleven workers, the pattern is clear: people who defend them…" 1:00:40 She traces the pattern from the McCloskeys standing on their private property in St. Louis, to Daniel Penny restraining a threatening man on a New York subway, to the Stockton clerks — in each case, the person who pushed back faced prosecution. Meanwhile, three girls harassing an Asian family on a New York City subway — and apparently beating the woman filming them — received no mainstream media coverage, which Kelly attributes to the racial identity of the aggressors. The rule seems to be: who defends themselves, and who attacks whom, determines what's a crime.
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After groups of young adults ransacked Chicago stores in what looked unmistakably like coordinated flash mob looting, a reporter asked Mayor Brandon Johnson about the 'mob.' Johnson — Chicago's newly elected far-left mayor — took exception to the word itself, insisting on 'large gathering' and warning against referring to participants as 'baby Al Capones.' Dana Loesch and Megyn Kelly are having none of it. Loesch points out that a 20-year-old committing crimes in a group is not a baby anything — they're a grown adult who can stand for the consequences of their behavior. What Johnson should have said, she argues, is simple: if you're 20 and doing this, get a job. Instead, by policing the language used to describe the rioters, Johnson enables and emboldens the exact behavior he's too squeamish to name.
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The Memphis story is the episode's most underreported bombshell. A 33-year-old former student, armed with a handgun, drove his red pickup to a Jewish school in Memphis. [1] — Dana Loesch "A 33-year-old armed man drove to a Jewish school in Memphis, entered the security vestibule — and couldn't get any further because of a dou…" 1:07:40 He entered the security vestibule — and that was as far as he got. The school's double-door locking system, CCTV, and alert staff meant that within moments of his arrival, they had his license plate and were on the phone to police. Officers intercepted him less than 3 miles away; he emerged from his truck with his gun drawn and was shot. No students were harmed. Dana Loesch argues this is exactly what decades of school hardening advocates have been calling for — and notes the tragic irony that a retired Secret Service agent demonstrated Parkland's security failures with a Post-it note experiment months before the massacre, only to be ignored. The Memphis success story received almost no coverage precisely because it validates school hardening over gun control.
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It might seem like a lighter story, but the detail is damning: President Biden's German Shepherd Commander has attacked Secret Service agents so many times that Judicial Watch obtained a 196-page trove of internal incident reports through FOIA. [1] — Megyn Kelly "Biden's German Shepherd Commander has bitten at least seven Secret Service personnel, with a 196-page FOIA document detailing incidents inc…" 1:17:00 One uniformed officer was bitten twice — once on the tricep, once on the leg — and had to use a steel cart as a shield against further attacks. Another agent needed hospital transport. Politico, to its credit, published the story under the headline 'Don't blame the dog, blame Joe Biden,' noting that if a Republican president's dog had done the same, the Marie Antoinette narrative would have written itself. Dana Loesch goes further, drawing a line between the biting dog and the broader chaos she sees as characteristic of the entire Biden family — and suggests the dog would do better with a different owner.
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The final segment of the show takes a sharp turn toward the personal, with Megyn Kelly sharing a parenting dilemma from their summer at the Jersey Shore: her 10-year-old son Thatcher was hit by a boat during a sailing lesson and then begged to skip an upcoming interclub race he had already promised to attend. [1] — Megyn Kelly "Megyn Kelly's 10-year-old son Thatcher wanted to skip a sailing interclub after being hit by a boat, but he had already promised his coache…" 1:24:00 Kelly chose not to force him but laid out the stakes clearly — you told your coaches you'd be there, they packed your boat, your team is counting on you. He went. Dana Loesch mirrors the story with her own son's resistance to fulfilling a football season commitment during a painful growth spurt. Both mothers agree these aren't just sports stories — they're character-defining moments. The broader conversation ranges from disciplining techniques (Loesch's grandmother's willow switch, Kelly's mother's calm disapproval) to the importance of parents being physically present and following through on their own threats. The segment is the episode's emotional counterweight — funny, honest, and warm.
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Megyn Kelly brings the episode to a close with a brief sign-off, noting she didn't get to the Trump indictment news and promising to cover it tomorrow with Rich Lowry and Michael Brendan Dougherty for National Review Day. She invites listeners to email parenting stories to megyn@megyn_kelly.com. Final ad placements for the Long Winded podcast and Vuori athletic wear play out before the episode ends.
- Restorative Justice
- A criminal justice philosophy that focuses on rehabilitating offenders and repairing harm to victims and communities rather than punitive incarceration; Dana Loesch uses it critically to describe policies that protect criminals over victims.
- Hardened entity / school hardening
- Security measures designed to physically prevent unauthorized access to a building — such as double-door locking vestibules, CCTV, and armed staff — applied to schools to deter or stop shootings.
- Self-ID
- Short for 'self-identification' — a policy allowing individuals to declare their gender without medical or legal documentation; discussed in the context of USTA transgender participation rules.
- Golden Ball
- A prestigious award given to winners of super national tennis tournaments at the USTA level; cited as an example of an award won by a transgender female player.
- Hagiography
- A biography or profile that idealizes or uncritically praises its subject; Clay Travis uses it to describe ESPN's reverential coverage of transgender women's athletes.
- Vestibule
- An antechamber or entryway between outer and inner doors; used to describe the double-door security zone at the Memphis Jewish school that stopped the armed attacker.
- FOIA
- Freedom of Information Act — a US law requiring federal agencies to disclose records upon request; Judicial Watch used FOIA to obtain 196 pages of Secret Service incident reports about Biden's dog.
- Meritocracy
- A system in which advancement is based on talent, effort, and achievement rather than demographics or connections; Clay Travis contrasts it with cosmetic diversity as a basis for selecting leaders.
- Cosmetic diversity
- Clay Travis's term for diversity policies that prioritize demographic representation for its own sake — race, gender — over merit or qualifications, using Kamala Harris as his primary example.
- Hagiography
- A biography that excessively praises a subject without criticism; Clay Travis uses it to describe the way ESPN profiles transgender women's sports award winners.
- ICOWNS
- Independent Council on Women's Sports — an advocacy organization that tracks and speaks out against biological males competing in women's athletic events.
- Opti / Optimist boat
- A small, single-sail dinghy used to teach children to sail; Megyn Kelly refers to these as the boats her son Thatcher sails in competitions.
- Interclub
- A competitive sailing race between junior sailors from different clubs; Megyn Kelly uses this term to describe the event her son almost skipped.
- Boom
- The horizontal pole attached to the base of a sail mast on a sailboat; Megyn Kelly warns it can hit sailors in the head during racing.
- Prohibited possessor
- Legal term for a person legally barred from owning or possessing firearms — such as convicted felons or those adjudicated mentally ill; Dana Loesch wonders if the Memphis attacker was one.
- Switch
- A thin flexible branch cut from a tree, used as an instrument of physical discipline; Dana Loesch's grandmother would tell grandchildren to 'cut a switch' as punishment.
- GOAT
- Greatest Of All Time — an acronym used in sports to designate the best-ever player in a discipline; Megyn Kelly's children call Michael Jordan the GOAT.
Chapter 2 · 01:12
USWNT's Historic World Cup Collapse
Megyn Kelly rarely leads with sports, but this is no ordinary sports story. The US Women's National Soccer Team has been eliminated in the round of 16 against Sweden — the earliest exit in team history — and Megan Rapinoe was caught on camera smiling after missing the decisive penalty kick. [1] — Megyn Kelly "The US Women's National Soccer Team lost to Sweden in the round of 16 — the first time in team history they failed to reach the quarterfina…" 01:30 Clay Travis, live from a team he remembers watching win in 2015, charts the team's transformation from universally beloved champions to polarizing activists, pinpointing the exact moment things went wrong: when the team turned down President Trump's White House invitation after their 2019 title. [2] — Clay Travis "Megan Rapinoe missed the decisive penalty kick against Sweden — and appeared to smile and laugh afterward. Clay Travis says that reaction p…" 04:57 The team's performance tracked their cultural drift: they scored just one goal across their final three matches. Kelly and Travis agree the team's focus on woke activism over winning was both cause and symptom of the collapse — and both are relieved Rapinoe is finally gone.
Claims made here
The US Women's Soccer team scored only one goal in the final three games they played at the 2023 Women's World Cup.
The US Women's National Soccer Team lost to Sweden in the round of 16 — the first time in team history they failed to reach the quarterfinals. Megyn Kelly and Clay Travis argue the team's woke activism, led by Megan Rapinoe, poisoned team culture and cost them on the field.
The US Women's National Soccer Team was eliminated in the round of 16 against Sweden, the earliest exit in team history.
Megan Rapinoe missed the decisive penalty kick against Sweden — and appeared to smile and laugh afterward. Clay Travis says that reaction perfectly captures a team that cared more about its political identity than about winning.
The US Women's Soccer team scored only one goal across their final three World Cup matches, a historically poor performance.
The US Women's Soccer team could have used the World Cup stage to champion global women's rights — pointing out that women can play sports freely in America while being imprisoned or killed for it elsewhere. Instead they chose to denigrate the very country that made their success possible.
Chapter 3 · 10:20
The Platform They Squandered: American Exceptionalism and Women's Rights
Clay Travis paints a picture of the road not taken: the US Women's Soccer team could have stood on the world stage and made a genuinely powerful case for America's role in advancing women's freedom globally. [1] — Clay Travis "The US Women's Soccer team could have used the World Cup stage to champion global women's rights — pointing out that women can play sports …" 10:03 In most of the world, women can't play soccer, drive a car, or choose how many children to have. In 69 countries, you can be imprisoned for being gay — and in 9, you can be killed for it. Rapinoe, as an out lesbian, would face imprisonment or death in much of the world she was competing in. Rick Grenell's tweet, read by Kelly, captures the irony perfectly: the most famous gay athlete in America was using her platform to attack the one country that protected her right to be exactly who she is.
Claims made here
Megan Rapinoe would be imprisoned in 69 countries around the world simply for being gay.
Megan Rapinoe would be killed in 9 countries around the world simply for being gay.
Michael Jordan's shoe still outsells every current NBA player's signature shoe combined.
Rick Grenell pointed out that Megan Rapinoe, as an openly gay woman, would be imprisoned in 69 countries around the world simply for being gay.
According to Rick Grenell, 9 countries around the world would execute someone simply for being gay, making America uniquely tolerant for LGBTQ athletes.
Chapter 4 · 13:50
Michael Jordan, LeBron, and the Price of Going Political
The Jordan-versus-LeBron comparison isn't just about basketball — it's about cultural authority and the cost of going political. Clay Travis observes that more people watched 'The Last Dance,' the ESPN documentary about Jordan's 1998 Bulls, than watched the NBA Finals that same year featuring LeBron James.[1] Jordan famously declined to get political — 'Republicans buy sneakers too' — and his reward is a sneaker empire that still dominates decades later. Megyn Kelly chimes in that even her young boys revere Jordan and want his shoes, while barely mentioning LeBron. The lesson is simple, Travis argues: woke activism and universal appeal are fundamentally incompatible.
Claims made here
More people watched 'The Last Dance' ESPN documentary about the 1998 Chicago Bulls than watched the NBA Finals that same year featuring LeBron James.
The US Women's National Soccer Team lost 5-2 to an under-15 boys team from Dallas, Texas in preparation for the 2019 Women's World Cup.
The ESPN documentary 'The Last Dance' about the 1998 Chicago Bulls drew more viewers than the actual NBA Finals that same year featuring LeBron James.
Before the 2019 Women's World Cup, the US Women's team lost 5-2 to an under-15 boys team in Dallas in a warmup match.
Chapter 6 · 22:15
The Biology Argument: Why Sex Divisions in Sports Exist
Clay Travis doesn't just make a cultural argument — he makes a biological one. [1] — Clay Travis "Men are only 7% taller than women on average, yet they have 57% more grip strength, 65% more leg strength, 90% more upper body strength, an…" 35:40 Despite men being only about 7% taller on average than women, the athletic gap is staggering: 57% more grip strength, 65% more leg strength, 90% more upper body strength, 162% more punching power. This is why we have separate men's and women's sports categories in the first place — without them, women would never win a gold medal in any Olympic event requiring physical strength. Travis argues the asymmetry is profound: no woman has ever gotten rich or powerful by identifying as a man, while men who identify as women are winning women's championships and being nominated Women's Athlete of the Year. Female tolerance, he says, is being weaponized against women — and moms especially need to wake up to what's coming for their daughters.
Claims made here
Elizabeth Warren submitted a recipe to a Native American cookbook called 'Pow Wow Chow' and got her start in law by claiming to be a minority.
The US Tennis Association allows men to compete in women's divisions at the recreational and league level simply by self-identifying as female — no hormone therapy required. The result: a transgender player named Alicia Rowley has now won multiple women's national tennis championships including the coveted Golden Ball award.
No woman has ever identified as a man and become wealthy doing it. Meanwhile, men who identify as women are winning women's championships and being named Women's Athlete of the Year. Clay Travis argues this is an asymmetric exploitation of female tolerance — and women need to start saying no.
Chapter 7 · 35:00
2024 Election: Bidenomics, Kamala, and Abortion as a Wedge Issue
The political segment opens with Clay Travis expressing concern not so much that Biden might win, but that Biden might die — leaving Kamala Harris as president, which he calls a civilizational risk. [1] — Clay Travis "Kamala Harris represents this cosmetic diversity idea that everything needs to be perfectly representative of the United States. She's gott…" 43:00 Harris, he argues, is the avatar of 'cosmetic diversity': promoted not on merit but on race and gender, and now being exposed by the gap between her position and her abilities. Meanwhile, Biden is trying to rebrand the economy with 'Bidenomics' talking points, but a New York Times poll shows only 20% of Americans feel good about the economy, while 70% say it's terrible. Both hosts agree Republicans have a winning hand on economics but are fumbling the abortion issue — Clay Travis argues that 80% of Americans hold moderate views on abortion, and Republicans must speak directly to that majority or hand Democrats a crucial advantage in swing states.
Claims made here
Men have on average 57% more grip strength, 65% more leg strength, 90% more upper body strength, and 162% more punching power than women, despite being only about 7% taller on average.
A New York Times poll showed approximately 20% of Americans feel somewhat good about the economy, while about 70% say the economy is going poorly.
Approximately 65% of Americans do not believe the country is headed in the right direction.
Approximately 10% of the population opposes abortion in all cases including rape, incest, and life of the mother, and that group is overwhelmingly Republican.
Men are only 7% taller than women on average, yet they have 57% more grip strength, 65% more leg strength, 90% more upper body strength, and 162% more punching power. These aren't political opinions — they're the scientific basis for why women's sports categories exist in the first place.
On average, men have 57% more grip strength than women, illustrating why biological sex divisions in sports matter.
Men have 162% more punching power than women on average, even though men are only about 7% taller on average.
A New York Times poll showed only about 20% of Americans feel somewhat good about the economy, while roughly 70% say it is going poorly.
Clay Travis argues that approximately 80% of Americans fall somewhere between the extreme pro-life and pro-choice positions on abortion, making it a winnable issue for Republicans if addressed thoughtfully.
Clay Travis draws a historical parallel between the 1960s leftward lurch and today's woke overreach, predicting that just as Nixon and Reagan followed the '60s tumult, a Reagan-like figure will emerge after Biden and lead America into an 'America is awesome' era that he believes will last through the 2050s.
Chapter 9 · 52:10
Mid-Show Ads: UnitedHealth Group and Long Winded
The show pauses for a mid-roll advertising break featuring UnitedHealth Group promoting their 'Building Better Health' conversation series and a repeat spot for the Long Winded podcast. These spots bridge the Clay Travis and Dana Loesch segments of the episode.
A Stockton, California 7-Eleven was robbed three times in 24 hours by the same man, who had previously threatened to shoot the clerks. When the clerk finally fought back with a stick, the suspect suffered pain in his leg and shoulder. Now local police are investigating the clerks for assault — while the robbery suspect faces his own charges.
Chapter 10 · 53:00
Stockton 7-Eleven: The Clerk Who Fought Back
The second hour opens with a story that perfectly encapsulates the upside-down logic of progressive criminal justice: a 7-Eleven clerk in Stockton, California — one of America's most crime-ridden cities — was robbed three times in 24 hours by the same man, who on one occasion threatened to shoot him if he intervened. [1] — Megyn Kelly "A Stockton, California 7-Eleven was robbed three times in 24 hours by the same man, who had previously threatened to shoot the clerks. When…" 52:10 On the third visit, the clerk snapped and beat the robber with a stick, the viral video showing a man getting exactly what was coming to him. The robber's injuries? Pain in his leg and shoulder. The police response? Investigating the clerk for assault. Dana Loesch is incredulous: these workers deserve a key to the city, not handcuffs. Both she and Kelly note that the police showed zero interest in the first two robberies — but were suddenly very interested once the victim fought back.
Claims made here
The Stockton 7-Eleven was robbed by the same suspect three times within a 24-hour period, with the suspect threatening to shoot clerks during multiple incidents.
A Stockton, California 7-Eleven was robbed three times in a 24-hour period by the same suspect before a clerk fought back.
Chapter 11 · 1:00:40
Restorative Justice and the Criminalization of Self-Defense
Dana Loesch connects the Stockton 7-Eleven case to a broader pattern she sees across progressive America: the restorative justice movement is systematically criminalizing self-defense and shaming victims into passivity. [1] — Dana Loesch "From the McCloskeys in St. Louis to Daniel Penny in New York to the Stockton 7-Eleven workers, the pattern is clear: people who defend them…" 1:00:40 She traces the pattern from the McCloskeys standing on their private property in St. Louis, to Daniel Penny restraining a threatening man on a New York subway, to the Stockton clerks — in each case, the person who pushed back faced prosecution. Meanwhile, three girls harassing an Asian family on a New York City subway — and apparently beating the woman filming them — received no mainstream media coverage, which Kelly attributes to the racial identity of the aggressors. The rule seems to be: who defends themselves, and who attacks whom, determines what's a crime.
From the McCloskeys in St. Louis to Daniel Penny in New York to the Stockton 7-Eleven workers, the pattern is clear: people who defend themselves are prosecuted while the aggressors are protected. Dana Loesch argues that restorative justice is systematically stripping Americans of the right and instinct to protect themselves.
Chapter 12 · 1:06:10
Chicago's New Mayor vs. the Word 'Mob'
After groups of young adults ransacked Chicago stores in what looked unmistakably like coordinated flash mob looting, a reporter asked Mayor Brandon Johnson about the 'mob.' Johnson — Chicago's newly elected far-left mayor — took exception to the word itself, insisting on 'large gathering' and warning against referring to participants as 'baby Al Capones.' Dana Loesch and Megyn Kelly are having none of it. Loesch points out that a 20-year-old committing crimes in a group is not a baby anything — they're a grown adult who can stand for the consequences of their behavior. What Johnson should have said, she argues, is simple: if you're 20 and doing this, get a job. Instead, by policing the language used to describe the rioters, Johnson enables and emboldens the exact behavior he's too squeamish to name.
After groups of young adults ransacked Chicago stores in flash mob-style riots, Mayor Brandon Johnson refused to call the perpetrators a 'mob,' objecting to the word as inappropriate. Dana Loesch argues this kind of language policing enables criminal behavior by refusing to name it accurately and hold perpetrators accountable.
Chapter 13 · 1:07:40
Memphis School: The Shooting That Didn't Happen
The Memphis story is the episode's most underreported bombshell. A 33-year-old former student, armed with a handgun, drove his red pickup to a Jewish school in Memphis. [1] — Dana Loesch "A 33-year-old armed man drove to a Jewish school in Memphis, entered the security vestibule — and couldn't get any further because of a dou…" 1:07:40 He entered the security vestibule — and that was as far as he got. The school's double-door locking system, CCTV, and alert staff meant that within moments of his arrival, they had his license plate and were on the phone to police. Officers intercepted him less than 3 miles away; he emerged from his truck with his gun drawn and was shot. No students were harmed. Dana Loesch argues this is exactly what decades of school hardening advocates have been calling for — and notes the tragic irony that a retired Secret Service agent demonstrated Parkland's security failures with a Post-it note experiment months before the massacre, only to be ignored. The Memphis success story received almost no coverage precisely because it validates school hardening over gun control.
Claims made here
A retired Secret Service agent walked through Stoneman Douglas High School with Post-it notes months before the Parkland massacre, placing notes on every student he could reach to demonstrate the school's security failure — but the school ignored the warning.
A 33-year-old armed man drove to a Jewish school in Memphis, entered the security vestibule — and couldn't get any further because of a double-door locking system. School staff tracked his license plate via CCTV, police intercepted him within 3 miles, and shot him. Dana Loesch argues this is exactly what school hardening advocates have been calling for — and the media refuses to cover it because it doesn't fit the gun control narrative.
A 33-year-old armed man was thwarted from entering a Jewish school in Memphis because of a double-door locking system, and was later shot by police nearby.
A retired Secret Service agent walked through Stoneman Douglas High School months before the Parkland massacre and placed Post-it notes on every student he could reach, exposing fatal security gaps.
Chapter 14 · 1:17:00
Biden's Biting German Shepherd: Commander in Chaos
It might seem like a lighter story, but the detail is damning: President Biden's German Shepherd Commander has attacked Secret Service agents so many times that Judicial Watch obtained a 196-page trove of internal incident reports through FOIA. [1] — Megyn Kelly "Biden's German Shepherd Commander has bitten at least seven Secret Service personnel, with a 196-page FOIA document detailing incidents inc…" 1:17:00 One uniformed officer was bitten twice — once on the tricep, once on the leg — and had to use a steel cart as a shield against further attacks. Another agent needed hospital transport. Politico, to its credit, published the story under the headline 'Don't blame the dog, blame Joe Biden,' noting that if a Republican president's dog had done the same, the Marie Antoinette narrative would have written itself. Dana Loesch goes further, drawing a line between the biting dog and the broader chaos she sees as characteristic of the entire Biden family — and suggests the dog would do better with a different owner.
Claims made here
Biden's German Shepherd Commander has bitten Secret Service and White House personnel in incidents documented in a 196-page trove of internal communications obtained via Freedom of Information Act.
Biden's German Shepherd Commander has bitten at least seven Secret Service personnel, with a 196-page FOIA document detailing incidents including an agent needing a steel cart as a shield. Politico published the story under the headline 'Don't blame the dog, blame Joe Biden.' Megyn Kelly and Dana Loesch argue it reflects broader dysfunction in the Biden household.
President Biden's German Shepherd Commander has bitten at least 7 people, including Secret Service agents, with a 196-page internal communications document detailing the incidents.
Chapter 15 · 1:24:00
Parenting Stories: Teaching Kids to Follow Through
The final segment of the show takes a sharp turn toward the personal, with Megyn Kelly sharing a parenting dilemma from their summer at the Jersey Shore: her 10-year-old son Thatcher was hit by a boat during a sailing lesson and then begged to skip an upcoming interclub race he had already promised to attend. [1] — Megyn Kelly "Megyn Kelly's 10-year-old son Thatcher wanted to skip a sailing interclub after being hit by a boat, but he had already promised his coache…" 1:24:00 Kelly chose not to force him but laid out the stakes clearly — you told your coaches you'd be there, they packed your boat, your team is counting on you. He went. Dana Loesch mirrors the story with her own son's resistance to fulfilling a football season commitment during a painful growth spurt. Both mothers agree these aren't just sports stories — they're character-defining moments. The broader conversation ranges from disciplining techniques (Loesch's grandmother's willow switch, Kelly's mother's calm disapproval) to the importance of parents being physically present and following through on their own threats. The segment is the episode's emotional counterweight — funny, honest, and warm.
Megyn Kelly's 10-year-old son Thatcher wanted to skip a sailing interclub after being hit by a boat, but he had already promised his coaches he'd go. Kelly chose not to force him but laid out the stakes — and he showed up. Dana Loesch shares a parallel story about her son and football. Both agree: following through on commitments, even when it's hard, is how character is built.
No indexed bits in this chapter.
Show stoppers
Snapshots ()
Key Quotes ()
This episode
Cast
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Outkick founder and author of 'American Playbook,' appearing as guest to discuss the USWNT, transgender sports, and the 2024 election.
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US Women's Soccer captain whose political activism and missed penalty kick became the central symbol of the team's World Cup failure.
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Host of The Dana Show, appearing to discuss self-defense law, the Memphis school shooting, Biden's dog, and parenting.
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Discussed in the context of Bidenomics messaging, the USWNT loss tweet, and his German Shepherd Commander's attacks on Secret Service agents.
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President Biden's German Shepherd who has bitten at least 7 Secret Service personnel, with incidents detailed in a 196-page FOIA document.
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Discussed as an example of 'cosmetic diversity' — promoted beyond her talent level on the basis of race and gender rather than merit.
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Used as a counterexample to politically active athletes — his apolitical stance kept him universally popular and his sneaker brand dominant decades later.
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New York subway rider who restrained and accidentally killed a threatening man, now facing criminal charges — cited as an example of self-defense being criminalized.
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Tennis legend who has spoken out against biological males competing in women's tennis, cited approvingly by Megyn Kelly despite political differences.
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Chicago's new far-left mayor who objected to the word 'mob' being used to describe groups of young adults who ransacked stores in flash mob-style attacks.
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Transgender swimmer who competed on the University of Pennsylvania women's swim team and was nominated for Women's Athlete of the Year by the Ivy League.
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Former college swimmer who competed against transgender swimmer Lia Thomas, now an advocate against biological males in women's sports, working at Outkick.
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First openly gay U.S. Cabinet member under Trump, quoted criticizing Rapinoe for being ungrateful to America given that 69 countries would imprison her for being gay.
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Lost to Sweden in the 2023 Women's World Cup round of 16, the earliest elimination in team history, amid criticism of team culture.
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Sports media company founded by Clay Travis, whose audience polls showed many Americans were not rooting for the USWNT during the World Cup.
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Tennessee city where a Jewish school's double-door security system successfully thwarted an armed attacker in a would-be school shooting.
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California city ranked among the top 10 most crime-ridden cities in America, site of the 7-Eleven robbery incident where a store clerk may face prosecution.
Stats
This episode
Claims & Sources
Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.
The US Women's National Soccer Team's loss to Sweden in the round of 16 was the earliest World Cup elimination in the team's history.
The US Women's Soccer team scored only one goal in the final three games they played at the 2023 Women's World Cup.
The US Women's National Soccer Team lost 5-2 to an under-15 boys team from Dallas, Texas in preparation for the 2019 Women's World Cup.
Michael Jordan's shoe still outsells every current NBA player's signature shoe combined.
More people watched 'The Last Dance' ESPN documentary about the 1998 Chicago Bulls than watched the NBA Finals that same year featuring LeBron James.
Megan Rapinoe would be imprisoned in 69 countries around the world simply for being gay.
Megan Rapinoe would be killed in 9 countries around the world simply for being gay.
Men have on average 57% more grip strength, 65% more leg strength, 90% more upper body strength, and 162% more punching power than women, despite being only about 7% taller on average.
A New York Times poll showed approximately 20% of Americans feel somewhat good about the economy, while about 70% say the economy is going poorly.
Approximately 65% of Americans do not believe the country is headed in the right direction.
Approximately 10% of the population opposes abortion in all cases including rape, incest, and life of the mother, and that group is overwhelmingly Republican.
The Stockton 7-Eleven was robbed by the same suspect three times within a 24-hour period, with the suspect threatening to shoot clerks during multiple incidents.
Biden's German Shepherd Commander has bitten Secret Service and White House personnel in incidents documented in a 196-page trove of internal communications obtained via Freedom of Information Act.
A retired Secret Service agent walked through Stoneman Douglas High School with Post-it notes months before the Parkland massacre, placing notes on every student he could reach to demonstrate the school's security failure — but the school ignored the warning.
Elizabeth Warren submitted a recipe to a Native American cookbook called 'Pow Wow Chow' and got her start in law by claiming to be a minority.