BetterHelp's 2026 State of Stigma Report found that 85% of 2,000 surveyed Americans believe getting mental health support is wise, while 74% say society discourages people from doing so.
Trump's Iran Negotiations, Entertainment Mergers, NBA finals
Trump said "I love the inflation" on camera — and with midterms approaching, Ron Elving says the president has already dropped 20 points among independents since the start of last year.
Up First from NPR
Trump's Iran Negotiations, Entertainment Mergers, NBA finals
Trump said "I love the inflation" on camera — and with midterms approaching, Ron Elving says the president has already dropped 20 points among independents since the start of last year.
TL;DR
Trump's ongoing Iran negotiations dominate this June 2026 Up First weekend briefing, with NPR's Ron Elving breaking down why a deal remains elusive despite Iran's foreign minister declaring it in "final stages" [1] — Ron Elving "A peace deal with Iran has become Washington's defining will-they-won't-they saga. Ron Elving explains that both sides want an agreement — …" 01:55 . The DOJ's unconditional approval of Paramount's $111 billion merger with Warner Bros. Discovery raises eyebrows given Larry Ellison's Trump ties and the political implications for CNN [2] — David Folkenflik "The DOJ's Antitrust Division just waved through the biggest like-for-like merger in Hollywood history with zero conditions. Two of the last…" 06:31 . Sportswriter Howard Bryant weighs the Knicks' near-inevitable first NBA title in 53 years and warns that sports betting corruption is only getting worse [3] — Howard Bryant "The Knicks have only lost 3 games all postseason and have come back from 20-point fourth-quarter deficits twice. Howard Bryant compares the…" 11:40 . Key takeaway: politics is shaping both foreign policy optics and media industry regulation simultaneously.
Up First covers three major stories: stalled US-Iran peace negotiations, the DOJ's unconditional approval of the $111 billion Paramount-Warner Bros. Discovery merger, and the New York Knicks' pursuit of their first NBA title in 53 years.
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Up First opens with a brisk preview of the weekend's defining stories. David Folkenflik and Alyssa Nadworny trade headlines: a peace deal with Iran remains elusive as Trump simultaneously threatens more strikes and promises peace is imminent; the DOJ has waved through the $111 billion Paramount-Warner Bros. Discovery merger with no conditions; and the Knicks stand one win away from ending a 53-year championship drought. The segment is deliberately fast-paced, signalling a news-dense episode before the hosts hand off to expert guests for each story.
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The episode's opening ad block features BetterHelp, Capital One Venture X, and Carvana. BetterHelp leads with a stat from its own 2026 State of Stigma Report: 85% of Americans believe seeking mental health support is wise, yet 74% say society discourages it. Capital One pitches unlimited double miles and a $300 travel credit on its Venture X card. Carvana rounds out the trio with a frictionless car-selling pitch — real offer, driveway pickup, no catch.
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NPR senior contributor Ron Elving joins to dissect what has become Washington's defining will-they-won't-they story. The week saw a US Apache helicopter go down in the Gulf of Oman, blamed on Iran, triggering US strikes and Iranian retaliation against Gulf neighbors — before Trump abruptly canceled a planned retaliatory strike and declared peace imminent. Elving's reading is clear: both the US and Iran have domestic incentives to claim a deal exists, but whether they've actually agreed on the same thing is another matter. A durable agreement, he notes, would reenergize oil markets and lower prices for gas, fertilizer, and food globally — and would give Trump a victory lap on his 80th birthday. [1] — Ron Elving "A peace deal with Iran has become Washington's defining will-they-won't-they saga. Ron Elving explains that both sides want an agreement — …" 01:55 The real test, as Elving warns, comes only once both sides have to deliver on whatever they signed.
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With bipartisan Senate opposition blocking Bill Pulte — who had zero intelligence experience — from even serving in a transitional capacity, Trump pivoted to Jay Clayton, a former US attorney for the Southern District of New York. Elving frames Clayton as a modest upgrade: still thin on intelligence credentials, but thin-and-real beats none-at-all. The segment then pivots to Trump's economic messaging disaster: asked about the worst inflation data in over 3 years, Trump said 'I love the inflation' on camera. [1] — Ron Elving "Trump's response to the worst inflation data in over 3 years was to say 'I love the inflation' on tape. With 20 points lost among independe…" 04:22 Elving suggests Trump may have meant to compliment the specific number — arguing it could have been worse — but failed to say so clearly, and now faces a damaging tape in an election cycle where he's not on the ballot to mobilise his base, having already lost 20 points among independents.
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The hosts play Trump's actual words — 'I love the inflation. You know why?' — and let them hang in the air before asking Elving to decode them. His verdict is damning: even if Trump meant to praise the inflation measurement rather than inflation itself, he failed to say so coherently, and the tape captures exactly what it sounds like. With Trump down 20 points among independents since the start of last year and not on the November ballot to turn out his base, Elving warns that a 'serious setback in the midterms' is a real possibility. [1] — Ron Elving "Trump's response to the worst inflation data in over 3 years was to say 'I love the inflation' on tape. With 20 points lost among independe…" 04:22 The segment underscores how a single stumble on the economy — the issue voters care most about — can compound political damage already in motion.
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Elving rounds out his segment with the weekend's strangest story: a new octagonal arena constructed near the site of the January 6, 2021 rally on the White House South Lawn, set to host a multimillion-dollar UFC event to mark Trump turning 80. [1] — Ron Elving "A multimillion-dollar UFC event is set for the White House South Lawn near the site of the January 6th rally. Ron Elving reads it as a deli…" 05:30 The subtext, Elving suggests, is transparency itself — the spectacle is designed to be big enough and loud enough to keep media focus on the party rather than on Trump's age and the political vulnerabilities it represents. As America's second octogenarian president, Trump faces questions that no UFC event can permanently suppress, but for one weekend, the strategy may work.
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David Folkenflik takes the anchor chair for the media story of the year: the DOJ's Antitrust Division has signed off on Paramount's $111 billion bid for the much larger Warner Bros. Discovery without imposing a single condition. [1] — David Folkenflik "The DOJ's Antitrust Division just waved through the biggest like-for-like merger in Hollywood history with zero conditions. Two of the last…" 06:31 The deal combines Paramount+ with HBO, CBS with CNN, and two of Hollywood's last remaining legacy studio empires — a combination Folkenflik describes as the biggest like-for-like merger in the industry's history. The DOJ's rationale was that in the streaming era, the relevant competitive market has exploded: Netflix, Apple, Amazon Prime Video, and others provide ample competition. That argument may be legally defensible, but the sheer scale of the consolidation — and the fact that zero divestitures were required — still struck observers as remarkable.
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Folkenflik's most pointed observation is that this outcome was widely predicted — not because the antitrust case was open-and-shut, but because of politics. [1] — David Folkenflik "Trump has openly said he wanted CNN in the Ellisons' hands. The Ellisons took over CBS, installed a right-leaning editor, and Trump liked w…" 08:24 Trump had publicly said he wanted CNN under the Ellisons' control. Larry Ellison, the Oracle co-founder and one of the world's richest individuals, and his son David acquired Paramount's parent company last year. David Ellison installed Bari Weiss — founder of the center-right Free Press — in charge of CBS, generating significant controversy. Trump approved of the editorial direction, and his regulators followed suit. Folkenflik's verdict: the DOJ gave the merger 'the matador defense' — stepping aside and letting it through. The Ellisons' Trump alignment effectively pre-empted any meaningful antitrust scrutiny.
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Despite the DOJ green light, David Folkenflik cautions that the road to completion is still long. The FCC must review CBS's locally owned broadcast stations — a separate regulatory lane. A massive infusion of foreign capital, including from the Saudi Sovereign Wealth Fund, adds another layer of scrutiny. The EU and UK both have their own regulatory processes underway. And Democratic state attorneys general have been growing increasingly aggressive about challenging major antitrust deals in court — which is likely where this is ultimately headed. [1] — David Folkenflik "The DOJ approval is the big hurdle cleared, but the FCC still needs to sign off on CBS's local stations, EU and UK regulators are reviewing…" 09:29 The DOJ's blessing is the biggest hurdle, but it is not the last one.
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Howard Bryant joins for the sports segment, and the conversation opens with a stunning result: the US men's team scored 4 goals against Paraguay in their 2026 World Cup opener — a single-match record. [1] — Howard Bryant "The US men's team had never scored 4 goals in a World Cup match. As host nation with nothing expected of them, they delivered the most stun…" 10:25 Bryant is characteristically measured: the women's team sets the standard for US soccer dominance, and the men's side isn't suddenly a championship contender because of one brilliant night. But as a host nation with a natural adrenaline boost, and with the next match against Australia on the horizon, Bryant gives permission to enjoy the moment. It's hard, he notes, to imagine a better World Cup debut given the turmoil the men's program has historically endured.
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Howard Bryant lays out the case for the Knicks' championship destiny with compelling precision. Only 3 losses all postseason. Two comebacks from 20 points down in the fourth quarter. A coaching transition that mirrors the 2004 Red Sox — Thibodeau fired, new energy, same core, championship-level results. [1] — Howard Bryant "The Knicks have only lost 3 games all postseason and have come back from 20-point fourth-quarter deficits twice. Howard Bryant compares the…" 11:40 Bryant draws the Boston parallel knowing New Yorkers will bristle, but insists it's the most accurate analogy: a team where everything works, where the feeling of inevitability is palpable. The Spurs, he acknowledges, have had the lead in the final 2 minutes of every game in the series, and Victor Wembanyama has declared them capable of winning the next 3. But Bryant believes New York's 53-year wait ends this weekend — tonight in San Antonio, or next game back in Madison Square Garden.
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Texas Tech quarterback Brendan Sorsby's case is, in Howard Bryant's view, a perfect encapsulation of everything that was wrong about legalising sports betting. Sorsby bet on his own team 40 times — a practice banned for over a century — and received a lifetime NCAA ban. Then a Texas judge granted an injunction allowing him to play while his case heads to trial in February. [1] — Howard Bryant "The 2018 Supreme Court decision that legalized sports betting made scandals like Brendan Sorsby's lifetime ban inevitable. Teams want their…" 13:10 Bryant's take is unflinching: this isn't surprising, it's structural. Texas Tech wants him because he's a great player. The teams, leagues, and media — much of which is itself underwritten by gambling advertisers — have no financial incentive to take a principled stand. The Supreme Court opened the door in 2018, and everyone walked through it. The result, Bryant concludes: public trust in sports was already eroding; it's about to erode further.
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The hosts close out Up First for June 14, 2026, with a full production credits roll: producer Dave Mistich, editor Diana Douglas, director Andy Craig, technical director David Greenberg, and executive producer Evie Stone among others. The tease for Sunday's NPR story — the unsolved 2020 killing of a Black teenager at a Seattle police violence protest, six years on — adds a note of journalistic gravity to the weekend wrap. Listeners seeking their local NPR station are pointed to stations.npr.org before the show hands off to a final ad block.
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The episode's final segment is a Midi Health sponsor read featuring the voices of co-founders Dr. Kathleen Jordan and CEO Joanna Strober. They describe a gap in care: women's perimenopause and menopause symptoms are underappreciated and often trivialized by clinicians, yet can cause serious long-term health consequences. Midi Health's response is a telehealth-first model built for iteration — trying different medications, helping women learn their bodies over time, rather than treating discrete diseases. The ad closes with a direct call to action at joinmidi.com, positioning Midi as a new category of care rather than a conventional medical service.
- Memorandum of Understanding (MOU)
- A non-binding agreement between parties outlining intentions and terms before a formal treaty or contract is signed; used here to describe the preliminary Iran-US peace framework.
- Antitrust
- Laws designed to prevent monopolistic practices and promote market competition; the DOJ's Antitrust Division reviews large mergers to determine if they would harm consumers or competitors.
- Matador defense
- An informal term for a regulatory strategy where authorities step aside and let something pass without resistance, like a matador allowing a bull to charge past; used by David Folkenflik to describe the DOJ's stance on the Paramount-Warner merger.
- FCC (Federal Communications Commission)
- The US agency that regulates radio, television, wire, satellite, and cable communications; must approve media mergers involving broadcast station licenses.
- Sovereign Wealth Fund
- A state-owned investment fund, typically funded by national revenues from natural resources or trade surpluses; the Saudi Sovereign Wealth Fund is cited as an investor in the Paramount-Warner Bros. Discovery deal.
- Skydance Media
- A film and TV production company founded by David Ellison, son of Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison; Skydance arranged the bid for Paramount that led to the Ellisons taking control.
- The Free Press
- A center-right online news and opinion publication founded by journalist Bari Weiss, described in the episode as having been placed in charge of CBS News.
- Injunction
- A court order requiring a party to do or refrain from doing a specific action; here, a Texas judge granted quarterback Brendan Sorsby an injunction allowing him to play football while his case proceeds to trial.
- Octogenarian
- A person who is between 80 and 89 years old; Ron Elving used it to describe Trump as the second octogenarian US president.
- Bipartisan
- Involving members of both major political parties; used to describe the cross-party Senate opposition to Bill Pulte's nomination as Director of National Intelligence.
- Loath
- Reluctant or unwilling; Ron Elving described senators as 'loath' to allow Bill Pulte even a transitional period in the DNI role.
- Placate
- To make someone less angry or upset by conceding something; Ron Elving said Jay Clayton's nomination would 'placate' enough senators to secure confirmation.
- Perimenopause
- The transitional period before menopause during which hormonal changes begin; Midi Health's ad highlighted underappreciated medical symptoms in this phase of women's health.
- DNI (Director of National Intelligence)
- The head of the US intelligence community, overseeing 18 intelligence agencies; the episode covers Trump's replacement of his initial controversial pick for this role.
Chapter 2 · 00:52
Sponsor Break: BetterHelp, Capital One & Carvana
The episode's opening ad block features BetterHelp, Capital One Venture X, and Carvana. BetterHelp leads with a stat from its own 2026 State of Stigma Report: 85% of Americans believe seeking mental health support is wise, yet 74% say society discourages it. Capital One pitches unlimited double miles and a $300 travel credit on its Venture X card. Carvana rounds out the trio with a frictionless car-selling pitch — real offer, driveway pickup, no catch.
Claims made here
BetterHelp's 2026 State of Stigma Report found 85% of Americans believe getting mental health support is wise, yet 74% say society discourages people from seeking it.
Chapter 3 · 01:55
Iran Peace Negotiations: Will-They-Won't-They
NPR senior contributor Ron Elving joins to dissect what has become Washington's defining will-they-won't-they story. The week saw a US Apache helicopter go down in the Gulf of Oman, blamed on Iran, triggering US strikes and Iranian retaliation against Gulf neighbors — before Trump abruptly canceled a planned retaliatory strike and declared peace imminent. Elving's reading is clear: both the US and Iran have domestic incentives to claim a deal exists, but whether they've actually agreed on the same thing is another matter. A durable agreement, he notes, would reenergize oil markets and lower prices for gas, fertilizer, and food globally — and would give Trump a victory lap on his 80th birthday. [1] — Ron Elving "A peace deal with Iran has become Washington's defining will-they-won't-they saga. Ron Elving explains that both sides want an agreement — …" 01:55 The real test, as Elving warns, comes only once both sides have to deliver on whatever they signed.
Claims made here
Iran's foreign minister stated that a US-Iran peace deal is in the final stages and that Iran's leadership has approved it.
A peace deal with Iran has become Washington's defining will-they-won't-they saga. Ron Elving explains that both sides want an agreement — just not necessarily the same one — and the real test comes only after signatures are on the page.
Iran's foreign minister said on June 12, 2026, that a peace deal with the US is in the final stages and Iran's leadership has approved it.
A peace deal would help President Trump celebrate his 80th birthday by claiming victory and ending a politically expensive conflict.
Bill Pulte had zero intelligence experience — so little that bipartisan senators refused to let him serve even temporarily. Jay Clayton's thin-but-real credentials as a federal prosecutor may be just enough to get him confirmed.
Jay Clayton, Trump's new pick for Director of National Intelligence, served as a US attorney for the Southern District of New York but has limited intelligence background.
Chapter 4 · 03:35
Jay Clayton, DNI Nominee & Trump's Political Standing
With bipartisan Senate opposition blocking Bill Pulte — who had zero intelligence experience — from even serving in a transitional capacity, Trump pivoted to Jay Clayton, a former US attorney for the Southern District of New York. Elving frames Clayton as a modest upgrade: still thin on intelligence credentials, but thin-and-real beats none-at-all. The segment then pivots to Trump's economic messaging disaster: asked about the worst inflation data in over 3 years, Trump said 'I love the inflation' on camera. [1] — Ron Elving "Trump's response to the worst inflation data in over 3 years was to say 'I love the inflation' on tape. With 20 points lost among independe…" 04:22 Elving suggests Trump may have meant to compliment the specific number — arguing it could have been worse — but failed to say so clearly, and now faces a damaging tape in an election cycle where he's not on the ballot to mobilise his base, having already lost 20 points among independents.
Chapter 5 · 04:22
Trump's Inflation Gaffe and Midterm Warning
The hosts play Trump's actual words — 'I love the inflation. You know why?' — and let them hang in the air before asking Elving to decode them. His verdict is damning: even if Trump meant to praise the inflation measurement rather than inflation itself, he failed to say so coherently, and the tape captures exactly what it sounds like. With Trump down 20 points among independents since the start of last year and not on the November ballot to turn out his base, Elving warns that a 'serious setback in the midterms' is a real possibility. [1] — Ron Elving "Trump's response to the worst inflation data in over 3 years was to say 'I love the inflation' on tape. With 20 points lost among independe…" 04:22 The segment underscores how a single stumble on the economy — the issue voters care most about — can compound political damage already in motion.
Claims made here
New inflation data released in mid-June 2026 showed the highest inflation level in more than 3 years.
Trump has fallen 20 points among independent voters since the start of last year.
Trump's response to the worst inflation data in over 3 years was to say 'I love the inflation' on tape. With 20 points lost among independents since last year and no ballot presence in the midterms, this clip could define the next election cycle.
New economic data released mid-week showed the highest inflation level in more than 3 years, prompting Trump's controversial 'I love the inflation' comment.
Trump has fallen 20 points among independent voters since the start of last year, making his 'I love the inflation' gaffe particularly damaging.
Chapter 6 · 05:30
Trump's UFC Birthday Extravaganza on the White House Lawn
Elving rounds out his segment with the weekend's strangest story: a new octagonal arena constructed near the site of the January 6, 2021 rally on the White House South Lawn, set to host a multimillion-dollar UFC event to mark Trump turning 80. [1] — Ron Elving "A multimillion-dollar UFC event is set for the White House South Lawn near the site of the January 6th rally. Ron Elving reads it as a deli…" 05:30 The subtext, Elving suggests, is transparency itself — the spectacle is designed to be big enough and loud enough to keep media focus on the party rather than on Trump's age and the political vulnerabilities it represents. As America's second octogenarian president, Trump faces questions that no UFC event can permanently suppress, but for one weekend, the strategy may work.
A multimillion-dollar UFC event is set for the White House South Lawn near the site of the January 6th rally. Ron Elving reads it as a deliberate spectacle designed to distract from Trump turning 80 — and all the political baggage that comes with that number.
A multimillion-dollar UFC cage match is scheduled for the White House South Lawn on Sunday to mark Trump's 80th birthday.
The DOJ's Antitrust Division just waved through the biggest like-for-like merger in Hollywood history with zero conditions. Two of the last remaining legacy studio empires — plus two streaming services and two major TV news channels — are about to become one.
Chapter 7 · 06:32
Hollywood's Biggest Merger Gets Washington's Full Blessing
David Folkenflik takes the anchor chair for the media story of the year: the DOJ's Antitrust Division has signed off on Paramount's $111 billion bid for the much larger Warner Bros. Discovery without imposing a single condition. [1] — David Folkenflik "The DOJ's Antitrust Division just waved through the biggest like-for-like merger in Hollywood history with zero conditions. Two of the last…" 06:31 The deal combines Paramount+ with HBO, CBS with CNN, and two of Hollywood's last remaining legacy studio empires — a combination Folkenflik describes as the biggest like-for-like merger in the industry's history. The DOJ's rationale was that in the streaming era, the relevant competitive market has exploded: Netflix, Apple, Amazon Prime Video, and others provide ample competition. That argument may be legally defensible, but the sheer scale of the consolidation — and the fact that zero divestitures were required — still struck observers as remarkable.
Claims made here
The DOJ approved Paramount's $111 billion bid for Warner Bros. Discovery after an 8-month review with zero conditions.
The DOJ approved Paramount's $111 billion bid for Warner Bros. Discovery with zero conditions attached — the biggest like-for-like merger in Hollywood history.
After an 8-month review, the DOJ's Antitrust Division found no threat to competition and imposed zero conditions on the Paramount-Warner Bros. Discovery merger.
Chapter 8 · 08:24
The Politics Behind the Merger Approval
Folkenflik's most pointed observation is that this outcome was widely predicted — not because the antitrust case was open-and-shut, but because of politics. [1] — David Folkenflik "Trump has openly said he wanted CNN in the Ellisons' hands. The Ellisons took over CBS, installed a right-leaning editor, and Trump liked w…" 08:24 Trump had publicly said he wanted CNN under the Ellisons' control. Larry Ellison, the Oracle co-founder and one of the world's richest individuals, and his son David acquired Paramount's parent company last year. David Ellison installed Bari Weiss — founder of the center-right Free Press — in charge of CBS, generating significant controversy. Trump approved of the editorial direction, and his regulators followed suit. Folkenflik's verdict: the DOJ gave the merger 'the matador defense' — stepping aside and letting it through. The Ellisons' Trump alignment effectively pre-empted any meaningful antitrust scrutiny.
Claims made here
Trump publicly stated he wanted CNN placed in the hands of Larry and David Ellison.
Trump has openly said he wanted CNN in the Ellisons' hands. The Ellisons took over CBS, installed a right-leaning editor, and Trump liked what he saw. When the regulator is the regulated's biggest fan, don't expect an antitrust fight.
The DOJ approval is the big hurdle cleared, but the FCC still needs to sign off on CBS's local stations, EU and UK regulators are reviewing, and Democratic state AGs are increasingly aggressive about taking deals like this to court.
Chapter 9 · 09:30
What Comes Next: FCC, EU, and Democratic AGs
Despite the DOJ green light, David Folkenflik cautions that the road to completion is still long. The FCC must review CBS's locally owned broadcast stations — a separate regulatory lane. A massive infusion of foreign capital, including from the Saudi Sovereign Wealth Fund, adds another layer of scrutiny. The EU and UK both have their own regulatory processes underway. And Democratic state attorneys general have been growing increasingly aggressive about challenging major antitrust deals in court — which is likely where this is ultimately headed. [1] — David Folkenflik "The DOJ approval is the big hurdle cleared, but the FCC still needs to sign off on CBS's local stations, EU and UK regulators are reviewing…" 09:29 The DOJ's blessing is the biggest hurdle, but it is not the last one.
Claims made here
The Saudi Sovereign Wealth Fund is among the investors in the Paramount-Warner Bros. Discovery merger deal.
The US men's team had never scored 4 goals in a World Cup match. As host nation with nothing expected of them, they delivered the most stunning opener in American soccer history. Whether that translates into a real run remains to be seen.
Chapter 10 · 10:28
US Soccer's Record-Breaking World Cup Opener
Howard Bryant joins for the sports segment, and the conversation opens with a stunning result: the US men's team scored 4 goals against Paraguay in their 2026 World Cup opener — a single-match record. [1] — Howard Bryant "The US men's team had never scored 4 goals in a World Cup match. As host nation with nothing expected of them, they delivered the most stun…" 10:25 Bryant is characteristically measured: the women's team sets the standard for US soccer dominance, and the men's side isn't suddenly a championship contender because of one brilliant night. But as a host nation with a natural adrenaline boost, and with the next match against Australia on the horizon, Bryant gives permission to enjoy the moment. It's hard, he notes, to imagine a better World Cup debut given the turmoil the men's program has historically endured.
Claims made here
The US men's national soccer team had never scored 4 goals in a single World Cup match before their 2026 opener against Paraguay.
The Knicks have not won an NBA title in 53 years.
The US men's national soccer team scored 4 goals — a record for a single match — in its World Cup opener against Paraguay.
The Knicks have only lost 3 games all postseason and have come back from 20-point fourth-quarter deficits twice. Howard Bryant compares them to the 2004 Red Sox — a team where everything just works, and a title feels written in the stars.
The New York Knicks have not won an NBA title in 53 years and are one win away from ending that drought in the 2026 Finals.
Chapter 11 · 11:43
The Knicks Are One Win Away from History
Howard Bryant lays out the case for the Knicks' championship destiny with compelling precision. Only 3 losses all postseason. Two comebacks from 20 points down in the fourth quarter. A coaching transition that mirrors the 2004 Red Sox — Thibodeau fired, new energy, same core, championship-level results. [1] — Howard Bryant "The Knicks have only lost 3 games all postseason and have come back from 20-point fourth-quarter deficits twice. Howard Bryant compares the…" 11:40 Bryant draws the Boston parallel knowing New Yorkers will bristle, but insists it's the most accurate analogy: a team where everything works, where the feeling of inevitability is palpable. The Spurs, he acknowledges, have had the lead in the final 2 minutes of every game in the series, and Victor Wembanyama has declared them capable of winning the next 3. But Bryant believes New York's 53-year wait ends this weekend — tonight in San Antonio, or next game back in Madison Square Garden.
Claims made here
The Knicks have only lost 3 games in the entire 2026 NBA postseason.
The Knicks came back from 20-point deficits in the fourth quarter on two separate occasions during the 2026 playoffs and won both games.
The Knicks lost only 3 games in the entire 2026 postseason, making them by far the most dominant team in the playoff field.
The 2018 Supreme Court decision that legalized sports betting made scandals like Brendan Sorsby's lifetime ban inevitable. Teams want their stars to play. Media is bankrolled by gambling companies. The conflict of interest runs in every direction.
Chapter 12 · 13:13
Sports Betting, the Sorsby Scandal, and the Corruption That Was Always Coming
Texas Tech quarterback Brendan Sorsby's case is, in Howard Bryant's view, a perfect encapsulation of everything that was wrong about legalising sports betting. Sorsby bet on his own team 40 times — a practice banned for over a century — and received a lifetime NCAA ban. Then a Texas judge granted an injunction allowing him to play while his case heads to trial in February. [1] — Howard Bryant "The 2018 Supreme Court decision that legalized sports betting made scandals like Brendan Sorsby's lifetime ban inevitable. Teams want their…" 13:10 Bryant's take is unflinching: this isn't surprising, it's structural. Texas Tech wants him because he's a great player. The teams, leagues, and media — much of which is itself underwritten by gambling advertisers — have no financial incentive to take a principled stand. The Supreme Court opened the door in 2018, and everyone walked through it. The result, Bryant concludes: public trust in sports was already eroding; it's about to erode further.
Claims made here
Texas Tech quarterback Brendan Sorsby bet on his own team 40 times and was banned for life by the NCAA.
The Supreme Court lifted the ban on sports betting in 2018.
Texas Tech quarterback Brendan Sorsby was banned for life by the NCAA after betting on his own team 40 times, before a Texas judge granted him an injunction to play this season.
The Supreme Court lifted the barring of sports betting in 2018, which Howard Bryant argues directly led to corruption cases like the Sorsby scandal.
No indexed bits in this chapter.
Show stoppers
Snapshots ()
Key Quotes ()
This episode
Cast
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US President central to all three main stories: Iran negotiations, inflation gaffe, and the politically charged Paramount merger approval.
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NPR senior contributor and political analyst, guest on the show discussing Iran, the economy, and Trump's political standing.
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Texas Tech quarterback banned for life by the NCAA for betting on his own team 40 times; granted a court injunction to play in 2026.
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Trump's replacement nominee for Director of National Intelligence after Bill Pulte faced bipartisan Senate opposition.
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Co-founder of Oracle and one of the world's richest people; took over Paramount's parent company and is central to the political dimension of the merger approval.
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Former opinion journalist and founder of The Free Press placed in charge of CBS News by David Ellison following the Paramount takeover.
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Trump's initial pick for Director of National Intelligence who faced bipartisan opposition due to zero intelligence background.
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Son of Larry Ellison and founder of Skydance Media; arranged Paramount's takeover bid and now controls CBS.
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Star player for the San Antonio Spurs who expressed confidence his team could win the next 3 games in the NBA Finals.
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One of Hollywood's last legacy studio empires, subject of a $111 billion takeover bid by Warner Bros. Discovery.
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Larger entertainment company merging with Paramount in a $111 billion deal approved unconditionally by the DOJ.
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NBA team on the cusp of their first championship in 53 years, discussed in depth by sportswriter Howard Bryant.
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NBA team facing the Knicks in the 2026 Finals, discussed as a potential spoiler despite trailing in the series.
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Approved the Paramount-Warner Bros. Discovery merger with no conditions after an 8-month antitrust review.
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TV news network set to fall under Trump-ally Ellison control via the Paramount-Warner Bros. Discovery merger, despite being a frequent Trump target.
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College sports governing body that issued Brendan Sorsby a lifetime ban for betting on his own team, a ban later partially stayed by a Texas court.
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Central subject of the episode's lead story; the US has been engaged in military conflict and peace negotiations with Iran.
Stats
This episode
Claims & Sources
Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.
Iran's foreign minister stated that a US-Iran peace deal is in the final stages and that Iran's leadership has approved it.
Trump has fallen 20 points among independent voters since the start of last year.
New inflation data released in mid-June 2026 showed the highest inflation level in more than 3 years.
The DOJ approved Paramount's $111 billion bid for Warner Bros. Discovery after an 8-month review with zero conditions.
The Knicks have only lost 3 games in the entire 2026 NBA postseason.
The Knicks have not won an NBA title in 53 years.
The US men's national soccer team had never scored 4 goals in a single World Cup match before their 2026 opener against Paraguay.
Texas Tech quarterback Brendan Sorsby bet on his own team 40 times and was banned for life by the NCAA.
The Supreme Court lifted the ban on sports betting in 2018.
BetterHelp's 2026 State of Stigma Report found that 85% of 2,000 surveyed Americans believe getting mental health support is wise, while 74% say society discourages people from doing so.
The Knicks came back from 20-point deficits in the fourth quarter on two separate occasions during the 2026 playoffs and won both games.
The Saudi Sovereign Wealth Fund is among the investors in the Paramount-Warner Bros. Discovery merger deal.
Trump publicly stated he wanted CNN placed in the hands of Larry and David Ellison.