The Hour opens with the O.J. Simpson debate and the Buffalo Bills’ decision to leave him off honors in the new stadium. Shannon and Greg argue over whether on-field accomplishments can be separated from off-field infamy, then connect that to Pete Rose, Bill Cosby, the NFL Hall of Fame, and whether a legacy can survive a scandal.
The crew then moves through a caller’s take on Tom Kean Jr., Mikie Sherrill, and New Jersey politics before reacting to the New Jersey middle school yearbook that accidentally includes a baby photo of Adolf Hitler. From there, they cover a Maine Senate poll involving Susan Collins and Graham Platner, AOC and JD Vance as possible 2028 nominees, whether democratic socialists are gaining power because young voters feel priced out, and why Republicans may be underestimating the appeal of economic populism.
The hour closes with an extended FCC and ABC debate, asking whether The View and late-night television serve the public interest or act like partisan cable programming. Greg makes the libertarian case against government overreach while Shannon argues for broadcast-license accountability, then the show rolls into Fight Club, a study tying religious cues to junk-food choices, motorcycles and helmet laws, a caller’s question about talk radio and the FCC, and Phil’s “Today in Music History” segment before the crew signs off.

Jul 01, 2026




