EPISODE · Sep 5, 2025 · 1H
The Neil Haley Show — Sept 5, 2025 Guests: Dolvett Quince, Mitchell S. Karnes, Dr. Gilda Carle, Johnathan Otto Ehritz, Sean Hudson
from The Neil Haley Show · host The Neil Haley Show
Segment 1 — Dolvett Quince (The Biggest Loser):Dolvett comes in hot—“sorry, just did 1,000 pushups”—and teases a refreshed season: new gym, trainer-versus-trainer format, and Bob Harper moving to host. The big twist? A temptation fork-in-the-road (health journey vs. a cash offer) that’s designed to light up social. He plugs his NYT-bestselling first book, says book #2 is underway, and previews his “Quintessential” app focused on bite-size fitness tips and community. Bottom line: constant evolution to keep viewers inspired and engaged.Segment 2 — Mitchell S. Karnes (Author Update):Mitchell’s on a packed author circuit—panels on series characters, red herrings, and story arcs—plus a women’s club talk, Pumpkin Fest signing, and a steady cadence of monthly marquee events. Blog tour feedback is strong (“riveting,” “compelling”), email subs are climbing, and Book 3 revisions are in while Book 4 is already 5k words deep. Strategy is simple and old-school smart: tell stories well, show up everywhere, and keep publishing so readers buy the next book the moment they finish the last.Segment 3 — Dr. Gilda Carle (Commentary):First, a sober take on a Minnesota Catholic school shooting: grief, missed mental-health red flags, and a blunt call for real security and parental vigilance—“If you see something, say something.” Then a gear shift to culture: why the Taylor Swift–Travis Kelce romance works. In her view, it honors traditional courtship (he pursued, she reciprocated) while modeling mutual support—two high performers protecting each other’s world instead of competing. Respect and teamwork > headlines.Segment 4 — Johnathan Otto Ehritz (Author of The Stable Boy):Diagnosed with autism/Asperger’s, Johnathan channels a vivid, visual imagination into a cross-age story about a boy who bonds with horses (rooted in his own therapeutic riding experience). Adults are loving it alongside kids. He wants readers—especially neurodivergent kids—to see “weakness” as hidden strength, and urges parents to be steady supporters. Favorite chapter? “Goliath,” where a feared horse reveals unexpected depth. Sequel’s on the table; a new epic-fantasy series is already in draft.Segment 5 — Sean Hudson (Financial Advisor; ex-teacher):From $27k paraprofessional to debt-free advisor, Sean lays out the unglamorous fundamentals that actually work: real budgeting (not just bill-checkmarks), emergency funds (3–6 months), crushing high-interest debt, then investing with a plan. His practice blends defense (risk management/insurance) and offense (wealth management), taught in plain English and targeted to what clients actually care about—kids’ college, retirement, breathing room. He’s taking the message to churches, schools, and community groups because financial literacy shouldn’t be a luxury.
What this episode covers
Segment 1 — Dolvett Quince (The Biggest Loser):Dolvett comes in hot—“sorry, just did 1,000 pushups”—and teases a refreshed season: new gym, trainer-versus-trainer format, and Bob Harper moving to host. The big twist? A temptation fork-in-the-road (health journey vs. a cash offer) that’s designed to light up social. He plugs his NYT-bestselling first book, says book #2 is underway, and previews his “Quintessential” app focused on bite-size fitness tips and community. Bottom line: constant evolution to keep viewers inspired and engaged.Segment 2 — Mitchell S. Karnes (Author Update):Mitchell’s on a packed author circuit—panels on series characters, red herrings, and story arcs—plus a women’s club talk, Pumpkin Fest signing, and a steady cadence of monthly marquee events. Blog tour feedback is strong (“riveting,” “compelling”), email subs are climbing, and Book 3 revisions are in while Book 4 is already 5k words deep. Strategy is simple and old-school smart: tell stories well, show up everywhere, and keep publishing so readers buy the next book the moment they finish the last.Segment 3 — Dr. Gilda Carle (Commentary):First, a sober take on a Minnesota Catholic school shooting: grief, missed mental-health red flags, and a blunt call for real security and parental vigilance—“If you see something, say something.” Then a gear shift to culture: why the Taylor Swift–Travis Kelce romance works. In her view, it honors traditional courtship (he pursued, she reciprocated) while modeling mutual support—two high performers protecting each other’s world instead of competing. Respect and teamwork > headlines.Segment 4 — Johnathan Otto Ehritz (Author of The Stable Boy):Diagnosed with autism/Asperger’s, Johnathan channels a vivid, visual imagination into a cross-age story about a boy who bonds with horses (rooted in his own therapeutic riding experience). Adults are loving it alongside kids. He wants readers—especially neurodivergent kids—to see “weakness” as hidden strength, and urges parents to be steady supporters. Favorite chapter? “Goliath,” where a feared horse reveals unexpected depth. Sequel’s on the table; a new epic-fantasy series is already in draft.Segment 5 — Sean Hudson (Financial Advisor; ex-teacher):From $27k paraprofessional to debt-free advisor, Sean lays out the unglamorous fundamentals that actually work: real budgeting (not just bill-checkmarks), emergency funds (3–6 months), crushing high-interest debt, then investing with a plan. His practice blends defense (risk management/insurance) and offense (wealth management), taught in plain English and targeted to what clients actually care about—kids’ college, retirement, breathing room. He’s taking the message to churches, schools, and community groups because financial literacy shouldn’t be a luxury.
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The Neil Haley Show — Sept 5, 2025 Guests: Dolvett Quince, Mitchell S. Karnes, Dr. Gilda Carle, Johnathan Otto Ehritz, Sean Hudson
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