PODCAST · comedy
Burnin’ Daylight
by Matt McKinley
A podcast explaining and celebrating the intricacies, wisdom and humor of cowboy/ cowpuncher/ buckaroo culture. Enjoy conversations with working cowboys, authors, musicians, business leaders and hilariously offensive news and political analysis from the viewpoint of your favorite feedlot cowboy, Matt McKinley.The podcast for the working cowboy!
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596
A’s Pitching Shoves, Royals Drop 14 & Yankees Get Slammed | BD Baseball June 19, 2026
Solo BD Baseball for Friday, June 19. I’m running through Thursday’s short MLB slate, starting with a clean A’s win, Gage Jump shoving, Zack Gelof staying hot, the Royals putting up 14, Bryan Woo dealing, and the rest of the weekend matchups. Solo show today on BD Baseball, and we had a light Thursday slate — only eight games — but there was still plenty to chew on. The A’s gave me a good one for once. Gage Jump was fantastic, going seven scoreless with seven punchouts, the offense jumped the Angels right away, Shea Langeliers drilled one off the batter’s eye, Tyler Soderstrom followed with one of his own, and Zack Gelof pushed the hitting streak to 22 games. That’s a clean win. No mental gymnastics required. Around the league, the Royals had the loudest offensive night, hanging 14 on the Cardinals, though Bobby Witt Jr. leaving with a knee issue is something to watch. Bryan Woo shoved for Seattle, the Blue Jays finished off a sweep in Boston, the Red Sox were gross with runners in scoring position, and Andrew Benintendi ruined the Yankees’ night with a pinch-hit grand slam. Then I get into the weekend board — Tigers trying to get right with Skubal, A’s needing Jeffrey Springs to find it again, Rockies and Pirates headed to Coors, and yes, I’m hammering the over there. Eight games, a little standings check, weekend matchups, and a clean A’s win. Don’t let your butt crack and move your ass. We’re burning daylight. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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595
A’s Get Smoked, Rockies Fall Short, Tigers Go Cold | BD Baseball June 18, 2026
Rough day for the BD Baseball crew. The A’s got shelled, the Rockies lost a close one at Wrigley, and the Tigers bats went cold in Houston — so naturally, we had plenty to work through. In this episode of BD Baseball, we run through the full June 17 MLB slate with a little extra attention on the homer teams. The A’s pitching staff got beat up by the Pirates, Ryan O’Hearn drove in six, and Zack Gelof at least kept his hitting streak alive. The Rockies gave up a seven-run inning to the Cubs, but Sterlin Thompson hit the first two homers of his big league career, Hunter Goodman kept swinging it, and Colorado’s lineup still looks a lot more interesting than the record says. On the Tigers side, it was a frustrating one. Detroit only managed three hits against Houston, Peter Lambert shoved, Kevin McGonigle got one off Josh Hader late, and Gleyber Torres heading back to the IL with an oblique issue is a real kick in the teeth. We also get into Andrew Painter getting lit up again and finally sent down, the Shohei Ohtani pitching/DH rule conversation, umpire challenge drama, the Yankees doing Yankee things without Judge, Kyle Bradish punching out 12, the Mariners going to a six-man rotation, and why the A’s need pitching help if they’re going to keep hanging around the wildcard race. It’s a full slate recap, BD Baseball style: straight talk, no filler, and no pretending bad baseball is good baseball. Topics covered: A’s vs Pirates Rockies vs Cubs Tigers vs Astros Zack Gelof’s hitting streak Sterlin Thompson’s first MLB homers Gleyber Torres injury Andrew Painter sent down Shohei Ohtani rule discussion Yankees vs White Sox Blue Jays bullpen shutout Kyle Bradish career-high strikeouts Mariners rotation talk June 17 MLB recap June 18 MLB look-ahead Don’t let your butt crack, and move your ass. We’re burning daylight. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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594
A’s Blow It, Rockies Steal One & Tigers Waste Framber | BD Baseball June 17, 2026
Jake’s back on the mic and we had a full MLB slate to chew through. The A’s jumped out early on the Pirates, Zach Gelof stayed hot, and then the bullpen let another one slip away. The Rockies gave us the bright spot of the day with a win at Wrigley, while the Tigers wasted a good Framber Valdez start and opened up a bigger conversation about Detroit’s rotation and bullpen decisions. We also get into the rest of the league: Jesús Luzardo dealing for Philly, George Springer hitting career homer No. 300, the Yankees hammering the White Sox, Logan Gilbert shoving for Seattle, Reid Detmers blanking Arizona, Shohei Ohtani supplying the only run in a 1-0 Dodgers win, and the Giants apparently sliding into full fire-sale mode. Then we look ahead at today’s games, the A’s-Pirates rubber match, Rockies-Cubs, Tigers-Astros, a few weekend series worth watching, and the World Cup crowds taking over American cities. The dog days are here. The ball is flying. Trade rumors are heating up. It’s a damn good time to be a baseball fan. Move your ass. We’re burning daylight. In this episode: A’s blow an early lead against Pittsburgh Bryan Reynolds and Brandon Lowe power the Pirates comeback Zach Gelof keeps swinging a hot bat Rockies beat the Cubs at Wrigley Tigers waste a strong Framber Valdez start Jake breaks down Detroit’s rotation questions Phillies, Blue Jays, Yankees, Mariners and Dodgers all make noise Shohei Ohtani wins a 1-0 game with one swing Giants trade rumors and possible fire sale talk Today’s MLB slate preview World Cup crowds bring chaos and energy to American cities Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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593
A’s Bats Are Cooking, Tigers Go Deep & Rockies Pain at Wrigley | BD Baseball 6-16-26
The homer teams had themselves a night… well, two of them did, anyway. The A’s absolutely stomped the Pirates 11–2, led by a full‑on manimal performance from Nick Kurtz: three hits, two nukes, five driven in, and a pretty clear “vote me into the All‑Star Game” message to the league. Old man Jeff McNeil – the Flying Squirrel – finally woke up too, with three hits and four RBI out of the bottom of the lineup, turning things over for Kurtz and making the A’s offense look downright dangerous again. On the mound, J.T. Ginn gave me another honest‑to‑God quality start: six innings, one unearned run, worked through traffic, and looked more and more like the ace of a very shaky A’s staff. Meanwhile Lawrence Butler keeps hitting rockets and the hits are finally falling. It was the opposite vibe for the Rockies. They blew a late lead at Wrigley and got walked off on a walk as Pete Crow‑Armstrong hit for the first cycle of the 2026 season and basically beat Colorado by himself. That’s one of those games where you shut the TV off and stand in a cold shower questioning your life choices. In Detroit, though, they’re partying. Colt Keith went deep three times, drove in six, and the Tigers dropped five homers on the Astros in a 9–3 win. We hit the best performances of the night, Dustin May’s one‑hit shutout, the standings, key transactions, and a full rundown of today’s pitching matchups. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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592
My A’s Won the Series… But Sunday Was a Crime Scene | BD Baseball 6-15-26
My A’s took the weekend series from my Rockies, so technically I should be happy. But then Sunday happened. Colorado dropped a franchise-record 23 runs on 24 hits in Las Vegas, and the A’s got absolutely slobber-knocked in the getaway game. Willi Castro went off, Hunter Goodman nearly hit for the cycle, and Las Vegas Ballpark kept playing like a launchpad. In this episode of BD Baseball, I start with the homer teams — A’s, Rockies, and Tigers — then run through the rest of the MLB weekend from June 12–14. I get into: A’s taking the series 2–1 from Colorado Rockies dropping 23 runs on the A’s Willi Castro, Hunter Goodman, and the Rockies’ offensive explosion Zack Gelof’s hitting streak and Tyler Soderstrom’s on-base streak Tigers’ bats going quiet against Cleveland Tarik Skubal getting back on the mound Jacob Misiorowski throwing a complete-game one-hitter with 15 strikeouts for Milwaukee Yoshinobu Yamamoto flirting with a no-hitter Paul Skenes pitching well and still losing A full MLB weekend rundown and quick look at the week ahead BD Baseball is scores, starters, who’s hot, who’s not, and straight baseball talk without the filler. Move your ass. We’re burning daylight. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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591
A’s Climb Back, Rockies Stick It to the Cubs & Tigers Get Rolling | BD Baseball June 12, 2026
Welcome back, Daylight Burners. Jake and I are back on BD Baseball and the season is heating up. The A’s got themselves a day off after climbing back toward .500, which is probably a good thing before the Rockies come to town this weekend. The Rockies, meanwhile, had one of those games where the box score tells you they should’ve been in it, and then you look up and they lost by six. Twelve hits, still got beat 9-3, because Seiya Suzuki hit a grand slam and the Cubs did Cubs stuff. And then there’s the Tigers. Detroit went absolutely stupid on Minnesota — six home runs, 11-0 final, and one of those games where you just start laughing at the box score. We’ll get into the A’s, Rockies, Tigers, the rest of Thursday’s MLB slate, the best arms, the best bats, and whatever rabbit holes Jake and I end up wandering down. BD Baseball. Ball talk, homer bias, and box scores that don’t always make a lick of sense. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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590
Screw(worm) Iran! — Friggin’ Farm & Ranch Report June 12, 2026
Friggin’ Farm & Ranch Report for Friday, June 12, 2026. We wrap the week with a full run‑through of the board, the barns, and the Beltway. August live closes in the low 240s while August feeders rip higher, five‑area cash holds in the mid‑250s, and the basis blows out to roughly $14. We walk the Sale Barn Pulse and National Beef Wire runs: $4‑plus calves from Missouri and Kansas, nearly $500/cwt on high‑end New Mexico cattle, and $560/cwt on 430‑pound calves at Fallon, Nevada — a $2,400 range calf. On the heavy side, 8–9 weights in the Southern Plains and East are stuck in the mid‑$3s as packer capacity and plant issues bite. From there we hit the drought map and producer headspace: the Southwest and Southern Plains lighting up in D2–D4, the Corn Belt drowning, and what that split means for hay, fall feed costs, and who’s liquidating what. War Reel covers day 101 of a choked Strait of Hormuz, IRGC strikes on US bases in Kuwait, Bahrain, and Jordan, Trump’s latest “deal is close” talk, Houthi threats in the Red Sea, and why a 6% dump in Brent crude doesn’t mean your diesel and fertilizer come back to normal any time soon. Bugs & biosecurity brings a tight screwworm update (Texas and New Mexico cases, new USDA lab at Kerrville, and futures traders finally pricing it), plus a quick check on the Cargill Fort Morgan lockout and what that idle plant does to kill capacity and basis. We then sit down with the six‑sentence FENCE Act: what it actually changes inside ECP, why it’s a marginal improvement in a program you may not love, and where “new fencing technology” becomes GPS collars, data exhaust, and a future fight over who owns your grazing information. We close with quick hits on BLM’s grazing “modernization” rule, USDA payment‑limit tweaks, drought and producer sentiment, On This Day in history, and the weekend sports slate. If you make your living on a horse, in a tractor, or in the sale barn, this episode walks you through what the board, the bugs, the fuel, and the feds just did to your budget this week. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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589
A’s Rally, Rockies Walk It Off & MLB Loses Its Mind | BD Baseball June 11, 26
Jake and I break down a wild day in baseball, starting with the homer teams: the A’s taking two out of three from Milwaukee and the Rockies walking off the Cubs. Then we hit the rest of the MLB chaos: the Giants’ ridiculous comeback, Drew Rasmussen punching out 13, the Yankees sweeping Cleveland, the White Sox taking over the AL Central, the Pirates stunning the Dodgers, Max Scherzer reaching 3,500 strikeouts, and Reid Detmers shoving against Houston. A’s win. Rockies win. Cubs lose. Astros lose. Good baseball day. Headline:A’s Win, Rockies Walk It Off, and MLB Gets Weird Subheadline: The A’s took the series, the Rockies stuck it to the Cubs, the White Sox took the Central, and the Giants pulled off one of the wildest comebacks of the year. Post: The homer teams both got it done, so that’s where Jake and I started. The A’s took two out of three from Milwaukee in Vegas, with Alika Williams hitting his first career homer and Carlos Cortes and Lawrence Butler going deep late to flip the game. The bullpen held it together, the defense looked better, and the A’s keep climbing back toward .500. Then the Rockies walked off the Cubs, which is always worth celebrating. Michael Lorenzen gave Colorado a solid start at Coors, TJ Rumfield got them back in it, and Sterlin Thompson finished it in the ninth. After that, the whole MLB slate turned into chaos: the Giants erased a 9-1 deficit, Drew Rasmussen struck out 13, the Yankees swept Cleveland, the White Sox took over the AL Central, the Pirates stunned the Dodgers, and Reid Detmers shoved as the Angels beat the Astros. Good day for the A’s. Good day for the Rockies. Bad day for the Cubs and Astros. Move your ass. We’re burning daylight. Substack Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Down Goes Hormuz — Friggin’ Farm & Ranch Report June 11, 2026
Good morning, Daylight Burners. This is the Friggin’ Farm & Ranch Report for Thursday, June 11, 2026. Live cattle are firming back up, feeders love the cheaper corn, hogs are soft, and the grain complex is still weak – but the real world is loading for bear. We’ve got: – A board that wants to drag cash cattle down while the barns keep paying mid‑4s on five‑weights and the five‑area cash fats hang in the mid‑250s. The board lies; the barn doesn’t.– Screwworm risk still real but not “all screwworm all the time” – five confirmed U.S. cases, control zones and sterile flies in place, and the real job for producers is checking wounds, drying navels, and calling it in when you see something ugly.– A big update on the Cargill Fort Morgan situation: 1,700+ Teamsters locked out, unfair labor practice charges, and what it means when a 5,000–6,000 head‑per‑day plant goes dark in a market with the smallest cow herd since Truman.– BLM’s new “modernizing” grazing rule – streamlined for them, more rangeland‑health hooks for your permits, plus a June 11 virtual meeting where they’ll tell you it’s all for your own good.– USDA’s sudden “Farmer and Rancher Freedom Framework” and why I’m not calling it a win until we see actual regs, projects, or enforcement actions die because of it.– A heavy war reel: Apache down near Hormuz, U.S. “self‑defense” strikes into Iran, Iranian shots at our bases in Jordan, Kuwait, and Bahrain, Houthis threatening the Red Sea/Bab el‑Mandeb, and how all that war risk turns diesel, fertilizer, and freight into hostages again.– On This Day, June 10: National Milk Month kicks off as a chain‑store promo, and Farm Credit finally pays Uncle Sam back for the ’80s bailout – two reminders that ag has been “managed” from the outside for a long damn time. If you run cows or ground and you’re trying to make sense of the board, the bugs, the packers, the alphabet agencies, and two different Middle East chokepoints all at once, this one’s for you. Full immersive transcript, charts, and link pack over on Substack: burnindaylight.substack.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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587
Packer Hooks, BLM Paperwork, and a Helicopter Down — Friggin’ Farm & Ranch Report June 10, 2026
Well howdy there, daylight burners. This is the Friggin’ Farm & Ranch Report for Wednesday, June 10. All the numbers are from yesterday’s close, because I’m not a breaking‑news guy – I want time to see what the hell we’ve actually got going on. We start on the board and in the barn. Live and feeder cattle were up – August live at 252.50, October at 248.25, feeders up 2–3 bucks across the board – while lean hogs kept bleeding lower around 97.20. Cash cattle are still stout with the 5‑area live in the mid‑250s and dressed over 404, and the sale barns say light calves are gold: 550‑pounders ringing up in the mid‑400s to high‑400s while 8–9 weights are stuck down in the low‑ to mid‑300s. Weight is discounting, lightness is paying, and the better‑managed, tighter pens are still dragging top dollar. On the grain side, July corn’s around 4.20¾, wheat trying to bounce off multi‑year lows, and beans sagging sideways while everyone stares at South America and U.S. weather. Corn is cheap by recent history, but USDA’s balance sheet still screams ‘ample supplies.’ Then we lay that next to energy: Brent in the mid‑90s and national diesel still north of five bucks – AAA and EIA have diesel just over that 5‑dollar mark even after a little pullback. Feed looks manageable on paper, but every gallon of diesel and every pound of fertilizer is still trying to crawl up your back. Then we move to the war reel. A U.S. Army AH‑64 Apache went down near the Strait of Hormuz, off Oman. Both crew members were pulled out and are reported safe, but Trump says Iran shot it down with a Shahed drone and that the U.S. ‘must respond,’ and CENTCOM already answered with strikes inside Iran. For the first time, we had a drone knock down a helicopter and another drone boat help drag the crew out of the water. This isn’t just war porn – it’s the risk premium baked into every barrel that has to squeeze through that chokepoint, and that’s why your diesel and fertilizer don’t come back to earth as fast as the chart says they should. Back home, we hit the New World screwworm update. USDA APHIS first confirmed a 3‑week‑old calf in Zavala County, then a second calf in Zavala, a calf in La Salle County, and a dog out in the Andrews County oil patch – plus another La Salle calf for five confirmed U.S. cases so far. We talk about the 20‑kilometer infested zones, road checkpoints, paperwork on livestock movements, and sterile‑fly drops along the border – and how all of that looks if you’re in South Texas, New Mexico, or buying cattle out of those areas. The bug is a biology problem; the rules they’ll write on top of it are an economic problem. I wrap it up with why packers are still chasing cattle in a short‑cattle, long‑capacity world, how BLM’s new grazing rule and the death of the Public Lands Rule change (and don’t change) public‑land grazing reality, what EPA’s right‑to‑repair guidance actually does for your ability to work on your own iron, and a quick hit on H5N1 in dairy cattle and what that might mean for cull cows going through dairy‑heavy plants. If you make your living on a horse, in a tractor, or with a wrench in your hand – or you just care what screwworms, packers, public land, and a downed Apache mean for your fuel bill and sale‑barn check – this one’s for you. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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586
BD Baseball – June 9, 2026: Vegas Launching Pad, Naylor Villain Arc & A’s–Brewers Madness
On today’s BD Baseball, Jake and I break down one of the wildest games of the season: A’s–Brewers in Las Vegas, a 12‑inning circus with 11 homers, 29 runs, 34 hits, 441 pitches, and 7 pitchers used by each side in 4 hours and 14 minutes. We talk about Vegas playing like Coors on steroids, Shay Langeliers and Tyler Soderstrom going deep, Nick Kurtz leaving the yard entirely, and William Contreras hitting a tank so hard he ended up on his ass at the plate. We also hit Josh Naylor’s full villain arc in Detroit – the McGonigle play at first, the sliding mitt thrown at Dingler, the cleats‑up slide through second – and why I’m now firmly in the “fuck Josh Naylor” camp, with Jake giving his view from behind home plate on Sunday. From there we dive into the ABS challenge system (Dingler’s masterclass vs umps getting petty on timing), give props to the Philly ump who let Christopher Sánchez get his ovation, and run through the rest of the board: Mariners waking up, Rays stopping their skid, Yankees’ first extra‑innings win of the year, Astros refusing to die, the Nats’ fun young offense, plus today’s best pitching matchups including Paul Skenes vs the Dodgers and J.T. Ginn back on the hill in Vegas. Enjoy your baseball and move your ass – we’re burnin’ daylight. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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585
Friggin' Farm & Ranch Report — Screwworm, Spy Collars & Board vs Barn | June 9, 2026
Howdy there, I'm Matt McKinley and we're Burnin' Daylight. Today's Friggin' Farm & Ranch Report for June 9, 2026 covers: 🐛 NEW WORLD SCREWWORM — What's really happening in South and West Texas. What the quarantine zones and border closures mean for cattle and trade. Why DC handed screwworm preparedness to a meat-packing and export power broker instead of a parasite nerd or a working cow-calf rep. 📡 VIRTUAL FENCING & SOFT CONTROL — GPS collars, NRCS money, and conservation maps that might save you some fence posts while they quietly write a surveillance log of everywhere your cows ever walked. 📊 MARKETS: BOARD VS BARN — Cash cattle still out-muscling the futures. Sale barns paying up for the right kind of calves. Grains sliding. Diesel camped out around $5.35 as policy and war premium keep squeezing margins. 📅 ON THIS DAY — D-Day, the Bill of Rights, the Antiquities Act, Orwell's 1984, and the USS Liberty incident. Judge governments by their incentives, not their press releases. Full transcript + sources: https://burnindaylight.substack.com We're Burnin' Daylight. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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584
Tigers Wake Up, Miz Dome Shot, A's Scuffling | BD Baseball 6-8-26
The Tigers woke up. The A’s scuffled. And Jacob Misiorowski put a 98 mph cutter off Tyler Freeman’s dome at Coors in one of the scarier moments of the weekend. I’m rolling through the full MLB weekend recap on today’s BD Baseball. The A’s got beat up by Houston Friday and Saturday, but rookie Gage Jump shoved Sunday and helped Oakland avoid the sweep. Not a great series, but a 5-5 road trip feels a lot better than getting broomed by the Astros. Detroit also did the A’s a favor by taking two of three from Seattle, including a walk-off win Sunday. Terek Skubal looks like he might not be human, and the Tigers are starting to show some life. I also hit Braves-Pirates, Brewers-Rockies, Cardinals-Reds, Dodgers-Angels, Padres-Mets, standings, wild card picture, injuries, transactions, and the week ahead. Now move your ass — we’re burning daylight. #BDBaseball #MLB #Athletics #Tigers #Rockies #Baseball #BurninDaylight Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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583
A's Bullpen Implodes, Ketel Marte Walks Off Doyers | BD Baseball 6-5-26
Happy Friday, Daylight Burners. Jake is out today, so I’m rolling solo through a lighter MLB slate that still gave us plenty to talk about. I’ve got to start with the A’s, because that one hurt. JT Ginn gave Oakland six innings, two hits, one run, and eight punchouts. That is exactly the kind of start you want. The offense did its job too. Shea Langeliers hit an inside-the-park homer and another shot, Tyler Soderstrom went deep, Jonah Heim joined in, and the A’s put six runs on Shota Imanaga. That should have been enough. It was not. The bullpen gave up six, the Cubs walked it off 7-6, and Wrigley got to celebrate snapping an eight-game home losing streak. The A’s still took two out of three in Chicago, but that was one they had in their pocket. I also get into Zach Wheeler keeping it rolling for the Phillies, Baltimore roughing up Boston, the Yankees edging Cleveland, the Giants and Brewers putting up a football score, Toronto avoiding the sweep in Atlanta, Kansas City’s offense showing signs of life, Pittsburgh beating Houston, and Ketel Marte walking off the Dodgers in Arizona. Then I look ahead to the weekend series that matter: A’s-Astros, Mariners-Tigers, Pirates-Braves, Guardians-Rangers, Reds-Cardinals, Brewers-Rockies at Coors, and the Battle of L.A. The A’s are still hanging around the AL West and wild card picture. The Cubs still look like June swoon candidates to me. The Braves and Dodgers keep looking like monsters. And the NL Central is still the division I’m watching closest. Now move your ass. We’re burning daylight. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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582
Screwworm’s Back at the Gate | Friggin’ Farm & Ranch Report June 4, 2026)
The New World screwworm is not just another fly. It is a livestock parasite that eats living flesh, nearly broke parts of the cattle business before eradication, and is now back in Central America, Mexico, and pushing hard against U.S. cattle country again. In this Friggin’ Farm & Ranch Report, Matt McKinley breaks down what screwworm actually is, why it matters, how bad it got before eradication, how the sterile insect technique changed the game, and what modern ranchers have now that their granddads did not: better wound treatment, systemic products, emergency approvals, surveillance, and a whole lot more science behind the response. We also talk cattle markets, feeder prices, corn relief, diesel, the sale barn picture, and why a Texas-scale screwworm establishment could mean hundreds of millions in producer losses and billions in broader economic damage. This is a bug your granddad hated and your kids have never seen. Let’s keep it that way. Topics covered: New World screwworm biology Why it targets fresh wounds, navels, castration cuts, dehorning stumps, and other injury sites Why newborn calves, lambs, and kids are at highest risk The old benzol-and-pine-tar treatment era How sterile insect technique helped eradicate screwworm from the U.S. Why the Panama sterile-fly barrier matters Modern treatment tools: topical larvicides, systemic products, emergency authorizations, and wound care Why a Texas-scale outbreak would be an economic wreck Cattle markets, feeders, grains, diesel, and sale barn reads Why ranchers should watch the situation without letting fear merchants run the show Full immersive version with transcript, charts, slides, and source appendix is available on Substack: burningdaylight.substack.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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A’s Stun Cubs, Tigers Sweep Rays, Rockies Get Rocked, Sánchez Makes History, Ohtani Is AI | BD Baseball 6‑4‑26
Solo Thursday BD Baseball — Jake’s out, I’m running the full slate east‑to‑west, then shutting it down to read about New World screwworm instead of doing the farm and ranch report. We hit every game on the board: Marlins–Nats ruining my over, Tigers absolutely cooking the Rays at the Trop behind Troy Melton’s best start yet and Dillon Dingler’s third homer and ninth RBI of the series, and the White Sox offense dragging the Twins through the mud while Sam Antonacci reaches six times. From there it’s Mets ending Seattle’s eight‑game heater, Braves winning their 12th straight on two‑out bombs, Giants–Brewers playing a 1–0 game decided by a rookie’s first homer, Royals–Reds drama, Yankees–Guardians, and an Astros–Pirates game where Houston explodes late and Josh Hader finally closes one for them. In the homer block, the A’s pull a 10‑inning win at Wrigley on a Nick Kurtz RBI and a Colby Thomas rocket off the bench, Rockies get exposed by the Angels as Vaughn Grissom and friends hang 11, and then we zoom out: Cristopher Sánchez’s scoreless streak ends at 50 2/3 but he sets the all‑time lefty record, and Shohei Ohtani throws six scoreless while reaching base five times in a 7–0 Dodgers win. We close with today’s probables — Wheeler, Rodón, Chris Sale, Seth Lugo, JT Ginn, Robleski and more — plus a quick reminder that if you think Ohtani isn’t MVP, I don’t know what you’re watching. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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580
Gage Jump Shoves, Tigers Roll, and Joe Adell’s Canseco Special | BD Baseball 6-3-26
From Detroit’s bats waking up to the A’s and Rockies stealing headlines, Jake and I walk through a jam-packed slate and preview a loaded day of pitching. Show Notes (concise, from your POV): On this June 3 episode of BD Baseball, I sit down with Jake and run through a full 15-game slate: Tigers crush, Flaherty shoves, and Greene/Perez provide the power we’ve been missing. Gage Jump delivers seven strong in Wrigley as the A’s win a tight one behind an opposite-field bomb from Nick Kurtz. Rockies step out of the basement, the Angels fall further, and Joe Adell recreates Jose Canseco with a ball off his glove and head. We talk Johan Duran’s filth, John Smoltz’s “no pitchers, only throwers” comments, and where we agree or disagree. Around the league: Orioles in Boston, Pirates staying relevant, Braves still a wagon, and the Giants plus Red Sox continuing to make their fans miserable. We preview a stacked pitching slate with Peralta–Kirby, Sanchez–Buehler, Burns–Royals, Cole–Gavin Williams, and Skenes–Astros, plus some first-five and total leans. Injury and transaction notes on Verlander, Jackson Jobe, Mason Barnett, Cade Morris, Civale, and Severino. New episodes of BD Baseball drop all week on Burnin’ Daylight Sports. Don’t let your butt crack — move your ass, we’re burnin’ daylight. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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579
Friggin’ Farm & Ranch Report: Futures Freak Out, Sale Barn Says Otherwise | June 3, 2026
The board had a full‑blown hissy fit today. Fats dumped, feeders slid, and if you’re glued to the screen you’d think the cattle business just died. Out here in the real world, five‑area cash and the sale barns are still paying up, and the country isn’t buying the panic. I walk through the tape, the BDR Sale Barn Pulse runs, and what that ugly futures‑to‑cash spread really means when you’re hauling cattle instead of clicking buttons. Then we hit grains getting kicked lower on fund selling, a little relief on corn and meal, and why it doesn’t feel like relief when diesel, fertilizer, and 8‑percent money are still chewing on your margins. War Reel is hot—missiles and drones in the Gulf, U.S. strikes back, tankers getting hit, crude jumping—and that all shows up in your fuel and fertilizer bill real quick. Plus screwworm creeping north, Theileria in Nebraska, wolves in Washington, drought squeezing the beef cow herd, and fresh noise out of D.C. on MCOOL, cattle price discovery, and WOTUS. Full write‑up, charts, receipts, and the full transcript live over on Substack:https://burningdaylight.substack.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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578
June Swoon Watch, Tigers Chaos, and ABS Meltdown | BD Baseball 6-2-26
On today’s BD Baseball, Jake and I fire up the June Swoon Watch and take a hard look at the A’s, Cubs, and a few other clubs teetering on that edge between contender and collapse. Jake breaks down the Tigers’ wild 10–9 win over the Rays, Kerry Carpenter’s big return, and why Detroit went from best record in baseball last year to tied for the worst this year. We also dive into the ABS disaster in the A’s–Yankees series, how a frozen laptop cost Oakland a challenge, and what it means when the system that’s supposed to fix bad calls breaks down on its own. Then we hit on the new automatic check swing challenges in Triple-A, how there’s not even a clear rulebook definition of a check swing, and what that might look like if it ever comes to MLB. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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577
Board Gets Smoked, Barns Didn’t Blink – Friggin’ Farm & Ranch Report 6‑1‑26
On this Friggin’ Farm & Ranch Report for Monday, June 1, 2026, I walk through a day where the board got its teeth kicked in and the barn didn’t blink. June live cattle closed around 240, down over 11 bucks on the day, while the 5‑area cash trade is still printing in the mid‑250s, leaving roughly a $16 gap between paper and real cattle headed to a real kill plant. We talk placements, 11.6 million head on feed, almost 2 million head over 180 days, packer discounts on heavy carcasses, and what that means for feedlot leverage and your fall outlook. On the grain side, Kansas City hard red winter wheat just took a 23‑cent haircut after USDA’s May WASDE printed a 1.56‑billion‑bushel all‑wheat crop with only 15% of Kansas rated good to excellent – disaster numbers that still have to pencil through your hay and grazing plans. Then we hit diesel at the $5.50 floor, fertilizer up 40–47% since February, Iran threatening both Hormuz and Bab el‑Mandeb, screwworm creeping to within about 30 miles of the border, and the latest on Farm Bill, mCOOL, and base‑acre decisions. For the full charts, sale barn runs, and war reel sources, head to burningdaylight.substack.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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576
BD Baseball Weekend MLB Wrap: A's Pain, Tigers Misery, Rockies Chaos, Mariners Rising
Solo show today — breaking down every series from the weekend, west to east, AL then NL, and I had to sit here and recap one of the ugliest innings in A's history while also telling you my little league A's got wrecked by the parents in the end-of-season game. It was a full weekend. The real A's gave up 13 runs in the third inning Sunday. Yankees sent 18 batters up, batted through the order twice, Ben Rice hit a double AND a triple in the same inning, and my guys threw three pitchers at it and still couldn't stop the bleeding. They came back with eight runs and still lost by five. Severino got lit up Friday and is now headed to the IL with a right shoulder strain. The defense is a mess without Jacob Wilson. JT Ginn was filthy on Saturday and the offense actually showed up — Langeliers, Kurtz, and Soderstrom all going deep — but it didn't last. A's drop to 28-31 and the pitching staff is a dumpster fire right now. Tigers got walked off by Miguel Vargas in the tenth on Friday after Troy Melton threw seven innings of one-run ball. Seven innings. One run. Didn't matter. Saturday the White Sox put three homers on them — on Quero's bobblehead day, of course — and Sunday Colson Montgomery ties it in the seventh and Tristan Peters drives in the winner. White Sox sweep. Tigers are 6-21 in May. It is not good. The Rockies had one of the best nights of the year on Friday. Giants up 6-3 in the ninth, Goodman hits a 414-foot three-run shot to tie it, and then Tovar walks it off with his SECOND homer of the game. Saturday, Feltner comes back from injury and throws six shutout innings. Then the Giants show up Sunday and drop 19 on them. That's Coors. That's always Coors. Still take the series two to one. Beyond my teams: Yamamoto struck out 10 and held Philly hitless through three. Wrobleski went seven innings, one hit, nine K on Friday — one of the best starts of the weekend anywhere. Acuna hit four homers in his last five games and is making his case for best player in baseball again. The Orioles came back from 5-1 in the bottom of the ninth with eight straight guys reaching and Pete Alonso walking it off. Misiorowski retired the last 17 Astros in order in a 2-0 shutout. Carson Benge leadoff homer, Juan Soto grand slam, Mets sweep the Marlins. Pirates swept the Twins. Mariners swept the D-backs. Rangers swept the Royals. Full standings breakdown and a look at today's slate to close it out. 📅 Games covered: May 29–31, 2026📍 Sources: MLB.com, ESPN, CBS Sports, Fox Sports 🔔 Subscribe and don't waste the daylight👍 Like if you stayed till the standings breakdown💬 Tell me your excuse for your homer team in the comments — I've already got mine 📲 Follow us:@burnindaylightsports@moveyerass Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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575
Valentine Made History. Packers Low-Balled All Week. Screwworm at the Wire. | FFRRR Fri. May 29
The week of May 25, 2026 delivered one for the record books — and not just one record. Valentine Livestock in Valentine, NE set the highest daily weighted average for 7-weight steers in U.S. history: $407.28/cwt on 2,582 head. Five of the top 10 all-time 7-wt steer sales nationally now belong to Valentine — all set on the same day. Meanwhile, packers bid $253 live all week while yards held at $260. Only 1,559 head traded through Thursday morning. The $7 standoff held. Chains ramp back to 530–540K next week — that's the pressure point. Slaughter for the Memorial Day week came in at 448,000 head — the smallest Memorial Day week cattle kill in modern history. YTD kill is running 9.2% below last year's pace. Heavier cattle (avg live weight 1,469 lbs, up 45 lbs year-over-year) are backstopping beef output, but YTD beef production is still 6.6% below the prior year. Boxed beef ribs ran +$18.50/cwt in a single week. Choice cutout closed at $391.47 — net up $1.20 on the week despite two down days Friday. Screwworm is 60 miles from the U.S. border. All southern ports of entry remain closed to livestock imports. No timeline on reopening. Mexican cattle are not coming. That feeder supply hole stays open heading into summer. Strait of Hormuz: U.S. and Iran agreed to a 60-day ceasefire extension. Shipping stays unrestricted — for now. WTI crude sold off on the news, erasing an earlier 3% gain. First crack in 14 straight weeks of fertilizer price increases showed up this week — potash and UAN32 eased. High Plains drought is expanding. Kansas Poor-to-Very Poor winter wheat: 55%. National Good/Excellent: 26%. Nevada and Great Basin fire outlook: above normal through summer. Fallon Livestock Special Feeder Sale — Tuesday, June 9, 2026. burnindaylight.substack.com · burnin-daylight.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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574
June Swoon Watch, Tigers in Trouble & Weekend Series Preview | BD Baseball 5-29-26
It’s BD Baseball for Friday, May 29, 2026. Jake and I sort through a light Thursday slate and some heavy shit for a few teams. We start in Detroit: Skubal’s back on the IL, the offense is flat‑lined, and we’re asking out loud if the Tigers just suck this year and what a trade might even look like. From there we head to the South Side where the White Sox stay hot and Murakami keeps mashing, then up to Boston where the Braves roll through Fenway and Ronald Acuña Jr. hits a grand slam off the Monster because of course he does. We get into why teams are spamming breaking balls at the Cubs and how that turned their May into a disaster, plus another Paul Skenes start where he shoves and gets nothing from the offense or the bullpen. We also talk about the Astros coming on, the Rangers wobbling, and the AL West being wide open if anybody wants to grab it, while the Brewers and the rest of the NL Central look like a damn gauntlet. We run through injuries and roster moves — Twins shuffling pieces, Steven Kwan heading to the paternity list, more bad news for the Rockies’ pitching staff, and Andrew McCutchen getting released when everyone on earth just wants to see him finish up in Pittsburgh. Then we look ahead to the weekend: Padres at Nationals, Twins at Pirates, Cubs at Cardinals, Tigers at White Sox, Angels at Rays, Brewers at Astros, Giants at Rockies, Yankees at A’s, D‑backs at Mariners and Phillies at Dodgers. We wrap it up with the official BD June Swoon Watch List — Cubs, A’s, Rangers, Pirates and Padres — talk about who might actually get hot instead (Jays, Phillies, maybe even the Tigers if the baseball gods ever cut them a break), and then wander into NBA Western Conference Finals Game 7, Knicks Finals talk, the Toy Story/Avalanche Stanley Cup “conspiracy,” and a Little League “most improved” story from my team. Move your ass. We’re burnin’ daylight. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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573
$47M Beef Settlement, 180-Day Feedyard Record & FTC Pulls the Subpoenas | Friggin' Farm & Ranch Report 5-28-26
In today’s Friggin’ Farm & Ranch Report for Thursday, May 28, 2026, I’m coming to you out of Yerington, Nevada with a full plate of cattle, policy, and bullshit to sort through. We talk: June live cattle 10 under cash while the 5‑Area cash price holds 260.45 and packers slow the chain. USDA’s May Cattle on Feed report showing a record 1.99 million head on feed 180 days or more. Tyson’s new 47 million‑dollar civil settlement on beef price‑fixing for commercial buyers — with the DOJ criminal probe still hanging out there. Trump’s Argentina quota expansion and the 200‑day beef TRQ suspension that swing the foreign beef door wide open during a historically tight U.S. herd. The FTC’s fresh investigation into fertilizer pricing — on top of DOJ — while anhydrous, DAP, MAP, UAN, and urea all sit more than 150% above 2020. Base acre elections, CRP emergency grazing, Nebraska wheat damage, and what that means if you run cows or farm ground. Tigers hurting, Brewers rolling, A’s hanging around in the AL West, and an “On This Day” that runs from the Indian Removal Act to the Sierra Club and cloned horses. If this show is worth something to your operation, the best thing you can do is tell one neighbor who runs cows or farms ground and send them my way. Read the write‑up, get the transcript, and support the show over on Substack: 👉 https://burningdaylight.substack.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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572
Tigers Finally Win, A’s Fall Apart, Brewers Roll, Cubs Panic | BD Baseball 5-28-26
Jake’s back, the new studio actually works, and two-thirds of our homer teams lost again. We open with the Tigers finally snapping their skid against the Angels, at the cost of injuries to Casey Mize and Kenley Jansen, and then roll straight into the A’s pitching nightmare: Savale to the IL, Springs struggling, Severino bad, the carousel in full spin, and the bats cooling off in West Sacramento. From there we hit Rockies–Dodgers and Shohei throwing six no-hit innings while basically pitching against himself, the Blue Jays maybe waking up, the Guardians being quietly legit behind Gavin Williams, and the Nationals turning into an over machine with James Wood and CJ Abrams both on a tear. We dig into Seattle finally hitting a lefty against Jeffrey Springs, Logan Gilbert and the stacked Mariners rotation, the AL West being kind of trash, the Tigers’ much-needed 4–0 win, and how it feels to watch your team lose in every possible way. Then it’s Christopher Sánchez’s filthy scoreless streak for the Phillies, Padres pitching rumors as the Dodgers and Diamondbacks heat up, Ketel Marte going God mode, and why Paul Skenes with run support feels wrong but beautiful. Down the stretch we talk Brewers as a full-on pitching factory with Miserowski and Harrison, Cubs grinding through a ten-game skid and sliding into crisis mode, whether the Pirates hang around or just play spoiler, Murakami chasing records for the White Sox, the Royals being back to ‘Bobby Witt and nobody else,’ the Astros starting to wake up behind Yordan’s heater, and the Rockies getting the most Rockies run you’ll ever see off Shohei without a hit. We close with today’s light getaway slate, a couple of overs and moneylines we like, and a quick look ahead to a spicy weekend: Padres–Nats, Tigers–White Sox, Cubs–Cards, Brewers–Astros, D-backs–Mariners, Yankees–A’s, and Phillies–Dodgers. Move your ass, we’re burnin’ daylight. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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571
A's Said Gage Jump, M's Said How High | BD Baseball 5-27-26
All three of our teams got their teeth kicked in last night, so we’re naming and shaming. The A’s waste Gage Jump’s debut while Emerson Hancock shoves, the Tigers let Vaughn Grissom hang six RBIs on them (grand slam included), and the Rockies give up 15 runs and five bombs to the Dodgers in front of 52,000 people. We rip through the whole Tuesday slate — Yankees hanging 15 on the Royals, Braves–Red Sox turning into a sweat, the Cubs’ skid getting uglier in Pittsburgh, Brewers bullying the Central again, Rangers–Astros turning into a home run contest, Phillies stealing one in San Diego, D‑backs punching the Giants in the mouth, and more. Then it’s standings and pain: AL West clown car, NL Central power, how far the Tigers and Rockies are from “respectable,” plus the injury/transaction hits that actually matter — Aaron Civale to the IL and Gage Jump up, Logan Henderson’s back barking in Milwaukee, Luis Robert Jr. and Tyrone Taylor both shelved, Craig Kimbrel patching Tampa’s pen, Alejandro Kirk to the 60‑day, Noah Schultz down on the South Side. If you’re an A’s/Tigers/Rockies sicko or just like watching MLB chaos from a safe distance, this one’s for you. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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570
War Premium, BLM Backpedal & $950M Oil Bets – Friggin’ Farm & Ranch Report (5/26/26)
In this episode of the Friggin’ Farm & Ranch Report I’m pulling a lot of threads together: cattle on feed, beef imports, BLM’s backpedal on public lands, $5.60 diesel, and some very suspicious trades in oil and prediction markets. Here’s what I walk through: – May 1 Cattle on Feed: 11.6M on feed (+2% y/y), placements +6%, marketings –10% – first y/y increase in 18 months. dtnpf +1 – Beef cows still around 27.6M head (–1% y/y), so the cow factory is still tiny even if feedlots look heavy. nass.usda +1 – Q1 2026 beef imports at 562k metric tons / ~$4.5B, up 18% from last year and 122% from five years ago, while the Trump team talks about suspending beef import TRQs. qz +1 – BLM rescinding the 2024 Public Lands Rule and revoking American Prairie’s bison permits on seven Montana allotments, putting cattle back on those BLM pastures. wlj +1 – The board: June live around $248, August feeders about $349, July corn $4.58, KC wheat $6.76 – a don’t‑screw‑it‑up board, not a get‑rich one. FF-RR-transcript-5-26-26.txt – Inputs: EIA diesel at $5.596, AAA diesel at $5.584, DTN fert with DAP at $914, urea $865, anhydrous $1,118, and hay economics that pencil a multibillion‑dollar hole for alfalfa growers. gasprices.aaa +3 – War reel: Iran, Hormuz, Brent screaming higher on war headlines, then a ceasefire dropping prices – plus a $950M crude short placed right before that ceasefire and a Green Beret indicted for using classified intel to trade Polymarket. debevoise +2 – How all of that – war, imports, BLM, and Wall Street side bets – ends up in your fuel bill, fertilizer bill, and cattle checks. If you want the charts and receipts I’m talking about, the full write‑up for this episode is on Substack (free to read and listen): 👉 https://burningdaylight.substack.com That’s also where you get early access to the Burnin’ Daylight Report (my markets dashboard) and Man About a Horse. Share it with a neighbor, send me your local sale‑barn reports and drought pictures, and remember: move your ass – we’re burnin’ daylight. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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569
Astros No-Hit Rangers, Cowser Walks Off Again & A’s Still in First | BD Baseball 5-26
Memorial Day gave us everything: a combined no-hitter in Texas, back‑to‑back walk‑off bombs from Colton Cowser, and the A’s somehow still sitting on top of the AL West. Matt goes solo today and runs through: Weekend recap: Rays–Yankees in the Bronx, Astros bending the Cubbies over at Wrigley, Royals–Mariners chaos, Twins sweeping Boston, and the Dodgers doing Dodgers things. Full Memorial Day slate: 13 games, every starting pitcher, and the biggest offensive lines, including the Astros’ combined no‑hitter and Cowser’s 13‑inning walk‑off against Tampa. Division standings at the Memorial Day mile marker: why the AL Central is suddenly winnable, why the NL Central is a street fight, and how the A’s are clinging to first with a negative run differential. Homer Corner: A’s–Mariners in West Sac, Tigers trying to get right without Skubal, Rockies’ bullpen blowing another one at Dodger Stadium, and Gage Jump getting the call with Savale headed to the IL. Grab a beer, fire up the grill, and catch up on a wild weekend of baseball. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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568
Burnin' Daylight Sports — Harrison Shoves at Wrigley, Strider's Back & Tigers Schnide | MLB 5-21-26
I am flying solo today as Jake is live at Comerica Park for Tigers-Guardians Game 2. Full rundown of Wednesday's 15-game MLB slate: 🔥 Kyle Harrison — 7 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 11 K, Game Score 83 (Brewers 5, Cubs 0) 🔥 Chris Sale — 7 IP, 1 ER, 8 K, ERA 1.89 (Braves 9, Marlins 1) 🔥 Trey Yesavage — 6 IP, 0 R, 8 K, struck out Aaron Judge THREE times (Blue Jays 2, Yankees 1) 🔥 Shohei Ohtani — Leadoff HR + 5 IP, 0 ER, ERA 0.73 (Dodgers 4, Padres 0) 🔥 A's 6, Angels 5 (F/10) — McNeil tying HR in the 9th, Soderstrom walk-off RBI in the 10th Plus: Full division standings, homer team check-ins (A's, Rockies, Tigers), Golden Knights 4 Avalanche 2 Game 1 recap (Carter Hart .947 SV%), and a full preview of tonight's slate — headlined by Spencer Strider returning to Miami. Tonight's games: Strider vs. Alcantara (ATL/MIA, Peacock), Rodón vs. Fisher (TOR/NYY, MLB Network), Severino vs. Soriano (OAK/LAA), and the ECF opener: Hurricanes vs. Canadiens (8 PM ET, TNT). Move your ass. We're burnin' daylight. 🔥⚾ Follow us: @burnindaylightsports | @j_renquist | @moveyerass Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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567
$30 Million to Take Out Massie. 425 Beef Plants Into China. Make It Make Sense. — 5/20/26
The cattle trade story of the year dropped this week and almost nobody connected the dots. China's GACC renewed 5-year licenses for 425 U.S. beef packing establishments — straight out of the Trump-Xi summit in Beijing. USMEF CEO Dan Halstrom called it "what we've been waiting for almost a year." Meanwhile, the same Washington that spent $30 million to primary Thomas Massie — the only guy in Congress who consistently pushed back on farm policy sellouts — is now celebrating a China beef deal that China can turn off whenever it wants. We'll unpack both. Today's show covers: China GACC: 425 U.S. plant licenses renewed + 77 new registrations. What it means, what it doesn't, and why Argentina's peso devaluation changes the math Big 4 packer antitrust update — DOJ/FTC review context Cash cattle confirmed today: $263.90/cwt live, $410.00/cwt dressed — 3,074 head thin test on a soft board Corn reverses 11.5¢ · Boxed beef Choice $395.75 · HRW wheat at 17% good-to-excellent — worst since 2012 Diesel $5.60/gal (EIA wk ending 5/19) · Brent $110 · DAP $682/ton · Urea $549/ton War Reel: Ukraine hits Russian oil refineries 1,600 km inside Russia — Yaroslavl, Tuapse, Samara — and the direct line to your fuel and fertilizer bill Farm Bill: House passed HR 7567 April 30 (224-200), Senate markup imminent — Boozman targeting late May Brucellosis zone comment window OPEN NOW for MT/WY/ID Yellowstone interface producers On This Day: Homestead Act signed (1862) · Levi's born in a Reno tailor shop (1873) · Hamburger Hill — 72 KIA, abandoned 3 weeks later (1969) Burnin' Daylight is the farm and ranch market report for working producers — no hedge-fund voice, no filler, every number sourced before it goes on air. 🟡 Subscribe on Substack (ad-free + full show notes + dashboard):https://burningdaylight.substack.com Find us everywhere podcasts live. New episodes every weekday. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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566
$30 Million to Take Out Massie. 425 Beef Plants Into China. Make It Make Sense. — 5/20/26
The cattle trade story of the year dropped this week and almost nobody connected the dots. China's GACC renewed 5-year licenses for 425 U.S. beef packing establishments — straight out of the Trump-Xi summit in Beijing. USMEF CEO Dan Halstrom called it "what we've been waiting for almost a year." Meanwhile, the same Washington that spent $30 million to primary Thomas Massie — the only guy in Congress who consistently pushed back on farm policy sellouts — is now celebrating a China beef deal that China can turn off whenever it wants. We'll unpack both. Today's show covers: China GACC: 425 U.S. plant licenses renewed + 77 new registrations. What it means, what it doesn't, and why Argentina's peso devaluation changes the math Big 4 packer antitrust update — DOJ/FTC review context Cash cattle confirmed today: $263.90/cwt live, $410.00/cwt dressed — 3,074 head thin test on a soft board Corn reverses 11.5¢ · Boxed beef Choice $395.75 · HRW wheat at 17% good-to-excellent — worst since 2012 Diesel $5.60/gal (EIA wk ending 5/19) · Brent $110 · DAP $682/ton · Urea $549/ton War Reel: Ukraine hits Russian oil refineries 1,600 km inside Russia — Yaroslavl, Tuapse, Samara — and the direct line to your fuel and fertilizer bill Farm Bill: House passed HR 7567 April 30 (224-200), Senate markup imminent — Boozman targeting late May Brucellosis zone comment window OPEN NOW for MT/WY/ID Yellowstone interface producers On This Day: Homestead Act signed (1862) · Levi's born in a Reno tailor shop (1873) · Hamburger Hill — 72 KIA, abandoned 3 weeks later (1969) Burnin' Daylight is the farm and ranch market report for working producers — no hedge-fund voice, no filler, every number sourced before it goes on air. 🟡 Subscribe on Substack (ad-free + full show notes + dashboard):https://burningdaylight.substack.com Find us everywhere podcasts live. New episodes every weekday. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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565
FF&RR 5-19-26: Iran Rewrites Your Diesel Bill — $104 Crude, $262 Cash Cattle, Corn Rips 5%
The morning crew was too polite to spell it out, so Matt did it after the close. Tuesday, May 19, 2026 — WTI settled $104.23 (+3%), Brent ~$111 (+~5%), and the Trump administration publicly admitted it called off an Iran bombing campaign yesterday. CENTCOM's Adm. Brad Cooper says he's ready to "execute a broad range of contingencies." Stocks got smoked, metals cratered, cattle bled on the board — and cash cattle didn't blink at $262.72 live / $411.56 dressed. This is not a watch-and-wait day. The whole macro picture is repricing around an Iran war about to escalate again, and your diesel bill, your fertilizer bill, and your feeder calf math just got rewritten between Friday's close and right now. In this episode: • Markets close — LE 247.18 (-1.94%), GF 363.85 (-1.01%), HE 102.10 (+12.88%), Corn 475.25 (+5.26%), Beans 1,210.25 (+3%), Meal -3%, Gold -4%, Silver -12.89%, Russell -4.09% • Lead story: Iran, $104 crude, and what it means for diesel ($5.65 retail), urea, and DAP • Cattle complex: cash holds, board sells — sale barn pulse from Clovis NM, Producers UT Salina, OKC West (with the on-the-fly correction), Producers TX, Billings MT, Torrington WY • Cattle on Feed setup heading into Friday's NASS report • Grains: corn ripping, meal selling — feedyard ration math you should run tonight • Drought: D3/D4 at 16.3% of monitored regions; Southeast at 81% D2+ • Disease wall: potato wart in PEI + Dectomax-CA1 screwworm EUA • Policy: S.785 American Beef Labeling Act cloture filed (MCOOL fight inside 30 days), S.1102 WOTUS markup, EV/hybrid registration fees, and a Thomas Massie eulogy • On This Day: T.E. Lawrence's motorcycle wreck (May 19, 1935), Mt. St. Helens (May 18–19, 1980), and the capture of Cynthia Ann Parker / birth of the Quanah Parker story (May 19, 1836) • Sports: JT Ginn's 8 no-hit innings undone in the 9th, Rashee Rice 30 days, Caitlin Clark grand marshal of the Indy 500, Avs–Knights WCF, and the Toy Story 5 conspiracy • Close: what Matt would do this week — top off diesel, book fall fertilizer, sell into cash strength, pay down operating notes, don't be the guy holding the bag at 6 PM Eastern when the next Iran headline drops Shout-out to the firefighters, farmers, and ranchers working the fires in SE Colorado, the OK/TX Panhandles, and SW Kansas. Tied — keep that disc moving. Cash is king. The packer is the only honest buyer. Tehran is writing your fuel bill this week. Friday's Cattle on Feed report lands at 2 PM Central — be ready. Move your ass — we're burnin' daylight. Full write-up, sources, dashboard, A Man About A Horse, and ad-free episodes: burningdaylight.substack.com Follow on Instagram, Facebook, X, YouTube, Rumble, and wherever you get podcasts — search Burning Daylight. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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564
Heartbreak in Anaheim: JT Ginn's 8 No-Hit Innings Spoiled by Zach Neto Walk-Off | BD Baseball 5/19
Matt and Jake recap a brutal Monday around MLB: JT Ginn's 8 no-hit innings spoiled by Zach Neto's walk-off HR, the Mets putting up a 10-spot in the 12th to beat the Nats 16-7, the Rays staking their claim to the best record in baseball, the Brewers serving notice in the NL Central, and a Michael King–Yamamoto pitcher's duel in San Diego. Plus Acuña off the IL, Chadwick Trump called up, NBA double-OT, and the Avalanche/Toy Story conspiracy. Today's preview included. Move your ass — we're burning daylight. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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563
BD Baseball Weekly Wrap Up 5-17-26
Daylight Burners — Matt and Jake are back to wrap up another week of baseball. Livestream gremlins be damned, we recorded it anyway. What's in this one: - Tough week for Tigers, Rockies, and A's fans (but we survived) - The White Sox are 24-22 and chasing the Guardians — is this real life? - Murakami and Schwarber going nuclear (Schwarber more HRs than half the league since May 7) - Friday/Saturday/Sunday game-by-game recap across the league - Wheeler vintage, Valdez dealing, Schlittler keeps shoving - Nick Kurtz pushes his on-base streak to 40 games (chasing Rickey) - A's transaction tornado: Jonah Heim in, Austin Wynns out, Junior Perez to the ChiSox, Jose Suarez (woof), Alika Williams up — and why Carlos Cortez might be the next to go - Tigers injury report: Mize back, Torres rehab in Triple-A, Báez running, Skubal throwing - Standings pulse: AL East two-horse race, AL Central scrum, NL East Braves + Phillies, NL West A's cling to first - Week ahead: Brewers/Cubs, Tigers/Guardians, Reds/Phillies, and the Padres/Dodgers heavyweight bout - HR + OPS leaders New episodes every Tuesday. Move your ass — we're burning daylight. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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562
Friggin' Farm & Ranch Report — Weekly Wrap 5/16/26 | Beijing Blinked, Plains Are Burning & Cash Cattle Hold $260
Weekly wrap for the week ending May 16, 2026. It's been a week, daylight burners. Trump flew to Beijing, shook Xi's hand, declared fantastic deals, and flew home. The soy market said show me the purchase order — beans closed the week down 31 cents from Monday's peak. The one concrete thing that came out of that summit? China quietly renewed import licenses for 400+ US beef plants on Thursday. Five-year validity. The door to the world's biggest beef market just reopened. Cash cattle hit $260–$265 live and held all week — record territory. The WASDE cut US beef production 243 million pounds and raised the steer price forecast $8–$10 across the back half. The futures didn't believe it on Monday. By Friday, the board was following cash higher. The beef tariff executive order got pulled after ranch country raised hell. The Choice/Select spread is sitting at $0.10 — near inversion. Grilling season demand is very real. Wheat was the print of the week. KC hard red ripped $0.81 on the WASDE before giving back Friday. New crop all-wheat production at 1.561 billion bushels — below the lowest analyst estimate. If you stored winter wheat, your bin got more valuable this week. The Southern Plains and Southwest lit up Thursday and Friday. Hunggate Fire in Randall County TX — 14,000 acres, mandatory evacs, 5 simultaneous ignitions. Line Fire crossing from Quay County NM into the Texas Panhandle. Cimarron County Oklahoma getting hit again — same corridor as the February Ranger Road Fire. The NIFC season is running at 194% of the 10-year average. Nebraska already lost a million acres of summer grass. The Great Basin summer outlook is above normal for fire potential. Plan now, not in July. Also on the show: pseudorabies confirmed in Iowa and Texas commercial swine — first time since eradication in 2004. Fertilizer Institute CEO told the Senate Ag Committee that 34% of global urea runs through the Strait of Hormuz. Urea is up 47% since February and the Hormuz premium is not peeling off. Purdue Ag Economy Barometer hit an October 2024 low — two-thirds of producers expect net farm income to fall in 2026. And North Dakota pastureland broke $1,000 per acre in every region of the state. This is the show. Move your ass — we're burnin' daylight. Full show prep, transcripts, and the Burnin' Daylight dashboard: burningdaylight.substack.com A Man About a Horse equine intelligence app: burningdaylight.substack.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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A's Gut-Punch, Tigers Swept, Rockies Rolled, Cubs–White Sox on the South Side | BD Baseball 5-15-26
Happy Friday, daylight burners! Matt and Eric ride solo today (Jake's back Sunday) to recap a rough Thursday on the homer front and set up a loaded Rivalry Weekend. The A's drop a 5-4 heartbreaker to the Cardinals — Kurtz extends his on-base streak to 37 games with a leadoff bomb (two shy of Giambi's '98 A's record), but the bullpen coughs up the lead. The Rockies get rolled 7-2 in Pittsburgh as Ryan O'Hearn goes 3-for-4 with a two-run shot and Chase Dollander exits early with right forearm soreness. The Tigers get swept by the Mets 9-4, A.J. Ewing's first big league homer caps the Mets' five-homer barrage, and Hinch gets tossed (on a hot mic) over a blown replay at third. Around the league: Chase Burns deals 6 IP, 2 H for the Reds in a 15-1 dismantling of the Nationals (JJ Bleday — back-to-back jacks, 6 RBI), Zebby Matthews tosses 7 shutout in his spot start for the Twins, Schwarber breaks up a pitchers' duel with an 8th-inning bomb at Fenway, Brewers handle the Padres 7-1, Mariners take down Houston 8-3 (Cal Raleigh to the IL with a right oblique), Cubs avoid the sweep 2-1 in Atlanta behind Ben Brown's 4 IP, 1 H, 7 K, White Sox keep rolling over the Royals, and the Dodgers retake the NL West lead with a 5-2 win over the Giants. Full injury rundown: Cal Raleigh, Dollander, Garrett Crochet (20 pitches off the mound!), Max Fried imaging, Cole Ragans to the IL with pitcher's elbow, Kerry Carpenter, Verlander sim game, Buxton hip flexor, Murphy IL/Sean Murphy out, Hyeseong Kim back, Lindor still not close, Francisco Alvarez 6-8 weeks (meniscus), Yelich back, Nootbaar nearing rehab, Boyd out 6 weeks, Paddock signed by Reds, Mookie Betts back, and more. Weekend preview: Forget the Subway Series — the marquee matchup is the Crosstown Classic on the South Side (Cabrera vs. Burke). Plus Phillies-Pirates (Nola vs. Ashcraft), Blue Jays-Tigers (Yesavage debut watch), Reds-Guardians, Rangers-Astros, Royals-Cardinals, D-backs-Rockies (hammer the over), Padres-Mariners, and Giants at the A's in West Sac. Betting picks inside. Now move your ass — we're Burning Daylight. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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560
Trump Pulls Beef Tariff Order, Cash Cattle Holds $260, Wheat Rips Again | FF&RR 5-14-26
The Friggin' Farm & Ranch Report — Thursday, May 14, 2026 Host: Matt McKinley from Yerington, Nevada Cash cattle hold at $260 live in the South while futures stay skeptical. Wheat surges again on WASDE-driven drought concerns. The Fertilizer Institute testifies to Congress on the Hormuz disruption's impact on global fertilizer supply. North Dakota pastureland tops $1,000/acre — a national first in survey data. Beijing's Day 1 readout of the Trump-Xi summit adds geopolitical context to ag markets. We break down what this means for cattle margins, feed costs, and policy risk — with a local lens from Nevada. Stories covered: - Trump delays beef tariff order; market reaction and packer dynamics - Cash cattle at $260; futures skepticism and breakeven math - Wheat & grains rally on WASDE drought pricing - Hormuz disruption and fertilizer (urea/phosphate) price implications - APHIS brucellosis policy update near Yellowstone - Drought Monitor: D3/D4 expansion - ND pastureland tops $1,000/acre nationwide first - Beijing Day 1 readout: Trump-Xi summit - Fallon/Great Basin sale barn records on light calves Chapters: 00:00 Cold open 01:30 Tariffs: Trump delays beef tariff order 04:00 Cattle: cash $260 and futures dynamics 07:30 Wheat & grains: WASDE fallout 10:15 Fertilizer & Hormuz 12:45 Beijing Day 1 readout 15:30 Brucellosis/APHIS update 18:00 Drought Monitor update 20:45 ND pastureland values 23:30 War reel recap 25:30 Beef export read-through 28:15 Fallon/Nevada sale barn color 32:00 Three to watch for Friday 34:00 Close and callouts Got sale barn numbers? Send them in — we'll weave them into Friday's wrap. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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559
Young Bulls on Parade | A's Kids Cook, Kurtz Goes Grand, Tigers & Rox Roll - BD Baseball 5-14-26
Jake and I are back after a day off to break down a loaded Wednesday slate from around MLB. Pounded through some livestream gremlins to get this one out — there was too much baseball to skip. The story of the day was the youngsters: Henry Bolte and Michael Stefanic showing out in their MLB debuts for the A's, A.J. Ewing and Carson Benge powering the Mets' walk-off over the Tigers, and Drake Baldwin staying hot in Atlanta. What we cover: • Shohei Ohtani drops his ERA to 0.82 with 7 shutout innings vs. the Giants • Nick Kurtz's 3rd career grand slam — on-base streak now at 36 games • Mickey Moniak's birthday near-cycle (3-5, HR/2B/3B, 5 RBI) • Jacob Misiorowski's 10-K masterpiece and the quad cramp scare • Daulton Varsho walks off the Rays with a 10th-inning grand slam • Daylen Lile's tiebreaking 10th-inning HR buries the Reds • Kyle Bradish one-hits the Yankees; Max Fried exits with elbow soreness • White Sox climb to .500 for the first time since March 31, 2025 • Riley Greene scorching, Casey Mize back Saturday — cavalry incoming for Detroit • Standings deep-dive across all six divisions • Today's slate, rubber matches & weekend preview (Cubs/Braves is the CTV) No show Saturday. Friday weekend preview, Sunday wrap. Move your ass — we're burning daylight. — Matt & Jake Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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558
WASDE Wheat Shock, $260 Fat Cattle & $5.64 Diesel — Friggin' Farm & Ranch Report (5/13/26)
Two days of markets in one shot. This Friggin' Farm & Ranch Report folds Tuesday's May WASDE fireworks into Wednesday's cattle tape and policy mess. We start with WASDE-671: U.S. wheat chopped to 1.561 billion bushels, 424 million under last year and below the low end of the trade range. KE wheat runs 50 cents, corn and beans climb, and USDA quietly confirms the drought story we've been preaching for weeks. We spell out what that does to your wheat, hay, and feed costs headed into summer. Cattle side, USDA cuts 2026 beef production 243 million pounds and raises steer prices, but the board shrugs. Cash bids hit $260 live in the South while Live Cattle futures close $1.70 to $2.80 lower and Feeders $2.50 to $7.30 lower. The longs are walking, and we break down what the Wednesday Fed Cattle Exchange needs to do before you pull the trigger on fats. We hit the DOJ's criminal antitrust probe into the Big 4 packers, walk through the sale barn pulse from OKC West, Dodge City, Beaver County, and Lone Star Stockyards, then talk diesel at $5.64, fertilizer that 70% of farmers say they can't afford, the Farm Bill in Senate limbo, Trump–Xi in Beijing, Colorado's wolf budget blowout, and the Hormuz tanker war keeping a premium in your fuel bill. Straight talk, no hedge-fund voice. Markets, policy, war — all tied back to your fuel bill, feed bill, and cattle check. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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557
Diesel Knife Fight, Cattle Hammered & USDA Misses Delaware: Friggin' Farm & Ranch Report — 5/11/26
Matt McKinley, coming at you out of Yerington, Nevada — Monday, May 11, 2026, post-close edition of the Friggin' Farm & Ranch Report. Split-personality tape today: grains ripped ahead of tomorrow's noon-Eastern WASDE, cattle got hammered on Trump-admin tariff-suspension headlines, and diesel is sitting 15 cents from an all-time national record. Engine's calling it WATCH at 51% medium confidence — market at an inflection point, wait for confirmation before acting. ON THE TAPE • Corn $4.74¼ (+21¾¢, +4.80%) · Beans $12.11 (+32¢, +2.71%) · KC Wheat $6.87¼ (+11½¢) • June Live Cattle $249.65 (-$3.83, -1.51%) · Aug Feeders $362.45 (-$9.95, -2.67%) • EIA On-Highway Diesel $5.64 (+29¢/wk) · AAA Diesel $5.636 · AAA Regular $4.520 (highest since June '22) • Choice/Select INVERTED AGAIN — Choice $391.22, Select $391.49 (Select OVER Choice = demand is real) • WTI $98.25 (+3.33%) · Silver +13.01% · Copper +5.79% · DAP $682/T · Urea $549/T SALE BARN PULSE OKC West 787-lb $368.93 (10,138 head) · Clovis NM 600-lb $654.25 · Producers San Angelo 614-lb $476.89 · Torrington WY 1,313-lb $212.52 (probably cull stock off the Nebraska fires) · Billings MT 1,031-lb $365.73 · Producers Salina UT — light cattle firing, heavies softening across the board DEEP DIVE — Two Beef Magazine pieces dissected and named for what they are: Neville Speer's "Packers, Politics and Theater" (pro-packer/pro-market-flexibility bias acknowledged on air) and Dennis Smith's "When will the bull market end?" (drought + 60-year-old average cow-calf operator + high rates + screwworm) — Box beef inversion is BACK — Select trading OVER Choice tells you demand is very, very real — Screwworm inching toward Texas, Mexican border closed two years running. Bill Bullard's happy; South Texas and California grass guys are not — Feedyard margins squeeze: ration cost climbing as live takes a $3.83 haircut, diesel +29¢ on the freight side UNDERREPORTED — STORIES YOU OUGHTA HEAR — USDA missed the 2025 corn crop by 4.5 MILLION acres (bigger than Delaware). Former chief economist Seth Meyer: "It's a miss. No other word to call it." — 70% of US farmers say they can't afford this year's input costs (American Farm Bureau survey, April) — California's 2014 Sustainable Groundwater Management Act is finally biting Madera County — canary for every Western water basin including Nevada and the Ogallala FENCE POST POLITICS H.R. 7567 — the 2026 Farm, Food, and National Security Act · Missouri AG Catherine Hanaway vs. Prop 12 fallout · USDA's One Farmer, One File modernization · Tariff suspension on beef-exporting nations ON THIS DAY — MAY 11 1837: One of the first U.S. agricultural patents issued + John Deere starts manufacturing plows 1858: Minnesota admitted as the 32nd state 1862: Homestead Act moving through Congress (160 acres for 5 years of farming) 1935: FDR creates the Rural Electrification Administration SPORTS NBA conference semis underway · Avalanche 5-2 over Minnesota, lead the series 3-1 · D-backs over Rangers 1-0, Eovaldi shoved but took the L · Aces-Padres in San Diego next week THREE TAKEAWAYS 1. Watch tomorrow's WASDE at noon Eastern — grains ran today on positioning, the report decides if it holds 2. Cattle tone is defensive, not broken — don't chase the down move on quality replacements you actually need 3. Diesel is the silent killer — 15¢ from an all-time record, 29¢ in a week. If you haven't locked fall fuel, call your jobber SUBSCRIBE: burningdaylight.substack.com Paid subs get discounted access to the Burnin' Daylight Report dashboard AND A Man About A Horse equine intelligence app. If you're in the horse business — cowboy flipping on the side, breeder, trainer, whoever — hit me up. Helping hone the See A Man About A Horse pricing feature. FOLLOW on Facebook · Instagram · YouTube · Twitter/X · TikTok · Rumble Don't let your butt crack. Stay safe out there and move your ass — we're burnin' daylight. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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556
Cubs Cool Off, Reds Wake Up, Tigers Survive
Busy week of baseball. Streaks snapped, arms shoved, and a couple of fanbases went through it. Matt and Jake run through the Tigers snapping a five-game skid, the Reds finally waking up after eight straight losses, and the Cubs coming back to earth after a 10-game heater and 15 straight at Wrigley. They dig into why the NL Central looks like the best division in baseball right now, how the Rays quietly sit on top of the AL East over the Yankees' gaudy run differential, and why the Astros might actually be cooked in May. You'll also get Tigers injury talk (Skubal's elbow cleanup and all the bullpen days), the state of the AL Central clown show, Padres–Dodgers in the West, and a full beanball segment after Framber dots Trevor Story. New episodes of BD Baseball Weekly Recap drop every week on Burnin' Daylight Sports. Listen & subscribe: Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2ZtEeyDYlFW20iz2xc0VYb Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/burnin-daylight/id1460032773 Megaphone RSS: https://feeds.megaphone.fm/burnin-daylight Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Cubs Win 10 Straight, Yankees Get Punched, Reds Free Fall | Sat 5/9/26
Saturday, May 9, 2026. Coming in hot from Yerington. Standings are starting to mean something. Cubs ripped off ten straight, the Yankees got shut out by a 24-year-old throwing 103, and the Reds — last month's NL darlings — got hung with a ten-spot at home and dropped their eighth in a row. On today's show: • Misiorowski's 103.6 mph masterclass — first Brewers shutout of the Yankees since 1992 • Cease's 10 K Friday in Toronto, McGreevy's career-high 9 K shutout for the Cards, Arrighetti stuffs the Reds • Luke Raley's 7 RBI night in Seattle, Hunter Goodman's 10th HR, Mark Vientos walks off the D-backs • Full standings sweep across all six divisions — who's real, who's a fraud, who's quietly cooked • Homer focus: A's in first in the AL West, Tigers on a 4-game skid, Rockies showing a heartbeat • Saturday slate breakdown — every probable, every angle, including Strider vs. Snell in primetime • Watch list: Cubs going for 11, Reds trying to stop the bleeding, Misiorowski's 70 K in 8 starts Daily MLB show. No corporate copy. No host notes. Just baseball talk. burnindaylightsports.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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554
Weekly Wrap 5/8/26 — DOJ Comes for the Big Four, Cash Cracks, Nevada Water on the Clock
Matt McKinley wraps May 4-8, 2026 from Yerington, Nevada. Cash cattle printed an all-time record midweek and gave back into Friday — June live $248.90, August feeders $364.22. Boxed beef cracked Thursday and partially recovered Friday (Choice $389.02 / Select $385.17). EIA on-highway diesel $5.640, up 29¢ WoW. AAA national regular $4.546 / diesel $5.663 — pump up 25¢ two weeks running, $1.40 higher YoY, highest since 2022. DAP $682 (+$14), urea $549 (+$8). Sale Barn Pulse: 6 markets, 15,247 head, avg $480.78/cwt; OKC West $368.93 on 787-lb. DOJ has confirmed an antitrust investigation into the Big Four meatpackers — Tyson, Cargill, JBS USA, National Beef — roughly 85% of the U.S. fed cattle market — and is actively soliciting whistleblowers. Three story segments: drought + fire + structural cattle crunch (86.2M total / 27.6M beef cows / 50.9% U.S. in drought); Farm Bill H.R. 7567 + PRIME Act pilot + Big Four probe; Western water rights — Lower Basin 3.2M acre-feet cuts through 2028 + the Nevada NRS 533.087 vested rights deadline of December 31, 2027. War Reel ties Hormuz fertilizer disruptions and the AAA pump surge back to your input bill. On This Day closer on V-E Day, May 8, 1945. Burnin' daylight. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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553
Cubs Won't Lose, Reds Can't Win, A's Are in First | 5/8/26
Coming in hot Friday morning out of Yerington — your daily MLB rundown. The Cubs have won nine in a row. The Reds have lost seven in a row. They're in the same division. Your A's are sitting in first place in the AL West after JT Ginn went 8 innings of one-run ball and the West Sacramento lineup hung 12 on the Phillies in their own park. Tonight: Chris Sale at Dodger Stadium, Max Fried vs Misiorowski in Milwaukee, and Chase Dollander walking into Citizens Bank. WHAT'S IN THIS EPISODE • JT Ginn shoves 8 innings, A's 12 — Phillies 1 • Imanaga keeps Chicago rolling, Cubs at 26-12 • Mitch Keller out-pitches Zac Gallen — ace duel in the desert • Liberatore wins another knife fight — Cards 8-2 in their last 10 • Marlins walk it off on a throwing error in Baltimore • Rays seven straight, nine of ten • Standings, division by division — A's leading a messy AL West • Tigers have the only positive run diff in the AL Central • Tonight's slate, top to bottom HOMER LENS A's, Tigers, Rockies — extra time, extra opinion. Always. SOURCING All scores, records, last-10s, run differentials, and probable pitchers verified against MLB.com's official pages. Burnin' Daylight Sports — daily MLB. Move your ass, we're burning daylight. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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$255 Cash, 313K Kill — Packers Run the Rope | Friggin' Farm & Ranch Report 5/7/26
Thursday, May 7, 2026 — Yerington, NV. Three shows deep into the same story this week. Cash cattle printed $255.02 5-Area live and $399.08 dressed for the week ending May 3rd, but the board's bleeding and the cutout is cracking. Packers bought 72,513 head and ran a 313,000 weekly kill — down 34,133 from same week last year. That's leverage, not competition. In this episode: • Live data off the BDR dashboard — June live cattle 250.45 (-1.30), Aug feeders 366.68 (+0.07), June hogs 99.775, July corn 467.25, July beans 1,191.00, KC HRW wheat 667.25 • 5-Area Weekly Weighted Average breakdown — full steer/heifer live and dressed prints • Boxed beef cutout — Choice 387.58 (-2.04), Select 385.08 (-4.55) • Sale Barn Pulse — OKC West $368.93 on 787-lb cattle, six-market average $545.30 • Diesel up 29 cents week-over-week to $5.640; DAP $682, Urea $549, Potash $398 • Prime Rate 7.75% / Feeder Finance 8.25% — both unchanged • Big Four Packer Probe — Day 4, no filing, the silence is the news. Brooke Rollins, Todd Blanche, Chad Sullivan press conference review • Plains AND Nebraska fire aftermath — Ranger Road, Lavender, 8-Ball, Morrill, Cottonwood, Road 203, Anderson Bridge — over a million acres of cow country burned out, drought index hitting record territory • "Golden Age of Agriculture" rhetoric vs USDA's $50 billion farm income drop — Iowa farmer on CBS, Zippy Duvall at Senate Ag, National Potato Council • Thomas Massie's PRIME Act tucked into the Farm Bill — what to watch • On This Day: Lusitania 1915, Reims surrender 1945, STS-49 first three-person spacewalk, 27th Amendment ratified after 202 years Defensive tape, defensive playbook. Move your ass — we're burnin' daylight. 📬 burnindaylight.substack.com 📊 burnin-daylight-report.vercel.app Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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551
BD Baseball 5/7/26 – Skenes Shoves, Pages Nukes, A's/Tigers/Rockies Watc
Today on Burnin’ Daylight Sports, we run through a loud Wednesday in Major League Baseball: Paul Skenes dealing in Arizona, Nathan Eovaldi punching the Yankees in the mouth again, Andy Pages going full video game, and Marcus Semien cashing in at Coors. Then it’s a full division-by-division standings snapshot, AL West and AL Central chaos, Rockies pain in the NL West, and a look at today’s slate through the homer-club lens of the A’s, Tigers, and Rockies. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Big Four Heat & Bean Rally — Friggin' Farm & Ranch Report (5/5–5/6/26)
Studio blew up on me yesterday, so today's Friggin' Farm & Ranch Report is a two-day catch-up for May 5–6. We put the Big Four packer antitrust story right up front, then walk the board, the barn, inputs, drought, and DC without making you bounce your head off the wall. We talk packer leverage, what a real DOJ case would mean for cow-calf outfits and feedyards, and why nothing has "fixed" cash trade yet. Then we go through two days of tape: June live cattle taking a hard hit Tuesday and a small bounce Wednesday, August feeders doing the same, lean hogs holding the front month in the low-90s with June around a buck, and soybeans leading the way both days while corn keeps your ration costs tight. On the cash side, we use Lone Star Stockyards' Texas Angus Association feeder sale as the lead steer — 980 head, about 85% feeders, steers and heifers mostly $2–$6 higher — and lay that alongside March Cattle on Feed and a $460 sale-barn average. On the input side, diesel stays camped around $5.64 EIA and $5.659 AAA with AAA gas about $4.48, and corn isn't giving anybody a real break either. We wrap with APHIS' brucellosis zone expansion, ag bills sitting in committee, and Southeast drought chewing up grass and forcing some ugly decisions. No fake certainty, no Wall Street voice — just cattle, feed, diesel, and policy in plain ranch language. Sponsor: Lone Star Stockyards, Wildorado, TX — Tuesday sale every week at 11 AM Central. lonestarstockyards.com. Move your ass — we're burnin' daylight. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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549
BD Baseball 5/6 – Skubal's Elbow, AL Central is Booty, Sanchez Shoves
Well, welcome back, daylight burners. How the hell are ya? Spent yesterday arguing with AI chatbots and my shit wasn't working, but the studio's finally alive again, so let's talk some damn baseball. We kick it off with Tarik Skubal's elbow surgery — loose bodies in there, Tigers' ace on the shelf, and the only real news from Monday turning into a "well, that's not ideal" situation. Then we roll through scores from around the league: Red Sox pounding the Motor City Kitties, Jays dropping one to a hot Rays club, Yankees and Royals rolling, Reds reeling, and everybody else stuck around .500. Framber Valdez decides Trevor Story's been tipping signs and buries one in his back, benches clear, and we get into where "stealing signs the right way" ends and "you're just being a dumbass" begins. Christopher Sanchez absolutely shoves it right up the A's ass, Severino pitches good enough to win, and the bullpen finds a way to light it on fire anyway. Then it's the injury and transaction dump: Skubal's elbow, Carlos Correa's bad ankle, Acuña's hammy, Shea Langeliers on the paternity list, Jonah Heim back to the A's for catcher depth, and a pile of arms bouncing between the IL and rehab assignments. Standings talk: AL Central is straight booty with not a single winning record, AL West is mid while the A's somehow hang on with a negative run differential, Braves are a wagon, Cubs are rolling in a loaded NL Central, Reds cooling off, Pirates way better than anyone expected, and the Giants and Rockies both suck at their own pace. We wrap it with today's pitching matchups worth a damn: McClanahan vs Corbin, Glasnow vs McCullers, Wheeler vs Springs, Paul Skenes vs Soroka, and a bunch of dudes who are either shoving or getting touched up. Move your ass. We're burnin' daylight. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Cash Still King, Feed Still High — Friggin’ Farm & Ranch Report (5/4/26)
Board took a breather, cash is still doing the heavy lifting, and the sale barns plus the video boys are telling you this feeder and replacement market is not done yet. This is your Monday reset for May 4, 2026. We start with the scoreboard: fats at 251.95, feeders at 366.98, corn at 4.85½, beans at 12.22¼, and wheat just under 6.96. On feed sits at 11.55 million head with February placements at 1.61 million (104% of last year) and marketings at 93%, all against a total herd of 86.2 million – lowest since 1951. From there we walk through cash, cutout, and packer pain – 5‑area cash still in record territory, late trade around 256 live and 405 dressed, Choice in the upper 380s, Select barely under it, and packer margins deep red at roughly –$231/head. Somebody’s math is going to break first. Sale barn pulse covers big Friday and Saturday runs plus the videos: Plains and Lake Cumberland yearlings $6–$12 higher, cows and bulls firmer, 235‑lb calves bringing $700/cwt, and older pairs still trading close to five grand a pair. Then we zoom out to Thursday’s Superior Hudson Oaks sale – roughly 24,700 head with most of the feeders over 600 lb and USDA calling feeder steers $10–$20 higher and steer calves up to $25 higher versus the Gulf Coast Classic – and Friday’s Western Video out of Paso with five‑weights at $560, 570‑lb heifers over $500, nine‑weights in the mid‑$300s, and front‑end heifer pairs from $5,575 to $6,200. Inputs and drought get their due: diesel at $5.351, DAP at $682, urea at $549, potash at $398, prime 7.75%, feeder money 8.25%, and nearly half the Southern Plains in severe‑to‑extreme drought while the Corn Belt is basically fine. You’re feeding high‑dollar cattle on high‑dollar fuel, high‑dollar fertilizer, and high‑dollar interest. Then we roll through the war reel and policy – why Ukraine, the Middle East, and shipping lanes keep a floor under energy and freight, why Tyson’s outlook and losses don’t line up clean with a 75‑year‑low herd, and why USDA’s shrinking survey response means every WASDE and planting report has more noise and more room to whipsaw the board. We close with Golden Tempo’s 23‑1, last‑to‑first Kentucky Derby win for trainer Cherie DeVaux – the first woman to win the Derby – and tie that back to the kind of horse, and the kind of cattle, that will still be traveling when everyone else quits. It’s not a get‑rich market. It’s a don’t‑screw‑up market. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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BD Baseball 5/4 – A’s Lead the West, Tigers on Top, Rockies “Not Terrible”
Welcome back, Daylight Burners. Happy Sunday – Monday’s staring us down again – but it’s weekly recap time for Burnin’ Daylight Baseball. Jake was at the Tigers game getting lit up while Detroit was rolling, the A’s and Rockies gave us a little heartburn, and we’re a month into the season with some things starting to feel real. We kick off with a full Sunday scoreboard: Astros–Red Sox in extras, Mets snapping out of free fall against the even‑more‑free‑fall Angels, Twins finally picking one up over the Blue Jays, Dodgers stopping the bleeding in St. Louis, Cubs extending their home streak, Braves finishing a sweep in Coors, Pirates walking off the Reds 1–0, plus the rest of a packed slate. R/H/E, who shoved, who got shelled, and where the “AI is lazy” box scores came up short. Then it’s standings and storylines:– Yankees and Braves looking like the class of each league.– AL Central with Guardians and Tigers tied up, only Detroit in the black on run differential.– A’s somehow two games clear in the AL West despite a negative run diff.– NL Central with every team over .500 and the Pirates flipping the whole thing by sweeping the Reds.– NL West with Dodgers/Padres on top, D‑backs and Rockies streaky, Giants just flat‑out bad. We close with homer segments: Tigers as a real‑ish first‑place team, the “dummies” leading the AL West out of West Sac, and Rockies sitting at “not terrible” after running into the Braves buzzsaw. Let’s go get a hit. Move your ass. We’re burning daylight. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
A podcast explaining and celebrating the intricacies, wisdom and humor of cowboy/ cowpuncher/ buckaroo culture. Enjoy conversations with working cowboys, authors, musicians, business leaders and hilariously offensive news and political analysis from the viewpoint of your favorite feedlot cowboy, Matt McKinley.The podcast for the working cowboy!
HOSTED BY
Matt McKinley
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