Episodios

  • Episode 439 BOB DOLE The Life That Brought Him There (Part 20) The Senate (C) How the Senate Works
    Apr 9 2026

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    Episode 439 — Bob Dole: The Life That Brought Him There (Part 20)

    The Senate (C): How the Senate Works

    In Episode 439 of our continuing series on the life and career of Bob Dole, we take a deeper look inside one of America’s most complex institutions — the United States Senate — and explore how it actually works.

    This episode moves beyond personalities alone and into the structure, rules, and tools that define the Senate — particularly during a period marked by extraordinary leadership and institutional knowledge.

    Drawing on firsthand reflections from many of the same voices featured in our previous episode — including Bob Packwood, Chuck Grassley, Thad Cochran, Trent Lott, Tom Daschle, Daniel Inouye, Alan Simpson, and Bob Dole himself — we hear directly from those who understood the institution from the inside.

    Together, they explain:

    • How Senate rules shape outcomes
    • The role of committees and seniority
    • The tools leaders use to move legislation forward — or stop it
    • The importance of relationships, trust, and negotiation
    • How personalities influence the pace and direction of the chamber

    This is a portrait of the Senate as a living institution — one that runs not just on procedure, but on people.

    At a time when leadership required patience, strategy, and an ability to navigate competing interests, these voices offer rare insight into how the Senate functioned at a high level — and how it managed to govern in an era of both conflict and cooperation.

    If Episode 438 introduced the leaders…
    Episode 439 shows you how they led.

    A behind-the-scenes look at the rules, the rhythm, and the reality of the United States Senate.

    Questions or comments at , Randalrgw1@aol.com , https://twitter.com/randal_wallace , and http://www.randalwallace.com/
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    54 m
  • Episode 438 BOB DOLE The Life That Brought Him There (Part 19) The Senate (B) The Senate Leaders
    Apr 6 2026

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    Episode 438 — Bob Dole: The Life That Brought Him There (Part 19)

    The Senate (B): The Senate Leaders

    In Episode 438 of our continuing series on the life and career of Bob Dole, we move deeper into the inner workings of the United States Senate — focusing on the men who have led it, and the methods they used to make it function.

    This episode explores the often unseen world of Senate leadership — where influence is built not just through speeches, but through relationships, negotiation, and a deep understanding of the institution itself.

    We examine the leadership styles and legacies of key figures, including Lyndon B. Johnson, whose mastery of the Senate remains legendary; Mike Mansfield, known for his quiet, steady approach; Hugh Scott; Howard Baker; and Bob Dole himself, whose leadership would come to define an era.

    But this episode is not just about history — it’s about hearing directly from those who lived it.

    Featuring voices from across the Senate, including Bob Packwood, Chuck Grassley, Thad Cochran, Trent Lott, Tom Daschle, Daniel Inouye, and Alan Simpson, we gain firsthand insight into how Senate leaders actually get things done.

    From committee assignments and legislative strategy to coalition-building and floor management, these conversations reveal the tools of leadership inside one of the world’s most complex governing bodies.

    This is the Senate behind the scenes —
    where power is exercised quietly,
    and leadership is measured not just by words, but by results.

    Questions or comments at , Randalrgw1@aol.com , https://twitter.com/randal_wallace , and http://www.randalwallace.com/
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    1 h y 8 m
  • Episode 437: BOB DOLE THE LIFE THAT BROUGHT HIM THERE (Part 18) THE SENATE (A) A Mosaic of the Senate
    Apr 2 2026

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    Episode 437 — Bob Dole: The Life That Brought Him There
    The Senate (A): A Mosaic of the Senate

    In Episode 437 of our continuing series on the life and career of Bob Dole, we shift our focus from the campaign trail to the institution that would define much of his public life — the United States Senate.

    This episode explores the Senate of the 1970s as Dole began his rise within its ranks — a chamber shaped by powerful personalities, unwritten rules, and a very different pace of politics than what we see today.

    In the aftermath of the Watergate scandal, the Senate was undergoing change, yet it remained a place where relationships, negotiation, and institutional knowledge carried enormous weight. Seniority mattered. Committee work mattered. And above all, the ability to navigate the personalities within the chamber mattered.

    We examine what made this era of the Senate unique:

    • How the Senate functioned day-to-day in the 1970s
    • The culture of collegiality and conflict within the chamber
    • The leadership structure and how influence was built
    • The environment that allowed Bob Dole to emerge as a key Republican voice

    This is a portrait — a mosaic — of a Senate that no longer quite exists, but whose traditions and dynamics shaped generations of American leadership.

    Before Bob Dole became a national figure, he became a Senate figure.
    And to understand his rise, you have to understand the Senate he entered.

    Questions or comments at , Randalrgw1@aol.com , https://twitter.com/randal_wallace , and http://www.randalwallace.com/
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    51 m
  • CBS News Radio: The End of a Century of Radio News (Special Edition)
    Mar 31 2026

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    Welcome to this special edition of the program.


    Today, we mark the end of an era in American broadcasting — the closing chapter of CBS News Radio, which has announced it will cease operations after nearly a century on the air, this coming May 22.


    For 99 years, CBS News Radio has been more than a network. It has been a voice — steady, trusted, and present at some of the most important moments in modern history.


    From the crackling urgency of World War II broadcasts, to the calm authority of reporters bringing the world into American homes, CBS helped define what radio journalism could be. It set the standard — for accuracy, for immediacy, and for storytelling that made listeners feel not just informed, but connected.


    In this special episode, we look back at that legacy.


    You’ll hear archival moments that capture the power of radio at its peak — including wartime reporting that brought distant battlefields into living rooms, and behind-the-scenes reflections on how CBS News Radio operated, adapted, and helped build the very foundation of modern broadcast journalism.


    Because what we do today — in this medium, in podcasting — did not emerge in a vacuum.


    It was built on the work of those who came before. The pacing, the storytelling, the intimacy of voice — all of it traces back to institutions like CBS News Radio.


    This is, in many ways, the grandfather of what we do today.


    And that’s why this moment carries a certain weight.


    It is not just the end of a network. It is the closing of a chapter that began when radio itself was still new — when the idea of hearing the world, as it happened, was nothing short of revolutionary.


    Today, we honor that contribution.


    We remember the voices, the moments, and the legacy.


    And we say goodbye.

    Questions or comments at , Randalrgw1@aol.com , https://twitter.com/randal_wallace , and http://www.randalwallace.com/
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    50 m
  • Episode 436 BOB DOLE THE LIFE THAT BROUGHT HIM THERE (Part 17) The Vice Presidential Campaign of 1976 : The Final Stretch (D)
    Mar 30 2026

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    The Vice Presidential Campaign of 1976 (D): The Final Stretch

    In Part 17, we bring the 1976 campaign to its conclusion.

    As Election Day approaches, Bob Dole and President Gerald Ford push through the final stretch of a hard-fought race against Jimmy Carter.

    The campaign had tightened significantly in its closing days, with momentum shifting and the outcome uncertain until the very end.

    This episode covers:

    • The final campaign strategy and messaging
    • The closing arguments to the American people
    • Election night and the razor-thin result
    • The narrow defeat that ended Ford’s presidency

    Though the ticket fell just short, the campaign marked a defining chapter in Bob Dole’s career — establishing him as a national figure and setting the stage for the political battles still to come.

    Questions or comments at , Randalrgw1@aol.com , https://twitter.com/randal_wallace , and http://www.randalwallace.com/
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    1 h y 13 m
  • Episode 435 BOB DOLE THE LIFE THAT BROUGHT HIM THERE (Part 16) The Vice Presidential Campaign of 1976 : The Debate (C) Bob Dole vs Walter Mondale
    Mar 26 2026

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    The Vice Presidential Campaign of 1976 (C): The Debate

    Part 16 presents one of the defining moments of the 1976 campaign — the vice presidential debate between Bob Dole and Walter Mondale.

    In this episode, we bring you the full debate, allowing you to hear the exchange as it happened — unfiltered and in its entirety.

    The debate became one of the most talked-about events of the campaign, remembered for its sharp contrasts, pointed arguments, and a controversial line from Dole that drew national attention.

    As you listen, consider:

    • The tone and strategy of both candidates
    • How foreign policy and recent history shaped the discussion
    • The role debates played in presidential politics during this era

    This is a rare opportunity to experience a pivotal political moment exactly as voters did in 1976.

    Questions or comments at , Randalrgw1@aol.com , https://twitter.com/randal_wallace , and http://www.randalwallace.com/
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    1 h y 25 m
  • Alexander Butterfield : Reluctant Witness (Special Edition, with dedications to Loverboy Dennis Condrey and Beautiful Bobby Eaton (the Midnight Express) and Chuck Norris)
    Mar 24 2026

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    Welcome to this special edition of the program.


    Today, we step into one of the most consequential moments in American political history — and into the life of a man who, almost reluctantly, changed the course of that history.


    Alexander Butterfield was not a household name when the Watergate scandal began to unfold. He was a quiet figure inside the Nixon White House — disciplined, precise, and largely out of public view. But in a single moment of testimony, Butterfield revealed the existence of the secret White House taping system — a disclosure that would transform the investigation and ultimately the presidency of Richard Nixon.


    In this episode, we take a deeper look — not just at what Butterfield did, but who he was.


    We explore his life and career, his role inside the Nixon administration, and the weight of the moment that made him a central figure in history. We also examine the complexity of his legacy — our mixed feelings about a man who became, in many ways, the most credible internal critic of Nixon, even as he remained a loyal insider for much of his service.


    We’ll discuss the now-infamous recording system itself — how it worked, why it existed, and how its discovery reshaped the balance between power and accountability in the American presidency.


    We also address the controversies and lingering questions — including claims made by E. Howard Hunt suggesting Butterfield may have had connections beyond what was publicly known, and what to make of those assertions in the broader historical record.


    And we step back to examine the larger strategic picture of the Nixon era — a presidency navigating the Cold War by attempting to play the world’s two communist superpowers against each other, a dimension of policy that is often overshadowed in the telling of Watergate, and one that critics like Bob Woodward have been accused by some of underemphasizing.


    This is not a simple story of heroes and villains.


    It is a story about power, loyalty, truth — and the moment when one man’s words helped expose the inner workings of a presidency.


    And before we begin, we dedicate this episode to three figures who, in very different arenas, left their own lasting marks.


    To professional wrestling’s Loverboy Dennis Condrey and his partner Beautiful Bobby Eaton, of the legendary The Midnight Express — masters of their craft, whose performances defined an era.


    And to Chuck Norris — an enduring symbol of strength, discipline, and cultural impact.


    Three legacies. Three different stages. All remembered.


    Thank you for joining us.

    Questions or comments at , Randalrgw1@aol.com , https://twitter.com/randal_wallace , and http://www.randalwallace.com/
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    1 h y 21 m
  • Episode 434 BOB DOLE THE LIFE THAT BROUGHT HIM THERE (Part 15) The Vice Presidential Campaign of 1976 (B) On the Trail with Bob Dole and Walter Mondale
    Mar 23 2026

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    The Vice Presidential Campaign of 1976 (B): Dole on the Trail

    In Part 15, we follow Bob Dole as he steps fully into his role as the Republican nominee for Vice President in 1976.

    Now campaigning alongside President Gerald Ford, Dole becomes one of the administration’s most visible and aggressive advocates — traveling the country, sharpening the campaign’s message, and taking on the opposition ticket of Jimmy Carter and Walter Mondale.

    This episode explores:

    • Dole’s campaign style and messaging
    • His role as an attack surrogate for the ticket
    • Key moments from the campaign trail
    • The political challenges facing Republicans in a post-Watergate America

    As the campaign unfolds, Dole’s national profile grows — and so does the intensity of the race.

    Questions or comments at , Randalrgw1@aol.com , https://twitter.com/randal_wallace , and http://www.randalwallace.com/
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    45 m