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On this episode of The Left Hook, host Mark Bland and co-host Jason Kull open with some light banter before unloading on the week's biggest political stories. They zero in on the Trump administration's midterm message: Americans should brace for economic pain—higher gas and grocery prices—in support of the escalating conflict with Iran.
Mark and Jason Kull challenge the shifting rationale behind the conflict, question the absence of any clear, immediate threat, and take aim at claims that Trump's energy policies will somehow fix it all down the road—despite ongoing tariffs and supply chain instability.
They also dig into the bizarre feud between the White House and Pope Leo, mocking JD Vance's attempt at theological authority and highlighting the strange optics of Trump attacking a major religious figure while still relying on evangelical support. The conversation turns to whether MAGA loyalty can hold as the administration grows more isolated on the world stage.
The episode rounds out with discussions on the missing Epstein files, Clarence Thomas's comments on progressivism, rising election denialism, and a lighter segment featuring the 2026 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductees and a satirical take on "real American" tax refund spending.
Sharp, funny, and unfiltered as always.
By Mark Bland1.9
88 ratings
On this episode of The Left Hook, host Mark Bland and co-host Jason Kull open with some light banter before unloading on the week's biggest political stories. They zero in on the Trump administration's midterm message: Americans should brace for economic pain—higher gas and grocery prices—in support of the escalating conflict with Iran.
Mark and Jason Kull challenge the shifting rationale behind the conflict, question the absence of any clear, immediate threat, and take aim at claims that Trump's energy policies will somehow fix it all down the road—despite ongoing tariffs and supply chain instability.
They also dig into the bizarre feud between the White House and Pope Leo, mocking JD Vance's attempt at theological authority and highlighting the strange optics of Trump attacking a major religious figure while still relying on evangelical support. The conversation turns to whether MAGA loyalty can hold as the administration grows more isolated on the world stage.
The episode rounds out with discussions on the missing Epstein files, Clarence Thomas's comments on progressivism, rising election denialism, and a lighter segment featuring the 2026 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductees and a satirical take on "real American" tax refund spending.
Sharp, funny, and unfiltered as always.