Sunday, November 23, 2025

The Flyover Podcast

The following stories are featured exclusively on The Flyover Podcast—a daily show that gives you the most important headlines in under 15 minutes, straight from the heart of the country. Clicking the link will take you directly to these stories:

Ukraine talks were rocked by Trump’s last-minute “not final” bombshell. (Hear More)

➤ See how much space $2,000 a month will get you in these cities. (Listen Now)

➤ Researchers say a common virus could prompt worker bees to overthrow a queen bee in a hive-level coup. (Podcast Available)

  

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This is legal in dog food (disturbing). Would you feed your dog a diseased animal carcass?

That probably sounds like an insane question…

But it’s legal for pet food makers to include diseased animal carcasses in commercial dog food.

The worst part is, they don’t even have to list it on the label. Millions of dog owners are unknowingly feeding their pets ingredients they’d never choose if they knew the truth.

Click here to watch this whistleblowing video now.

Sports

➤ FCS No. 3 Montana State handed No. 2 Montana its first loss of the season, 31-28, in the 124th “Brawl of the Wild” to secure the Bobcats’ 19th Big Sky Conference title. (Recap)

➤ Noah Whittington ran for 104 yards and a touchdown as No. 7 Oregon beat No. 15 USC 42-27, with ESPN’s College GameDay in attendance. (Highlights)

A UAB football player was arrested after he allegedly stabbed two teammates ahead of the Blazers’ 48-18 loss to South Florida. (More)

➤ LSU is reportedly finalizing a $90 million offer to hire Ole Miss coach Lane Kiffin as Brian Kelly’s replacement after firing Kelly earlier this season for the program’s recent mediocrity. (More)

➤ The San Francisco 49ers plan to void All-Pro receiver Brandon Aiyuk’s contract guarantees after he reportedly skipped meetings and failed to communicate during rehab for his 2024 knee injury. (More)

➤ NFL fans get marquee matchups today, featuring Vikings-Packers and Eagles-Cowboys rivalry games, before the Buccaneers face the Rams to close the schedule on Sunday Night Football. (See Schedule)

Yesterday’s Results: NBA | NHL | PGA | LPGA | Soccer | NCAAF | NCAAM | NCAAW

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Night Vision Pro Driving Glasses: Drive at night with clarity and confidence—these anti-glare, yellow-tinted lenses reduce oncoming headlight glare and sharp reflections so you can see roads and signs more clearly. Lightweight and stylish with UV protection, they’re the ideal upgrade for safer, more comfortable night driving. (SHOP NOW)

Finance

Trend Line Weekly Market Report   Previous Week

NASDAQ
Natl. Assoc. of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations
22,273.08
-2.26%
SPX
S&P 500
6,602.99
-1.65%
DJI
Dow Jones Industrial Average
46,245.41
-1.75%
BTC
Bitcoin
$85,090.69
-9.65%
GOLD
Per Ounce
$4,076.70
0.16%
Bitcoin and gold are traded 24 hours a day.

The Trump administration may approve sales of Nvidia’s H200 AI chips to China after President Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping negotiated a truce in their trade and tech disputes last month. (More)

➤ Kia and Hyundai are recalling 335,000 U.S. vehicles after discovering a defect that could melt fuel tanks in Kia K5 sedans from 2021–2024 and Hyundai Sonatas from 2020–2023. (More)

Amazon said nearly 40% of its 4,700 job cuts in New York, California, New Jersey, and Washington were engineering roles, part of more than 14,000 layoffs announced last month. (More)

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Cyber Week = Even More Savings. For anyone still catching up on their holiday checklist (us too), CVS Photo’s Cyber Deal is here to save the day: 11×14 Canvases are just $12.49 through December 6. You can also design custom photo books, ornaments, mugs, and over 50 same-day items—all ready in hours, not days. Perfect for last-minute gifting that still looks like you planned ahead. Make this season personal, affordable, and easy with CVS Photo.

The Rotator
Sunday Rewind
Today’s Rotator section is brought to you by:

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Ladies and gentlemen, here are our most-clicked stories of the week:

This list of the top hole-in-the-wall breakfast spots in each state gives travelers insights into beloved local eateries ranging from unassuming storefronts to classic diners. (See List)

Midland, Michigan, ranks as the top U.S. retirement city after an analysis of 850 locations weighed several categories such as affordability, crime, weather, and tax burdens. (See List)

A Swedish engineer and musician spent six months teaching an octopus to play the piano, successfully proving the animal could mimic simple melodies. (See Octopus)

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Here’s the dirty little secret about insomnia and those frustrating 2 A.M. wake-ups your family doctor will NEVER tell you: 1 food that sedates insomnia, overactive adrenals, shuts down night-time cortisol, and triggers deep sleep… (like anesthesia) Don’t let this be you… Where months or years of broken sleep spiral into heart problems, memory loss, and a nervous system crash…Or worse… cause an accident that could hurt you, your kids, or someone you love.

Find The Secret Here

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This one problem could be hiding in your dog’s food bowl: If you want your dog to live a long and healthy life, there’s one hidden problem you need to know about.

Most owners have no idea — but it’s lurking right inside their dog’s food bowl.

Renowned comedian and Hollywood actor Kevin Hart learned this the hard way after losing two of his dogs, Roxy and Riggs, far too soon.

Sadly, Kevin’s not alone.

Unexplained health issues are quietly affecting dogs all across America — and nobody’s talking about it.

Click here to learn how your dog may be affected >>

Quick Hits

Police have identified three suspects in a North Carolina shooting that sent four people to the hospital during a Christmas tree lighting ceremony in Concord on Friday night, saying it was not a random act of violence. (More)

➤ Nigerian officials now say armed men abducted 303 children and 12 teachers from a Catholic school in the country’s northwestern region on Friday, significantly more than originally reported. (More)

➤ Colombian authorities say sniffer dogs helped uncover 14 tons of cocaine at the nation’s main Pacific port, marking the country’s largest drug bust in a decade. (More)

➤ A recent study finds that Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Vermont are the most expensive states to raise a child, while Mississippi and Alabama are the least costly. (See Study)

➤ Transportation officials say a rogue weather balloon was the mystery object that shattered a United Airlines jet’s windshield at 36,000 feet over Utah last month. (See Windshield)

➤ A new documentaryThe Age of Disclosure, claims former President George H.W. Bush knew about extraterrestrial life and an alleged meeting between aliens and U.S. officials. (More)

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➤ BIOptimizers is offering their biggest Black Friday deal on Magnesium Breakthrough—a full 7-in-1 formula unlike most supplements with only 1–2 forms. Enjoy huge savings plus up to $250 in bonus gifts like blue light glasses and health courses. It’s their lowest price of the year.

Whatever Happened To...

Whatever happened to Radio Shack?

In its heyday in the 1980s and 90s, RadioShack seemed to be in every strip mall, wedged between a dry cleaner and a video store. If you needed a weird battery, a tangle of speaker wire, or a mystery adapter five minutes before dinner, you went to RadioShack.

It was the default tech stop long before anyone thought to “just order it online.” But it didn’t begin as a corporate giant. RadioShack started in 1921 as a tiny Boston shop selling radio gear to ship operators and hobbyists who liked to tinker.

The real growth began in the 1960s, when Tandy bought the struggling chain. Tandy stocked the stores with soldering irons, CB radios, and, eventually, by the late 1970s, the TRS-80 home computer—the first “real” PC a lot of families ever saw. Here’s a Radio Shack Christmas commercial from the 1980s.

This successful period, though, led to a dead-end as the decades went by. Big-box stores like Best Buy and Walmart undercut RadioShack on price and selection. Then the World Wide Web arrived and made online ordering of obscure parts just a click away, removing the chain’s biggest advantage.

Chasing growth, RadioShack leaned hard into selling cellphones and contracts, a business already dominated by carriers and bigger retailers. The stores, still small and aging, began to feel cramped and oddly random—half phone shop, half junk drawer.

By the mid-2010s, after two bankruptcies and waves of closures, the once-ubiquitous brand had faded into a handful of remaining retail outposts and a nostalgic URL, a relic of a more hands-on analog version of tech.

Did you use to shop at Radio Shack? Let us know your thoughts by replying to this email.

 

Check This Out

One Wicked fan nearly brought the house down, literally, after a prop mishap halted his performance.

Poll Position

Do you dress up for Thanksgiving or keep it casual?

  1. Dress up
  2. Casual
  3. The comfier, the better


 

Yesterday’s Results:

If you had to choose a city to live in, where would you rather live?

  1. Los Angeles: 60%
  2. New York: 40%

Quote BoxDaily Quote

Quote

“I think this film puts us in a different place. It sets the table for a president to step to the microphone and more comfortably tell all of humanity that we’re not alone in the universe.”

—  Filmmaker Dan Farah, on his new documentary The Age of Disclosure, about the existence of extraterrestrial intelligence. 

TriviaToday’s Trivia

What was the name of the first magazine published in the U.S.?

Show me the answer

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