The Neal Larson Show
Neal Larson is an Associated Press Award-winning newspaper columnist and radio talk show host. He has a BA from Idaho State University in Media Studies and Political Science. Neal is happily married to his wife Esther with their five children in Idaho Falls.
Julie Mason is a long-time resident of east Idaho with a degree in journalism from Ricks College. Julie enjoys reading, baking, and is an avid dog lover. When not on the air she enjoys spending time with her three children and husband of 26 years.
Together these two are a powerhouse of knowledge with great banter that comes together in an entertaining and informative show.
The Neal Larson Show
7.9.2026 - Platner Exits | Stegner Launches Gov Campaign | Shelley RecipeGate
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Thursday’s show bounced between national politics, Idaho’s governor’s race, and a surprisingly sticky local controversy—while still making room for the truly important work: Julie’s ongoing hunt for the perfect “better-than-a-Cabbage-Patch” doll for her upcoming granddaughter (and a detour into whether chocolate hummus is a real thing). Neal and Julie unpacked the sudden exit of Maine U.S. Senate candidate Graham Plattner, questioning how parties keep ending up with candidates who feel “crafted” and inauthentic—and why Democrats keep swinging and missing when they try to package a “masculine” messenger for collectivist politics. The conversation also touched on the “movement” rhetoric, John Fetterman’s blunt reaction, and the broader pattern of party power-brokers overriding voters when a candidate becomes inconvenient.
Back home, they turned to Idaho’s independent gubernatorial candidate John Stegner and the challenge voters face evaluating a longtime judge with limited public positions—while also flagging the “doctor retention” messaging as a proxy debate over abortion policy and the coming ballot fight. The show mixed serious notes with sharp humor: a mini-rant about why liberal talk radio tends to fail while podcasts thrive, a tense moment drawing a hard line with an antagonistic texter, and then the unexpected “RecipeGate” saga involving the Shelley Senior Citizen Center—complete with cease-and-desist drama and Neal and Julie offering to personally help copy and return disputed recipes to end the whole mess.
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Highlights
- Neal and Julie dissect Graham Platner’s exit from the Maine Senate race—down to the oddly staged video choices and why his whole presentation felt “engineered.”
- John Fetterman’s hot take (“the trash took itself out”) sparks a broader debate about why parties keep nominating candidates that don’t match the moment.
- A pointed (and funny) breakdown of why liberal talk radio has repeatedly flopped—while long-form podcasts can reward sloppy claims and “Wild West” incentives.
- The show draws a firm line with a recurring antagonistic texter after an accusation of lying: “Put up or shut up.”
- Idaho politics: independent gubernatorial candidate John Stegner enters the spotlight, with Neal and Julie probing what voters can actually learn about a judge’s real policy positions.
- “RecipeGate” erupts in Shelley: cease-and-desist letters, alleged withheld recipes, and Neal and Julie offering to broker a peace deal—return the recipes and the story goes away.
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