BBS Radio TVSociety & Culture

BBS Radio TV is engaged in the production and distribution of original live talk radio. We engineer and produce over 120 hours of talk show programming every week since 2004. A network of powerful personalities providing illuminating information!


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All Learning Reimagined, July 17, 2026

Sat, 18 Jul 2026
All Learning Reimagined with Teresa Songbird

Episode 7 of series on Embodied Intelligence
Know Thyself (Identity)

Knowing Your Own Signal: Identity, Discernment, and the Wisdom of the Body

Summary

Beyond Roles and Labels

Teresa Songbird explores identity as something deeper than a profession, relationship, qualification, achievement, or social label. She asks listeners to consider who they would be if familiar roles changed or disappeared, especially during a period when technology and life circumstances may rapidly reshape careers. The episode presents knowing oneself as a foundational form of learning and invites reflection on personal preferences, natural strengths, sources of aliveness, and activities that drain energy.

Values as an Inner Compass

The discussion turns to values, which Teresa describes as lenses through which people make decisions and interpret their lives. She identifies connection, contribution, expansion, learning, and exploration as central values in her own life while acknowledging the importance of contributing without sacrificing personal well-being. The episode contrasts self-knowledge with an endless self-improvement cycle that can reinforce the belief that a person is never enough.

How the Body Communicates Alignment

Teresa connects identity with embodied intelligence by describing physical sensations of expansion, contraction, excitement, resistance, heaviness, and relief. She suggests that the body may register a person, room, opportunity, or major life change before the conscious mind can explain what is happening. Integration may also continue in the body after a job, relationship, home, or other circumstance has changed intellectually or practically.

Identity as an Unfolding Process

The episode emphasizes that identity is not fixed. Childhood, adolescence, adulthood, careers, retirement, relationships, beliefs, and interests can all shift over time. Teresa describes inherited labels and subconscious stories, including the effect that repeated “dumb blonde” jokes had on her early self-image, to illustrate how outside messages can become internal beliefs. She encourages listeners to question whether old stories remain true or aligned with who they choose to be today.

Discernment and Energetic Weather

Teresa introduces “energetic weather” as a way of describing the emotional atmosphere of people and environments. From her perspective, people may sometimes absorb or respond to feelings that did not originate within them. Knowing one’s own emotional and bodily signal therefore becomes essential for distinguishing personal feelings from surrounding influences. She also compares people to tuning forks whose emotional regulation, joy, heaviness, or tension can affect those around them.

A Micro-Practice for Knowing Your Signal

The closing practice asks listeners to pause when a strong emotion arises, breathe, place a hand on the heart, and ask whether the feeling began within them or may have been picked up from the surrounding environment. Teresa encourages listeners to identify their own signal, compare it with the “world’s signal,” and notice what feels genuinely true in the present moment. She concludes that authentic living begins beneath labels, expectations, and inherited beliefs, where a person’s deeper essence and inner knowing can be recognized.

Hollywood and Horsepower Show, July 16, 2026

Thu, 16 Jul 2026
Hollywood And Horsepower Show with Mark Otto

Guest: Interview with Terry Finley - Owner and CEO of West Point Thoroughbreds
https://www.westpointtb.com/team/terry-finley/

Terry and his wife Debbie Finley established West Point Thoroughbreds in 1991. Terry, a former U.S. Army officer whose passion developed a passion for racing at a young age. His vision was to create a way for racing enthusiasts to enjoy the ownership experience without the enormous financial burden that typically comes with it. Since our first stakes winner, we've been committed to delivering unforgettable experiences to our partners both on and off the track. Over the years, we've had the privilege of racing some of the finest horses in the sport, including Kentucky Derby winner Always Dreaming, Grade 1 champion Flightline, and Eclipse Award nominees. We've celebrated victories in some of the sport's most prestigious races, from the Breeders' Cup to international events. But at the heart of our operation is the belief that every horse we race carries the hopes and dreams of our partners.

From West Point to the Winner's Circle: Terry Finley on Horses, Leadership, and Racing's Future

Summary

A Friendship Forged at the Racetrack
The episode opens with the program theme, sponsor recognition for Tony's Steak and Seafood, and appeals for Old Friends Equine and No Fallen Heroes. The host then welcomes Terry Finley, recalling that their friendship began when Finley complimented his shoes at Del Mar. Their lighthearted exchange establishes a personal tone before the discussion turns to Finley's background, career, and long involvement in Thoroughbred racing.

From Levittown to West Point
Finley describes growing up as the youngest of seven children outside Philadelphia, where his schoolteacher father introduced him to racing at Keystone and Liberty Bell. As a young person, he walked hots, rubbed horses, traveled with them, and became captivated by the racetrack. He later entered West Point after being inspired by an older football player who attended the Naval Academy, graduated in 1986, served in the Army, and maintained his connection to racing even while stationed in Germany and later at Fort Dix.

Building West Point Thoroughbreds
After leaving military service, Finley chose horse racing over a conventional corporate path and credits his wife, Debbie, for supporting the risk. He explains how an early partnership involving his father and brother showed him the excitement that shared ownership could create. Beginning with one horse at Philadelphia Park, he used small advertisements in BloodHorse and became an early adopter of the World Wide Web, eventually using technology to communicate directly with partners and update horse information.

The Human Side of Horse Racing
The conversation examines the many people whose work affects a racehorse, including trainers, jockeys, exercise riders, grooms, owners, and other barn personnel. Finley and the host emphasize that horses have distinct personalities and communicate in different ways, making judgment, feel, and experience essential. Stories involving Pat Day, Alysheba, Randy Romero, and other racing figures illustrate how trust between horse and rider can influence performance and how owners should give professionals room to make informed decisions.

Leadership, Loyalty, and the Long View
Finley argues that owners receive better results when they support trainers privately and publicly rather than constantly second-guessing them. Both speakers connect this philosophy to lessons learned from military service, family relationships, and business leadership. They describe effective leadership as listening, clearing obstacles, encouraging people to think creatively, and maintaining loyalty while still addressing performance problems when necessary.

An Evolution for Racing's Future
Looking ahead, Finley discusses the pressures facing horse racing and calls for evolution rather than revolution. He urges industry participants to move beyond personal attacks, collaborate respectfully, support aftercare and backstretch workers, welcome younger voices, and build both the fan base and wagering base. The discussion closes by considering lessons from Formula 1 and the PGA, particularly their use of media, events, sponsorship, and fan engagement, before the host directs listeners to West Point Thoroughbreds and again highlights the episode's sponsor and charities.

Tony Alamo, July 15, 2026

Wed, 15 Jul 2026
Ep218, How To Have Gods Life Living In You, Part 116, Two Kingdoms, One Choice: Spiritual Power, Endurance, and the Kingdom of Heaven

Six-Paragraph Summary

Prayer for God’s Power to Work Through Human Lives

Tony Alamo opens by asking God to speak through him and to pour the Holy Spirit upon listeners. He teaches that Christ lived as a human being led by the Spirit and that believers must die to their former ways, remain humble, and allow God to continue His work through human bodies. The prayer emphasizes salvation through preaching, spiritual power, resurrection, and the restoration of God’s kingdom.

Reports of Evangelism in Kenya, Mexico, and India

A female reader shares letters describing the distribution of ministry literature and Bibles. A correspondent in Kenya reports counseling work, baptisms, radio listening sessions, and large numbers of people responding to the message. Letters from Mexico and India request additional materials and describe readers becoming interested in Christ, asking questions, confessing sins, and joining local churches.

Christ’s Blood, Sacrifice, and Resurrection

The teaching section begins with Jesus’ exchange with Pontius Pilate. Alamo argues that Christ entered the world specifically to die, shed genuine human blood, and fulfill the symbolism of Old Testament sacrifices. He describes the blood of sacrificial animals, Jesus’ pierced body, the appearance to Thomas, and the resurrection as evidence for his understanding of atonement and salvation.

The Kingdom of Light and the Kingdom of Darkness

Alamo presents the world as divided between two spiritual kingdoms: the kingdom of heaven and the kingdom of darkness. He teaches that every person must choose one master and that continued deliberate sin demonstrates allegiance to darkness rather than Christ. He rejects teachings that salvation automatically covers all future sin and argues that believers must continue in obedience, discipline, and spiritual light.

Endurance, Testing, and the Narrow Way

The sermon repeatedly describes hardship as a test of faith. Alamo compares spiritual testing with evaluating horses, cars, and physical strength, saying that believers must study Scripture, put on the mind and armor of Christ, and endure pressure without abandoning faith. He warns against reincarnation teachings and insists that each person has one life, followed by judgment.

“My Kingdom Is Not of This World”

The final section returns to Jesus’ statement that His kingdom is not of this world. Alamo contrasts earthly political and religious systems with the future kingdom of heaven and says that believers should not sell their souls for temporary worldly benefits. He closes with a salvation prayer, invites listeners to become citizens of heaven, and gives instructions for obtaining program 218.

SEO Keywords / Key Phrases

kingdom of heaven, kingdom of darkness, spiritual endurance, blood atonement, resurrection of Jesus, Christian salvation prayer, narrow path to heaven, Holy Spirit power, biblical obedience, eternal life through Christ

SOS Coming Home, July 15, 2026

Wed, 15 Jul 2026
When Love Finally Lands: A 104-Year Journey Through Healing, Time, and Coming Home

A Homecoming Filled With Mishaps
Jennifer Elizabeth Masters recounts a trip from Los Angeles to Canada to visit her mother shortly after her 104th birthday. The journey begins with a delayed red-eye flight, a passenger attempting to bring an unauthorized kitten aboard, confusion over a rental car, and a series of humorous but stressful travel complications. These events frame a deeply personal weekend in which ordinary frustrations become opportunities for reflection, healing, and renewed connection.

The Mother Wound and the Mink Coat
Masters explains that her relationship with her mother had long been complicated by criticism, control, competition, and a lingering belief that she was not fully loved. A mink coat once promised to her but later given to a niece became a symbol of that wound. Over three years, her mother repeatedly tried to assure her of her love, while Masters worked to receive that reassurance without requiring the past to be rewritten.

Time, Presence, and a 104-Year-Old Mother
After arriving late with flowers, Masters learns from a death doula that time can become more precious than gifts for someone nearing the end of life. She recognizes that her mother’s disappointment was not really about the flowers but about losing irreplaceable time together. This realization changes how she approaches the rest of the weekend, making punctuality, presence, and attention central to their time together.

A Thrift-Store Escape and a Moment of Happiness
Masters takes her mother on an outing to a thrift store and Dairy Queen, reviving an activity they had enjoyed together for years. The trip includes difficulty opening the Prius trunk, concern over the heat, help from strangers, and confusion at the senior residence because the outing had not been formally recorded. Yet the most meaningful moment comes when her mother quietly describes herself as happy while eating an ice cream cone.

Grief, Mortality, and Quiet Release
After leaving the senior residence, Masters follows an intuitive prompting to find a park and is drawn through a cemetery. Surrounded by monuments representing entire human lives, she reflects on mortality, the brevity of life, and the energy spent trying to be right, understood, or vindicated. Sitting beneath trees in a park, she allows herself to cry without needing a specific explanation, experiencing the release as part of the healing process.

Love Received Without Keeping Score
On the final day, Masters helps her mother with practical needs, advocates for her comfort, moves a dangerously placed telephone, and accepts clothing her mother offers freely. Their exchanges reveal a relationship no longer dominated by competition or unresolved accounting. Her mother’s final declaration of love allows Masters to understand forgiveness as something that does not erase history but makes room for love to be given, received, and believed.

SEO Keywords / Key Phrases

healing the mother wound, forgiveness and family relationships, caring for an aging parent, emotional healing journey, mother daughter reconciliation, nervous system regulation, accepting people as they are, end of life reflections, self-love and authenticity, healing generational wounds

Reclaiming Authenticity, July 15, 2026

Wed, 15 Jul 2026
Invisible Connections: Finding Meaning, Healing, and the Souls We Overlook

Seeing the People Society Overlooks
The episode explores the human need for connection, meaning, acceptance, and purpose through literature, film, spirituality, and everyday experience. Dr. Hauck draws on Carson McCullers, Forrest Gump, A Love Song for Bobby Long, and Past Lives to consider people who move quietly through the world while carrying unseen struggles. He encourages listeners to notice those who are marginalized, isolated, or treated as invisible.

Stigma, Exclusion, and Disenfranchisement
A substantial portion of the discussion examines how societies have stigmatized people because of disease, mental illness, emotional suffering, social status, or other characteristics considered unacceptable. The host describes historical practices of separation, branding, quarantine, and exclusion, while emphasizing the emotional and social wounds created when a person is reduced from a whole individual to a discredited identity.

Chance Encounters and Meaningful Connection
The host questions whether apparently accidental encounters may contain deeper meaning. He describes ordinary moments in stores, crowds, and public places as possible opportunities to recognize another person’s need for attention, compassion, or conversation. The Korean concept of inyeon is presented as a way of imagining connections between people that may extend beyond a single meeting or lifetime.

Lessons from the Produce Aisle
Dr. Hauck shares a personal story about repeatedly meeting strangers in grocery-store produce sections who unexpectedly disclosed painful experiences. What initially felt like an interruption became a spiritual lesson about presence, safety, and intentional listening. He explains that this changed the way he approached errands, leading him to ask whom he might need to see, hear, or support that day.

Wounds, Energy, and Relationships
The episode connects unresolved wounds with the ways people interpret and respond to relationships. Bitterness, betrayal, distrust, shame, and unforgiveness are described as inner conditions that can shape how a person sees others and can echo through families and social systems. Healing, forgiveness, gratitude, and compassion are presented as ways to transform those patterns and recognize shared dignity beyond race, class, creed, culture, or stigma.

Inner Riches and the Freedom to Let Go
The closing story, attributed to Anthony de Mello, concerns a wandering sannyasi who freely gives away an enormous diamond. The villager eventually returns it and asks for the inner wealth that made such generosity possible. Dr. Hauck uses the story to conclude that lasting freedom does not come from possessing external treasures, but from healing within, releasing former burdens, and embodying grace, love, and a deeper awareness of connection.

SEO Keywords / Key Phrases

social stigma, invisible people, meaningful encounters, spiritual connectedness, emotional healing, intergenerational trauma, forgiveness and compassion, finding life purpose, inner freedom, unconditional love

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