The King of POP: Why Donald Trump Is Smiling —“Inconvenient Ideas” Reflection with Stan Hustad
Inconvenient Ideas with Stan Hustad...the Radio Man
Release Date: 10/09/2025
Inconvenient Ideas with Stan Hustad...the Radio Man
There are certain phrases from sports that stay with us long after the game is over. One of those phrases is “high, hard, and inside.” Baseball fans know exactly what it means. It is the pitch that comes fast. It comes close. It gets your attention. It makes you step back. And sometimes it changes everything. In this episode of The Transformation Zone, I share a baseball story that begins with a treasured baseball, moves through memories of growing up as a Chicago Cubs fan, includes an unexpected connection to Hall of Fame pitcher Juan Marichal, and eventually arrives at a powerful...
info_outlineInconvenient Ideas with Stan Hustad...the Radio Man
As millions of Americans celebrate Independence Day with fireworks, family gatherings, and patriotic festivities, broadcaster and transformation coach Stan Hustad invites listeners to see the holiday through an entirely different lens. In this warm and engaging episode of The Transformation Zone, a simple story about a frightened rescue dog becomes an unforgettable metaphor for the emotional and spiritual storms that every person eventually faces. The result is an episode that begins with laughter, moves toward reflection, and concludes with genuine hope. A Story Every Pet Owner Understands...
info_outlineInconvenient Ideas with Stan Hustad...the Radio Man
What if one of Jesus' most practical business lessons had nothing to do with profits, marketing, or management—but everything to do with birds and snakes? That unusual question launches one of the newest episodes of the Jesus Entrepreneur Collective, where broadcaster and entrepreneur Stan Hustad returns from a brief broadcasting sabbatical with a fresh challenge for anyone seeking to build a meaningful life and business in today's rapidly changing world. At first glance, "The Birds and Snakes Society" sounds mysterious—even a little unsettling. That is exactly the point. Drawing from...
info_outlineInconvenient Ideas with Stan Hustad...the Radio Man
There are moments in life when a single question changes everything. As I prepared for another Fourth of July weekend—and reflected on a wonderful week celebrating another birthday—I found myself asking a question I never imagined I would ask: What do you do when you didn't expect to live this long? For me, that isn't just a philosophical question. It's deeply personal. Several years ago, following a cancer diagnosis and knowing my family's history of relatively short lives, I honestly believed my time might be drawing to a close. I prepared myself emotionally and spiritually for that...
info_outlineInconvenient Ideas with Stan Hustad...the Radio Man
Busy, but Becoming: Finding Purpose in Everyday Moments and Unlikely Questions In this episode of Inconvenient Ideas Radio, veteran broadcaster Stan Hustad brings together a surprising mix of reflections—ranging from media wisdom to faith, from family stories to modern challenges—into a thoughtful and engaging conversation about what really matters. At the heart of the program is a question many quietly wrestle with: Is being busy the same as being effective? Hustad explores the tension between activity and impact, encouraging listeners to consider how their time, talents, and...
info_outlineInconvenient Ideas with Stan Hustad...the Radio Man
A reflective essay on the danger, drama, and cultural memory surrounding the Indianapolis 500 A Childhood Memory That Was Real Your memory is not exaggerated at all. The Indianapolis 500 really was considered extraordinarily dangerous for much of its history, and part of the fascination — especially from the 1930s through the 1970s — was precisely that mixture of speed, courage, patriotism, spectacle, and risk. For many Americans, especially in Indiana and throughout the Midwest, “The 500” was almost a sacred ritual of late May and Memorial Day weekend. Families gathered around radios...
info_outlineInconvenient Ideas with Stan Hustad...the Radio Man
There are days when everything feels planned, polished, and predictable. And then there are days like this one. This is one of those point-of-the-moment days—what I like to call POM thinking. No script. No delay. No filter. Just real-time reflection from the Coaching Zone, where ideas don’t always arrive neatly packaged… but they often arrive useful. Welcome to another adventure in Inconvenient Ideas—because let’s be honest: the ideas that help us most are often the ones that disrupt us first. Radio, Real Time, and the Power of Now One of the reasons I’ve spent a lifetime in...
info_outlineInconvenient Ideas with Stan Hustad...the Radio Man
Why Every Company Now Needs a Chief Broadcasting Officer (CBO) By Stan “The Radio Man” Hustad The What It Takes Radio Company presents another adventure… another expedition… and this one might just disrupt the way you think about your entire business. Let me start with a simple—but slightly inconvenient—idea: You are probably missing a very important person in your business today. And no… it’s not your CFO. Not your CMO. Not even your AI specialist. You need a CBO. A Chief Broadcasting Officer. AI is changing everything. But we’re not just entering a digital economy—we’re...
info_outlineInconvenient Ideas with Stan Hustad...the Radio Man
By Stan Hustad There are times in life when you step away for a bit—whether by design or by necessity—and when you return, you see things differently. That happened to me. After a stretch of what I’ll call “downtime, overtime, and out-of-time,” I’m back behind the microphone with a fresh installment of Inconvenient Ideas. And it felt only right to begin with a simple—but unsettling—question: What if everything we think we know… might be wrong? Now, that’s not a comfortable thought. But then again, the best ideas rarely are. The Power—and Problem—of Inconvenient...
info_outlineInconvenient Ideas with Stan Hustad...the Radio Man
On a quiet and reflective Maundy Thursday—coinciding with the sacred rhythms of Passover—veteran broadcaster and coach Stan Hustad took a moment not to preach, but to think out loud. What emerged was less a formal message and more a seasoned conversation—part reflection, part reminder, part rallying cry for living wisely in a world shaped by rapid change, artificial intelligence, and ongoing global tension. Drawing from a piece of his own work rediscovered from several years ago, Stan revisited a simple but powerful question: What are the real skills—the “pro skills”—that...
info_outlineIn this thought-provoking edition of Inconvenient Ideas, Stan Hustad offers a 15-minute story-time reflection on power, personality, and perception — all wrapped around a provocative headline: “Donald Trump is smiling now because he’s the King of POP.” But
in Stan’s hands, POP doesn’t mean “Prince of Peace.” It means Power, Opportunity, and Personality — the currency of modern influence.
An Idea Worth Wrestling With
Broadcasting from the What It Takes Radio studio — standing tall, gesturing, and speaking with his whole body as he always does — Stan begins by reminding listeners that ideas matter. They lead to insight, insight leads to influence, and influence creates impact (and maybe even income). But to have impact, you must be willing to hold inconvenient ideas — the kind that comfort some people and discomfort others.
From there, Hustad turns to a “reality check of the moment.” As peace talks flicker across the headlines and the political stage grows restless, Donald Trump stands — figuratively and literally — smiling. Not because he’s universally loved, but because he’s managed to turn personality into power and persistence into political longevity. Whether admired or despised, Hustad argues, Trump embodies the ultimate performance principle: he knows who he is, what he wants, and how to keep the spotlight.
Politics, Power, and the Personality Principle
Stan takes listeners behind the headline with a mix of humor and humility. He points to the irony of Trump’s alliances — foes who become friends again (like Elon Musk), rivals turned partners (like Marco Rubio). He paints a picture of a man who doesn’t need to please everyone — only to keep momentum, to stay in motion, to act decisively while others argue.
As Hustad notes, this isn’t a political statement but a “statement of reality.” Leadership, like broadcasting, is performance — and the ones who understand their audience, even when the crowd boos, often end up writing the script.
Facing the Truth and Finding the Lesson
Hustad closes with a story about one of his mentors, who told him, “Always have the courage to face the truth.” That line becomes the heartbeat of the program. Whether it’s Trump’s triumph, your own business struggle, or life’s daily disappointments, success begins by seeing things as they are — not as we wish them to be.
The program ends as it began: with an invitation. Stan challenges listeners to pick up the microphone — literally or figuratively — and “story him back.” True communication, he insists, is not argument but relationship. “If I can turn a foe into a friend,” he smiles, “I might just be a prince of peace.”
Things to Remember, Share, and Do
**Remember:**
- Every great idea is inconvenient for someone.
- Power often follows personality — and the courage to stand when others sit.
- Facing the truth is the first step toward influence.
**Share:**
- This episode with anyone tired of shouting matches and hungry for genuine conversation.
- The insight that real communication creates connection, not division.
**Do:**
- Take 15 minutes to listen to the full Inconvenient Ideas program.
- Reflect on your own “POP” — your Power, Opportunity, and Personality.
- Record your own story, your own truth, and share it. Because ideas, shared wisely, can still change the world.
Produced by The What It Takes Radio Company • Inconvenient Ideas Series