The Nuance Hour – Details, episodes & analysis
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The Nuance Hour
Trevor Adams & Emily Fisk
Frequency: 1 episode/24d. Total Eps: 13

The Nuance Hour is a podcast all about getting out of our filter bubbles, questioning long-held beliefs, and moving beyond labels to have cathartic conversations. We discuss politics, religion, current events, and culture. We attempt to embrace the shades of gray, question our assumptions, and think critically.
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Apple Podcasts
🇺🇸 USA - philosophy
10/02/2026#77🇺🇸 USA - philosophy
09/02/2026#69
Spotify
No recent rankings available
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See allScore global : 73%
Publication history
Monthly episode publishing history over the past years.
Episode 12: The One Where They Talk Religion
Season 1 · Episode 12
samedi 7 février 2026 • Duration 01:21:01
In this episode, we finally dive deep into religion—the topic we've been promising since day one. We're thrilled to be joined by Reverend Benjamin Cremer, who brings serious theological credentials and two decades of pastoral experience. More importantly, Ben brings the kind of honest, historically-grounded perspective on American Christianity that cuts through the Christian nationalist white noise (pun intended).
We each share our spiritual journeys and unpack the movements that shaped our parents (and us), explore why American Christianity's extremists have become its loudest representatives, and ask the big question: does American Christianity exist outside of its dirty deal with power?
We also tackle where Gen Z fits into all this, why men are flocking back to rigid religion, what the "church of piety" looks like, and whether there's hope in Christianity's historical pattern of resistance movements. Spoiler: monasteries were the original protest against empire, and every reformation comes with reformers who get crucified for it.
Segments & Timestamps:
00:00 - Introducing Reverend Ben Cremer
00:25 - Episode Preview
01:40 - Meet Ben Cremer
04:05 - Historical Context
08:33 - Ben's Early Years
12:18 - Escaping Extremism
16:25 - Seminary & Grace
17:50 - Compensation Crisis
20:16 - Losing Credentials
25:25 - Online Ministry
31:12 - Church as Club
35:06 - Trevor's Background
38:03 - End Times
39:56 - Reformed Phase
42:02 - Philosophy & Faith
44:06 - Episcopal Discovery
47:14 - Emily's Journey
50:14 - Homeschool Movement
54:56 - Cult Years
58:08 - Church & Trauma
1:00:31 - American Christianity
1:05:05 - Gen Z
1:09:53 - Hope
1:13:27 - Church of Piety
1:18:12 - Wrap Up
1:20:27 - Outro
Mentioned:
Chad Kim's podcast: History of Christian Theology
Ben Cremer's newsletter: Into the Gray
Ben Cremer on social media: @brcremer
Connect With Us:
Produced and Engineered by Ken Wilson | Original Music by Robert Lanterman
Website: thenuancehour.com
Instagram: @thenuancehour
Email: thenuancehour@gmail.com
Episode 11: 2026 Bingo (Predictions)
Season 1 · Episode 11
samedi 24 janvier 2026 • Duration 01:13:15
In this episode, we kick off 2026 by throwing caution to the wind and making bold predictions across 13 topics—from politics and culture to tech, religion, and even rollerblading. After acknowledging the grim moment we’re living through, we dive into what the coming year might hold: midterm forecasts, the future of Trump’s influence, who could emerge in the 2028 presidential race, and what might happen with religion in the U.S. We also predict cultural trends like the potential resurgence of rollerblading (yes, really), the “analog year” vibe creeping into consumer culture, social media fatigue, and a possible AI backlash.
Whether it’s geopolitics, Taylor Swift, or the coalitions shaping the parties, this episode is all about being right or wrong together and starting the year with curiosity and nuance. Plus we’re turning it into a Bingo game, and everybody (Emily) loves a chance to compete.
Segments & Timestamps:
0:00 Intro + Remembering Rene
1:42 Prediction Season Rules
4:58 2026 Midterms
9:37 Trump, Power, and the Courts
15:12 Midterms & Movement Signals
21:04 2028?
26:41 Religion in 2026
31:55 Culture as Forecast (Yes, Rollerblades)
37:18 AI Backlash & the “Analog Year”
43:06 Social Media Fatigue
48:22 American Imperialism
1:00:36 Good Take: Dan Carlin — “First Day, First Term”
Mentioned:
Dan Carlin: Common Sense Ep 325
Connect With Us:
Produced and Engineered by Ken Wilson | Original Music by Robert Lanterman
Website: thenuancehour.com
Instagram: @thenuancehour
Email: thenuancehour@gmail.com
Episode 2: This is Why We Can’t Have Nice Things
Season 1 · Episode 2
vendredi 9 mai 2025 • Duration 01:18:11
Episode 1: The Most American Poster
Season 1 · Episode 1
samedi 19 avril 2025 • Duration 01:05:09
Mentioned:
'We conclude' or 'I believe?' Study finds rationality declined decades ago: https://phys.org/news/2022-01-rationality-declined-decades.html#google_vignette
W. Ada considers requiring ‘everyone is welcome’ signs at each school; claims teacher’s signs prohibited due to ‘design elements’: https://boisedev.com/news/2025/03/17/w-ada-considers-requiring-everyone-is-welcome-signs-at-each-school-says-teachers-signs-prohibited-due-to-design-elements/
Rev. Benjamin Cremer on Facebook, Instagram, Bluesky, and X: https://www.facebook.com/ben.cremer
https://www.instagram.com/brcremer/?hl=en https://bsky.app/profile/brcremer.bsky.social https://x.com/Brcremer
Episode 0: What is Nuance?
Episode 1
samedi 19 avril 2025 • Duration 34:22
Episode 10: My First Dictatorship
Season 1 · Episode 10
vendredi 19 décembre 2025 • Duration 01:35:20
In this episode, we take on the grim (and increasingly undeniable) question of America’s slide toward authoritarianism, and why naming it plainly isn’t partisan. We talk about how the two-party duopoly keeps forcing every concern into a Coke v. Pepsi “they’re all the same” dead end, making it easier to normalize power grabs with “yeah, but the other side…” logic. Trevor makes the case that structural issues like campaign finance, Citizens United, gerrymandering, and winner-take-all electoral rules have weakened representation and primed the system for strongman politics, while Emily argues for a broader “No Kings” style coalition that can welcome people who don’t neatly fit into either party identity.
From there, we map the current authoritarian terrain: due process erosion, weaponized institutions, loyalty-driven governance, creeping normalization of extrajudicial force, and civil society collapsing faster than we expected. We also push back hard on the false binary of “apathy or revolution,” making the case for sustainable resistance rooted in community, joy, and practical action. We end with corners—some good news on state-level experimentation to reduce money’s influence in politics, and a bad-take detour into the internet’s latest brain-melt: “Is Taylor Swift a Nazi?”
Segments & Timestamps:
0:00 Intro
0:23 Authoritarianism, Again
3:57 “We Were Early”
8:21 White House Discourse
11:56 Duopoly Brain
23:26 “No Kings” Coalitions
26:24 “At Least It’s Not…”
33:32 Oligarchy 101
36:46 Citizens United, Revisited
46:15 Gerrymandering + Electoral College
54:30 Joyful Resistance
1:01:54 Authoritarian Map Check
1:07:00 The List (Proof Points)
1:16:01 Due Process + Human Rights
1:23:26 Good News: Montana Plan
1:27:29 Good Take: Harris vs. Shapiro
1:28:56 Bad Take: T. Swift Isn’t a Nazi
Mentioned:
Sam Harris (Making Sense): Sam Harris vs. Ben Shapiro on Trump, authoritarianism, and the peaceful transfer of power
The New York Times Editorial Board: Are We Losing Our Democracy?
The Montana Plan: Montana’s state-level effort to limit corporate political spending after Citizens United
Connect With Us:
Produced and Engineered by Ken Wilson | Original Music by Robert Lanterman
Website: thenuancehour.com
Instagram: @thenuancehour
Email: thenuancehour@gmail.com
Episode 9: Squids on Mars! Attention Farming and the New Politics of Conspiracy
Season 1 · Episode 9
lundi 17 novembre 2025 • Duration 01:23:20
In this episode, we dive into why conspiracy theories feel so irresistible and ubiquitous right now, and why they’re also so corrosive. We talk about motivated reasoning, media bias, and our crumbling trust in experts, from JFK and 9/11 truthers to lab-leak debates, QAnon, RFK Jr., and the evergreen “do your own research” refrain. We also unpack how the attention economy and social media reward rage-bait and fringe content, why weather modification and “chemtrails” became right-wing go-tos after the Texas floods, and how politicians from Trump to Marjorie Taylor Greene exploit conspiratorial thinking for power. Along the way, we make the case for real media literacy, intellectual humility, and learning to live with complex, less cinematic truths.
Segments & Timestamps:
0:00 Intro
2:38 Why Conspiracy Theories Stick
11:54 Motivated Reasoning, Expertise & Bias
23:40 The Attention Economy & “Do Your Own Research” Culture
38:41 Weather Modification, Chemtrails & Political Weaponization
57:03 Epstein, Elon vs. Trump & the New Politics of Conspiracy
1:15:56 Counter Argument Corner: Is Musk Sitting on Nuclear Info?
1:21:35 Outro
Mentioned:
Abbie Richards for Media Matters: Why TikTok is becoming a playground for absurd AI-generated conspiracy theories
David Gardner on The Daily Beast: How Musk Brought Epstein Back to Life to Win His Bitter War With Trump
Planet Money: Why I Joined DOGE
Connect With Us:
Produced and Engineered by Ken Wilson | Original Music by Robert Lanterman
Website: thenuancehour.com
Instagram: @thenuancehour
Email: thenuancehour@gmail.com
Episode 8: Kitchen Sink: Bad Things, Better Angels
Season 1 · Episode 8
samedi 20 septembre 2025 • Duration 01:18:11
In our first Kitchen Sink roundup, we start with the week’s heaviest news: the assassination of Charlie Kirk. We talk frankly about political violence, free speech, and why “bad things are bad” should be a baseline instead of a partisan Rorschach test. From there, we hit a scatter of stories we’ve been tracking: the stalled push to release more Epstein files (and why Thomas Massie is a Libertarian badass), a quick update on Kilmar Abrego Garcia’s case, West Ada’s “Everyone Is Welcome” poster fallout, and that bizarre “Did Trump die?” rumor cycle. We also reflect on the civic muscles we still need to flex, from Lincoln’s “better angels” to the everyday discipline of touching grass.
#Politics #FreeSpeech
Segments & Timestamps:
0:00 Intro
0:24 Political Violence & Charlie Kirk
47:53 Epstein Files & Trump
57:24 Kilmar Abrego Garcia: Targeted as an Example?
1:08:40 West Ada Poster: Teacher Joins Boise School District
1:11:09 “Did Trump Die?” Let’s Touch Grass
1:17:41 Outro
Mentioned:
Business Insider: This Chart Proves There Is Something Profoundly Wrong With How The US Handles Guns
World Population Review: Gun Ownership by Country 2025
Idaho Ed News: ‘Everyone is welcome here’ teacher takes Boise School District job
Connect With Us:
Produced and Engineered by Ken Wilson | Original Music by Robert Lanterman
Website: thenuancehour.com
Instagram: @thenuancehour
Email: thenuancehour@gmail.com
Episode 7: Is Trump Replaceable? Inside the Fractured MAGA Grievance Worldview
Season 1 · Episode 7
vendredi 29 août 2025 • Duration 01:10:24
In this episode, we try to untangle the ideological realignment of the Republican Party in the era of Trumpism. From Reagan’s conservatism to the rise of grievance politics, we unpack seven conservative principles—and ask if Trump ever pretended to adhere to them—delve into the Epstein files as a defining cultural myth for the MAGA movement, and question whether the MAGA coalition can survive without its orange avatar. Tune in for a candid, nuanced conversation on identity, power, and the emergence of cultural movements.
Segments & Timestamps:
00:00 – Intro & Mission of The Nuance Hour
02:00 – Defining the MAGA/Trump Coalition
06:30 – Conservatism Then vs. Now
10:00 – Grading Trump Against Mike’s Seven Core Principles
18:00 – Tariffs & Economic Contradictions
22:00 – Liberty, Government, and Rhetorical Limits
26:00 – Social Values & Trump’s Conservative Identity
30:00 – Who Is Trump? A Grievance Framework
35:00 – The Epstein File & Conspiracy Psychology
42:00 – Self-Deception Within the Coalition
45:00 – Future of MAGA After Trump
50:00 – Final Thoughts & Hopes for Conservative Renewal
Mentioned:
Mike Johnson’s seven core conservative principles
Connect With Us:
Produced and Engineered by Ken Wilson | Original Music by Robert Lanterman
Website: thenuancehour.com
Instagram: @thenuancehour
Email: thenuancehour@gmail.com
Episode 6: Does Size Matter? Lessons From Civil Resistance Research
Season 1 · Episode 6
vendredi 25 juillet 2025 • Duration 01:02:10
In this episode, we dive into research on violent and non-violent civil resistance movements of the past. What lessons can we learn from successful resistance movements? Is there a critical threshold of civic involvement in the face of oppressive regimes? We also report from our experience at the Boise No Kings protest in June. Are the 50501 protests different than the Women’s March and other resistance protests of Trump’s first term? Emily does a 108 on the value of protests.
Mentioned in this episode:
Why Civil Resistance Works: The Strategic Logic of Nonviolent Conflict by Maria J. Stephan and Erica Chenoweth
Questions, Answers, and Some Cautionary Updates Regarding the 3.5% Rule by Erica Chenoweth









