Is Cold-Blooded Murder Just an Unfortunate Accident?

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From the heart of Times Square in New York City, Kevin McCullough takes America’s pulse — and delivers the shock it needs. THAT KEVIN SHOW doesn’t whisper opinions. It detonates them. With moral clarity, sharp wit, and genuine humor, McCullough has built one of the most loyal audiences in talk media.

Fearless. Fast. Funny. Rooted in that rarest virtue — common sense. In a media world allergic to truth and laughter, THAT KEVIN SHOW stands apart — delivering unapologetic clarity across faith, politics, culture, and comedy. It’s talk radio that’s as entertaining as it is enlightening.

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Friday, December 12, 2025

In this episode of ThatKEVINShow:

I'm struck by how every conversation we had today pointed to the same tension that defines this moment that we're living in. The world is trembling, but the truth of God is still unshaken.

We opened the show with something hard; the comment from Congressman Thompson calling the deliberate execution of our finest in uniform an "unfortunate accident". I still can't get over that phrase; not because it's just tone deaf, but because it diminishes the sacredness of the sacrifice of our warriors. The Apostle John never used soft language for evil. He didn't call darkness unfortunate; he said light has come into the world, but men love darkness instead of light. 

What Dr. Ray Pritchard reminded us of today is so deeply important. Advent is not sentimental. It's confrontational. Advent is the invasion of light into very real darkness. And if there was ever a December when America needed that reminder, it's this one.

We talked to Patrice Onwuka about genuinely encouraging economic news, jobs up, inflation cooling, more families catching their breath. Hope isn't a rumor, it's measurable. I thought about the people listening today who have been holding on for dear life for the past couple of years. Sometimes God sends hope not in thunderclaps, but in data points. Maybe the Lord's provision shows up in a spreadsheet, before it's in your spirit; but it's still provision, nonetheless. 

Lee Strobel reminded us about miracles. Not hypotheticals, not abstractions, real interventions of a God who is not retired, not distant, not uninterested. It felt like a reminder that even when leaders disappoint us; even when Congress minimizes evil; even when the world feels cold or cynical; heaven is not asleep. The same Jesus who arrived in Bethlehem arrives still...in moments, in mercies, in miracles.

We heard from Shelley Goldberg. Because if there's ever a time when families feel strained, stressed, anxious & stretched thin...it's this season. We all want peace, but sometimes the hardest place to find it is around our own tables. Her wisdom was simple, but profound. Adults need intentionality at Christmas the same way children do. Peace doesn't materialize out of thin air. It's cultivated, it's chosen, it's practiced,

I want you to do something for me. Carry this with you. The world may misname evil, but God doesn't. Leaders may disappoint, but Christ can't. Economies shift but God provides. Families struggle, but grace heals us. And the light that came into the world then; still shines, still pierces and still prevails. That's why, even like the days we live in now, we must not, cannot, do not lose hope; because hope is what it is about. 

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