Hour 1 of today’s Clay Travis & Buck Sexton Show delivers a deep dive into the state of the U.S. economy under President Donald Trump, highlighting newly released economic data, shifts in public sentiment, and a stream of impactful listener calls. The hour opens with Clay outlining major January inflation numbers, where core inflation has fallen to 2.4%, the lowest since early 2021, bringing the U.S. within reach of the Federal Reserve’s 2% inflation target. The hosts emphasize that the economic fears tied to Trump’s tariff policies have not materialized, pointing instead to an economy “moving in a very, very good direction.” They spotlight strong GDP growth at 4.4%, rising real wages, declining rent costs, and steadily falling gas prices—all trends they attribute to a combination of economic leadership and a more secure southern border that has reduced rental demand after millions of illegal immigrants left the country. Another major focus is the dramatic shift in the labor market: government jobs are down more than 40,000, federal jobs down over 30,000, and the U.S. now sits at the lowest government to private sector jobs ratio since 1966. Meanwhile, over 130,000 private sector jobs were added after subtracting government reductions, consistent with what the hosts call Trump’s long term plan to “privatize” the economy. Politically, Hour 1 frames the strong economic data as a challenge for Democrats, whom the hosts accuse of focusing on government shutdown tactics and other diversions because the strength of the economy undercuts their arguments. They compare the current moment to Reagan’s first term, noting how it took time for voters to feel economic improvement even when metrics were strong. A key theme is the gap between economic data and personal experience, illustrated through Clay’s anecdote about spending $84 at Dairy Queen for a group of kids—an example of lingering consumer frustration after the post Biden inflation spike from 1.9% up to 9.1%, now slowly returning to normal. The hour then shifts into a widely shared and emotional cultural moment: the death of actor James Van Der Beek at age 48, best known for “Dawson’s Creek” and “Varsity Blues,” who leaves behind six children after battling colon cancer. Clay and Buck play the actor’s final recorded message, a deeply reflective monologue about identity, fatherhood, mortality, and rediscovering self worth through faith. The hosts use the moment to discuss men’s roles as providers, the meaning of purpose, and modern cultural pressures that undermine those foundations. Listener reactions pour in, including powerful calls about losing loved ones to cancer and finding meaning through hardship. Wrapping up Hour 1, the hosts take additional calls on inflation, fast food pricing, grocery bills, regional price differences, and election anxieties heading into 2026. Some listeners report food costs stabilizing; others argue they remain dramatically elevated. The show closes by previewing Hour 3 content and promising continued coverage of ongoing news stories, including the Nancy Guthrie case.
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