Épisodes

  • The fight over fairness in Oklahoma high school sports (with Hannah Whitten)
    Apr 20 2026

    A behind-the-scenes look at how eligibility decisions are made in Oklahoma high school sports — and why one attorney says the system needs reform.

    Oklahoma Memo founder and curator Ryan Welton sits down with Hannah Whitten to break down a recent case involving student transfers, shifting rules, and missed playing time. The conversation expands into bigger questions about due process, fairness, and access for student athletes across the state.

    What We Talk About
    • A real case involving student athletes transferring schools in rural Oklahoma
    • How Oklahoma Secondary School Activities Association rules were applied — and then changed
    • Why some students lost practices and games
    • Concerns about due process in OSSAA hearings
    • The role of evidence (and what happens when it’s not considered)
    • Why this issue goes beyond sports (music, debate, activities)
    • The financial reality: who can move districts — and who can’t
    • What reform could look like
    • Advice for parents navigating eligibility issues

    Key Takeaways
    • Eligibility rulings can have real consequences — including lost opportunities and exposure
    • OSSAA decisions aren’t always handled with the same structure as courts
    • Families with more resources often have more flexibility
    • Advocacy matters — parents who push the system tend to get better outcomes
    • There is growing pressure for reform, but change hasn’t fully materialized

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    19 min
  • Oklahoma politics this week: Kevin Hern’s Senate bid, Mullin’s future and the Iran oil threat
    Mar 15 2026

    Ryan Welton is joined by Grant Hermes for a wide-ranging conversation on the week’s biggest political developments.

    They discuss Kevin Hern’s Senate bid and why it could trigger major consequences not just in Oklahoma, but in the U.S. House. They also look at Gov. Kevin Stitt’s possible ambitions, the uncertainty around Markwayne Mullin’s future, and the larger political calculations underway.

    The second half of the conversation turns to the Senate’s role in confirming cabinet officials, how that process really works, and why the escalating Iran conflict and Strait of Hormuz disruption could send shockwaves through oil markets and beyond.

    Topics include:

    1. Kevin Hern’s path to the U.S. Senate
    2. What Gov. Kevin Stitt may be thinking politically
    3. Why Markwayne Mullin’s future matters
    4. How cabinet confirmations actually work
    5. Trump, donor access and power politics
    6. Iran, the Strait of Hormuz and the oil shock threat
    7. What this all could mean for Oklahoma

    Subscribe to Oklahoma Memo: oklahomamemo.com/subscribe

    Subscribe to Make It Make Sense with Grant Hermes on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@MIMSnewspod

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    59 min
  • A Father’s Fight: The Story Behind Oklahoma’s “Leo’s Law”
    Mar 13 2026

    A heartbreaking tragedy is now driving a push for legislative change in Oklahoma.

    In this episode of the Oklahoma Memo Podcast, Ryan Welton speaks with Jacob Towe, whose young son Leo died from fentanyl poisoning.

    After learning the true cause of Leo’s death, Towe began pushing for a new law that would require the Oklahoma Department of Human Services to test parents for fentanyl before reunifying children with them.

    The proposed legislation, known as “Leo’s Law,” would simply add fentanyl to the panel of drugs already tested during child welfare investigations.

    Towe shares:

    • The story of his son Leo

    • How he discovered fentanyl poisoning caused Leo’s death

    • Why he believes the tragedy could have been prevented

    • The grassroots effort to pass Leo’s Law

    • Why other states — and Congress — are watching Oklahoma

    Towe says if the law saves even one child, the effort will be worth it.

    Resources mentioned in this episode:

    Leo’s Law Facebook group

    Families Supporting Families in Oklahoma

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    17 min
  • Oklahoma historian, educator warns 'quick fixes' won’t solve the reading crisis
    Mar 6 2026

    Improving reading outcomes has become a major policy focus in Oklahoma.

    But what actually helps children learn to read?

    In this episode of the Oklahoma Memo Podcast, Ryan Welton talks with longtime Oklahoma educator and historian John Thompson about the literacy debate, including the widely discussed “Mississippi Miracle.”

    Thompson explains why some tutoring programs fail, how high-dosage tutoring works, and why background knowledge and classroom culture play a critical role in literacy development.

    He also raises concerns about the growing push toward AI-based tutoring systems and what that could mean for the future of public education.

    Topics covered

    • The “Mississippi Miracle” reading debate

    • What research says about tutoring programs

    • High-dosage tutoring explained

    • Why test pressure can undermine reading comprehension

    • The role of knowledge and curriculum in literacy

    • Concerns about AI tutoring tools

    • Lessons from decades in Oklahoma classrooms

    Leave this episode a 5-star review and help the Oklahoma Memo podcast get discovered easier!

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    24 min
  • Investment or austerity? Oklahoma’s fork in the road | with Rep. Melissa Provenzano and John Croisant
    Mar 1 2026

    This week on the Oklahoma Memo Podcast:

    Ryan Welton is joined by Rep. Melissa Provenzano (D–Tulsa) and congressional candidate John Croisant for a wide-ranging discussion on Oklahoma’s fiscal future.

    Topics include:

    Education

    1. Mississippi’s reading model vs. Oklahoma’s funding history
    2. Third-grade retention debate
    3. Teacher pay, emergency certifications and workforce pipeline
    4. Private school tax credits vs. public investment

    Healthcare

    1. Federal Medicaid reductions and SoonerCare implications
    2. Insurance premium spikes
    3. AI-based claim denials

    Affordability

    1. Dynamic grocery pricing
    2. Insurance oversight
    3. Minimum wage proposals

    Economic Development

    1. Data centers and AI expansion
    2. Energy and water usage concerns
    3. Workforce readiness and corporate relocation decisions

    Connect with:

    Rep. Melissa Provenzano — melissa.provenzano@okhouse.gov

    John Croisant — croisantforcongress.com

    Subscribe to the Oklahoma Memo newsletter at OklahomaMemo.com/subscribe.

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    41 min
  • The State of the Union’s biggest story: What President Trump didn’t say
    Feb 28 2026

    Trump’s address was historic for its length — but the political tells were in the omissions. Ryan Welton is joined by national journalist and podcaster Grant Hermes (Make It Make Sense with Grant Hermes) to break down State of the Union week, the messaging strategy behind what got left out, and what it could signal heading into the midterms.

    Then, the conversation turns to Oklahoma: Gov. Kevin Stitt’s NPR interview and why his “return to integrity” tone — plus a states’ rights framing — sounds like he’s testing a national lane.

    In this episode

    1. Why Trump barely touched ICE — despite immigration enforcement being central to the administration
    2. What it means that the “One Big Beautiful Bill” didn’t get a direct mention
    3. The “SAVE America Act” and the bigger elections-power fight behind it
    4. How courts, procedure, and politics collide if executive actions push too far
    5. Kevin Stitt’s NPR interview: states’ rights, immigration tone, and 2028 vibes

    Links

    1. Subscribe to Oklahoma Memo: oklahomamemo.com/subscribe
    2. Grant Hermes / Make It Make Sense:

    (https://www.youtube.com/@MIMSnewspod)

    (https://mimsnewspod.substack.com/)

    Follow / Support

    If you found this useful, share the episode! We appreciate you!

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    55 min
  • Oklahoma Memo Newscast | February 25, 2026
    Feb 26 2026

    Welcome to the first Oklahoma Memo Newscast.

    Today’s top story:

    Senate Republican leadership unveils a $254 million education plan that would raise teacher pay and fund literacy initiatives by capping additional contributions to Oklahoma’s teacher retirement system.

    Teachers push back.

    Plus:

    Rob Miller withdraws from state superintendent race

    Markwayne Mullin confronts Al Green at State of the Union

    • Severe weather risk developing for next week

    • OU baseball walk-off win

    OSBI investigating Harmon County Sheriff’s Office

    Bryan County ranchers aid Beaver County wildfire victims

    Subscribe to the Oklahoma Memo newsletter for daily curated reporting from across the state. You can do so at OklahomaMemo.com/subscribe

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    16 min
  • Mustang’s 122 suspensions, Epstein shockwaves, and Iran escalation fears — explained
    Feb 23 2026

    Ryan Welton is joined by Grant Hermes (Make It Make Sense with Grant Hermes) for a wide-ranging conversation that connects a local Oklahoma education controversy to larger questions about power, institutional trust, and international pressure.

    They discuss Mustang Public Schools suspending 122 students after a Feb. 5 walkout, how lawsuits and discovery could reveal more behind the scenes, the mechanics of protest movements, and why Grant is watching signs of possible escalation involving Iran. They also touch on international developments connected to the Epstein files — and why weekends, especially Fridays, can be pivotal for breaking news.

    Key topics:

    1. Mustang’s 122 suspensions after the Feb. 5 walkout
    2. Student protest protections and the disruption standard
    3. “Unexcused absence” vs. viewpoint discipline — and why that distinction matters
    4. What discovery could reveal if litigation happens
    5. Protest spillover: how crackdowns can multiply movements
    6. International pressure around the Epstein files and credibility questions
    7. Iran escalation signals + coalition dynamics
    8. Media literacy: the Friday news dump and why “alerts” matter

    Weekly guest: Grant Hermes — Make It Make Sense:

    YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@MIMSnewspod

    Substack: https://mimsnewspod.substack.com/

    Subscribe: Oklahoma Memo (daily newsletter) — OklahomaMemo.com/subscribe

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    51 min