Start with the hard truth: you can’t fix culture if you ignore the home. We sit down with Jack Brewer—former NFL captain turned fatherhood advocate—to unpack why the most stubborn problems in crime, education, and reentry trace back to one root issue: fatherlessness. Jack tells the story of growing up with an engaged dad while watching talented cousins fall into trouble, then connects those experiences to data and the daily reality he sees inside prisons across America.
Jack’s approach is both compassionate and tough. He helped shape major fatherhood legislation in Florida and Ohio, then built programs that go straight into facilities and neighborhoods where hope feels scarce. The model is simple and demanding: train men to be present fathers, enforce clear standards, connect them to their children with tangible support—birthday gifts, groceries, scholarships—and set them up for life after release with IDs, resumes, phones, and references. Most of his staff have served time; they deliver empathy with credibility. And he insists lifers matter too, because a child’s need for a dad doesn’t end when a sentence begins.
We also focus on Texas, where fatherlessness rates and youth risk collide. The numbers are sobering, but the path forward is actionable: laws that promote responsibility without pretending government can replace the church or the family, and a culture that prizes mentorship as a daily duty. We talk about how legislators can open doors for faith-led partners, how communities can restore standards without losing compassion, and how each of us can step into the gap for a kid who needs guidance right now.
If you’re ready to move past talk and into solutions that change lives, this conversation will challenge and equip you. Subscribe, share with a friend who mentors or leads, and leave a review to help more listeners find this message. Then tell us: who will you mentor this week?