The Neil Haley Show — Daniel Baldwin, Joan Long, Christopher Richards & Dr. GildaActor Daniel Baldwin kicks things off with a fast, funny, and frankly human tour of Baldwin family lore—holiday “bowl” games, dinner-table one-upmanship, homemade 8mm movies—and how that sibling improv muscle shaped his craft. He shares the double-edged sword of the Baldwin name in casting, a wild “Eight Men Out” audition coincidence with Alec, and why big families breed big communicators (and cereal shortages).Baldwin gets serious about recovery, faith, and purpose: his micro-budget film The Wisdom to Know the Difference(written, directed, produced, and starring him) won 11 festival Best Picture awards and directly inspired a recovery center—work he calls more important than trophies. He’s transparent about a recent health scare (sky-high glucose and cholesterol), his shift to Diet Free Life habits, and a new couple-centric cooking show filmed at home—part food, part marriage, part fresh-from-the-farm living—plus a hard pass on reality-TV chaos after Celebrity Big Brother UK.Author Joan Long (94!) brings lived history to Daisy’s Hope for Her Journey, a Great Depression-era North Carolina tale drawn from farm life, rationed resources, and a Quaker community’s steady faith. She contrasts “no one had money” then with today’s spotty hardship, stresses gratitude, and explains conscientious objection and service alternatives in wartime. It’s a love letter to resilience, small-town landmarks, and the kind of community that still shows up for homecoming Sunday.Founder Christopher Richards lays out a no-fluff framework for SaaS teams stuck at $0–$10K MRR: tighten Ideal Client Profile alignment, unify messaging across marketing and sales, build a repeatable product-sales system, and stop betting on “build it and they will come.” The offer promises a tailored growth roadmap, conversion audit, and hands-on mentoring from an exited founder—less guru glitter, more blocking and tackling.Dr. Gilda closes with cultural trend-spotting: falling birth rates, Gen Z men wanting families, many Gen Z women opting out, and a growing interest in dating slightly older, no-games partners. Her bottom line is simple and unromantic—in a good way: align values early (kids or no kids), skip performative drama, and choose partners who actually want the same future. Fewer mixed signals, more honest conversations. That’s how you build something that lasts.