Episodes

Friday Feb 06, 2026
Friday Feb 06, 2026
On this fiery Friday episode, Clay dives into the chaos shaking Central Mississippi. From back-to-back bomb threats at Madison Station Elementary—leading to school closures and federal involvement—to a mass shooting threat at Hillcrest Christian School, where 38-year-old Abby Nicole Taylor was arrested and charged with terrorist threats on a shockingly low $75,000 bond. Clay breaks down the stupidity behind these acts and questions the low stakes for such serious crimes.
Hear the frustrating story of parent Shane Saxton, who defied school admins to get his kids off a bus during the lockdown, only to get pulled over by police afterward for "causing a disturbance." Clay shares Shane's viral video and opens the lines for listener reactions—was it overreach or necessary protocol? Plus, a shoutout to local heroes like the Flora Police Department keeping things safe.
Sports fans, celebrate with Clay as he congratulates New Orleans Saints legend Drew Brees on his Hall of Fame induction, reminiscing about epic moments like the Superdome's post-Katrina return game.
In hour two, State Auditor Shad White joins to expose a nonprofit focused on human trafficking that's funneling hundreds of thousands of taxpayer dollars to anti-ICE protests—liberal logic at its finest. Then, State Rep. Fred Shanks drops in for the weekly "Under the Dome" segment, covering bills like mobile sports betting, teacher pay raises, and PBM reform moving through the legislature.
Clay also touches on local media outrage over changes to a Medgar Evers pamphlet and calls for better parental communication during crises. Packed with texts, calls, and live reactions, this episode fights for the soul of America and demands positive solutions in a broken system.
Tune in for raw takes on Jackson's real issues—no holds barred. Listen now and join the conversation!

Thursday Feb 05, 2026
ROGER WICKER & CINDY-HYDE SMITH ANGER VOTERS, LET'S SEE WHY!!
Thursday Feb 05, 2026
Thursday Feb 05, 2026
In this unfiltered federal politics segment of The Clay Edwards Show, host Clay Edwards breaks down recent comments from Mississippi's U.S. Senators Cindy Hyde-Smith and Roger Wicker on hot-button immigration issues. First, Clay plays and analyzes Hyde-Smith's video defending her vote against Rand Paul's amendment to defund the HHS Office of Refugee Resettlement, explaining it's essential for caring for thousands of unaccompanied migrant children already in custody—some as young as three—per guidance from President Trump. She calls defunding inhumane without alternatives, emphasizing child welfare regardless of origin. Clay agrees Republicans must win the optics battle against "kids in cages" narratives, admitting he often disagrees with Hyde-Smith but backs her here on legal and moral grounds. Shifting to Wicker, Clay discusses his opposition to turning a Byhalia warehouse into a 10,000-person ICE detention center, arguing it was meant for job-creating economic development and would strain local infrastructure like medical services—despite his full support for enforcement. Initially skeptical, Clay concedes Wicker might be right after group chats highlight the burdens, suggesting alternatives like empty Jackson warehouses (e.g., Metro Center or Fondren spots) for ICE facilities to boost the capital's economy. Raw takes on incentives, accountability, and Mississippi's role in national debates—no sugar added.

Thursday Feb 05, 2026
RON DESANTIS EXPOSES DATA CENTERS AS FAKE ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT PROJECTS
Thursday Feb 05, 2026
Thursday Feb 05, 2026
In this eye-opening economic deep dive on The Clay Edwards Show, host Clay Edwards spotlights Pearl's massive win: a $300 million Siemens energy facility set to create around 600 jobs with an average salary of $75,000, praising local leaders like Jake Windham and the aldermen for boosting real, sustainable growth without gobbling up huge acreage. He contrasts this with Mississippi's rush into mega data center projects—like the $6-10 billion one in Brandon near his home—calling them short-term construction booms that deliver only 100-200 long-term gigs, massive energy drains on the grid, and potential power rate hikes for everyday folks. Clay warns that we're bending over backward with incentives, possibly selling our soul for minimal returns, and plays a clip from Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis slamming data centers for consuming power equivalent to a half-million-person city, hiring mostly foreign H-1B workers, subsidizing AI that could kill jobs, and defying basic economics by spiking demand without boosting supply—leading to higher bills just to fuel chatbots. Unfiltered takes on big tech's hidden costs, Mississippi's incentives gamble, and why not all "development" is created equal—no sugar added.

Thursday Feb 05, 2026
HARTFIELD BASKET-BRAWL FALLOUT, DAD SUSPENDED A FULL YEAR
Thursday Feb 05, 2026
Thursday Feb 05, 2026
In this eye-opening follow-up segment of The Clay Edwards Show, Clay revisits the viral "Hartfield basketball brawl"—more of a heated disturbance than a full-on fight—from the season opener against Oak Forest Academy on November 4. Drawing from Jackson Jambalaya's latest report, he breaks down how parent Mark Wilson got banned for the rest of the season by the Mid-South Association of Independent Schools (MAIS) after yelling at an Oak Forest parent during a player-student section scuffle, leading to both being restrained. Wilson sued in Rankin County Chancery Court for a temporary restraining order, calling the ban "arbitrary" and claiming due process violations since MAIS only reviewed videos without a hearing—but the court sided with MAIS, noting the handbook applies to students and schools, not parents. Now, Wilson misses his son's senior year entirely. Clay calls out helicopter parents at private school games, comparing it to umpire fights in travel ball, and urges adults to chill: "It's never that serious—let kids be kids." He even floats support for a past bill making assaulting officials a felony, emphasizing involvement without extremes. Unfiltered advice on parenting pitfalls and sports sanity, no sugar added.

Thursday Feb 05, 2026
ST. PADDY'S SHOOTING SUSPECT BACK IN JAIL 2 DAYS AFTER BEING RELEASED
Thursday Feb 05, 2026
Thursday Feb 05, 2026
In this hard-hitting segment of The Clay Edwards Show, Clay breaks down the latest twist in the Saint Patrick's Day mass shooting saga from downtown Jackson. Just days after being cleared when a Hinds County grand jury failed to indict them on murder and aggravated assault charges in the death of Cortez George, one of the McLeod brothers is back in custody. Marquavius McLeod, previously locked up alongside his brother Michael (a former UMMC cop), was arrested by Hinds County Sheriff Tyree Jones on a fresh charge: being a convicted felon in possession of a firearm. Clay calls it a classic case of "f*** around and find out," questioning the original release and the evidence in the chaotic shooting where firing into a crowd allegedly hit innocents. He extends an invite to the family for their side but slams Hinds County's justice system for dropping the ball, contrasting it with stricter enforcement in Rankin and Madison Counties. With unfiltered takes on accountability and two-tiered justice—white vs. black suspects—Clay doesn't hold back, proving why Hinds might be the spot to "get away with it" if you're bold enough. Raw reality radio, no sugar added.

Thursday Feb 05, 2026
WHY I DON'T CARE IF YOU DON'T THINK I ACT LIKE A CHRISTIAN
Thursday Feb 05, 2026
Thursday Feb 05, 2026
In this raw and introspective segment Clay explains his deliberate choice from day one to own his mistakes—wearing them like armor to preempt any "exposés" from critics. He chuckles at online trolls trying to "uncover" his story, emphasizing that transparency lifts the weight off his shoulders and turns his journey into one of redemption and self-overcoming. But Clay doesn't stop at vulnerability; he stirs controversy by calling out the drug rehabilitation community, admitting he's rubbed them the wrong way for ditching the "sympathy and empathy" playbook toward active addicts. Tied to church groups like Celebrate Recovery in the past, Clay now champions accountability over coddling, declaring zero tolerance for those choosing hardcore drugs like meth, cocaine, or opioids—labeling it self-inflicted ruin and a family burden. He ties this to Jackson's homeless crisis, arguing most are there by choice, not bad luck or mental illness, and challenges critics who call him "un-Christian" for his tough-love stance.

Thursday Feb 05, 2026
BLACK METH HEAD IN GLUCKSTADT GETS 15 YEARS, W/O POSSIBILITY OF PAROLE
Thursday Feb 05, 2026
Thursday Feb 05, 2026
In this segment of The Clay Edwards Show, Clay takes on stereotypes head-on with a wild bust out of Gluckstadt, Mississippi. Shattering the myth that meth is just a "white folks' drug," 32-year-old Kendarius Marquis Best—a black meth trafficker—pled guilty to two counts of trafficking methamphetamine in Madison County Circuit Court. Working with a confidential informant, Gluckstadt PD nailed him on multiple sales: one for $2,000 worth of meth and another for 5,000 meth-laced pills. A routine traffic stop sealed the deal when cops found over 11,000 more methamphetamine pills stashed in his trunk, totaling around 18,000 dosage units off the streets. Sentenced to 15 years without parole, Best learned the hard way that Madison and Rankin Counties have zero tolerance for dealers. District Attorney Bubba Bramlett called it an "incredible job" in removing a major threat with no regard for the harm caused. Clay dives into the irony, the details, and why Hinds County could learn a thing or two—no sugarcoating, just raw reality radio.

Thursday Feb 05, 2026
Thursday Feb 05, 2026
In this unfiltered episode of The Clay Edwards Show, host Clay Edwards dives into a "Rapid Fire Thursday" format, tackling eight hot topics with no holds barred. Kicking off with a critique of Mississippi's political landscape, Clay discusses Governor Tate Reeves' last-minute postponement of his State of the State address amid deadly ice storms that claimed 25 lives and left parts of North Mississippi without power. He questions the timing and ties it to a major defeat on school choice legislation (HB2), where the Senate killed a bill supported by Reeves, Speaker Jason White, and even President Trump—sparking backlash from conservatives and debates on government overreach in education.
Clay shares personal insights from a past meeting with Lt. Gov. Delbert Hosemann and defends the Senate's move, emphasizing public opposition to public-to-private school funding shifts. Shifting gears, he covers breaking news: a second bomb threat at Madison Station Elementary, turning buses around and raising safety concerns. In crime updates, a meth trafficker gets 15 years for dealing thousands of pills in Gluckstadt, highlighting strict enforcement in Madison and Rankin Counties.
The episode explores economic developments, including a $300 million Siemens facility in Pearl creating 600 jobs, contrasted with massive data center projects criticized for high energy demands, few long-term jobs, and potential rate hikes—echoing Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' warnings. Clay also addresses federal issues, like Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith's stance on funding for unaccompanied migrant children and Sen. Roger Wicker's opposition to a large ICE detention center in Byhalia due to infrastructure strains.
Wrapping up with reflections on personal redemption from past struggles and calls for accountability in addiction and homelessness, this episode delivers raw commentary on corruption, cancel culture, and fighting for America's soul. Strap in for honest, no-sugar-added talk that spotlights Jackson's issues and beyond.

Wednesday Feb 04, 2026
School Choice Bill HB-2 Dies In Mississippi Senate, Why I Think That Happened!!
Wednesday Feb 04, 2026
Wednesday Feb 04, 2026
Join Clay Edwards for an eye-opening segment from Episode #1148 of The Clay Edwards Show, where he breaks down the unanimous defeat of House Bill 2—the controversial school choice bill—in the Senate Education Committee. Clay celebrates the bill's death as a win influenced by his listeners' calls to legislators, noting its razor-thin passage in the House by just two votes, with suburban Republicans in A-rated districts voting no and two others walking out. He argues the bill wasn't as popular as proponents claimed outside the political bubble, critiques aggressive tactics like labeling opponents racist or parading controversial figures, and questions the all-or-nothing approach versus incremental reforms like Senate Bill 2002. Plus, insights on why conservatives balked at its welfare-like income provisions and the push for separate bills on charter schools and education savings accounts. Strap in for unfiltered, no-holds-barred commentary on Mississippi politics and fighting for common-sense education policy.

Wednesday Feb 04, 2026
Did Piney Woods Students Visit Epstein Island?
Wednesday Feb 04, 2026
Wednesday Feb 04, 2026
Join Clay Edwards for a jaw-dropping segment from Episode #1148 of The Clay Edwards Show, where he uncovers explosive allegations from the Epstein files tying directly to Mississippi's Piney Woods School. Drawing from a post by local figure Josias Lucas, Clay breaks down claims of Epstein funding tuition for students at the historic African American boarding school, frequent visits by kids to Epstein's infamous St. James Island, and suspicious financial "loans" to parents—all happening in 2018, just before Epstein's 2019 arrest. He connects the dots to a rumored local scandal involving a murdered instructor at Piney Woods and calls out potential involvement of powerful Mississippians like former Senator Trent Lott, plus bizarre references to biohacking and gene editing. Clay demands investigations from Attorney General Lynn Fitch and law enforcement, urging listeners to dig deeper and hold officials accountable. Strap in for unfiltered, no-holds-barred commentary exposing corruption and fighting for the soul of America.





