You’ll never guess who Jase Robertson baptized in his pool last week



Jase Robertson loves to hunt ducks, play golf with his brothers, and support the LSU Tigers, but there’s nothing he loves more than seeing people come to know Jesus.

Last week, Jase got to do his favorite thing when he baptized 49ers offensive lineman Colton McKivitz as his new brother in Christ in his own backyard pool.

“This story is incredible,” he says.

McKivitz grew up watching "Duck Dynasty" and going to church, but it wasn’t until recently that he decided to take the final step and get baptized.

The decision was spurred by none other than an episode of the “Unashamed” podcast.

“You guys [were] talking about being baptized and what it meant, and I knew it was time,” McKivitz tells Jase.

Through a mutual friend, McKivitz was connected to Robertson, and before he knew it, he was scheduled to be baptized on a Sunday bye week by his childhood hero.

When Jase asked McKivitz, “What is your confession?” he says the linebacker’s response was “one of the greatest confession speeches [he’s] heard.”

“He basically just shared Jesus and the gospel, and he ended it with, ‘I'm ready for Him to be the Lord of my life,”’ Jase recalls.

And when Jase lowered 6’6”, 300-pound McKivitz into the icy pool water, he knew he would have to rely on the Holy Spirit for the strength to pull him back up.

“That worked well,” he laughs.

However, the baptizing wasn’t over. McKivitz’s father was actually baptized next.

To hear the rest of the story, watch the episode above.

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The ONLY reason Deion’s Colorado beat Baylor last Saturday



Since Deion Sanders took over the head coaching position for the Buffaloes football program at the University of Colorado Boulder, Jason Whitlock has been unapologetically critical of the toxic culture that’s ensued as a result of Sanders’ ineffective leadership.

Now that football season is back in full swing, Jason is ready to analyze the coach’s every move, starting with the team's lucky overtime victory against the Baylor Bears last Saturday.

“They know they should have lost,” he says, adding that the win is nothing to be proud of since “Baylor’s not any good.”

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According to Jason, the only reason the Buffaloes won is because “the other coach handed [them] the game with one of the worst defensive calls in the history of football.”

“You leave three guys one-on-one on the final play of the game?! It's the dumbest thing I've ever seen,” he says.

As for the Buffaloes, Jason says their performance is “exactly what we saw last year.”

“Do you remember when they beat Colorado State to get to their 3 and 0 start? They got lucky! ... It’s the exact same thing all over again,” he says pointing to the team’s unfortunate predicament — they “have no right tackle,” “their guards are just OK,” and “their freshman holding tackle ... the all-American five-star kid that they thought would fix everything” is floundering.

That’s not to say that the Buffaloes did nothing right, however. Jason does give some credit where it’s due.

“Hats off to them for diversifying their offense,” he says. “They did switch up some formation stuff and gave [quarterback Shedeur Sanders] some different looks.”

“But at the end of the day, this was about an idiot head coach at Baylor lining up in the wrong defense,” he says.

To make matters worse for Baylor, apparently the head coach, Dave Aranda, threw "a kid on the team way under the bus rather than taking responsibility for calling the wrong defense.”

“It's one of the worst coaching performances in game and after game that I've ever seen,” says Jason.

And as for Deion, he’s still “a clown” in Jason’s eyes.

“His team hasn't really improved. I don't see him winning more than five or six games this year,” he sighs.

Besides the fact that Sanders is still the coach, another reason Jason doesn’t see the team improving this season has to do with the other main leader on the team — Sanders’ son and the quarterback Shedeur Sanders.

Last week, “People called out Shedeur for not shaking the hand of the Colorado State quarterback after the game,” and, unfortunately, Deion defended the behavior. “The week before, he walked off the field with two minutes on the clock.”

“Shedeur is a reflection of Deion. Deion has no class so his son has no class,” says Jason.

“The foundational pieces aren't in place for Colorado to build something sustainable.”

To hear more of Jason’s commentary and game analysis, watch the clip above.

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WATCH: Megyn Kelly explains why last night’s debate won’t change Trump’s chances



Glenn Beck says that Kamala Harris had one job last night: convince Harris skeptics that she was up for the job of president.

Harris’ goal was to “appear to be strong, tough, and presidential,” Glenn tells Megyn Kelly. “Did she do that for enough people?”

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“No,” is Kelly’s blunt response.

“I don’t think there was a game-changer last night. I think most people will say she won the debate. ... I saw someone who engaged in nothing but personal, ad hominem attacks.”

“Every chance she could, she went low, insulted him personally, and on that, he absolutely didn’t take the debate,” she continued, noting that Trump “took the debate on every other thing.”

“I saw somebody who couldn’t control herself emotionally. She was on screen harrumphing, rolling her eyes, hand up on the chin,” Kelly criticizes. “This country hasn’t elected a female president in 250 years. The person who’s going to be number one is not going to be an emotionally unregulated, harrumphing, sighing hysteric.”

“Don’t forget this election is coming down at the margins as men versus women — men are for Trump and women are for Kamala,” she continues, adding that she doesn’t believe that come Election Day, men specifically will be idle.

“I just think they’re going to be motivated by how extreme she is on policy. ... She is not a strong leader; she is the opposite of a Margaret Thatcher, and I think her school girl attacks on him personally ... were a real turnoff,” Kelly condemned.

To hear more of the conversation, watch the video above.

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