The First Voice a Child Hears

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From the heart of Times Square in New York City, Kevin McCullough takes America’s pulse — and delivers the shock it needs. THAT KEVIN SHOW doesn’t whisper opinions. It detonates them. With moral clarity, sharp wit, and genuine humor, McCullough has built one of the most loyal audiences in talk media.

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Tuesday, May 5, 2026

In this episode of That Kevin Show, Kevin McCullough discusses the importance of mothers in shaping our lives.

He shares personal anecdotes about his own mother's influence and explores the scientific evidence supporting the critical role mothers play in a child's development.

also delves into the data showing that a mother's voice is the first and most consistent voice a child hears, and how this shapes their perception of the world. He also talks to KT McFarland about the current state of the Middle East and the implications of the US's actions in the region.


An excerpt from The First Voice a Child Hears on Townhall.com

Before a child ever learns to read, before they understand rules or consequences, before they can even form a complete sentence, there is a voice. Soft. Familiar. Repeated. 

That voice becomes a reference point. A compass. And from a Christian worldview, none of this is surprising.

Scripture has always pointed to the importance of early instruction, of guidance rooted in relationship. “Train up a child in the way he should go…” isn’t just about discipline—it’s about formation in the earliest, most impressionable years. And who is most often doing that training?

Mom.

Not alone, of course. Fathers matter deeply. Family matters collectively. But there is something uniquely powerful about the role a mother plays in those first interactions with life itself. She is, quite literally, the introduction to the world. Which makes what we do with that role—as individuals and as a culture—far more important than we tend to admit. Because if we get those early years right, a lot of what comes later becomes easier. And if we get them wrong, we spend decades trying to repair what should have been built from the beginning.

That’s not hyperbole. That’s reality.

So, when we talk about mothers this week, we’re not talking about sentiment. We’re talking about influence. The kind that doesn’t make headlines, doesn’t trend, doesn’t get measured in quarterly reports—but quietly shapes everything that follows.

It starts with a voice.

Simple. Familiar. Consistent. And if that voice is steady, loving, and present-… it echoes for a lifetime.

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