Author: Jackson Posey

Jackson Posey is a junior Journalism and Religion double-major from San Antonio, Texas. He's an armchair theologian and smoothie enthusiast with a secret dream of becoming a monk. After graduating, he hopes to pursue a career in Christian ministry, preaching the good news of Jesus by exploring the beautiful intricacies of Scripture.

It’s Season 5, Episode 6 of Baylor Lariat Radio’s podcast Don’t Feed the Bears! Braden Murray, Joe Pratt and Jackson Posey are back to recap another week of Baylor basketball. The crew revisits last week’s Oscars segment before breaking down why dark alleys might not be as frightening as you think. Next, baseball is off to its hottest start since 2020, sitting at 8-3 after a trio of weekend games at Globe Life Field. All that and more on this week’s episode of Don’t Feed the Bears! 

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It’s Season 5, Episode 5 of Baylor Lariat Radio’s podcast Don’t Feed the Bears! Braden Murray, Joe Pratt and Jackson Posey are back to highlight the good, the bad and the ugly surrounding Baylor basketball. Women’s basketball continues its stretch of dominance, but how far will Nicki Collen and the Bears go? Conversely, men’s basketball is on the cusp of missing out on March Madness for the first time since 2018. The crew breaks down what needs to happen to get the Bears into the big dance, before finishing off with America’s second-favorite segment, Word of the Day. All that…

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It’s Season 5, Episode 4 of Baylor Lariat Radio’s podcast Don’t Feed the Bears! Join Braden Murray, Joe Pratt and Jackson Posey on this nostalgic episode of DFTB as the two oldest co-hosts test some of their favorite, or least favorite, flavors from their toddler days. After that, a brief recap of Baylor basketball’s week and what a win over No. 13 Arizona might mean for Scott Drew’s Bears. The guys round out this week with America’s second favorite segment, Word of the Day!

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Today, Dong is a freshman sensation at Baylor, 3-0 in singles and half of the Bears’ No. 2 doubles pairing alongside Purdue transfer Kennedy Gibbs. At No. 85 in the national ITA singles rankings and No. 18 among newcomers, she’s been a revelation. But it took the counsel of a longtime friend to bring her back.

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