Shaping the Story of Agriculture — A Conversation with Shaun Haney
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About this listen
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When I started the Patio Pondering Podcast, there were a handful of conversations I hoped I might get to have someday. This is one of them.
In this episode, I sit down with Shaun Haney, founder of RealAgriculture, to talk about something a little different than production, nutrition, or markets.
We talk about how agriculture thinks about itself.
Shaun has spent the last 15+ years building RealAgriculture into one of the most recognized voices in ag media—starting with a camcorder and an instinct that the industry was ready for something different.
Our conversation covers:
- What questions agriculture should be asking—but isn’t
- How RealAgriculture grew in what many saw as a “mature” media space
- The role of timing, technology, and simply getting started
- Why velocity and consistency matter more than perfection
- The challenge of balancing attention, depth, and relevance in today’s media environment
- How audience behavior—not intention—drives what gets covered
We also spend time on Shaun’s role in the Friday Roundtable on AgriTalk AM with Chip Flory, and how his Canadian perspective shapes the way he interprets U.S. agriculture.
That leads into a broader discussion on:
- The changing role of media in agriculture
- Why perspective matters as much as information
- The importance of hearing multiple viewpoints—even the ones we disagree with
- And where agriculture may be headed in the next 10 years
Shaun also shares his personal journey—from production agriculture to media—and what it took to leave the farm and build something entirely different.
We wrap up with the Five Signature Questions, covering everything from Henry Wallace’s legacy to why agriculture may be one of the most capital-intensive, misunderstood industries in the world.
Closing Thought
This is not a conversation about how to farm better.
It’s a conversation about how we understand agriculture—and how that understanding shapes the decisions being made across the industry every day.
If you’re interested in how the story of agriculture gets told—and why that matters—this is one you’ll want to listen to.