The music is good, not great. The soloist's voice is pleasant and able. The direction is capable, although sometimes stilted. But, the bottom line is that Glenn had done his homework w.r.t. acting on stage, as he delivers a superior performance that kept my interest throughout, as well as the rest of the live audience with me [approx. 60 others]. The moral question is asked and answered quite effectively with no fluff, no mis-direction, and no sidetracks. I enjoyed watching Glenn's involvement, at depth, into the real/literary character[s] that he portrayed with subtle ease and total absorption.
Perhaps, one needs to be a GlennBeck fan to appreciate his schtick, yet my wife enjoyed the event without previous knowledge of the overall tenor or message. I would classify Glenn's show as a one-person performance act using mental imagery and political events as the backdrop. The emotions run deep and heavy, yet the connection is certain that we are all descendants of a truly great class of human beings--Americans under the aegis of a grand Higher Power and not beholden to any government, most surely our own.