McGregor, the Ultimate Fighting Championship’s main attraction, had the support of the prominent sports physician Neal ElAttrache when he decided to use performance-enhancing drugs.
The doctor, Neal ElAttrache, oversaw the surgery to repair McGregor’s leg. He is a widely celebrated figure and has treated a litany of Hollywood actors and baseball and football stars. He is also the head physician for the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Los Angeles Rams.
In response to questions from The Times, ElAttrache said by text that after he had repaired McGregor’s broken leg he sent him to specialists in bone healing and “explained that I don’t prescribe hormone or steroid treatment.” He was referring to drugs banned by nearly all major sports because they help athletes build muscle far faster than the human body can by itself.
ElAttrache said that after McGregor saw a specialist, he wrote a letter supporting McGregor’s application for a special exemption that would have allowed him to use performance-enhancing drugs without facing a penalty.
Officials overseeing the U.F.C.’s drug testing program believed that in seeking the exemption, McGregor — with the imprimatur of ElAttrache — was trying to exploit a loophole to use banned drugs, the two people said. It was the beginning of a split between the U.F.C. and the United States Anti-Doping Agency, known as USADA, the entity that was overseeing the U.F.C.’s drug testing program.
Across more than three decades of practice in Los Angeles, Neal Sami ElAttrache (b. 1960) has occupied the point where elite athletics, surgical innovation, celebrity culture, and the commerce of professional sports converge. The teams that won championships, the athletes who signed record contracts, and the performers whose bodies constitute their livelihoods came to him when those bodies failed. His career tracks the transformation of sports medicine from a specialized branch of orthopedics into a central institution of professional sport, and his biography offers a study in how a medical tradition passes from founders to heirs.
ElAttrache grew up in Mount Pleasant, Pennsylvania, in a home where medicine and family life shared the same rooms. His father, Selim ElAttrache, a Syrian Druze immigrant, practiced orthopedic surgery and treated patients whether or not they could pay, at times accepting goods and services in place of money. His mother, Vera, worked as a nurse. Patients came through the family home, and the son absorbed early the personal character of the bond between physician and patient. He later described this as the foundation of his own practice: medicine rests on trust before it rests on technique.
He attended the University of Notre Dame, where he won the light-heavyweight boxing championship as a freshman. The victory revealed a competitive temperament and a physical confidence that later eased his rapport with professional athletes, men who size up everyone around them by how they carry themselves. He graduated from Notre Dame in 1981 and took his medical degree from the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine in 1985. A general surgery internship and an orthopedic residency in Pittsburgh followed. Then came the move that defined his career. He went west for a sports medicine fellowship at the Kerlan-Jobe Orthopaedic Clinic in Los Angeles.
The fellowship placed him under Robert Kerlan (1922-1996) and Frank Jobe (1925-2014), the two men who built modern sports medicine in America. Kerlan had pioneered the role of the team physician for professional franchises. Jobe had revolutionized the field in 1974 when he reconstructed the ulnar collateral ligament of pitcher Tommy John (b. 1943), an operation that now carries the patient’s name and that rescued thousands of throwing careers. ElAttrache became more than a trainee under these men. He became the institutional heir to their tradition. From Jobe he inherited a conception of sports medicine as the restoration of elite human performance rather than mere orthopedic repair. The distinction shaped everything he did afterward. A surgeon who repairs a shoulder returns a man to daily life. A surgeon who restores performance returns a pitcher to a hundred-mile-per-hour fastball, and the second task demands a different relationship to anatomy, rehabilitation, and risk.
ElAttrache joined Kerlan-Jobe upon completing his fellowship and rose alongside the commercialization of professional sports. He became head team physician for the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Los Angeles Rams and served as orthopedic consultant to the Los Angeles Lakers, the Los Angeles Kings, and the Anaheim Ducks. In 2008 he served as senior orthopedic surgeon for the United States Olympic team at the Beijing Games. As franchises grew into billion-dollar enterprises and player contracts climbed into the hundreds of millions, the physician who determined when an athlete could return to competition acquired a new kind of authority. ElAttrache exercised that authority more often, and at higher stakes, than perhaps any surgeon of his generation.
A succession of landmark cases marks his surgical career, each carrying consequences for entire organizations rather than single careers. In 2008 he reconstructed the anterior cruciate ligament of Tom Brady (b. 1977) after an injury that threatened the New England Patriots dynasty. In 2013 he repaired the ruptured Achilles tendon of Kobe Bryant (1978-2020), an injury that ranks among the most consequential in modern basketball. In 2023 he performed a modified elbow procedure on Shohei Ohtani (b. 1994) as Ohtani prepared to sign the largest contract in the history of professional sports. He treated Aaron Rodgers (b. 1983) after Rodgers ruptured his Achilles tendon, and the rehabilitation protocols developed for that recovery compressed timelines that the profession had long considered fixed. Each case tested the same question: how far can surgical technique and rehabilitation science push the boundary between injury and career resumption?
ElAttrache matched his clinical work with invention. In 1999 he developed a socket-and-screw fixation system for attaching tendons and ligaments to bone. Licensed through Arthrex, the device spread throughout orthopedic surgery and generated substantial royalties. He called it orthopedic duct tape, a joke that revealed his preference for practical answers to complex surgical problems. He refined the docking technique in Tommy John surgery, reducing bone trauma and improving graft fixation. His contributions to rotator cuff repair, Achilles reconstruction, and rehabilitation protocol became standards across the specialty.
His academic record gave the clinical reputation an institutional foundation. He authored roughly one hundred peer-reviewed articles, forty textbook chapters, and ten instructional videos, and he delivered more than three hundred lectures in the United States and abroad. His publications on shoulder surgery, elbow reconstruction, and knee ligament repair circulate widely in the field. Through this body of work he linked the laboratory, the operating room, and the training facility, three worlds that the founders of his specialty had first joined and that he kept joined.
Leadership followed scholarship. He served as president of the American Orthopaedic Society for Sports Medicine from 2018 to 2019 and as president of the Herodicus Society from 2016 to 2017. He chaired the Kerlan-Jobe Orthopaedic Foundation, co-chaired medical affairs for the Kerlan-Jobe Institute, and sat on the clinic’s board. When Kerlan-Jobe partnered with Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in 2014 to form the Cedars-Sinai Kerlan-Jobe Institute, ElAttrache guided the transition. The merger expressed a broader pattern in American medicine, the absorption of physician-owned practices into large health systems, and it posed the question of whether a clinic built on the personal authority of founding surgeons might survive inside a corporate structure. Under ElAttrache’s stewardship, the institution kept its reputation for elite athletic care while gaining the resources of a major medical center.
Recognition accumulated. Medical publications and surveys named him among Southern California’s top physicians year after year. Observers of Los Angeles sports counted him among the most powerful figures in that world, a striking judgment about a man who never owned a team, coached a game, or signed a player. His patient roster grew beyond athletics to include actors, musicians, and public figures, anyone whose livelihood depends on a body that performs. In Los Angeles, a city organized around performance, the surgeon who restores performance occupies a singular position.
The personal dimension of his practice distinguishes him as much as the technical. He married Tricia Flavin, an operating room nurse he met during his early years at Kerlan-Jobe, and together they raised three daughters. Athletes who came to him as patients stayed as friends. They sought his counsel on matters far from surgery and remained in contact years into retirement. For ElAttrache, the physician-patient bond constitutes an enduring human connection built on loyalty and confidence rather than a professional transaction. The philosophy descends in a straight line from the house in Mount Pleasant where patients walked through the family door.
That same philosophy drew him into controversy. After mixed martial artist Conor McGregor (b. 1988) suffered a catastrophic leg fracture in a 2021 UFC bout, ElAttrache participated in the surgical repair and later supported McGregor’s application for a therapeutic use exemption that might have permitted substances prohibited under anti-doping rules during recovery. The exemption was denied. A 2026 investigation by The New York Times reported that anti-doping officials viewed the request with skepticism and that experts could not recall a comparable exemption sought for treatment of a broken bone. ElAttrache defended the exemption process as a legitimate channel for medical care and argued that athletes should not lose access to appropriate treatment because a substance appears on a prohibited list. The episode exposed the unstable boundary between healing and enhancement, between athlete welfare and competitive fairness, a boundary that the physician devoted to his patient and the regulator devoted to the sport draw in different places. The same loyalty that made athletes trust him made regulators wary.
By the mid-2020s, ElAttrache had become more than a surgeon. He was an inventor, a researcher, an institutional leader, a mentor to a generation of fellows, and the custodian of a tradition that runs back through Jobe and Kerlan to the founding of his specialty. His influence travels through the athletes he treated, the surgeons he trained, the techniques he devised, and the institutions he built and preserved. His career embodies the maturation of sports medicine from a niche discipline into a visible and consequential branch of modern medicine, and it raises the questions that attend any field where healing, money, fame, and competition meet. Few physicians have shaped the careers of elite performers to a comparable degree. Fewer still have defined a specialty while practicing it.
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Dan Senor (b. 1971) worked as a Senate aide, a war-zone spokesman, a presidential campaign adviser, a hedge fund executive, a bestselling author, and a podcast host. He’s built a career built on translation: between Israel and America, between government and markets, between the foreign policy establishment and the listening public. Since October 7, 2023, his podcast Call Me Back has made him an influential English-language interpreter of Israeli politics and society, perhaps the most listened-to of his kind, a status that rests on three decades of accumulated access, credibility, and institutional knowledge.
Daniel Samuel Senor was born on November 6, 1971, in Utica, New York, the youngest of four children in a Jewish family bound to Israel by work and history. His father worked for Israel Bonds, the organization that channels diaspora capital into the Israeli state. Members of his mother’s family survived the Holocaust in Slovakia before emigrating to North America. The family moved to Toronto, where Senor grew up and attended Forest Hill Collegiate Institute. The household combined Zionist commitment with the immigrant memory of catastrophe, a pairing that shaped his lifelong preoccupation with how societies endure crisis. His sister, Wendy Senor Singer, later directed AIPAC’s Jerusalem office for many years, a fact that shows how far the family’s professional and communal lives intertwined with the American-Israeli relationship.
Senor studied history at the University of Western Ontario and spent a year at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. The Jerusalem year gave him direct exposure to Israeli political culture during a period of ferment, and it converted an inherited attachment into a firsthand one. He later earned an MBA from Harvard Business School. The sequence matters. Senor built a foundation in history and foreign affairs before adding the credential that opened finance to him, and his subsequent career alternated between the two tracks rather than abandoning either.
His political career began in Washington in the 1990s on the staff of Senator Spencer Abraham (b. 1952), a Michigan Republican. Senor served as a foreign policy adviser and then as communications director, a combination that trained him in both substance and presentation. When Abraham became Secretary of Energy under President George W. Bush (b. 1946), Senor continued to work with him. These years placed Senor inside the Republican foreign policy network at the moment that network prepared to govern. He also worked in investment banking at The Carlyle Group, the private equity firm whose partner ranks included former officials from several administrations. Carlyle gave him an education in global capital and a model for how government experience converts into financial position.
The Iraq War made him a public figure. After the 2003 invasion, Senor advised U.S. Central Command and joined the reconstruction effort, then became chief spokesman for the Coalition Provisional Authority under Ambassador L. Paul Bremer (b. 1941). From Baghdad he conducted daily briefings that made him one of the most visible civilian faces of the American occupation. He served longer in Iraq than almost any other American civilian of that period, and he watched the occupation’s failures accumulate from inside: the disbanded army, the insurgency, the gap between Washington’s assumptions and Iraqi realities. The Pentagon awarded him the Department of Defense Medal for Distinguished Public Service, its highest civilian honor. The Iraq years gave Senor something his later critics never dislodged: he had stood at the podium for a war that went wrong, and he carried both the experience and the association for the rest of his career.
The years after Baghdad show a man building parallel structures. In 2009 he co-founded the Foreign Policy Initiative with William Kristol (b. 1952) and Robert Kagan (b. 1958). The think tank worked to preserve the interventionist, internationalist strand of Republican foreign policy at the moment that strand began losing the party’s base. The Iraq War had discredited the project the founders still believed in, and the organization fought a rearguard action that the rise of Donald Trump (b. 1946) would later overwhelm. Senor’s association with Kristol and Kagan placed him in the neoconservative lineage, though his own work moved toward Israel and away from the broader democratization agenda.
In 2010 he joined Elliott Management, the hedge fund founded by Paul Singer (b. 1944), and rose to partner and member of the firm’s management committee. As Chief Public Affairs Officer he oversees communications, public policy, and geopolitical risk analysis. The position suits him. Elliott practices an aggressive form of activist investing that depends on political and legal intelligence as much as financial analysis, and Senor’s government experience translates into commercial value there. The Elliott salary also underwrites his public work. He does not depend on media income, book advances, or think tank funding, which frees him from the economic pressures that constrain most commentators.
He remained active in Republican politics through the Romney era. He served as a senior adviser to Mitt Romney (b. 1947) in the 2012 presidential campaign and worked with Paul Ryan (b. 1970), the vice presidential nominee who became House Speaker. Senor belonged to the wing of the party that lost. The Romney-Ryan Republicanism of free trade, alliance maintenance, and entitlement reform gave way to a party hostile to most of what Senor’s circle championed. He responded by stepping back from partisan combat rather than converting. His later public identity centers on Israel and Jewish life, subjects on which the Republican coalition’s internal wars touch him less.
His most durable intellectual contribution came through collaboration with his brother-in-law, the journalist Saul Singer (b. 1961), a former editorial page editor of The Jerusalem Post who married Wendy Senor. Their book Start-Up Nation (2009) asked why Israel, a small country under permanent threat, produces more technology startups per capita than any nation on earth and listed more companies on NASDAQ than any foreign country except one. Their answer drew on military service, immigration, flattened hierarchy, informality, and a culture that tolerates failure and rewards improvisation. The book became an international bestseller, appeared in dozens of translations, and gave Israel a brand. Governments and business schools adopted its framing. Israeli officials used the phrase as shorthand for the country’s economic identity. Few books by political operatives achieve that kind of penetration, and the success rested on timing as much as argument: the book arrived as the global economy turned toward technology and as Israel’s diplomatic position made an economic success story useful.
Senor and Singer returned in 2023 with The Genius of Israel, published weeks after the October 7 attacks. The book shifted from innovation to resilience. It asked why a society fractured by religious, ethnic, and political division recovers from crisis faster than wealthier and more stable countries, and it pointed to thick communal bonds, national service, strong families, and a shared sense of purpose that survives political combat. The timing made the book read as either prophetic or premature, depending on the reader. The attacks tested its thesis in real time, and Senor spent the following years arguing that Israeli society passed the test even as its government failed.
Call Me Back launched in May 2020 through what became Ark Media. Senor conceived it during the pandemic as a conversation series, and for three years it built a respectable audience among listeners interested in Israel, geopolitics, and Jewish affairs. October 7 transformed it. English-speaking audiences, many of them American Jews shaken by the attacks and the campus reaction that followed, needed a guide to Israeli politics and military strategy, and Senor’s program supplied one. The podcast has produced more than five hundred episodes and now anchors a media company. Ark Media runs a daily news product, a members-only subscription feed, additional programs, and newsletters from the Israeli journalists Amit Segal and Nadav Eyal, who appear as regular contributors. Senor built, in effect, a small media institution around access to the Israeli political and security elite.
The format explains part of the influence. Call Me Back runs long, favors historical context over breaking news, and treats its guests as sources of expertise rather than targets. Senor interviews Israeli journalists, generals, intelligence veterans, diplomats, and politicians, and he asks questions designed to extract explanation rather than confrontation. He functions as a translator. He renders Israeli coalition politics, security doctrine, and social tension legible to audiences that lack the background to follow Hebrew media. The approach has costs. Critics note that the guest list tilts toward the Israeli establishment and the American pro-Israel center-right, that hard questions about Gaza arrive softened, and that the program’s analytical frame rarely escapes the assumptions of its host. Supporters answer that no other English-language program delivers comparable access and depth, and that Senor’s restraint as an interviewer produces more information than adversarial alternatives.
Senor is not a journalist by training or temperament. He spent his career as an advocate: for a senator, for an occupation, for a candidate, for a fund, for a country. The podcast extends the advocacy into a new medium, but it does so through curation and emphasis rather than argument. Senor rarely lectures. He selects guests, frames questions, and lets the answers carry the load. The method gives the program credibility that direct advocacy would forfeit, and it makes the editorial choices harder to see.
His personal life mirrors the professional intersections. In 2006 he married Campbell Brown (b. 1968), then an NBC anchor who later worked at CNN and became a senior executive at Meta overseeing news partnerships. They have two sons and live in New York City. The marriage joins Republican foreign policy circles to mainstream media and then to the technology platforms that reshaped both, a combination that few households contain.
Critics place Senor within the pro-Israel center-right and the post-Cold War foreign policy establishment. His worldview formed in the 1990s and hardened in Baghdad: American power underwrites global order, Israel anchors the American position in the Middle East, and societies survive through cohesion, institutions, and will. The Iraq War damaged the establishment that taught him these views, and the Trump era scattered it, but Senor adapted where many of his contemporaries did not. He narrowed his public focus to the subject he knows best and built an audience that the establishment’s collapse could not take from him. Supporters call him the clearest English-language communicator on Israel.
Senor holds no academic post, no press credential, no government office. His authority rests on access, experience, and the trust of an audience, resources he accumulated across thirty years in rooms where decisions got made. The career suggests that the old categories of journalist, official, and analyst have lost their boundaries, and that the figures who now explain the world to the public often come from advocacy rather than observation. Senor never hid which side he stands on. The audience that made Call Me Back a phenomenon did not want neutrality. It wanted someone who knew the terrain and shared the stakes, and Senor spent his whole life becoming that man.
David Pinsof, David O. Sears, and Martie G. Haselton argue in “Strange Bedfellows” that political belief systems do not descend from values. They rise from alliance structures. People choose allies on similarity, transitivity, and interdependence, then deploy propagandistic biases to support those allies in conflict: perpetrator biases that excuse an ally’s harms, victim biases that magnify an ally’s grievances, attributional biases that credit an ally’s successes to character and blame his failures on circumstance. The resulting belief systems read as patchwork, full of contradictions that no philosophy could generate but any coalition map could predict. Dan Senor’s career tests the theory well because he has spent thirty years doing in public what Pinsof says everyone does in private: choosing allies, managing transitivity, and producing the narratives that hold a coalition together.
Start with how he chose. Pinsof’s three criteria run through Senor’s biography like load paths through a building. Similarity came first. He was born into the pro-Israel alliance, the son of an Israel Bonds man, raised among people whose markers of identity announced their coalition membership. The year at Hebrew University, the AIPAC sister, the brother-in-law at The Jerusalem Post: these are not credentials. They are alliance signals, the tags Pinsof describes that let likeminded people find each other and coordinate. Interdependence followed. The Abraham office gave him political capital, Carlyle gave him financial ties to the Republican establishment, Elliott pays him a fortune to convert government experience into market intelligence. At every step, Senor bound himself to people who could provide benefits and to whom he could provide benefits in return. The result, by midlife, was a man embedded in three overlapping alliances at once: the Republican foreign policy network, the pro-Israel coalition, and the finance world that funds both.
Pinsof predicts that membership in heterogeneous alliances produces heterogeneous beliefs, and Senor’s record confirms it. He championed free markets while celebrating Israeli state industrial policy, the government venture programs and military technology transfers that built the startup sector. He sold democratization in Iraq while his coalition courted Gulf autocracies, and he later treated the Abraham Accords, an alliance of Israel with absolute monarchies, as a diplomatic triumph. He warned against nationalism as the pathology that wrecked the Middle East, then co-wrote a book arguing that Israeli national cohesion, service, flags, and shared purpose explain the country’s strength. No value system reconciles these positions. An alliance map reconciles them instantly. Each belief mobilizes support for an ally or opposition to a rival, and the apparent contradictions mark the seams where different allies’ interests meet. Pinsof would say Senor is not a hypocrite. He is a normal political animal with a complicated portfolio of allies.
Start-Up Nation looks different through this frame. Read as scholarship, it is a breezy book with a selection problem. Read as alliance work, it is a masterpiece. By 2009 the pro-Israel coalition faced a recruitment problem. Its existing pillars, evangelical Christians and committed Jews, were aging or contested, and the country’s brand abroad ran through occupation and war. Senor and Saul Singer rebuilt the brand in the idiom of a new constituency. They translated Israel into the language of venture capital, entrepreneurship, and business school case studies, and they recruited investors, founders, and MBA students into a coalition those people had no prior reason to join. Pinsof calls this a bridging alliance, the kind that links groups with no natural similarity by manufacturing interdependence. The book gave secular global capitalists a stake in Israel’s success and a vocabulary for defending it. That is why governments handed it out and why Israeli diplomats quoted it. It expanded the alliance structure, which is the highest service a partisan can perform.
The book also runs on what Pinsof calls attributional bias. Israel’s advantages flow, in its telling, from internal dispositions: chutzpah, improvisation, flattened hierarchy, the crucible of military service. External causes get less ink: American aid and security guarantees, German reparations, the arrival of a million trained Soviet engineers, the diaspora capital his own father spent a career raising. The pattern matches the bias exactly. Allies’ successes come from character. The same bias structures The Genius of Israel, where resilience flows from the society’s inner qualities rather than from circumstance.
When alliance structures shift, beliefs and loyalties shift with them, and that individuals caught between fracturing allies face the two risks transitivity exists to prevent: infighting and betrayal. After 2016 Senor’s network shattered along exactly those lines. William Kristol chose open war with the new Republican coalition and lost his magazine. Robert Kagan migrated toward the Democrats. Mitt Romney became a pariah inside the party he had led. Senor did something else. He went quiet on Trump and loud on Israel. The move reads, in Pinsof’s terms, as transitivity management of a high order. His Israel coalition now contained both Never Trump donors and Trump-administration architects of the Abraham Accords, both liberal Jewish listeners and evangelical Republicans. Any strong statement about Trump would set his allies against each other or force him to side with some rivals against some friends. So he relocated his public identity to the one alliance that spanned the rupture. The narrowing that looks like intellectual focus, the turn from Republican politics to Jewish peoplehood, is what alliance preservation looks like from the inside.
Call Me Back then becomes legible as coalition infrastructure. Consider the guest list. Israeli journalists, generals, intelligence veterans, diplomats: men and women drawn from the security establishment of an allied state, interviewed by a man who never pretends to neutrality. The program’s critics complain that hard questions arrive softened, and Pinsof explains why softening is the product, not a defect. The podcast performs the perpetrator biases on Israel’s behalf: context for harms, emphasis on intentions, attention to the mitigating circumstances of urban war. It performs the victim biases too, keeping October 7 present, documenting the hostages, cataloging the world’s indifference. Pinsof notes that victim biases make no sense as self-image maintenance, since they advertise weakness, but make perfect sense as mobilization, since they recruit third parties to an ally’s side. That is the program’s function in wartime. It mobilizes English-speaking third parties for Israel, week after week, through the testimony of credible insiders. The competitive victimhood the theory predicts, each side striving to establish the greater injustice, structures the entire post-October 7 information war, and Senor commands one of its most effective platforms.
The audience completes the picture. The listeners who made Call Me Back a phenomenon after October 7 were disproportionately American Jews undergoing what Pinsof’s framework would describe as alliance shock. Many had spent decades inside a progressive coalition, and the campus and activist reaction to the attacks read to them as betrayal, the precise risk that transitivity calculations exist to detect. A rival of my ally has become the friend of my friends: the structure had stopped making sense, and people in that condition need help renegotiating their alliances. Senor supplied it. He offered a narrative in which the old coalition had defected first, in which Jewish security required new friends and a colder eye toward old ones. Liberal Jews listening devotedly to a Romney adviser and Elliott Management partner are strange bedfellows by any ideological measure. By Pinsof’s measure they are the predictable output of a reshuffled alliance structure, since beliefs follow alliances and alliances follow threat. The podcast does not merely describe the realignment of American Jewish politics. It conducts it.
Even the family pattern fits. Pinsof grounds alliance psychology in evolved machinery, and kinship remains the oldest alliance technology humans possess. Senor’s coalition runs through blood and marriage: the sister who directed AIPAC’s Jerusalem office, the brother-in-law who co-wrote both books, the wife whose career linked the network to NBC, CNN, and then Meta. The Senor-Singer family operates as a node in the pro-Israel alliance structure, with interdependence so thick that the usual line between personal and political loyalty disappears.
The Voice
Senor speaks like a man who learned his trade at a podium and refined it at a microphone. The Baghdad briefings trained him in message discipline, and the discipline never left. He almost never speculates beyond his ground, he bridges away from danger with phrases like “what’s important here is” and “I want to step back for a second,” and he keeps a small set of safe formulations he returns to under pressure. The training shows most on television, where he compresses into talking points, speaks fast, and concedes nothing. The podcast relaxed him. On Call Me Back he sounds like a different man: warmer, slower, host-generous, a salesman at ease in his own store.
The accent is broadcast-neutral North American with a faint Canadian flatness he never mentions. The pace runs fast. He stacks short clauses with “and,” builds momentum rather than ornament, and rarely pauses or fills. The fluency itself is the credential. He sounds like a man who has answered this question a thousand times, because he has.
His signature device is the wind-up question. He spends a minute or more building context for his guest, naming dates, defining terms, sketching the institutional background, and then lands on a modest ask: “Am I getting that right?” or “What am I missing?” The construction does three jobs at once. It educates the audience, it flatters the guest, and it lets Senor deliver his own analysis while appearing only to ask. The humility is a vehicle. He gets to make the argument and the guest gets to confirm it. “What am I missing” may be the heaviest phrase in his repertoire, because it converts assertion into inquiry.
He defers to guests as a matter of method. He introduces them with extended praise, credits their books, tells the audience why this person knows more than anyone. The deference buys him something: a guest who feels honored talks longer and discloses more. He also ventriloquizes disagreement rather than owning it. Hard questions arrive attributed to others: “The critique you’ll hear is,” “People will say,” “Our listeners have been asking.” He almost never says “I disagree.” The third-party frame lets him press without rupturing the relationship, which suits a man whose product is access.
He summarizes constantly. “So what I hear you saying is” precedes a restatement cleaner and more quotable than what the guest said. The habit reflects his translator function. He takes Israeli political shorthand, military jargon, and Hebrew terms and renders them for an American ear, defining as he goes: the Kirya, a hesder yeshiva, what a coalition of sixty-one means. He treats no knowledge as assumed, which keeps the program open to newcomers and keeps him in the teacher’s chair.
His diction is plain, concrete, and business-inflected. He reaches for “extraordinary,” “remarkable,” and “stunning” as his intensifiers of choice, and he softens with “sort of” and “kind of” far more than his polish would predict. He numbers his points in briefing style: “Three things. One.” He tells time in specifics, dates, names, locations, a habit from both journalism-adjacent work and the spokesman years, when a wrong detail meant a news cycle.
Emotion stays controlled. After October 7 the program carried real grief, and Senor signaled it through pace rather than volume. He slows down, drops register, lets silence sit a beat longer than usual. The restraint reads as gravity and probably is, but it also serves the brand: he positions the show as the calm room in a hysterical media environment, and a host who breaks composure forfeits that.
The overall register is optimistic. He sells. Even in the worst weeks of the war he frames toward resilience, capability, and the long view, and he ends episodes pointing forward. The relentless constructiveness is the rhetorical spine of everything he does, the books included. Where a journalist’s instinct runs toward what is broken, Senor’s runs toward what holds. You can hear the Israel Bonds inheritance in it: the son still makes the case, the pitch refined across forty years, delivered now to the largest room his father could have imagined.
What they value first is competence under pressure. The set’s formative experiences are the deal, the campaign, the war room, and the crisis call, and its members judge each other by performance in rooms where stakes run high and time runs short. They prize fluency, the capacity to summarize a complicated situation in three points without notes. They prize discretion: the unforgivable sins are leaking, grandstanding, and freelancing. They value access and treat it as both currency and proof of seriousness, since a man whom generals and ministers will call back has been vetted by the only process the set trusts. They value philanthropy as obligation rather than option. A successful man who does not give, sit on boards, and show up has failed a test everyone can see. They value family thickly and conventionally: marriages endure in public, children attend day schools or at least Hebrew school plus summer programs in Israel, and the bar mitzvah functions as a dynastic event. And since October 7 they value resilience above everything, in themselves, in Israel, and in institutions, having organized their entire account of the war around the claim that the society holds.
The hero system runs from victim to builder to defender, and the arc structures everything. At its foundation lie the sacred dead: the six million, the fallen of Israel’s wars, and now the murdered of October 7, whose photographs and names the set keeps in circulation with liturgical care. Above the dead stand the founders, the generation that built a state from ash, and the set treats founding as the highest human activity: founding states, companies, schools, funds, magazines. The living heroes follow the pattern. The reservist who flew back from New York on October 8 outranks everyone. The hostage families who turned grief into advocacy hold a sanctity no one challenges. The entrepreneur who builds in Tel Aviv under rocket fire, the donor who funds a wing or a fellowship or an iron dome of lawyers for campus Jews, the communicator who walks into a hostile studio and holds the line: each enacts the same story, the Jew who refuses the victim’s role while honoring the victims. The supreme status move available to an American family in this world is a son or daughter who makes aliyah to serve in the IDF, because it converts the set’s rhetoric into blood commitment. Gentiles can enter the hero system as righteous outsiders, and the set canonized Douglas Murray (b. 1979) in this role after October 7, the eloquent stranger who showed up when allies fled. Immortality in this world means a named institution, an endowed chair, a building in Jerusalem, a fund that outlives you. Singer pursues it through a philanthropic empire; Hertog pursued it through Tikvah; Rowan pursued it through the war for the University of Pennsylvania.
The status games sort into four currencies that only partly convert. The first is money, table stakes in the finance wing, where status runs by fund performance, by the scale and intelligence of giving, and by who can summon whom. The second is access, the currency Senor trades in: who heard from Dermer first, who got the general the week of the strike, whose WhatsApp groups carry real information, who has sat with the prime minister. Benjamin Netanyahu (b. 1949) functions in these games as a complicated prize, a man much of the set distrusts but no one can afford to be cut off from. The third currency is voice. The set once outsourced its public argument to professionals; since October 7 it rewards members who fight in public, and a hierarchy of platforms emerged almost overnight, with a successful podcast or newsletter outranking an op-ed, an op-ed outranking a panel, and a viral congressional hearing moment outranking everything. Ackman plays the voice game loudly and divides the set in doing so, because the older norm prized restraint, the Singer model of power that never tweets, and the set still half-believes that a man who posts his anger has lost a form of control that matters. Senor’s standing rests on resolving this tension: maximal voice, zero apparent anger. The fourth currency is sacrifice, the hardest to fake, measured in children in uniform, trips to Israel during the war rather than after it, and presence at funerals and shivas. Attendance is the set’s deepest status practice. Showing up, at the rally, the hospital, the hostage family’s hotel, generates a credit that money cannot buy, and absence gets noticed and remembered.
The normative claims start with self-defense as the master norm. Jews must hold power and must use it, because the alternative was tried and produced Auschwitz; weakness invites aggression and strength brings peace, in the Middle East and everywhere. From this follow the operational norms: the American alliance is sacred and must be tended by every generation; military service in Israel and communal service in America are duties, not choices; success obligates giving; one defends Israel in public and criticizes in private, and the man who takes internal disputes to the Times has defected. Antisemitism must be fought everywhere but the set now ranks its threats, holding that the campus and progressive variant is the rising danger and the right-wing variant, though lethal, lacks institutional power, a ranking that conveniently tracks the set’s coalition needs and that its Hartman-flank members contest. The universities betrayed their trust and must be disciplined through the only lever donors hold. Moral clarity outranks moral complexity, a norm the set states in exactly those words; nuance has its place, but a man who reaches for complexity in the first week after a massacre reveals where he stands. Civility remains mandatory within the set, suits and courtesy and no profanity, which makes its wars cold rather than hot: the punishment is the dropped board seat, the unreturned call, the name quietly removed from the invitation list.
The essentialist claims begin with peoplehood. The Jewish people exists as a real, continuous, trans-historical entity, not a construction or a faith community but a family with a story, and every member of the set can perform the story on demand, from Abraham through expulsion through Zionism to the present war. Antisemitism is likewise an essence, the oldest hatred, a virus that mutates across centuries while remaining itself, which means each new outbreak confirms an eternal pattern rather than requiring local explanation. Israelis possess a national character: improvisational, blunt, resilient, allergic to hierarchy, the chutzpah essence that Senor’s first book sold to the world. The Iranian regime is fanatic in its essence and cannot be appeased, only deterred or defeated. The Arab world divides into essential pragmatists, the Gulf modernizers of the Abraham Accords, and essential rejectionists. America is good in its essence, a covenantal nation whose elites have temporarily lost the thread, and the West stands as a civilizational category with Israel at its frontier, holding the line for everyone else, against barbarism that is also treated as a kind of essence. The set rarely notices that its essentialism cuts both ways, that a world of eternal hatreds and fixed national characters leaves little room for the diplomacy and transformation its pragmatist wing pursues.
The moral grammar gives all of this its daily language. The set speaks in clarity words: moral clarity, existential, unambiguous, evil, and the post-October 7 coinages, never again is now, bring them home, we will dance again. It speaks in presence words: standing with, showing up, shoulder to shoulder. It speaks in family words about the entire people, our boys, our hostages, am echad, one people with one heart. Sin, in this grammar, is silence: the colleague who said nothing, the institution that issued the mealy statement, the celebrity who posted about every cause except this one. Betrayal is its aggravated form, reserved for the progressive allies who failed the test, and the set processes betrayal through lists, mental and sometimes literal, of who called and who did not in the week after the massacre. The heretic has a face: the anti-Zionist Jew, with Peter Beinart (b. 1971) as the archetype, the insider who took his inheritance and turned it against the family, and the set’s rage at him exceeds anything it directs at gentile critics, because the grammar treats him as a defector rather than an opponent. Redemption exists too, for the lapsed Jew whom October 7 brought home, and the set tells these return stories constantly, the assimilated financier who found his way to shul, because they confirm that the essence holds, that the people endures, that under pressure the family reassembles. Senor’s podcast speaks this grammar fluently while sanding off its rougher edges, which is much of why the set treats him as its voice: he says what the room believes in a register the room can forward to anyone.
The set has fractures the grammar papers over. The Trump question divides it on a line that runs through dinner parties: the policy wing largely despises him, the donor wing largely funds him, and the norm of cold civility keeps the dispute managed rather than resolved. The judicial overhaul of 2023 split it again, with the Hartman flank and many of the journalists in open opposition to the Israeli government while defending Israel abroad, a two-front posture the set found exhausting and never fully reconciled. Religion grades it from secular philanthropists through Conservative synagogue stalwarts to the Modern Orthodox, with mutual condescension running quietly in both directions. And beneath everything sits the unspoken hierarchy between money and intellect, the donors who fund the writers and the writers who privately believe they outrank the donors, an old arrangement, older than this set, that holds because both sides need the other and the war reminded everyone why.
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Rebecca Ellis is an American investigative journalist whose career traces a path through public media into metropolitan accountability reporting. She covers Los Angeles County government for the Los Angeles Times, where her work on child welfare, juvenile justice, and the county’s sexual abuse litigation has made her a central chronicler of institutional failure in the nation’s largest county. Her career illustrates a shift in American journalism away from political personality coverage and toward the study of how government agencies function in practice, who depends on them, and what happens when they break down.
Ellis grew up in New York City and graduated from Brown University in 2018. She entered the profession through public media rather than through the campaign trail or the political desk. She served as a Kroc Fellow at NPR in Washington, a competitive entry-level program that rotates young journalists through the network’s reporting and production operations. She then worked general assignment and breaking news on the metro desk of the Miami Herald before joining Oregon Public Broadcasting, where she covered city politics, housing, homelessness, and policing in Portland. The sequence gave her grounding in local government across three regions and two mediums, radio and print, before she turned thirty.
Portland made her reputation. In the years after the 2020 protests, the city became a national proxy for arguments over policing and public order, and private security firms filled gaps that the shrinking police bureau left behind. Ellis investigated that industry in a three–partseries that documented weak state oversight, questionable hiring, and misconduct among contractors operating with quasi-police authority and little of the accountability that attaches to sworn officers. The series made her a Livingston Award finalist in 2022, an honor reserved for journalists under thirty-five, and signaled the method that would define her later work: pick the institution no one watches, learn its regulatory architecture, and document the gap between its legal obligations and its conduct.
The Los Angeles Times hired her in 2023 to cover Los Angeles County government. The assignment placed her inside one of the largest local governments in the United States, a bureaucracy that runs public hospitals, probation facilities, the foster care system, and social services for ten million people on a budget larger than that of many states. Most reporters assigned to such a beat gravitate toward the Board of Supervisors, where the political theater happens. Ellis gravitated toward the departments, where the consequences happen.
Her early county reporting uncovered failures in child welfare and juvenile justice. With colleagues, she documented the county’s practice of housing abused and neglected children in hotels because the foster care system lacked placements and treatment beds. The practice cost taxpayers millions while leaving children in unstable rooms with thin supervision. The stories pulled a hidden crisis into public view and forced officials to account for decades of underinvestment in foster infrastructure. At the same time she investigated the county’s juvenile halls, where chronic staffing shortages, safety breakdowns, and administrative dysfunction had drawn the attention of courts, state regulators, and community advocates. Her probation department coverage portrayed an agency unable to meet its legal obligations even as oversight bodies circled.
What followed marks the most distinctive phase of her career. Ellis did not treat the settlement as the end of the story. She treated the settlement as a new institution requiring the same scrutiny she had applied to the probation department. Her reporting examined the claims process: questions about claim verification, allegations of fraud within parts of the intake pipeline, attorney solicitation practices, and the investor financing that stands to profit from mass tort payouts. Her recent work includes coverage of the State Bar investigating a Los Angeles law firm connected to the $4 billion sex abuse case, the county pausing some payouts amid settlement investigations, and reporting on how investors stand to profit from the county’s sex abuse settlements. The move required her to anger a new set of powerful actors, the plaintiffs’ bar and litigation finance industry, after years of angering county officials. Few local reporters scrutinize both the institution accused of abuse and the legal machinery built to remedy it. Ellis does both, and the symmetry defines her approach.
The work has earned professional recognition beyond the Livingston selection. She was part of the Los Angeles Times team that received a National Headliner Award for coverage of the county’s sexual abuse settlement crisis. The honors reflect impact as much as craft. Her reporting prompted investigations by county officials, legal regulators, and prosecutors, and shaped public debate over how the county should fund and verify the largest sex abuse settlement in American history.
Her method combines traditional investigative technique with command of legal and bureaucratic systems. She works from court records, settlement filings, public records requests, and internal government documents, and she pairs the paper trail with interviews with the people the systems fail: foster children housed in hotels, detainees in collapsing juvenile halls, abuse claimants navigating the settlement pipeline. The pairing lets readers grasp both the institutional architecture and the human cost. Her prose stays plain and her stories stay specific. She names the facility, the dollar figure, the official who signed the memo.
Ellis belongs to a generation of journalists formed by public media and local accountability work rather than by political journalism. The career path matters. Reporters who come up through NPR fellowships and regional public broadcasting learn beats built around systems, housing, courts, social services, rather than around campaigns. As local government disputes migrate from legislative chambers into lawsuits, consent decrees, and court supervision, reporters fluent in administration and litigation have become the profession’s growth stock. Ellis arrived at the Los Angeles Times with exactly that fluency at exactly the moment the county’s failures turned into the largest municipal liability story in the country.
Her body of work makes a larger argument about where accountability now lives in American local government. The Board of Supervisors did not reform the probation department; federal and state oversight, litigation, and sustained reporting forced the question. The foster care crisis did not surface through legislative hearings; it surfaced through hotel invoices and reporters who read them. The abuse settlement did not stay clean because officials designed it well; it came under scrutiny because a reporter kept reading the filings after the press conference ended. Ellis works the line where bureaucracy, law, and public money meet.
L.A. County D.A. claims four in five cases in $4-billion sex abuse payout may be fraudulent
Los Angeles County’s district attorney says he believes four in five claims in the largest sex abuse settlement in U.S. history may be fake — a claim that dwarfs previous assumptions over the scale of fraud within the $4-billion payout.
Dist. Atty. Nathan Hochman has asked the judge overseeing the bulk of the sex abuse cases to pause payments for six months while he continues his sprawling criminal investigation into the plaintiffs, lawyers, and therapists behind the claims.
Distributing the money now, he argues, will hamper his investigation “by complicating witness cooperation [and] obscuring financial trails.”
The county agreed in April 2025 to pay $4 billion to settle more than 11,000 claims of sexual abuse arising from county-run juvenile halls, foster homes and a notorious children’s shelter. The claims, many of which dated back decades, came after California changed the statute of limitations to give victims who were sexually abused as children a new window to sue.
Seven months after the payout was announced, the D.A.’s office opened a probe, spurred by claims that some plaintiffs made up stories of abuse and were never in county custody. Times investigations found nine people who said they were paid small amounts of cash by recruiters to sue the county for sex abuse in juvenile halls. Four of them said they fabricated the claims.
The Voice
Her speech runs casual where her prose runs formal. She’s reporter who talks like a graduate student explaining her dissertation at a bar: “kind of,” “sort of,” “basically,” “roughly,” “quite frankly” recur as verbal padding. She says “kind of” as a hedge before almost any characterization: “it kind of triggered this domino effect,” “the lines get a little blurred there,” “sort of cleaned up.” The hedging is constant and it does work. It marks the line between what her data shows and what she infers, which for a reporter on a live legal and political story is self-protection and accuracy at once.
Her diction stays plain. She says “screw-up” twice, once about the county and once, with the softener “if you will,” about the evacuation order failure. She says “the county seems to have done a really good job that morning” before pivoting to the question that guts the praise: so where were all those firefighters that night? That move, concede then pivot, structures much of her answers. She grants the strongest version of the official defense, unprecedented conditions, three fires, mutual aid into the Palisades, and then sets the fact that survives the defense: 60 engines east of Lake Avenue, one truck west, eighteen dead on the west side.
Numbers anchor her rhetoric. She repeats “60 versus one” and flags it: “that’s why I wanted to highlight that number.” She builds credibility through method talk rather than through adjectives. She narrates the public records request, the 55,000-page PDF of latitude and longitude pings, the data colleague who made it legible, the minute-by-minute mapping. The method narration does double duty. It shows her work and it implies that anyone disputing her conclusions must dispute the coordinates.
She volunteers her caveats before the host can raise them. The mutual aid gap, the missing AVL data from other agencies, comes from her own mouth, twice, unprompted the second time: “again, there’s this caveat.” She refuses conclusions the data cannot carry. Asked whether deployment failed, she answers “I wouldn’t say the deployment” and reroutes to the narrower claim the records support: a possible repositioning failure, a “moth to a fire” pattern, a phrase she attributes to two former incident commanders rather than claiming as her own. She borrows vivid language instead of generating it, which keeps her testimony dry and her sources colorful.
She also pushes back on officials in real time, but with a tonal courtesy that disarms. When the host relays Supervisor Horvath’s suggestion that evacuation procedure failures trace to federal regulation, Ellis says “I will say, for this issue, I don’t think it’s a federal issue” and names the local failure: one side of town warned hours after the other. The disagreement comes wrapped in “I will say” and “if you will,” the verbal equivalent of a paralegal correcting a partner without raising her voice.
Emotion enters through other people. Her own register stays flat until she relays the residents: “the level of rage a lot of residents feel toward the fire department, who they quite frankly feel abandoned them, is pretty intense.” The strongest material she delivers is the story of Sophia, the woman who stayed for her tortoise, fought fires from her roof with no siren in earshot, fled near dawn, and lost the animal anyway. Ellis tells it with no adjectival inflation beyond “extremely broken,” and she lets the detail, the son finding the tortoise dead in front of the house, do the work. When the host supplies the emotional conclusion, “I can imagine she feels betrayed,” Ellis answers “Yeah, I think that’s fair to say,” declining even there to editorialize past what her source told her.
Her syntax in speech rambles where her print prose marches. Sentences restart, qualifiers stack, “um” and “you know” thread through. None of it reads as nervousness. It reads as a speaker composing in real time and refusing to outrun her evidence, which makes the few flat declaratives land harder. “Residents are really, really angry.” “No, definitely not,” when asked whether residents feel they have answers, followed by the quiet judgment she rarely permits herself: “I think in large part that’s pretty fair.” That last line is her style in miniature. The verdict arrives in eight plain words, hedged twice, after thirty minutes of coordinates.
The Set
Rebecca Ellis moves through a social world with three overlapping rings. The inner ring is the Los Angeles Times newsroom, in particular its metro and investigative desks. The middle ring is the accountability ecosystem of Los Angeles County: the oversight officials, plaintiffs’ attorneys, advocates, and data keepers who feed and consume her reporting. The outer ring is the national guild of young accountability reporters who came up through public media and now staff the investigative teams of major metros. Each ring has its own values, its own version of the hero, its own status ladder, and its own moral grammar, and Ellis holds standing in all three.
Begin with the newsroom. The Times metro operation that Ellis joined in 2023 carries the institutional memory of the paper’s accountability tradition: Paul Pringle’s USC investigations, Harriet Ryan and Matt Hamilton’s work on Bell and on USC, James Queally on courts and policing, Connor Sheets on sheriff’s gangs and county institutions, Julia Wick, Dakota Smith, and David Zahniser on City Hall, and the data desk where Sean Greene turned Ellis’s 55,000-page PDF of fire truck coordinates into a map. Above them sits executive editor Terry Tang, who took the job after Kevin Merida (b. 1957) resigned in 2024, and above her the ownership of Patrick Soon-Shiong (b. 1952), whose interventions in the opinion pages have made the newsroom anxious about its independence. The anxiety shapes the floor. Metro reporters at the Times now hold a value that older newsrooms took for granted and theirs cannot: the wall between reporting and ownership. They prize work so documented that no owner, no subject, and no lawyer can dislodge it.
What this world values, beneath the craft talk, is verification as a way of life. The supreme good is the document: the internal memo, the AVL ping, the settlement filing, the invoice for a foster child’s hotel room. Testimony ranks below paper. Emotion is admitted only when sourced to someone else; the reporter who cries on the page loses standing, while the reporter who makes a reader cry with a dead tortoise and a flat declarative gains it. They value stamina, the willingness to read the 55,000th page. They value beat fluency, knowing the county code well enough to catch the violation an official does not mention. And they value impact, defined with some circularity as the response of the institutions they cover: the paused payouts, the launched investigation, the resignation.
The hero system follows from the values. The hero of this world is the reporter who forces a powerful institution to admit what it concealed, at personal cost, without error. The martyrology features reporters who endured legal threats, source freezes, and institutional pressure and published anyway. Pringle holds hero status for pushing the USC stories against, by his own account, his own editors. The young reporters’ version adds a wrinkle: the hero now also masters data. The romance of the shoe leather reporter has merged with the romance of the records request, and Ellis’s fire truck investigation, built on coordinates rather than confessions, is the new model. Immortality in this world is the clip file and the prize citation, the knowledge that a law changed or a settlement paused because of something you published. The fallen hero is the fabricator, and one rung above him, the reporter who became a player, who traded coverage for access or carried water for a faction.
The status games run on several boards at once. Inside the newsroom, status accrues to front-page placement, to investigations that take months and survive legal review, and to being the byline the editors send when the county melts down. Across newsrooms, the game is prizes. The Pulitzer sits at the top, and below it a lattice every player can read: the Livingston Awards for reporters under thirty-five, where Lynette Clemetson’s Wallace House operation at Michigan anoints the generation’s stars and where Ellis has been a finalist more than once; the National Headliner Awards, which honored the Times settlement coverage; the Polk, the IRE awards, the Loeb. A second board is the talent market. The Times, The Washington Post, ProPublica, and The New York Times poach from one another, and a reporter’s market value tracks her last investigation. A third board is subtler: standing with sources. The reporter known to protect sources, to quote with context, and to resist spin holds capital that never appears on a resume but determines what she can break. Ellis plays a fourth game few colleagues attempt: she accumulates standing with adversarial parties on both sides of the same litigation, county counsel and plaintiffs’ firms, each of which believes she might expose the other.
The middle ring, the county accountability ecosystem, has its own roster. The Board of Supervisors: Hilda Solis (b. 1957), Holly Mitchell (b. 1964), Lindsey Horvath (b. 1982), Janice Hahn (b. 1952), and Kathryn Barger (b. 1960), whose district burned in the Eaton fire. The oversight layer: the county’s Office of Inspector General under Max Huntsman, the Probation Oversight Commission, the court monitors, the state attorney general’s office, and the state regulators who declared the juvenile halls unsuitable. The litigation layer: the plaintiffs’ firms handling thousands of abuse claims under California’s lookback law, among them Slater Slater Schulman, the New York firm that amassed the largest share of county claims, along with the established local trial bar; opposite them, county counsel and outside defense firms. The advocacy layer: foster care reformers, juvenile justice organizations, the Berkeley-based investigative reporters like Garrett Therolf who have tracked the Department of Children and Family Services for years. The values here diverge by faction, but the ecosystem shares one currency: credibility with the record. Every player, supervisor, monitor, trial lawyer, advocate, needs journalists to certify its version of events, and Ellis is among the certifiers whose stamp carries weight.
The normative claims. The public has a right to know how its institutions treat the powerless. Power conceals by default, so concealment requires no proof of malice to deserve exposure. The reporter must follow the evidence even when it harms allies, and a story that flatters your sources demands more skepticism, not less. Fairness means the subject gets to respond before publication, not that the truth gets split down the middle. Victims deserve compensation, and the process that compensates them deserves audit, and these two claims do not cancel. Anger at injustice is fuel, never a method. And the work must be its own justification: the reporter who asks what coverage will do to her access, her party, or her friendships has begun to corrupt.
The essentialist claims. This world believes some people are reporters by nature: born skeptics, congenital readers of fine print, people constitutionally unable to let a discrepancy rest. It believes institutions have natures too. Bureaucracies essentially protect themselves; given a choice between transparency and self-protection, the agency will choose self-protection every time, and the reporter who expects otherwise is a naif. Politicians essentially perform; their statements are positioning until documented otherwise. Trial lawyers essentially follow fees, whatever justice they also deliver. And the public is essentially distracted, which is why the hero system rewards the reporter who makes it look. The world holds a final essentialist belief about itself: that journalism is a calling rather than a job, that the people who do it well could earn more elsewhere and stay because the work expresses what they are.
The moral grammar assigns praise and blame in a distinct pattern. The gravest sin is fabrication, followed by plagiarism, followed by burning a source. Below those felonies sit the misdemeanors: the unforced error that hands the subject a correction, the overwritten lede, the credulous quote. Blame attaches to outcomes less than to process; a reporter who follows the method and gets a fact wrong receives correction and sympathy, while a reporter who cuts corners and happens to be right receives quiet contempt. Praise flows to restraint. Saying less than your evidence might support is virtue; the hedge is honorable; “I wouldn’t say the deployment” wins more respect inside the guild than a thundering accusation. The grammar also contains a tension the players feel but rarely name. The world honors the reporter who angers anyone, yet it draws its emotional energy from a rooting interest in the powerless, and when the powerless or their champions become the story, as the plaintiffs’ bar did in the county settlement, the grammar strains. Some members resolve the strain by softening coverage of allies. The world reserves its highest private honor for those who do not, which is the honor Ellis is currently earning, story by story, in a town where both the abusers’ employer and the victims’ lawyers now answer her calls with care.
Manufactured Natures: Stephen Turner on the Essentialist Claims of the Rebecca Ellis Set
Stephen Turner (b. 1951) has spent a career dissolving the collective objects that social groups believe in. In The Social Theory of Practices and the essays that followed, he argues that when a group attributes a shared essence to itself or to others, a common spirit, a nature, a hidden thing that members possess and outsiders lack, the attribution cannot survive the question of transmission. No essence passes from one head to another. Each member acquires her own habits through her own history of imitation, correction, and feedback, and the rough uniformity that results gets misread, after the fact, as evidence of a shared object that was there all along. Essence talk, for Turner, is a folk theory. It does real work in the group’s life, but the work is social rather than descriptive: it legitimates authority, polices boundaries, and converts contingent training into destiny. Run the accountability journalism world around Rebecca Ellis through this analysis and its essentialist claims come apart in instructive ways.
Start with the claim the guild makes about itself: that some people are reporters by nature, born skeptics, congenital readers of fine print, constitutionally unable to let a discrepancy rest. Turner’s first move is to ask how such a nature could be acquired or detected. The guild’s answer is that it cannot be taught, only discovered, which is what makes it an essence. The biographical record answers differently. Ellis’s skepticism has a visible manufacturing history: Brown, then the Kroc Fellowship at NPR, an institution that exists to install the dispositions of public radio journalism in twenty-two-year-olds through rotation and supervision; then the Miami Herald metro desk, where breaking news drills the habit of verification under deadline; then Oregon Public Broadcasting, where a beat structure teaches a reporter to read regulatory filings because the beat produces nothing else. Each stage is a feedback loop. Editors strike the unsupported sentence, praise the documented one, and the young reporter’s habits converge on the guild standard. Nothing transmits except corrections. The “born reporter” emerges at the end of the pipeline and the pipeline is then deleted from the story. The essence narrative does work the training narrative cannot: it makes the hierarchy feel natural. If reporting talent is an essence, then the prize committees that certify it, the Livingston judges, the Headliner panels, are detecting something real rather than consecrating one training lineage over others, and the certified can carry their authority as discovery rather than as appointment.
Take next the essences the guild attributes to the institutions it covers. Bureaucracies protect themselves by nature. Politicians perform by nature. Trial lawyers follow fees by nature. Turner treats such claims as folk causal theories that substitute a nature for an explanation. Their virtue is economy: a reporter who believes the probation department will conceal by default needs no case-by-case analysis before filing the records request, and the heuristic pays its way often enough to survive. Their vice is unfalsifiability. When the county cooperates, the cooperation gets explained inside the essence: they only released it because they knew we had it, the candor is itself a tactic. No behavior can count against a nature, which is the mark of an attribution doing social work rather than empirical work. The social work here is jurisdictional. The claim that institutions essentially conceal is also the claim that the public needs a class of professional revealers, and so the essence attributed to the bureaucracy underwrites the existence of the guild. The reporter’s authority and the agency’s nature are two sides of one coin, minted together.
Ellis’s own practice shows less essentialism than her world’s talk. Her fire investigation did not assume the county fire department’s nature and write toward it. She requested the vehicle locator pings, mapped them, and reported a pattern, sixty engines east of Lake Avenue, one truck west, while volunteering the caveat that other agencies’ data was missing. Asked on the Rebuilding L.A. podcast whether the deployment failed, she said “I wouldn’t say the deployment” and confined herself to a narrower repositioning question her coordinates could carry. Turner’s framework illuminates the difference. The guild’s essence talk is a shared vocabulary, but the working reporter’s skill is a set of individually acquired habits that often outrun the vocabulary. Ellis talks the guild’s folk theory in green rooms and practices something more granular at the keyboard. The gap between what the group says it knows and what its members each do is exactly where Turner says to look.
The settlement phase of her career stresses the guild’s essentialism. The folk theory sorts the county litigation cleanly: the bureaucracy conceals by nature, the survivors suffer by circumstance, the lawyers fight by calling. Her phase two reporting scrambled the sort. The lawyers’ fee-following nature, a background assumption when they sued the county, became foreground when she examined solicitation practices and the State Bar opened an investigation. The claims process, built as the remedy, displayed the self-protective behavior the theory reserves for the wrongdoer. Members of the guild who held the essences experienced her reporting as betrayal, an attack on the victims’ side, because in an essentialist scheme scrutiny tracks natures: you investigate the kind of actor that conceals. Ellis behaved as though no actor has a kind, only a position and a paper trail. Turner gives the vocabulary for what she did: she treated the essences as defeasible folk summaries rather than as knowledge, and the portion of her world that confused the summary for the thing could not follow her.
Journalism, members say, is what they are; they could earn more elsewhere and stay because the work expresses their nature. Turner reads vocation talk as the conversion of an acquired disposition into a discovered self, and the conversion has a clear function in a collapsing industry. A guild that cannot pay market wages must pay in identity. The essence of the journalist, incorruptible, called, born for it, is the compensation package. It also disciplines: the reporter who leaves for public relations has not changed jobs but betrayed a nature, and the threat of that judgment holds the labor force in place at the price the industry can afford. The calling narrative even structures the heroes. Paul Pringle’s canonization rests on the story that he could not have done otherwise, that pushing the USC stories against his own editors expressed what he was. Turner would note that the canon is assembled backward: the guild selects the careers that ended in vindication, narrates them as essence unfolding, and quietly drops the equally driven reporters whose certainty ended in error. The essence is a retrospective award.
The Ellis set behaves alike because its members passed through similar pipelines, answered to similar editors, chased similar prizes, and corrected toward similar standards, each one separately. There is no shared object, no essence of the reporter, no nature of the bureaucracy, only convergent habituation and the folk theory that decorates it. The decoration pays the underpaid in identity, naturalizes the prize hierarchy, justifies the guild’s jurisdiction, and sorts the world into actors who deserve scrutiny by kind. Ellis’s distinction, on this reading, is that she wears the decoration lightly. Her habits, acquired ping by ping and correction by correction, let her investigate her own side’s saints, because habits, unlike essences, do not know whose side anyone is on.
In Explaining the Normative, Stephen Turner attacks the idea that beneath social life sits a layer of obligation, oughts that bind independent of anyone’s say-so, validity that transcends what people happen to enforce. He calls the idea normativism, and his charge is that it explains nothing while smuggling in a tribunal that does not exist. What presents itself as the binding force of a norm, Turner argues, decomposes without remainder into ordinary causal material: habits installed through training, expectations about what others will do, anticipated sanctions, and a folk vocabulary of duty that members learn along with everything else. The feeling of obligation is real. The objective obligation behind the feeling is the fiction. Communities then use the fiction in predictable ways: to settle disputes by appeal to a higher authority that is, in fact, only themselves, and to license a priesthood that claims special access to what the norms really require. The accountability journalism world around Rebecca Ellis runs on normative claims, and Turner’s analysis bites on every one of them.
Take the foundational claim: the public has a right to know how its institutions behave. The sentence presents a normative fact, a right, sitting somewhere prior to any law or practice, which the reporter merely serves. Turner asks where such a fact could live. Not in law; the First Amendment restrains government and grants the public no claim on the county’s hotel invoices, which is why Ellis needs the California Public Records Act, a statute, revisable, fought over, and full of exemptions. Not in the public, which never convened to issue the right and mostly does not read the stories that vindicate it. The right to know is the guild’s charter myth, and its function is jurisdictional. It converts what reporters do, extract information that institutions prefer to hold, into what someone is owed, and a job into a fiduciary duty. The conversion pays. A trade that serves a pre-existing right can claim protections, access, and deference that a mere business could not. Turner’s point is the claim works without being true. The records statutes, the press passes, and the deference exist because enough people act as if the right exists, and the acting, not the right, carries all the causal weight.
Or take the norm Ellis’s career now tests: follow the evidence even when it harms allies. Inside the guild this is spoken as a duty with objective force, the thing a real reporter must do. Turner’s dissolution starts with the observation that the duty becomes visible only through enforcement, and the enforcement is the community’s behavior, nothing above it. When Ellis turned from exposing the county to auditing the settlement, the claims verification questions, the solicitation practices, the litigation financiers, her world split. One faction read her as violating a norm: protect survivors, do not arm the county against its victims. Another read her as fulfilling a norm: the evidence led to the plaintiffs’ pipeline, so the duty ran there. Normativism says one faction was right, that a fact about journalistic obligation existed and adjudicated the dispute. Turner says look for the tribunal and you find only the factions. What settled the question was causal, the State Bar opened its investigation, the county paused payouts, her reporting held up, and the guild then rewrote the norm retrospectively as having always commanded the audit. Had her stories collapsed, the same community would now cite the same vocabulary to condemn her. The norm did not guide the outcome. The outcome fixed what the norm is said to have been.
The procedural norms decompose even faster. Fairness means the subject gets to respond before publication: spoken as ethics, structured as liability management. The pre-publication call documents the absence of malice and shrinks the libel exposure, and the Times legal review, the no-surprises rule, the carefully logged requests for comment exist because lawyers and insurers shaped them. The reporter experiences the procedure as duty because she acquired it as habit, under editors who enforced it, in a newsroom whose general counsel appears in the credits of its own podcast. Turner does not say the ethical gloss is cynical. He says the gloss is causally idle. Remove the felt obligation and leave the libel regime, and the calls still get made. Remove the libel regime and leave the felt obligation, and the practice erodes within a generation, as it has in jurisdictions and formats where the sanctions disappeared.
The same analysis reaches the claim that anger is fuel, never a method. Ellis performs this norm visibly: residents rage, the tortoise dies, and her own register stays flat, “I think that’s fair to say.” The guild narrates the flatness as an epistemic duty, emotion corrupts inference. Turner would trace the installation. The flat register survives editing; the angry draft does not. The flat quote survives the defense lawyer’s deposition; the editorializing reporter becomes the story. Wire service convention, broadcast regulation, the libel bar, and prize-committee taste built the affect rules, and each reporter acquires them as corrections long before she can state them as principles. The principle is the residue of the corrections, stated as if it had been their source.
Turner reserves particular attention for the priesthood that every normativist community generates, the specialists who claim the norms have content beyond what the community enforces. Journalism has built this apparatus in full: the Society of Professional Journalists code, the ethics columnists, the ombudsmen and public editors, the Poynter seminars, the journalism school ethics requirement. On Turner’s reading these institutions do not discover the profession’s obligations; they manage the vocabulary in which the profession’s conflicts get fought. Their pronouncements matter exactly as far as newsrooms sanction in accordance with them, which is why the codes trail practice by years and why their gravest pronouncements, on aggregation, on social media, on artificial intelligence, read as attempts to catch a moving train. The Ellis settlement coverage will eventually appear in this literature as a case study, and the case study will present as discovered principle what was, in the event, a reporter’s habits colliding with her coalition’s expectations and winning.
Two of the set’s normative claims deserve a closer look because they carry the economics of the trade. The work must be its own justification: the reporter who weighs what a story costs her access or her friendships has begun to corrupt. And victims deserve compensation while the process deserves audit, two duties asserted as non-canceling. The first norm performs the same conversion Turner finds everywhere, turning a market condition into a duty. An industry that cannot pay for loyalty must moralize it; the prohibition on weighing personal cost keeps reporters producing adversarial work at salaries that do not price the adversity. The second norm is more interesting because the set asserts the two duties do not conflict while its behavior shows they do. The faction that froze Ellis out experienced the conflict; the vocabulary denies it. Normativism requires the denial, because admitting that duties collide without a fact to resolve the collision concedes Turner’s whole case: that what gets called the resolution is just the community’s sanctioning behavior settling into a new pattern.
What remains of the Ellis set’s ethics after Turner is everything that was doing the work all along. The training pipelines that install the habits. The libel regime, the records statutes, the prize committees, the editors, the peer contempt and peer honor that sanction deviation and conformity. The folk vocabulary of rights and duties in which the sanctions get narrated. Turner’s dissolution does not predict the ethics will fail; the causal substrate is sturdy and self-reinforcing. It predicts only that when the substrate shifts, when ownership changes, when the libel calculus moves, when the prize economy rewards different work, the norms will follow, and the community will discover that its eternal obligations have quietly acquired new content. Ellis, on this reading, is not obeying a higher tribunal her colleagues betrayed. She is what her corrections made her, running in an environment that, for now, still pays out for the habit of reading one more filing. The guild calls that integrity, and Turner would not object to the word. He would only note that the word names a disposition with a history, and the history, not the tribunal, explains every story she files.
Apply four questions to any public communicator and the shape of their situation emerges. What coalition do they depend on for status and income? Who do they risk angering if they speak plainly? Who benefits if their framing wins? What truths might cost them their position?
Most careers yield one stable set of answers. Rebecca Ellis yields two, because her career at the Los Angeles Times splits into two phases with different coalition structures, and the second phase required her to investigate the people the first phase made her allies. That flip is rare in local journalism.
Start with the first question in phase one. When Ellis joined the Times in 2023 to cover Los Angeles County government, her income came from the paper and her status came from a coalition that forms around any accountability reporter on a social services beat. The coalition included her editors, who needed the county beat to produce impact. It included the prize committees, the Livingston judges who had named her a finalist for her Oregon private security investigation in 2022 and the National Headliner judges who later honored the Times team for its settlement coverage. It included the oversight apparatus around county government: inspectors general, court monitors, state regulators, the attorneys who sue the county. And it included the advocates, the foster care reformers and juvenile justice activists who feed reporters tips, documents, and outraged quotes. When Ellis documented children sleeping in hotels because the county lacked foster placements, or staffing collapses inside the juvenile halls, every member of that coalition gained. Her stories armed the advocates, vindicated the monitors, strengthened the plaintiffs’ lawyers, and gave her editors the impact metrics that justify an investigative reporter’s salary.
The second question, in phase one, had a comfortable answer. Speaking plainly risked angering county officials: the Board of Supervisors, the probation department brass, the Department of Children and Family Services. These are people with limited power over a Times reporter. They cannot fire her. They can slow her records requests, freeze her out of background briefings, and complain to her editors, and that is roughly the extent of their arsenal. A reporter whose plain speech angers only the institution she covers occupies the safest position in journalism. The adversarial posture is the job description. Her paper, her prizes, and her sources all reward the anger she provokes. In phase one, the four questions reveal a reporter with aligned incentives: the people she might anger and the people she depended on sat on opposite sides of the table.
Then the table turned. The county’s failures moved into the courts. California’s lookback legislation opened the door to thousands of sexual abuse claims from former wards of county juvenile halls and foster placements, the county moved toward a settlement measured in billions, and Ellis followed the story into its second phase. Here the third question becomes the hinge. Who benefited when her phase one framing won? When the framing was county institutions abuse children and hide it, the beneficiaries included the claimants, the advocates, and above all the plaintiffs’ bar, whose contingency fees scale with the county’s liability. Every story Ellis wrote documenting abuse inside the halls raised the settlement value of the claims. She did not write the stories for that purpose. The stories were true. But truth has beneficiaries, and the lawyers were among them.
Phase two begins when Ellis turns the same scrutiny on the remedy. Her reporting examined claim verification, attorney solicitation practices, alleged fraud in parts of the intake pipeline, and the investors positioned to profit from mass tort payouts. By early 2026 she was reporting on a State Bar investigation of a law firm tied to the $4 billion case and on the county pausing payouts amid settlement investigations. Run the first question again and the coalition has reorganized. Her editors and the prize committees remain. But the sources who sustained phase one occupy a new position. The plaintiffs’ lawyers who once handed her filings now field her questions about their solicitation practices. The advocates who cheered her foster care exposes now watch her cast doubt on a claims process that compensates survivors. A reporter’s coalition includes her source network, and Ellis chose to convert a wing of her source network into subjects.
The second question now has a harder answer. In phase two, speaking plainly risks angering the plaintiffs’ bar, which differs from angering a county bureaucracy in kind. Trial lawyers sue people for a living. They command publicity machinery of their own, relationships with other reporters, and a moral shield the probation department never had: they represent abuse survivors. A story questioning claim verification can be reframed, within hours, as an attack on victims. Ellis also risks angering the survivors, or at least the organizations that speak for them, who hear scrutiny of the settlement as a threat to compensation. And she risks angering the part of her own professional culture that treats plaintiffs’ attorneys in abuse litigation as the good guys. The county, meanwhile, has become an awkward partial beneficiary of her work. When she reports fraud allegations in the claims pipeline, county officials seeking to limit payouts can wave her stories. The reporter who spent two years arming the county’s adversaries now produces copy the county can use. Nothing about her method changed. The field changed around her.
The third question, run on phase two, explains why the work remains honest rather than captured. If her new framing wins, the framing that the settlement apparatus deserves the same scrutiny as the abuse, the beneficiaries form a strange and unstable set: taxpayers, legitimate claimants whose payouts a fraud scandal might otherwise taint or delay, county budget officials, and the State Bar. No single member of that set can sustain her the way the accountability coalition sustained phase one. Taxpayers do not leak documents. Budget officials make poor heroes. The diffuseness of the beneficiaries is the strongest evidence that coalition service does not drive the reporting. A reporter optimizing for coalition position might have stayed in phase one forever. The abuse story could supply a career of sympathetic victims, villainous bureaucrats, and prize entries. Ellis traded that position for one where her natural allies are a bar association and a county counsel’s office.
The fourth question cuts deepest, and its answer differs by phase. In phase one, the truths that might have cost Ellis her position were truths unfavorable to her sources: evidence that an advocate exaggerated, that a claimed pattern of abuse rested on weak documentation, that the county’s failures were less damning than the litigation posture required. Most beat reporters never test whether they can publish such truths because the occasion never forces it. In phase two, Ellis forced the occasion on herself. The truths she now publishes, that some claims may be fraudulent, that solicitation practices in the case drew a State Bar investigation, that investors stand to profit from a fund built for abuse survivors, are the truths phase one made expensive. Each one strains the source relationships her beat depends on. The countervailing truths also exist and also carry cost: if she overweights the fraud allegations, she hands the county a pretext to slow compensation to people its facilities harmed as children, and her reporting becomes the county’s shield. She works a corridor with coalition penalties on both walls.
Her spoken manner, visible in her August 2025 podcast appearance on the Eaton fire investigation, shows how she manages the corridor. She concedes the strongest official defense before delivering the fact that survives it. She volunteers her caveats before the host can raise them. She attributes the vivid phrases to her sources and keeps her own language flat. She corrects a county supervisor’s federal deflection with “I don’t think it’s a federal issue” and softens the correction with “I will say.” The hedging reads as caution. The four questions suggest it reads better as coalition management: a speaker who knows that every plain sentence angers someone she may need, and who prices each sentence before saying it.
The questions also illuminate what Ellis’s two-phase career says about her employer. The Times pays for impact, and impact in phase two comes from a smaller, stranger audience than impact in phase one. Children in hotels is a story every reader understands. Litigation finance in a mass tort settlement is a story for the State Bar, the county counsel, and the courts. That the paper sustained the second phase suggests its incentive structure, prizes, subscriptions, institutional pride, can still reward reporting whose coalition payoff is thin. That is the condition that makes Ellis possible. Her four answers, in both phases, depend on a newsroom willing to absorb the anger her plain speech generates. The day that willingness fades, the fourth question gets a new answer, and the truths that cost a reporter her position will include the ones Ellis now publishes every month.
What the flip reveals, in the end, is the difference between a reporter whose adversarial posture is positional and one whose posture is methodological. Positional adversaries fight whoever their coalition opposes. Methodological adversaries audit whoever holds power in the story, and accept that the audit will eventually reach their friends. Ellis passed the test most accountability reporters never face, because she scheduled it herself. She read the filings after the press conference ended, and the filings led back through her own source list. She kept reading.
The Auditor’s Apprenticeship: Stephen Turner on Expertise and Tacit Knowledge in the Career of Rebecca Ellis
Stephen Turner’s work on expertise begins from a problem for democracy and a problem for philosophy, and the two problems meet in a reporter like Rebecca Ellis. The democratic problem, set out in Liberal Democracy 3.0 and the essay “What Is the Problem with Experts?”, is that liberal politics presumes discussion among rough equals, while modern government runs on knowledge that citizens cannot check. The public must take expert claims on trust, which makes the management of that trust, who certifies the experts, who audits them, who translates them, the real constitution of a modern polity. The philosophical problem, worked through in The Social Theory of Practices and Understanding the Tacit, is that the knowledge experts hold is mostly tacit, embodied in trained judgment rather than statable rules, and tacit knowledge cannot be transferred. It can only be re-created, learner by learner, through apprenticeship and feedback. Put the two together and you get Turner’s picture of the knowledge society: a lattice of trained judgments that no one can fully articulate, held together by certifications and trust relations that the official theory of democracy barely acknowledges. Ellis works a junction point in that lattice. Her job is to audit expert classes on behalf of a public that cannot, using an expertise of her own that the public cannot check either.
Her value to the Los Angeles Times rests on a command of bureaucratic and legal systems that her readers, and most of her colleagues, lack. She knows that county fire vehicles carry transmitters that ping their coordinates every minute, that the pings are a public record, and that a records request phrased the right way will shake them loose. She knows how to read a settlement filing for the clause that shifts risk, a probation staffing report for the number that contradicts the press release, a county budget for the fund where liability hides. Almost none of this is statable as rules. Ask her to write down how she reads a filing and she could produce tips, but the tips would not produce her judgment in a novice, any more than a written description of bicycle balance produces a rider. Turner’s account of the tacit explains why. The knowledge lives in habituated perception, in what leaps out of a page at her after years of pages, and what leaps out cannot be handed over. It can only be grown again in another person through the same kind of history.
Her career. The Kroc Fellowship at NPR is an apprenticeship institution in Turner’s exact sense: it does not transmit a body of doctrine, it arranges occasions for habituation. The fellow rotates through desks, files under supervision, gets corrected, and the corrections accumulate into dispositions. The Miami Herald metro desk added the deadline reflexes, verification under time pressure, the habit of calling before believing. Oregon Public Broadcasting added the beat layer, and the beat is the deepest apprenticeship journalism has. A beat reporter learns her agencies the way a clinician learns bodies, by long exposure to cases, until the abnormal announces itself. The Portland private security investigation marks the moment her trained perception outran the official record: she could see, in licensing files and hiring practices, a pattern the regulators who produced the files had not assembled. Turner’s anti-collectivist point belongs here. Nothing called “journalistic practice” entered Ellis at any stage. Each reporter who passes through Kroc or a metro desk builds her own approximation of the guild standard out of her own corrections, and the approximations converge because the feedback environments resemble each other. The convergence is real. The shared object is not.
Los Angeles County government is an expert formation almost perfectly sealed against citizen judgment. Its budget exceeds most states’. Its child welfare, probation, and public health systems run on professional knowledge, administrative records, and, increasingly, litigation: consent decrees, court monitors, settlement funds. A voter cannot check any of it. The supervisors cannot check most of it; they too take their departments’ claims on trust. The official democratic theory has no answer to this except elections, and elections cannot reach a claims-verification process or a fire department’s deployment logic. Turner argues that polities handle the problem, when they handle it at all, through intermediary institutions that audit and translate expert claims: commissions, inspectors, and the press. Ellis is that theory walking. When she mapped the vehicle locator data and put sixty engines east of Lake Avenue against one truck west, she performed an audit no resident of Altadena could perform, of an expert system, incident command, whose own self-account the public had no way to test. When she examined the abuse settlement’s intake pipeline, she audited a second expert class, the plaintiffs’ bar, whose claims about claim validity the survivors, the county, and the courts had all been taking substantially on trust.
The sequence of her career, read through Turner, is a sequence of audited expert classes. First the security regulators in Oregon. Then the county’s administrative experts: probation officials, child welfare managers, fire command. Then the legal experts: the mass tort firms, the claims processors, the litigation financiers. Each class holds knowledge the public cannot check, each produces a self-justifying paper record, and each met in Ellis an outsider who had grown enough insider perception to read the record against the self-justification. The fire chief could say unprecedented conditions; the pings said the trucks did not reposition. The firms could say every claim is vetted; the filings and the State Bar’s interest said the vetting deserved its own audit. Turner’s framework names what makes this possible and what makes it rare. Possible, because expertise is tacit and individual, an outsider can grow it; nothing confines the reading of settlement filings to lawyers. Rare, because growing it takes years of fed-back exposure that almost no institution outside a beat newsroom will subsidize.
The public that cannot check the county cannot check her either. Readers do not re-request the AVL data or re-map the pings. They take her audit on trust, which means the democratic problem has not been solved, only moved one step, to the question of who certifies the auditor. The answer is the apparatus visible all over her career: the masthead of the Times, the legal review that precedes publication, the prize lattice, Livingston, Headliner, that consecrates trained judgment the way boards certify physicians. Her habit of narrating method, the 55,000-page PDF, the data colleague, the minute-by-minute map, the volunteered caveats, functions as a trust performance. It shows work the reader still cannot replicate. The judgment calls that constitute the expertise, what counts as a caveat, which inference the coordinates will carry, why “I wouldn’t say the deployment” but yes to a repositioning question, remain tacit, and the reader trusts the flat tone and the institutional stamp. Turner would not call this a scandal. He would call it the normal structure of a knowledge society, and he would point out that journalism’s self-image, we make expertise transparent to the public, understates what the trade really is: a rival expert class whose product is audits, certified by its own guild institutions, trusted because the certifications have held up.
Tacit knowledge dies when the apprenticeship chain breaks; there is no manual to store it in. The expertise Ellis holds was grown by a fellowship, two metro desks, and a beat structure, every link of which sits inside an industry that has shed most of its capacity to grow the next Ellis. When a county of ten million has one reporter who can read its settlement architecture, the audit function of democracy hangs on a single trained perception and the willingness of one paper to keep paying for it. Turner’s expert classes go unchecked by default; checking them is the artifact, the thing that requires institutions. Her recent reporting on the claims process shows what the artifact buys. The audit of the remedy, the part of the story no faction wanted, the part only trained judgment could see in the filings, came from the one person positioned to perform it. The lattice held at that junction because she was standing there. The question her career poses, in Turner’s terms, is who is being habituated, right now, to stand there next.
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Ian Masters (b. 1947) is an Australian-born American broadcaster, BBC-trained journalist, author, screenwriter, and documentary filmmaker. He created and hosts Background Briefing, a public-affairs radio program and podcast devoted to foreign policy, national security, intelligence, and American politics. Over more than four decades on the air, he built the most durable franchise in American public-interest broadcasting, and he did it from outside the institutional structures of network television, major newspapers, and the think tank world. His career shows how an independent broadcaster can sustain serious coverage of international affairs across the end of the Cold War, the September 11 attacks, the Iraq War, and the return of great-power rivalry, all while the commercial radio industry around him moved toward ideological entertainment.
Masters comes from one of the most productive media families Australia has produced. His mother, Olga Masters (1919-1986), worked for decades as a country and suburban newspaper journalist before publishing her first book of fiction at age 63. In the four years before her death she became one of Australia’s most acclaimed writers, with The Home Girls, Loving Daughters, and Amy’s Children securing her a permanent place in Australian letters. His father, Charles Masters, taught school. The couple raised seven children, and six of them made careers in media and the arts. Roy Masters (b. 1941), the eldest, coached rugby league at the top professional level before becoming a sports columnist for The Sydney Morning Herald. Quentin Masters (b. 1946) directed and produced films from London. Chris Masters (b. 1948) became the most decorated investigative reporter in Australian television; his Four Corners report “The Moonlight State” triggered the Fitzgerald Inquiry and brought down the government of Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen in Queensland. Sue Masters produced landmark Australian television drama, including Brides of Christ and SeaChange, for the ABC and Channel Ten. Deb Masters also worked as a producer. The family constitutes a dynasty, with influence running across journalism, literature, sport, film, and television drama.
Within this family, Ian Masters took a path none of his siblings chose. He trained at the BBC, absorbed the British public-service broadcasting tradition, and then left both Australia and Britain for the United States. He settled in Los Angeles in the late 1970s, arriving in a media market dominated by entertainment but home to KPFK-FM, the Pacifica Radio outlet that had served as a platform for dissenting and noncommercial voices since 1959. In 1980 he launched Background Briefing on KPFK as a weekly Sunday program. The title borrowed the vocabulary of the diplomatic and intelligence worlds, and the borrowing was deliberate. Masters conceived the program as something like an open-source intelligence briefing for citizens, a weekly hour in which the people who knew the most about international security would explain what they knew to anyone who cared to listen.
The timing favored him. The program began as the Cold War entered its final and most dangerous decade. The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, the collapse of détente, the Euromissile crisis, the Reagan defense buildup, and the nuclear freeze movement all generated public appetite for informed discussion of strategy and arms control. Much of the activist broadcasting on the left treated these subjects through the lens of protest. Masters treated them through the lens of expertise. He brought diplomats, defectors, military analysts, scholars, and former intelligence officers to a Pacifica audience more accustomed to movement voices, and he asked them about throw-weights, verification regimes, Soviet succession politics, and the internal logic of deterrence. He covered subjects that fell into the gap between commercial media, which found them too technical, and activist media, which found them too compromising. Strategic nuclear doctrine, intelligence failure, and the inner workings of authoritarian states became his recurring terrain.
While the conventional host poses as a stand-in for the uninformed listener and asks the guest to start from zero, Masters approaches the guest as an informed interlocutor. His questions often run a minute or longer, synthesizing the history of an issue and the competing interpretations of it, before he asks the guest to confirm, refine, or dispute his account. Critics of the method note that it can crowd the guest. Its defenders note what it makes possible: conversations that begin where most broadcast interviews end, with specialists pushed past their talking points into the disputed territory of their fields. The method presumes a listener willing to work, and over four decades Masters found enough of them to sustain the program.
The history of Background Briefing also tracks the history of American alternative media and its troubles. Pacifica Radio passed through repeated financial crises, governance wars, and purges from the 1990s onward, and KPFK suffered with the rest of the network. The program expanded from weekly to daily distribution in 2009, reaching more than forty stations and a national podcast audience. Masters later resigned from KPFK amid the station’s turmoil and produced the program from his home in Santa Monica, distributing it as an independent podcast and through KPFA in Berkeley and other affiliates. He returned the program to KPFK at the beginning of 2025 after the station instituted reforms under interim management. Through all of it he kept editorial control, financing the program through listener support and independent syndication rather than institutional patronage. The arrangement cost him reach and money. It bought him autonomy, and autonomy was the asset he refused to sell.
In 2022 the Los Angeles chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists honored Masters with its Distinguished Journalist Award for Audio, a recognition of more than forty years of sustained public-affairs work. In 2005 he married the British-American actress Christina Pickles (b. 1935), known for St. Elsewhere and Friends, a union that placed the most determined anti-entertainment broadcaster in Los Angeles inside the entertainment world’s family circle.
The comparison with his brother Chris clarifies what Ian Masters is and is not. Chris Masters broke stories. He gathered evidence, named names, and brought down a state government. Ian Masters broke almost nothing. His contribution lies elsewhere, in curation and interpretation: the construction of a forum where expert knowledge reaches a general audience before it hardens into conventional wisdom, and where the listener hears the argument inside the expert community rather than its press release. In this he resembles Brian Lamb (b. 1941), the founder of C-SPAN, another broadcaster who bet that an audience existed for substance delivered without theater. Masters made the same bet with a sharper focus on intelligence, diplomacy, and war, and from a far more precarious institutional perch.
His career also poses a question about the American media system he joined. Masters arrived from a public broadcasting tradition, the BBC’s, that treated international affairs as a core obligation. He found an American system in which that obligation had no secure home. Commercial radio would not carry it. Public radio carried it in fragments. The Pacifica network, his refuge, lurched from crisis to crisis. So he built the institution, one program, one listener pledge at a time, and kept it running for more than forty-five years. The achievement is partly journalistic and partly architectural. He constructed an independent platform for informed political discussion outside the universities, the networks, and the think tanks, and he proved it could survive on the loyalty of an audience that wanted history, evidence, and competing interpretation rather than speed and outrage. Whether such platforms can outlive their founders remains an open question. That one man sustained this one for so long, from a rented frequency on the left edge of the dial in Los Angeles, stands as a singular fact in the recent history of American broadcasting.
ON a Sunday morning like any other, when so many Southern Californians are sleeping in or heading to the beach, Ian Masters, Australian expatriate, former BBC journalist, Hollywood dropout and indefatigable student of American foreign policy, has arrived at his post behind a live microphone in the political free-fire zone of KPFK-FM (90.7) on Cahuenga Boulevard.
Looking a bit bleary-eyed, Masters nevertheless has an air of authority about him. Dressed in a smart sports coat and pressed jeans, with a healthy shag of white hair and overseas accent, he reminds you of a former road manager for the Rolling Stones. “I didn’t get much sleep last night, my girlfriend was up sick,” he tells me moments before the clock in the studio reads 11 a.m. straight up, and he bends into the microphone to introduce today’s edition of “Background Briefing,” his brainy show about current events and geopolitics that he has been doing for 26 years.
Like many programmers in public radio, Masters gets no money — zero — for all the hours that go into producing a program that is considerably more ambitious and frequently more illuminating than such Sunday morning television fare as NBC’s “Meet the Press” and ABC’s “This Week With George Stephanopoulos.”
…He will cross this expanse of intellectual and political terrain armed with smart questions drawn from a store of knowledge and reasoned opinion that he does not hesitate to share. His interviews tend to be more conversational and more probing than most — a rare mix that eschews the kind of formal objectivity familiar to American broadcast journalism without lapsing into pure advocacy or rant. With his clear, understated voice set at an unwavering pitch, Masters seems to be pushing ever onward toward the heart of the matter…
“He has the ability to ask questions and provide a point of view that inspires people to go deeper into subjects,” says Andrew Davis, the Hollywood director of “The Fugitive” and “Collateral Damage” and a longtime friend who has used Masters as a consultant. “He sees linkages that other people don’t see.”
…The seeds of the program were sown in 1978, when Masters, then a film editor, was enlisted by cinematographer Haskell Wexler to help make the anti-nukes documentary “War Without Winners,” produced by a group of retired generals and admirals. The TV documentary was a response to “The Price of Peace and Freedom,” a 30-minute Pentagon-friendly film made by the hawkish Committee on the Present Danger, a group that included Paul Wolfowitz and George H.W. Bush.
To gather material, Masters went on an extensive fact-finding tour of Washington, D.C., and the Pentagon to find a justification for the U.S. to amass more nuclear weapons. If he was going to make an advocacy film, he wanted to know the arguments on the other side.
The experience left him with “all this knowledge and nowhere to go,” he says, until he got a call from someone at KPFK with the offer of a Sunday morning show. “Reagan was coming on,” Masters remembers. “And there was a genuine concern that we were moving toward Armageddon.”
The contacts he had made in government, the military and the intelligence agencies were the start of his compiling what he calls a great Rolodex, but those same official sources have made him an object of suspicion among some KPFK supporters who have accused him of being a government apologist and CIA stooge.
The fact that he is a white male, says one station insider, does not help Masters win support internally at multicultural KPFK — or at the Pacifica network, which does not distribute the program to the other four Pacifica stations.
Masters — who is 63, has been married twice, to an English and an American actress, and has a 22-year-old daughter — recently graduated from UCLA. While he has missed out on getting rich like many of his peers, he has kept interesting company along the way, sharing flats in London with Monty Python’s Eric Idle and Australian director Bruce Beresford, and working alongside Jonathan Miller and Lindsay Anderson at the BBC. He got to know Mick Jagger while working as an editor for Tony Richardson on the 1970 movie “Ned Kelly.”
…After attending the University of Sydney, he won a scholarship to film school in Paris during the New Wave but didn’t stay long. “It was a waste of time, very academic.” He quit and started shooting film for news agencies, including the BBC, where he became an editor.
He moved to Los Angeles in the early ‘70s, met Wexler and got work editing documentaries, including “The Secret Life of Plants.” He tried his hand at screenwriting and wrote one feature for 20th Century Fox, an adaptation of the Robert Ludlum espionage thriller “The Osterman Weekend” (1983), the last film directed by Sam Peckinpah. “That was a very unpleasant experience,” he says…
“We all know he’s always in money trouble,” says Wexler. “He lives very frugally.” When he is not preparing for the program, Masters gives lectures, moderates panels and develops movie projects. He also wants to become an American citizen after more than three decades living as a legal resident alien. “I want to vote,” he says.
The Voice
His voice is the first thing a listener notices. The Australian accent survives under fifty years of Los Angeles, broad vowels flattened but not erased, and the effect is a kind of placelessness that suits the material. He sounds like neither American radio nor the BBC, though the BBC formed him. The register sits low, the pace unhurried, the volume even. He almost never raises his voice. When he wants emphasis he slows down or lets a pause do the work.
The signature of his speaking manner is the question that is not a question. A Masters question runs sixty to ninety seconds, sometimes longer. It opens with history, moves through the relevant actors with names and dates attached, summarizes the competing interpretations, tips his own hand about which interpretation he favors, and then lands on a terse invitation: “your assessment,” “speak to that,” “your thoughts.” The guest receives less a question than a position paper to mark up. This inverts the grammar of broadcast interviewing. Most hosts ask short questions and get long answers. Masters gives long questions and often gets short confirmations, which he then builds on with the next long question. The interview becomes a collaborative essay with the guest as fact-checker.
His diction draws from three registers at once. The first is the vocabulary of the intelligence and diplomatic worlds: assets, tradecraft, blowback, kompromat, the interagency. He uses these terms without glossing them, which flatters the listener and filters the audience. The second is the literate vocabulary of a man raised in a writing family: he reaches for words like “feckless,” “venal,” “supine,” and “craven” as routine descriptors. The third is the epithet. Masters attaches sardonic labels to figures he holds in contempt and repeats them until they become fixtures. In the Trump years this tendency hardened into a house style of mockery, with stock phrases recurring week after week. The repetition costs him something. A listener can predict the adjective before he reaches the noun.
He scripts his openings, and it shows. Each segment begins with a compressed essay, read rather than improvised, written in full sentences with subordinate clauses that spoken English rarely sustains. He reads well, a skill the BBC drilled into him, and the scripted openings give the program a formality that distinguishes it from the conversational drift of most podcasts. The seams appear when he departs from the script. His improvised speech keeps the same syntax, long periodic sentences that he almost always brings home, though sometimes a clause too late.
His rhetoric works through accumulation. He persuades by piling up names, dates, precedents, and prior statements until the conclusion appears to assemble itself. He rarely argues from principle. He argues from the record, and his command of the record across forty years of national-security politics is the real foundation of his authority. A guest who contradicts him learns that Masters remembers what the guest’s institution said in 1987.
The weaknesses follow from the strengths. The leading question makes for substance but invites the charge that guests serve as ornaments for conclusions he reached before the interview began. He selects guests who share his broad orientation, so the confirmations come easier than they should. The contempt, however earned, runs in one direction, and the sarcasm can curdle into rote. His tone darkened after 2016 from mordant to alarmed, and alarm sustained at weekly intervals loses its power to alarm.
What holds it together is the absence of performance. He does not do voices, does not banter, does not perform surprise, does not pad. The manner says the material is the show. That severity, maintained for forty-five years in the entertainment capital of the world, is its own rhetorical statement, and it may be the most Australian thing about him: the flat refusal to be impressed.
The Set
The world around Ian Masters sits at the intersection of three smaller worlds: the Pacifica left, the Westside Los Angeles liberal intelligentsia, and the national-security commentariat that supplies his guests. Each has its own membership and manners, and Masters spent four decades as the broker among them. Picture the room. It might be a Hammer Museum forum in Westwood, a fundraiser in a Santa Monica living room, or a Zoom screen connecting a Santa Monica home studio to a retired colonel in Virginia. The people in that room share assumptions deep enough that no one needs to state them, and the portrait of those assumptions is the portrait of the set.
Start with the local lineage. The Westside liberal intelligentsia descends from the salon that Stanley Sheinbaum (1920-2016) ran out of his Brentwood home for decades, where economists, Israeli generals, ACLU lawyers, and movie producers argued over dinner. Robert Scheer (b. 1936), the former Ramparts editor who became a Los Angeles Times reporter and then an independent left publisher, belongs to this lineage. So did Tom Hayden (1939-2016), who carried sixties radicalism into the state legislature, and Mike Davis (1946-2022), who gave the city its dark social theory, and Harold Meyerson (b. 1950), who chronicled its labor politics. Norman Lear (1922-2023) and his People for the American Way represented the Hollywood money wing. Warren Olney (b. 1937) at KCRW and Larry Mantle at KPCC held down the respectable public-radio center of the same conversation, while Kevin Roderick tracked all of them at LA Observed. Masters operated on the left edge of this world but drew guests, donors, and listeners from all of it. The Pacific Council on International Policy and the Los Angeles World Affairs Council gave it institutional form; the UCLA Burkle Center gave it an academic address.
Then the Pacifica wing. KPFK supplied Masters his platform and his most committed listeners, and its culture shaped the set’s idea of virtue. Amy Goodman (b. 1957) in New York stands as the network’s national face. Lila Garrett (1925-2020), the sitcom writer turned KPFK host, typified the local type: entertainment-industry success converted in late life into left activism. Sonali Kolhatkar and Marc Cooper, in different eras and different directions, worked the same building. Masters always sat at an angle to this wing. He shared its anti-imperialism and its contempt for corporate media, but he trusted expertise and state experience in a way the movement left did not, and the station’s purges and governance wars treated him as warily as he treated them.
The third world is the guest list, which over time became a community of its own. Lawrence Wilkerson (b. 1945), Colin Powell’s former chief of staff, embodies the type Masters prizes most: the insider who broke with the institution and now testifies against it. Malcolm Nance (b. 1961) brought intelligence-world credentials to cable-era alarm. Joe Cirincione (b. 1949) covered the nuclear file, David Cay Johnston (b. 1948) the financial one, Juan Cole (b. 1952) the Middle East, Marcy Wheeler the documents, John Nichols (b. 1959) the electoral left, David Rothkopf the foreign-policy establishment in exile from itself, and the historians of authoritarianism, Timothy Snyder (b. 1969) and Ruth Ben-Ghiat, supplied the dark interpretive ceiling after 2016. These people appear on each other’s podcasts, blurb each other’s books, and cite each other’s threads. They form a guild of credentialed dissenters, and Masters runs one of the guild halls.
What do they value? Knowledge first, but a particular kind: command of the record. The set prizes the man who remembers what the Pentagon said in 1986 and can quote it against what the Pentagon says now. It values documents over impressions, history over hot takes, and the long interview over the soundbite. It values apostasy when the apostate moves in their direction; the converted insider outranks the lifelong activist because he brings stolen goods, knowledge from inside the machine. It values stamina and institutional independence. Doing the work for forty years without a corporate paycheck counts as a moral credential, not just a professional one. And it values seriousness as a temperament. Jokes are permitted; entertainment is suspect.
The hero system follows. The highest heroes are the truth-tellers who paid: Daniel Ellsberg (1931-2023) stands at the top of the pantheon, the insider who sacrificed career and risked prison to expose the war. Below him rank the honest analysts ignored in their time, the inspectors who said there were no weapons, the ambassadors who warned against the invasion, the case officers who objected to the torture. The murdered and silenced journalists hold a martyrology of their own. The everyday hero is humbler: the listener-supporter, the retired schoolteacher who pledges during the fund drive, cast as a citizen doing the unglamorous work of self-government. The villains complete the system, and the set needs them as much as the heroes. The war criminal who failed upward, the television general on a defense-contractor board, the access journalist who traded truth for proximity, the think tank scholar whose funding explains his conclusions. Henry Kissinger (1923-2023) served for fifty years as the fixed pole of villainy, the man whose unpunished prosperity proved the indictment of the whole system.
The status games are subtle because the set officially disdains status. Money confers little standing and can subtract it; the Hollywood donor buys a seat at the table but not a voice at it. Standing comes from four currencies. The first is credential plus defection: rank earned inside the establishment and then spent against it, which is why a retired colonel outranks a tenured professor and a former CIA officer outranks both. The second is prescience, the most jealously tracked currency of all. Members keep score on who opposed the Iraq War in 2002, who called the 2008 crash, who saw the authoritarian turn coming, and the phrase “as I said at the time” functions as a status move the way a stock tip functions at a different kind of party. The third is proximity to suppression: having been fired, blacklisted, sued, or surveilled certifies that one’s work threatened power, and members narrate their cancellations as veterans narrate campaigns. The fourth is endurance, the gray hair of the cause. Within the games run the usual hierarchies the set would deny: national exposure beats local, MSNBC and the Times confer reach that members court while disclaiming, and the guest who graduates to a bestseller and a cable contract draws both pride and the murmur that he has softened.
The normative claims. Citizens owe the republic informed attention, and ignorance is a civic failure, not a private choice. Journalism exists to check power, and a journalist who serves power has committed not bad work but betrayal. Expertise creates obligation: the man who knows must speak, and silence in the credentialed is complicity. War requires extraordinary justification and almost never receives it honestly. Secrecy is presumptively illegitimate; the burden falls on the classifier, not the leaker. Media should be judged by what it does to the citizen who consumes it, which makes corporate media a public-health problem and listener-supported media a civic good. And the past must be kept; amnesia is the establishment’s favorite weapon, so memory is resistance.
The essentialist claims. Power lies; that is its nature, not its lapse. Institutions protect themselves first, whatever their charters say. Empires behave as empires regardless of their self-description, and America is one. Money does not merely influence policy; ownership is control, and to find the truth of any institution you find who pays for it. The public is sound but drugged: ordinary citizens would choose justice if the information system permitted them to see, which locates evil in the filter rather than the audience. Authoritarianism is a recurring human type rather than a foreign aberration, recognizable by fixed marks the historians of fascism are qualified to read. And character is destiny in public life; the corrupt man produces corrupt policy, which is why the set’s analysis so often runs through biography.
The moral grammar, the unspoken rules of accusation and excuse, completes the picture. Intent matters less than service: the journalist who launders a false official claim has sinned even if he believed it, because the sin lies in serving power, not in lying. Errors in the direction of skepticism toward the state are venial; errors in the direction of credulity are mortal, which is why no one lost standing for overpredicting authoritarian collapse but Iraq War endorsements followed men to their obituaries. Hypocrisy is the master charge, and the gap between an institution’s stated mission and its conduct is the set’s native subject. Forgiveness exists but requires public confession; the rehabilitated hawk must narrate his conversion, and the narration itself becomes a credential. Guilt scales with knowledge, so the expert who misled ranks below the ignorant man who repeated him. And the gravest local offense, the one that ends membership rather than merely damaging it, is selling out: trading the audience’s trust for money or access. The set polices this border constantly, because everyone in it lives close enough to the entertainment and media economy to feel the pull, and the vigilance is the tell. A community guards hardest the sin its members are most tempted to commit.
Masters models the resolution. He married into the entertainment world, holds court a few miles from the studios, drew his fellows’ appointments from a research university, and spent his career within reach of the establishment he indicts. The set forgave all of it for one reason. He never changed the show.
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The scholarly literature on leaking rests on a civic premise. The leaker, in this account, weighs the public interest against institutional loyalty and personal risk, and when conscience outweighs career, he goes to the press. The premise survives because it flatters everyone in the transaction. The source becomes a man of principle. The journalist becomes the instrument of accountability. The news organization becomes the civic infrastructure both require. Practitioners know a humbler truth, and they confine it to memoirs, eulogies, and barroom instruction. Most leaks flow to reporters whom sources enjoy. The proposition sounds trivial. It explains more of the historical record than the civic premise does, and it deserves the analytic treatment it rarely receives.
Begin with what a leak costs the source. He risks his job, his clearance, his standing with colleagues, and in some jurisdictions his liberty. Against these costs the civic model offers conscience, and the strategic model offers factional advantage. Both payoffs are real and both are insufficient, because they fail to explain the observed pattern of distribution. Conscience and strategy might predict that leaks flow to the reporter with the largest audience or the sharpest pen. They flow instead to particular individuals, in quantities that beggar their institutional rank, and they keep flowing to those individuals across decades, beats, and administrations. The variable that explains the distribution lives in the texture of the conversation.
The word fun misleads if taken to mean wit. The quality decomposes into at least five components, and few of its great practitioners possess all of them.
The first component is risk discount. A source prices the gamble of disclosure in the moment of speech, and he prices it from tone. A relaxed, unhurried, amused interlocutor signals that nothing catastrophic happens in this room. A tense and transactional one signals danger even when he intends none. The inference has no logical force. A reporter’s charm tells the source nothing about how the reporter handles attribution under deadline pressure. Sources make the inference anyway, because human beings read discretion from demeanor, and the reporter who grasps this conducts himself like a man with nowhere else to be. Robert Novak (1931-2009) built a half-century franchise on the discount. His column drew blood weekly, yet Republican staffers fed him without pause because an hour with Novak felt like membership in something rather than exposure to something.
The second component is exchange. Political and bureaucratic elites trade gossip the way merchants trade grain, and a reporter who arrives with empty hands asks for charity. The reporter who knows things, and who spends the harmless fraction of what he knows, converts the interview into commerce. Tim Russert (1950-2008) ran this trade from Capitol Hill staff jobs into broadcasting. Mike Allen (b. 1964) industrialized it. His Playbook digest dispensed hundreds of small items each morning, every item a micro-leak, and every flattered subject of an item became a candidate supplier of the next one. The pleasure of the exchange model lies in the game. The source enjoys the trade as a card player enjoys the table, and the reporter who plays well gets invited back.
The third component is confession. High office isolates. The men who hold it speak all day through masks, to audiences they must manage, in language vetted for consequence. A reporter who listens without visible judgment offers the rarest commodity in their lives, which is an intelligent audience before whom the mask can drop. Bob Woodward (b. 1943) stands as the supreme demonstration, and he refutes the assumption that the trait requires charm. Few who know Woodward describe him as a sparkling companion. He offers something better. He treats the source’s account as material for history, he sits still for four hours, and he lets a man explain himself without interruption. For an official of a certain temperament, dictating one’s memoirs to posterity while still in office beats any amount of wit. Seymour Hersh (b. 1937) sells the opposite pleasure with the same result. A conversation with Hersh feels like induction into a conspiracy against the official version of events. Woodward’s source leaves feeling historical. Hersh’s source leaves feeling subversive. Both leave feeling that the hour was the most consequential of their week, and both call again.
The fourth component is the mirror. Powerful men attract supplicants and adversaries, and almost no one in their orbit attends to them without wanting something immediate. The skilled reporter supplies focused, informed, sustained attention, and he asks the questions the source’s vanity has waited years to hear. How did you pull that off. What did the president say then. The questions confirm the source’s centrality to the narrative, and the source returns to the reporter as a man returns to the one portraitist who paints him at his best. Ben Bradlee (1921-2014) worked the mirror from the editor’s chair. Officials sought his company because his attention conferred a kind of election, and the Georgetown of his era institutionalized the effect. James Reston (1909-1995) received policy at lunch. Joseph Alsop (1910-1989) ran a dinner table at which the price of the terrapin was candor, and half of Cold War Washington paid it. The salon has since died of polarization and the open-plan office, but its logic survives wherever a reporter makes a source feel chosen.
The fifth component is dialect. Elite worlds run on dense local knowledge, on who hates whom and who owes whom and which rivalry explains which decision, and a source finds it exhausting to tutor an outsider in the geography before reaching the point. The reporter who speaks the dialect lowers the cost of the conversation to zero. Maggie Haberman (b. 1973) commands the Trump-world dialect so completely that figures in that orbit appear to call her under compulsion, less to spin her than to consult the one scorekeeper they trust to know their current standing. Jonathan Swan (b. 1985) holds a similar franchise in congressional and executive maneuvering, and his sources describe a man who relishes the material for its own sake. The relish does the work. A source can tell within ninety seconds whether his world bores the man across the table, and boredom kills more sourcing relationships than betrayal does.
The Australian record confirms the pattern at a useful distance from American mythology. Paul Kelly (b. 1947) drew decades of high-level disclosure from ministers and mandarins who found that an hour with Kelly clarified their own thinking, the interview functioning for them as a tutorial they happened to teach. Laurie Oakes (b. 1943) took leaks from every faction of both major parties for forty years, and the breadth of his supply reveals the trait’s final and least discussed component. Each of Oakes’s leakers believed, with some justice, that Oakes understood him. The best practitioners sustain that belief in enemies at the same time. The conversational ease that opens one minister’s door opens his rival’s door the same afternoon, and the great leak magnets manage the polygamy without any spouse feeling betrayed.
The trait carries costs, and the costs define the limits of the model. A reporter whom everyone enjoys becomes dependent on remaining enjoyable, and the dependence bends coverage. The access journalist protects the relationship at the reader’s expense, sands the edges off what he knows, banks the best material for a book. Michael Wolff (b. 1953) displays a second failure mode. His conversations run so loose and so warm that sources later claim, sometimes with cause, that they never understood the terms of the exchange. The counter-tradition answers both corruptions. I. F. Stone (1907-1989) held that sources flatter and documents do not, and he produced a body of work of permanent value while receiving almost no leaks at all. Mike Wallace (1918-2012) extracted disclosure through confrontation, and the investigative tradition that runs through reporters like Australia’s Chris Masters (b. 1948) rests on evidence and stamina rather than on company anyone seeks. Journalism requires both kinds. The leak magnet rarely concedes how much of his magnetism the reader subsidizes.
The professional mythology of journalism describes a discipline of method, in which information surrenders to persistence and verification. The mythology is half true and the suppressed half is social. The leak is a relationship before it is a transaction, and the relationship begins where all relationships begin, in the discovery that the other person’s company rewards the time. Sources are men who spend their days in guarded speech among people who want things from them. The reporter who offers risk-discounted, well-informed, attentive, and pleasurable conversation has built a channel that no encryption protocol and no compliance regime can fully close, because the channel runs on appetite. Editors can teach method. They cannot teach a man to be the phone call a deputy secretary looks forward to returning. The ones who are collect the secrets, and the profession, which prefers to honor its detectives, owes a more candid accounting to its hosts.
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Paul John Kelly (b. 1947) is the dean of Australian political journalists. For more than five decades he has worked at the intersection of journalism, history, and public policy, and he has done something few reporters attempt. He has built an interpretive framework for understanding his country. Where most political correspondents chronicle the daily contest, Kelly constructed a narrative of national transformation, the story of Australia’s passage from a protected, regulated, British-oriented society into a globally integrated market economy. That narrative shaped how a generation of politicians, academics, and journalists understood their own country, and it remains the subject of dispute three decades after he published it.
Kelly was born in Sydney on October 11, 1947, and educated at the University of Sydney. His formation as a political analyst began inside government rather than outside it. From 1969 to 1971 he worked in the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, where he observed the machinery of executive power at close range: cabinet process, constitutional convention, the daily grind of bureaucratic administration. The experience marked him. Most journalists come to politics through the contest of personalities. Kelly came to it through institutions, and an interest in state capacity, policy formation, and administrative competence runs through everything he has written since. He holds a Doctor of Letters from the University of Melbourne and is a fellow of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia, distinctions that signal how far his work has traveled beyond daily journalism.
He joined The Australian in 1971 and rose fast in the Canberra Press Gallery. The timing proved decisive. As a young correspondent he covered the Whitlam government through its chaotic final years and witnessed the constitutional crisis that ended with Governor-General Sir John Kerr (1914-1991) dismissing Prime Minister Gough Whitlam (1916-2014) on November 11, 1975. The Dismissal became the defining event of Kelly’s professional life. He published The Unmaking of Gough within a year, at age twenty-eight, and reissued it as The Dismissal in 1982. He returned to the crisis in November 1975 (1995), and decades later, working with Troy Bramston, he produced The Dismissal: In the Queen’s Name (2015) and The Truth of the Palace Letters (2020), the latter drawing on the correspondence between Kerr and Buckingham Palace that the High Court forced into the open. Few careers display this arc so well: the reporter who covered an event in real time becomes, across fifty years, its leading historian.
Malcolm Fraser, as opposition leader, was too greedy and too unscrupulous to wait for the next election to gain office. Sir John Kerr, as governor-general, was too devious and too dishonest to confront prime minister Gough Whitlam with his plans for removing the government. Whitlam, who dealt with Kerr almost every day, was too arrogant and too insensitive to realise that Kerr had come to detest him. Sir Anthony Mason, as a judge of the High Court, abused that position by acting as Kerr’s principal adviser. And Sir Garfield Barwick, as chief justice, although used by Kerr and not vice versa, was more than happy to encourage him to dismiss an elected government.
The books reflect the historian’s view that there is almost always fresh material to be discovered about past events. The most interesting new piece of information revealed by Paul Kelly and Troy Bramston is a copy of a note that Fraser says he made when he was telephoned by Kerr just before 10am on November 11 – three hours before Kerr handed Whitlam a letter of dismissal – and so advance notice of what was to happen…
Kelly and Bramston demonstrate that less than two years after the government’s removal, everyone, including Fraser and the Queen’s advisers in London, wanted Kerr gone. He had become an embarrassment, a constant reminder of one of the most divisive events in Australian history. Kerr had wildly misjudged the consequences of his actions on November 11. He could have been a hero if he had confronted Whitlam in advance but, too clever by half, he rejected that option.
Kelly’s career moved through the senior ranks of Australian print journalism. He served as chief political correspondent for The National Times from 1976 to 1978 and as its deputy editor through 1979, then as chief political correspondent for The Sydney Morning Herald from 1981 to 1984. He returned to The Australian as national affairs editor in 1985, became editor-in-chief in 1991, and since 1996 has held the role of editor-at-large, a position built around his particular gifts. The title freed him from administration and let him write. From that perch he has remained one of the country’s most influential commentators on politics, economics, and foreign affairs, with access to political leaders that spans every prime minister from Whitlam to Anthony Albanese (b. 1963). No other Australian journalist has maintained comparable proximity to power across so many governments.
His reputation rests above all on his interpretation of the reform era of the 1980s and 1990s. Kelly cultivated close working relationships with the politicians, Treasury officials, and senior public servants who restructured the Australian economy under Bob Hawke (1929-2019) and Paul Keating (b. 1944). These relationships let him watch reform from inside the governing elite, and he became its most effective interpreter, translating debates over the floating of the dollar, tariff reduction, financial deregulation, and labor-market change into a coherent story of national renewal. He was a mediator between the policy class and the public, and he performed the role with a conviction that the reforms were necessary and overdue.
This work culminated in The End of Certainty (1992), the most influential book ever written by an Australian journalist. The book introduced the concept of the Australian Settlement, Kelly’s claim that Australian politics after Federation rested on five pillars: White Australia, tariff protection, compulsory industrial arbitration, state paternalism, and imperial benevolence under British protection. The Hawke and Keating governments, Kelly argued, dismantled this settlement and pushed Australia toward a competitive, internationally exposed future. The concept entered the political vocabulary almost at once. Politicians cited it, academics organized conferences around it, and journalists adopted it as shorthand for a century of national history.
The framework also drew sustained criticism. Historians including Marilyn Lake (b. 1949) and Stuart Macintyre (1947-2021) argued that Kelly flattened the complexity of early Australian history, treating as mere protectionism a set of institutions that contemporaries understood as ambitious experiments in democratic governance, wage justice, and social equality. Others noted that Kelly’s account, written from inside the reform elite, underestimated popular resistance to globalization and failed to anticipate the populist revolt that arrived with Pauline Hanson (b. 1954) in the late 1990s. The criticism itself measures the book’s stature. Academic historians rarely spend decades arguing with a journalist’s interpretive scheme. They have spent three decades arguing with Kelly’s.
His larger body of work amounts to a continuous contemporary history of Australian politics. The Hawke Ascendancy (1984) covered Labor’s return to power. The March of Patriots (2009) treated the Keating and Howard governments as a single era of reform under John Howard (b. 1939) and his predecessor, arguing that the two men, for all their enmity, built modern Australia together. Triumph and Demise (2014) chronicled the leadership wars of the Rudd-Gillard years, drawing on interviews with Kevin Rudd (b. 1957), Julia Gillard (b. 1961), and the players around them. Morrison’s Mission (2022) examined foreign policy under Scott Morrison (b. 1968), including the AUKUS agreement. The Twilight of Exceptionalism, published by Melbourne University Press in July 2026, completes the trilogy begun with The March of Patriots, tracking the Liberal Party’s decline through the leadership of Tony Abbott (b. 1957), Malcolm Turnbull (b. 1954), and Morrison, and diagnosing an intellectual and political crisis that has brought the party to its lowest point in eighty years. The trilogy’s titles tell their own story. The patriots march, then triumph turns to demise, then twilight falls.
Kelly’s method generates both admiration and unease. He writes what might be called immediate history, books built on decades-long relationships with the people he covers, on background interviews, and on access to cabinet-level conflict that no academic historian can match. Admirers point to the depth and accuracy of his reconstructions. Critics answer that proximity exacts a price, that a journalist embedded this deep in the governing class tends toward sympathy with reform agendas and official perspectives, and that his books read at times like the work of a court historian. The tension between access and independence has shadowed his entire career, and Kelly has never resolved it so much as worked within it.
His intellectual position resists easy labeling, though liberal-conservative comes closest. He has supported economic liberalization, fiscal discipline, engagement with Asia, and the American alliance. He has criticized both major parties when he judged them unserious, and his later books mourn the decline of the policy ambition that defined the Hawke, Keating, and Howard era. His standing within News Corporation deserves note. As The Australian grew more ideological through the twenty-first century, Kelly retained a reputation for gravity and policy substance that set him apart from the paper’s combative culture. He became, in effect, the institutional conscience of a publication that often had little use for one.
In the history of Australian journalism, Kelly occupies ground comparable to Walter Lippmann (1889-1974) in the United States or Hugo Young (1938-2003) in Britain: the reporter who became an interpreter of national life. His achievement is the grand narrative itself, the account of how modern Australia made and unmade its founding settlement. One can accept the narrative or contest it. One cannot write about contemporary Australia without engaging it, and that, more than any award or title, defines his place.
The Voice
Kelly speaks in verdicts. His baseline register is judicial. He does not offer takes, he hands down rulings, and the syntax follows: declarative sentences that open with the subject and land on a judgment. “This is a defining moment for the Albanese government.” “The Liberal Party faces an existential crisis.” He reaches for the language of magnitude as a matter of habit. Defining, pivotal, fatal, folly, crisis, test. Every week brings another hinge of history, and parodists have noticed. The standing joke about Kelly is that no event is ever minor, that each budget and each reshuffle becomes the most consequential since Federation.
His diction comes from statecraft rather than the street. He talks about the political class, the national interest, the reform project, strategic circumstances, the alliance. Abstractions of governance. You rarely catch him in slang, anecdote, or self-deprecation. Humor barely exists in his repertoire. The closest he comes to color is the occasional biblical or martial flourish, twilight, demise, triumph, the march of patriots. His book titles read like chapter headings from Gibbon, and that is the tradition he writes in, decline-and-fall history with himself as the chronicler.
On television the manner is slow and weighted. The voice sits low, the pace deliberate, each clause given time to settle. He leans forward, fixes the host, and speaks in complete paragraphs with a thesis, supporting points, and a conclusion. He treats a panel question as an invitation to deliver a short lecture. On Insiders and Q&A he played the sober elder among quicker, snarkier panelists, and the contrast worked for him. While others scored points, Kelly rendered judgment, and the gravity of the delivery made the judgment feel earned whether or not it was.
His written rhetoric works through periodization. He carves time into eras, the Settlement, the reform era, the age of disruption, the twilight, and then locates every present event inside the scheme. This gives his columns a built-in authority. A reader encounters not an opinion about this week but a dispatch from a fifty-year narrative the author owns. It also gives him his signature move, the historical comparison as argument. Albanese measured against Hawke, Morrison against Howard, the present always weighed against the reform giants and found wanting. The comparison does the persuasive work while wearing the costume of analysis.
He argues through balance, or its performance. The classic Kelly paragraph grants both sides something before the verdict arrives: Labor deserves credit for X, yet the deeper truth is Y. The concession buys credibility for the conclusion. Critics call this the false even-handedness of a man whose conclusions run in one direction, toward markets, the alliance, and institutional order, but the form itself disarms. He sounds like a judge even when he writes like an advocate.
Two more habits define him. He invokes his own sources as ambient authority, senior figures, people at the highest level, conversations he cannot quote but lets you feel, so the prose carries the smell of the cabinet room. And he speaks of Australia as a project with a fate, something that can succeed or fail, which gives even his economics columns a moral charge. The risk of the whole manner is pomposity, and he does not always escape it. The reward is that when Kelly says something matters, much of the political class still believes him.
The Set
Paul Kelly’s social set is the Australian policy establishment, a world that runs along a Canberra-Sydney axis and gathers in predictable rooms: the Lowy Institute on Bligh Street, the United States Studies Centre at Sydney University, the National Press Club, the Sydney Institute‘s evening lectures under Gerard Henderson (b. 1945), the Australian-American Leadership Dialogue, book launches at university publishers, and the better dinner parties of the eastern suburbs and inner Canberra. It is a small world. Perhaps three hundred people matter in it, and most of them have known each other for forty years.
The core membership divides into four overlapping circles. First, the press gallery aristocracy of Kelly’s generation and the one below it: Michelle Grattan (b. 1944), Laura Tingle (b. 1961), Peter Hartcher, George Megalogenis (b. 1964), Niki Savva, Dennis Shanahan, Greg Sheridan (b. 1956), Chris Uhlmann, and Troy Bramston, who functions as Kelly’s collaborator and heir. Second, the mandarinate, serving and retired: Treasury secretaries like Ken Henry (b. 1957) and Martin Parkinson (b. 1958), security chiefs like Dennis Richardson, diplomats like Frances Adamson and the late Allan Gyngell (1947-2023), whose foreign-policy salon Kelly belonged to. Third, the ex-political class that has crossed into elder statesmanship: Paul Keating, John Howard, Bob Carr (b. 1947), Kim Beazley (b. 1948), and Peter Costello (b. 1957), men Kelly covered as a reporter and now treats as fellow custodians of the national story. Fourth, the think-tank and strategic-studies world: Michael Fullilove (b. 1972) at Lowy, Hugh White (b. 1953) at ANU as Kelly’s standing sparring partner on China, Rory Medcalf at the National Security College, Tom Switzer (b. 1971) at the Centre for Independent Studies, with the ghost of Owen Harries (1930-2020) presiding over the realist wing. Above the whole structure, at a distance, sit the Murdochs, Rupert (b. 1931) and Lachlan (b. 1971), who own the platform but do not belong to the set in any social sense. Kelly’s first marriage, to the Labor minister Ros Kelly (b. 1948), wired him into the Labor side of this world early, and the wiring held.
What they value, before anything else, is seriousness. The set’s supreme compliment is that a man is serious, that he reads the cables, knows the history, grasps the budget arithmetic, and thinks past the news cycle. The opposite of serious is not wrong but trivial, and triviality covers most of what they despise: social media, the culture war as practiced on Sky after dark, ministers who govern by announcement, journalists who chase clicks. They value access and discretion as a paired virtue, the capacity to know things you do not print, because holding secrets responsibly proves you belong inside the state’s confidence. They value continuity. The set venerates institutional memory, the long apprenticeship, the man who covered Whitlam and can therefore judge Albanese. And they value the nation as the unit of moral concern. Class, faith, and tribe all rank below the national interest, a phrase the set uses without irony and treats as having discernible content.
Their hero system canonizes the reformer-statesman. The pantheon is fixed: Bob Hawke and Keating for the economic opening, Howard for guns and the GST and border resolve, with John Curtin and Robert Menzies further back as founders. The heroic act is the politician spending capital on an unpopular necessary thing, and the heroic life arc runs from ambition through power to legacy, with legacy adjudicated by exactly this set. Below the statesmen rank the great mandarins, the Henrys and Gyngells, heroes of competence. Below them, the chroniclers, and here Paul Kelly has built something rare: he made the historian’s chair itself a heroic position. To have your government’s story told in a Kelly volume is canonization or sentencing, and the politicians know it. The set’s immortality project is the shelf, the body of work, the named concept that outlives you. Kelly’s Australian Settlement is the model. Megalogenis tried with the Australian Moment, White with the China Choice. A man who coins the frame through which the country reads itself has cheated death in the only way this world recognizes.
The status games follow from the hero system. The first game is access poker. Status accrues to the man who had the prime minister return his call, who dined with the Treasury secretary, who can write that senior figures believe. The currency is never spent loudly, it is implied. A Kelly column that murmurs about conversations at the highest level performs a flush without showing the cards. The second game is the verdict competition. The set competes to deliver the judgment of history first, in real time, and to have events vindicate it. Being right early about a leadership collapse or a strategic shift confers standing for years. The third game is festival placement, who keynotes the Lowy Lecture, who gets the long Q&A slot, who launches whose book, whose book gets launched by a former prime minister. Fourth, and sharpest, the proximity-purity tension. Every member must balance closeness to power against the appearance of capture, and the set polices this in others while practicing it themselves. The accusation of court historian circulates as the standard insult precisely because everyone in the room is somewhere on that spectrum. Kelly’s standing rests on having pushed proximity further than anyone while sustaining the gravitas that holds the capture charge at bay.
Their normative claims form a coherent civic creed. Australia ought to be governed from the sane center by leaders willing to spend political capital on reform. The alliance with the United States ought to remain the strategic foundation, with engagement in Asia as the complement, not the alternative; White’s heresy on this point is tolerated because debating it confirms the question belongs to the set. Markets ought to allocate, with a decent safety net, and budgets ought to balance over the cycle. Institutions ought to be defended against populists of the right and progressives of the identity left alike. Journalism ought to inform self-government, not entertain or agitate. Public language ought to be measured. The deepest norm is that disagreement stays inside the family: White and Kelly can dispute China for twenty years, but neither questions the other’s seriousness, because the boundary of the set runs exactly there.
Their essentialist claims are mostly unspoken. They hold that a political class exists as a natural kind, that some men simply have judgment, an essence revealed by experience but not created by it. They hold that nations have characters and trajectories, that Australia is essentially a pragmatic, lucky, institution-respecting country whose lapses into populism are deviations from type rather than expressions of it. They hold that the public, while sovereign in theory, lacks the temperament for strategic patience, which is why a custodial class must mediate. They hold that history has a discernible direction that wise statecraft aligns with and folly resists. And they hold that seriousness itself is an essence, you are or you are not, which converts a social boundary into a fact of nature and spares the set from defending it.
The moral grammar binds it together. Sins in this world are stewardship failures: squandering, drift, capitulation, short-termism, the wasted mandate. Virtues are custodial: discipline, candor in private, restraint in public, the long view. Praise takes the form of historical placement, the best treasurer since Keating, while damnation takes the form of historical erasure, a government that will leave no legacy. Moral standing is earned through service to the national project and lost through frivolity faster than through error; a serious man who got Iraq wrong remains in the set, while a clever man who tweets does not. Forgiveness exists and runs through the memoir and the late-career interview, where old enemies grant each other gravitas, Keating and Howard each blessing the other’s seriousness in Kelly’s pages. Judgment day is the verdict of history, and the set’s quiet, never-stated foundation is that they are its bench. Kelly sits where he sits because he grasped that before anyone, and spent fifty years becoming the judge whose court the others argue in.
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Phillip Knightley (1929-2016) occupies a singular position in the history of twentieth-century journalism. He won renown as an investigative reporter on the Sunday Times Insight team, but his lasting contribution lies elsewhere. He turned the tools of investigative reporting on journalism. His books on war correspondence, espionage, and media fraud established a field of inquiry that scarcely existed before him: the study of how institutions manufacture public belief and how reporters participate in that manufacture, often without knowing it. Few journalists of his era matched his record as a reporter. None matched his record as a critic of reporting.
Origins
Knightley was born in Sydney on January 23, 1929, and grew up through the Depression and the Second World War. His father painted signs for a living. The family had no connection to journalism, publishing, or the professions. Knightley left school without a university degree and entered newspapers from the bottom, starting as a copy boy on the Sydney Daily Telegraph. He worked at the Melbourne Herald from 1950 to 1951 and the Sydney Daily Mirror from 1952 to 1954, learning the trade in Australia’s rough, competitive popular press: deadline pressure, source cultivation, the discipline of the documentary record.
This formation shaped everything that followed. The dominant British journalists of his generation came up through Oxford and Cambridge and arrived in Fleet Street with establishment connections and establishment assumptions. Knightley arrived with neither. He carried the Australian newsroom’s instincts into elite British journalism: suspicion of authority, indifference to social deference, a conviction that institutions lie as a matter of routine and that the reporter’s job is to catch them at it. He remained an outsider in temperament long after he became an insider in standing.
His early career wandered. He went to London in 1954 as a correspondent for Australian papers, returned home, edited the Fiji Times for a period, and in the early 1960s edited a magazine called Imprint in Bombay. He learned years later that American intelligence had funded the magazine through front organizations, a discovery that amused him and confirmed his developing view that the hidden hand operates everywhere, including on the payrolls of the unwitting. A lottery win gave him the money to return to London for good in 1963. He arrived at the height of Fleet Street’s power, when a Sunday newspaper investigation could move governments.
The Sunday Times and the Insight Years
Knightley joined The Sunday Times in 1965 and spent two decades there. Under the editorship of Harold Evans (1928-2020), the paper’s Insight team became the most formidable investigative unit in British journalism, perhaps in the world. Insight pioneered a method: long-term investigation, exhaustive documentary research, team reporting, and an adversarial posture toward powerful institutions of every kind. Knightley became a leading figure in the unit and one of the chief practitioners of its method.
His first major subject was espionage. In 1967 the Insight team investigated Kim Philby (1912-1988), the senior British intelligence officer who had spied for the Soviet Union for three decades. The investigation, published over government objections, produced the 1968 book The Philby Conspiracy, which Knightley wrote with Bruce Page and David Leitch. The Philby story planted a question that occupied Knightley for the rest of his life: how did Britain’s most trusted institutions fail to see a traitor who sat among them for thirty years? His answer pointed at class. Philby’s colleagues could not imagine betrayal from a man of his background, his school, his clubs. The blindness was social before it was operational.
The defining investigation of his reporting career was thalidomide. Through the late 1960s and 1970s, Knightley and his Insight colleagues investigated how Distillers Company had marketed the drug thalidomide to pregnant women in Britain despite mounting evidence that it caused catastrophic birth defects. Knightley did the documentary core of the work. He obtained, organized, and worked through an enormous internal record, including hundreds of company documents that required translation from German, and built the evidentiary case that the company had been negligent. The campaign ran for years against active legal resistance. British contempt-of-court law barred publication of material bearing on pending litigation, and the government and courts repeatedly restrained the paper. The Sunday Times fought the injunctions to the European Court of Human Rights and won in 1979, a ruling that reshaped British press law. The campaign forced Distillers into compensation payments far beyond its original offers. The book that emerged, Suffer the Children, stands as a landmark of corporate-accountability journalism.
The thalidomide work displayed the qualities that marked all of Knightley’s reporting: patience over years rather than weeks, an appetite for primary documents that most reporters lack, and a refusal to accept official accounts from corporations, regulators, or courts. He followed it with an investigation of the Vestey family, one of Britain’s richest dynasties, exposing the offshore structures through which the family’s meat empire had escaped British taxation for generations. The Vestey work helped earn him the British Press Awards Journalist of the Year honor in 1980.
In 1983 he played a central role in one of journalism’s great fiascos, this time as the internal skeptic. Stern magazine in Germany announced the discovery of diaries written by Adolf Hitler (1889-1945), and Rupert Murdoch (b. 1931) moved to publish them in his papers, including the Sunday Times. Knightley had been through this before. In 1968 the paper had nearly bought forged Mussolini diaries, and from that episode he had developed a checklist for authenticating documents of sensational provenance. The Hitler diaries failed his checklist on nearly every point. He circulated his doubts inside the paper before publication. The historian Hugh Trevor-Roper (1914-2003) authenticated the diaries, then wavered; Murdoch published anyway; forensic examination exposed the diaries as crude fakes within weeks. Knightley drew from the episode a lesson he repeated for the rest of his career: journalists are most vulnerable to fraud when the story is one they want to be true, and commercial pressure converts that want into print.
He won Journalist of the Year a second time in 1988, becoming one of only two journalists ever to receive the award twice.
The First Casualty
Knightley’s reputation as a reporter would have secured him a place in journalism history. His books secured him a larger one. The central work is The First Casualty, published in 1975 and revised repeatedly through the following decades, a history of war correspondence from the Crimean War forward. The title takes its cue from the saying that truth is the first casualty of war, and the book documents the proposition across a century and a quarter of conflicts.
The argument runs deeper than the observation that governments lie in wartime. Knightley showed that the structure of war reporting produces distortion without requiring anyone to lie. The correspondent depends on the military for access to the front, for transport, for communications, for protection, and often for survival. Dependence breeds identification. The reporter who lives with soldiers, shares their dangers, and relies on their officers comes to see the war through their eyes. Censorship operates at the margins; the deeper control lies in what the correspondent can see, where he can go, and whom he comes to love. The result is a systematic narrowing of the reportable world. Readers at home receive an account of war shaped by the institutions waging it, delivered by reporters who believe themselves independent.
The book demolished the romantic figure of the war correspondent as fearless truth-teller and replaced it with something more troubling: the correspondent as a participant in propaganda, sometimes willing, more often structural. It became the standard history of war reporting and remains so fifty years later. Knightley treated it as a living argument rather than a closed history. He applied its framework to the Falklands, where the British government controlled access to the fleet and therefore controlled the story; to the Gulf War, with its pool system and briefing-room theater; to Kosovo, Afghanistan, and Iraq. He judged the embedding system of the 2003 Iraq invasion a refinement of old methods rather than a departure from them. The embedded reporter, he argued, reproduced the dependence of the First World War correspondent with better technology. He thought war reporting had circled back to 1916.
Espionage and the Construction of Belief
The same question that drove The First Casualty, how institutions shape what publics believe, drove his work on intelligence. The Second Oldest Profession, published in 1986, surveyed the history of modern espionage and arrived at a deflationary verdict. The intelligence agencies of the great powers were bureaucracies before they were anything else: rivalrous, self-protective, prone to exaggerating threats because threat justified budgets, and wrong about the major questions with remarkable consistency. The mystique of the all-seeing secret service, Knightley argued, was itself a product, manufactured by the agencies and retailed by novelists, filmmakers, and credulous journalists. The book did for espionage what The First Casualty did for war reporting.
In 1987 he co-wrote An Affair of State, a re-examination of the Profumo scandal that treated Stephen Ward as a man destroyed by an establishment protecting itself.
His Philby interest reached its culmination in 1988. After years of correspondence, Philby invited Knightley to Moscow, and Knightley conducted extended interviews with him in the months before his death, the only Western journalist to obtain such access. The resulting biography, The Master Spy, refused both available caricatures. Philby was neither monster nor romantic antihero. He was a product of the British establishment’s assumptions about its own members, a man whose treachery succeeded because his class rendered him invisible to suspicion. The book remains among the most respected studies of Cold War espionage, and the Moscow interviews stand as a reporting coup few journalists have equaled.
Later Years
Knightley published his autobiography, A Hack’s Progress, in 1997. The memoir doubled as an elegy for the investigative culture he had helped build. He argued that corporate ownership, legal caution, the growth of public relations, and commercial pressure had made the kind of journalism Insight practiced harder to sustain. The thalidomide investigation had consumed years and enormous money before producing a publishable word; few modern proprietors would fund such work. He wrote Australia: A Biography of a Nation in 2000, turning his method on his homeland, and held dual Australian and British citizenship with an attachment to both countries and a full allegiance to neither.
He remained active as a commentator and teacher into his eighties, serving as a visiting professor of journalism, lecturing widely, and pressing his critique of war coverage through the War on Terror years. He donated a substantial portion of his archive to what became the London College of Communication. He died in London on December 7, 2016, at eighty-seven.
Method and Legacy
The consistency of Knightley’s method distinguishes him from his contemporaries. He distrusted governments, militaries, intelligence agencies, corporations, and journalists in roughly equal measure, and his distrust rested on evidence rather than ideology. He held no detectable politics beyond the conviction that concentrated power seeks to shape public understanding and usually succeeds. He brought the same documentary discipline to a drug company, a forged diary, a Soviet spy, and his own profession.
His deepest subject was belief: how societies come to accept accounts of reality that serve the institutions producing them. The thalidomide investigation examined a corporation’s account of its own conduct. The Hitler diaries episode examined a press willing to believe what profit required. The First Casualty examined a century of publics persuaded that they understood wars they had been shown through a keyhole. The Second Oldest Profession examined agencies whose chief product was their own reputation. The subjects vary; the question does not.
Knightley’s legacy runs through two channels. As a reporter, he helped establish the standards of the long-form documentary investigation, and the thalidomide campaign remains a model taught wherever investigative journalism is taught. As a historian and critic, he created the framework through which scholars and serious journalists now understand war reporting, and his analysis of access, dependence, and identification has proved more durable than the conflicts that prompted it. Every subsequent debate about embedding, pool systems, and wartime censorship proceeds on ground he mapped. He spent his career demonstrating that the question is never only what the news says. The question is who arranged for it to be said, what the arrangement cost, and what the reader was never positioned to see.
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Australia holds about 27 million people, fewer than Texas, and yet its journalists keep turning up at the commanding heights of the English-speaking press. John Pilger (1939-2023) shaped documentary journalism for half a century. Phillip Knightley (1929-2016) wrote The First Casualty, still the standard history of war reporting. David Marr (b. 1947) moves between biography, legal analysis, and investigation with a range no American journalist attempts. Paul Kelly (b. 1947) wrote the defining accounts of modern Australian politics. Chris Masters (b. 1948) and Nick McKenzie produced investigative work that brought down police commissioners, premiers, and the nation’s most decorated soldier. The pattern runs too deep to count as coincidence. It reflects a set of conditions, some inherited, some accidental, some legal, that turn a small country into a productive school for reporters.
The first condition is cultural. Australia inherited the British newspaper tradition, with its emphasis on hard reporting, skepticism toward officialdom, and strong plain prose. But that tradition landed on different soil. A society founded as a penal colony, settled by people the British state had discarded, never developed the reflexive deference that marked Fleet Street at its most courtly. The egalitarian strain in Australian life, the instinct to cut down the tall poppy, gave journalists cultural permission to treat prime ministers, judges, and billionaires as men who put on their trousers one leg at a time. This is more than a matter of tone. It produces a distinct epistemic stance: the claims of authority start from a presumption of doubt. The British reporter of the old school asked whether the minister might grant an interview. The Australian reporter asked what the minister was hiding. When journalists formed in that stance moved to London or New York, they carried an irreverence that institutions built on access journalism found hard to absorb and harder to ignore.
The second condition is industrial. For most of the twentieth century, Sydney and Melbourne sustained fierce newspaper competition. Reporters could spend whole careers on crime, courts, unions, and state politics, and the contest between mastheads rewarded those who got the story first and got it right. Out of this market came Rupert Murdoch (b. 1931), who built his empire from a single Adelaide afternoon paper and exported a combative, populist style that later reshaped British and American media. His father Keith Murdoch (1885-1952) had already shown the type: the Gallipoli letter of 1915, which helped end a military campaign, remains a founding legend of Australian journalism. The Murdoch ascendancy cut both ways. It created a ruthless corporate culture that taught reporters to fight, and it provoked a counter-reaction. Public broadcasters and the Fairfax papers sharpened their investigative methods because the alternative was irrelevance. Australian journalists learned their trade inside a domestic media war, and the survivors emerged with instincts that transferred.
The third condition is institutional, and it has a name: the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. The ABC functioned for decades as a parallel power structure in Australian journalism, with a statutory charter, stable funding, and a culture that rewarded long-form work over circulation. Four Corners, which began in 1961, gave investigative reporters a protected platform and the legal resources to withstand the threats their work attracted. Masters made his name there with “The Moonlight State” in 1987, the broadcast that triggered the Fitzgerald Inquiry and brought down the government of Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen in Queensland. The ABC mattered as a second pipeline. A talented reporter who could not thrive inside the Murdoch and Fairfax duopoly had somewhere else to go, and the existence of that alternative disciplined the whole market.
The fourth condition is legal, and it is the least appreciated. Australia maintains some of the most restrictive defamation laws in the democratic world. The American public-figure plaintiff must prove actual malice; the Australian publisher must prove truth. Every investigative story carries the risk of a suit that can run for years and cost millions. This regime functions as a brutal training ground. The reporter who wants to publish must hold airtight evidence, contemporaneous notes, documents, and witnesses willing to stand up in court. McKenzie’s reporting on Ben Roberts-Smith (b. 1978) survived the longest defamation trial in Australian history because the journalism had been built to survive it. The discipline this imposes travels well. The Australian reporter who moves to a jurisdiction with stronger speech protections finds the legal weather mild and keeps the habits of verification the harsher climate taught him. Sloppy reporters do not last in Australia. The law removes them.
The fifth condition is structural. Australia concentrates its power in a small number of knowable institutions: Canberra, six state capitals, a handful of corporations, the unions, the police forces, and two or three media companies. The number of people who run the country is small enough that a determined reporter can, over a career, come to know most of them. He can map the whole game. He can trace the relationships between a property developer, a police minister, and a union official, because the network has perhaps a few thousand nodes rather than a few million. Compare the United States, where power disperses across fifty states, the federal apparatus, and thousands of institutions, and where no reporter can hold the full structure in his head. The Australian investigative tradition, from the Fitzgerald Inquiry through the church abuse investigations to the Brereton war crimes findings, rests on this knowability. Masters and McKenzie could identify the key actors and follow them for decades. Their American counterparts work one corridor of a vast building.
The sixth condition is the shape of the career. The Australian market is too small to support the extreme specialization of American journalism, so it rewards generalists. Marr has written the standard biography of Patrick White, the definitive account of the Tampa affair, investigations of the churches, and years of legal and political commentary. George Megalogenis (b. 1964) moved from the press gallery to demographic and economic history. The best Australian journalists convert daily reporting into books that get read in London and New York, and the books extend their influence far beyond the news cycle. Journalism in Australia long served as a main road into elite status for the verbally gifted, the men who in another country might have become senators or professors. The result is a national press that functions, at its top end, as a corps of public intellectuals.
The seventh condition is geographic. Australia sits between worlds: tied to Britain by inheritance, to America by alliance, to Asia by economics and proximity. Its news organizations maintained foreign bureaus across Asia and the Pacific, and they sent reporters out young, with little supervision and high autonomy. The middle-power passport helped. An Australian correspondent in Jakarta or Beijing drew less geopolitical suspicion than an American one, and got access the superpower’s reporters were denied. Murray Sayle (1926-2010) covered Vietnam, climbed on Everest, and wrote the most penetrating account of Hiroshima’s bombing for The New Yorker. The middle-power position also confers a cognitive advantage. The Australian journalist cannot assume his country sits at the center of events. He must think in comparative terms, measuring Australia against larger powers, weighing the American alliance against the realities of living near China and Indonesia. This produces a strain of realism about power that journalists inside the imperial core often lack.
The system has pathologies, and they grow from the same roots as the strengths. Concentration of ownership produces clear editorial lines and narrows the range of acceptable opinion. The Canberra press gallery, a few hundred people who live in one small city, socialize together, and compete for the same sources, forms a closed epistemic community with strong pressures toward consensus. The most distinguished Australian journalism has tended to come from those who worked outside the gallery or against it. As the commercial press contracts, the pipeline that trained the current generation weakens, and no one knows whether the ABC and a few independent outlets can carry the load alone.
Still, the record stands. A small country with knowable power structures, punishing defamation laws, a protected public broadcaster, a combative commercial culture, and a habit of sending its young reporters into Asia has produced, generation after generation, journalists who interpret power rather than transcribe it. The conditions made the journalists. The journalists, at their best, repaid the debt by showing their countrymen, and then the world, how power works.
The Pathology
The pathology works through a few channels. Advertising dependence comes first. Australian newspapers built their economics on real estate and retail advertising, and the two biggest media companies now own the property portals: News Corp holds a majority of REA Group, which runs realestate.com.au, and Nine owns Domain. A press that profits from rising house prices covered the housing market as a wealth celebration for thirty years while a generation got priced out. The affordability catastrophe, the tax settings that drove it, negative gearing, the capital gains discount, all got treated as third rails rather than scandals. When Labor took negative gearing reform to the 2019 election, the News Corp tabloids campaigned against it as an assault on ordinary savers. The biggest economic story in Australian life ran for decades with the press as a beneficiary rather than a watchdog.
Cross-ownership creates the second channel. Networks will not investigate the sports codes whose broadcast rights they hold. The AFL and NRL enjoyed soft coverage of concussion, gambling sponsorship, and salary cap rorts for years because Seven, Nine, and Foxtel have billions tied up in the product. The same logic protected the casinos. Crown’s reliance on junket operators tied to organized crime sat in plain sight through the 2010s. The story finally broke in 2019, and it took Nick McKenzie at an outlet whose proprietor had no casino stake. Kerry Packer (1937-2005) and then James Packer (b. 1967) enjoyed a generation of coverage softened by fear, advertising, and social proximity.
The third channel is the one the essay touched: the gallery and the elite social world. The knowability that makes Australian power easy to map also makes it easy to capture. The people who run the country and the people who cover them eat at the same restaurants, and a few hundred Canberra press gallery journalists compete for access to the same few dozen sources. Add defamation law, which the rich use as a suppression tool as much as a remedy, and you get long silences around men everyone in Sydney knew to talk about only at dinner parties.
So which stories got missed? I’d rank them this way.
The banks come first. The misconduct exposed by the 2018 Royal Commission into Misconduct in the Banking, Superannuation and Financial Services Industry, dead people charged fees, financial advice that stripped retirees, forged documents, ran for years while the financial press wrote earnings coverage. Adele Ferguson‘s CommBank and AMP investigations forced the commission into existence over the resistance of both the government and most of the press. One reporter carried a story that the entire business media should have owned a decade earlier.
Robodebt comes second. An unlawful scheme issued automated debt notices to hundreds of thousands of welfare recipients, drove some to suicide, and ran from 2016 to 2019 while the gallery treated it as an administrative dispute. The story bubbled up from victims on social media and from independent outlets before the Royal Commission confirmed the worst. The gallery missed it because welfare recipients are not sources, donors, or dinner companions.
The East Timor bugging affair comes third. In 2004 Australian intelligence bugged the cabinet room of the poorest country in the region to gain advantage in oil and gas negotiations that benefited Woodside Energy. The whistleblower, Witness K, and his lawyer Bernard Collaery faced secret prosecutions for exposing it. The story implicated a former foreign minister, Alexander Downer, who later took a Woodside consultancy. Coverage stayed thin for years. A scandal of this shape in Washington might have consumed a presidency.
The Afghanistan war crimes story belongs on the list as a near miss. Rumors about the Special Air Service Regiment circulated in defense circles for most of a decade before McKenzie, Chris Masters, and the Brereton Report brought it out. The delay had causes beyond media concentration, source fear and defamation risk above all, but a press less invested in Anzac mythology might have moved faster. The treatment of David McBride, prosecuted for leaking the documents that started it, extends the pattern.
Then there is the story the Australian press cannot tell: its own power. No Australian outlet has covered News Corp the way The Guardian covered phone hacking. The climate wars, the toppling of prime ministers, the company’s tax arrangements, the internal culture, all of it gets covered from outside Australia or not at all. Kevin Rudd (b. 1957) gathered half a million signatures for a royal commission into media diversity and the proposal died without serious examination by the institutions it named. The norm that papers do not report on each other holds tighter in a two-company market than anywhere else in the democratic world.
I’d add the Indigenous gap as the longest-running failure. The 1991 Royal Commission into Aboriginal Deaths in Custody issued recommendations that went unimplemented while hundreds more died, and the press treated each death as an item rather than a system. The pattern only began to break when Guardian Australia, an outsider entrant, built its Deaths Inside database in 2018.
The common thread runs through all of these. The Australian press is superb at stories where the target sits outside the circuit of advertising, ownership, and social proximity: a Queensland police commissioner, a disgraced soldier, a Chinese influence network. It is slow where the target funds the press, owns the press, or dines with it. The strengths and the pathologies are the same trait viewed from different angles. A small, dense elite is easy to map and easy to join.
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An Orthodox Jewish high school’s former director of academic support will avoid jail after pleading no contest Thursday to sexual abuse charges involving a student in her charge at the school’s boys’ division.
Julie Tichon, 38, was working at YULA Boys High School in May 2024 when two students reported having separate sexual relationships with her. The LA-based school fired Tichon and referred the matter to the police department. Tichon was charged four months later in connection with one of the students, who was 16 at the time of their alleged encounters.
Tichon will face two years of probation and will be registered as a sex offender for a minimum of 10 years.
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Paul Craig Roberts (b. 1939) built a career that ran from academic economics through the Reagan Treasury to the outer edges of American dissident commentary. He stands among the principal architects of supply-side economics and served as Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Economic Policy under President Ronald Reagan (1911-2004). During the 1980s he ranked among the leading conservative economic thinkers in the country. He then spent decades moving away from the institutions that made him, attacking globalization, interventionist foreign policy, and the political establishment, until his writings on intelligence agencies, terrorism, and Jewish influence pushed him beyond the boundaries of respectable opinion. Few public intellectuals have traveled so far from the center of elite policymaking to its margins.
Roberts was born in Atlanta, Georgia. He studied industrial management at the Georgia Institute of Technology before pursuing graduate work in economics at the University of California, Berkeley, and the University of Virginia. His early scholarship focused on comparative economic systems, above all the Soviet Union. His first major book, Alienation and the Soviet Economy (1971), challenged the common Western assumption that the Soviet Union ran a rationally planned economy. Roberts argued instead that Soviet economic life consisted of bureaucratic survival strategies, distorted incentives, and administrative dysfunction. The book set out themes that ran through the rest of his work: skepticism toward bureaucratic management and faith in market incentives.
His entry into national politics came through Congress. Working with Congressman Jack Kemp (1935-2009) and later Senator Orrin Hatch (1934-2022), Roberts became a leading intellectual advocate of supply-side economics. He drafted the original Kemp-Roth tax proposal, which sought deep cuts in marginal income tax rates. Roberts argued that growth depended less on stimulating demand than on encouraging production, investment, entrepreneurship, and work. The proposal became a foundational policy idea of the emerging conservative movement and helped reshape Republican economic thinking.
When Reagan entered the White House in 1981, Roberts became Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Economic Policy. At forty-one he stood among the administration’s top five economic advisers, at the center of the effort to implement what came to be called Reaganomics.
The administration was far from unified. Roberts fought fierce internal battles with other economic policymakers. He argued that lower marginal rates would generate substantial increases in investment and taxable income, offsetting much of the revenue loss from tax cuts. He believed supply-side reform would succeed if growth emerged from improved incentives. This position put him in conflict with Office of Management and Budget Director David Stockman (b. 1946) and Treasury Undersecretary Beryl Sprinkel (1923-2009). Roberts also attacked Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker (1927-2019) over his anti-inflation campaign, arguing that Volcker’s high interest rates deepened the 1981-1982 recession, delayed the recovery, and inflated federal deficits by suppressing growth. Roberts described these conflicts in The Supply-Side Revolution: An Insider’s Account of Policymaking in Washington (1984), presenting them as evidence that political coalitions and bureaucratic rivalries often matter more than economic theory in shaping policy.
After leaving the Treasury in 1982, Roberts entered a period of considerable prestige. He held associations with the Hoover Institution, the Cato Institute, and the Center for Strategic and International Studies. As an associate editor and columnist at The Wall Street Journal, he established himself as a prominent conservative economic commentator. His journalism appeared in BusinessWeek, Harper’s, and The Washington Times. France named him a Chevalier of the Legion of Honor in 1989. He received the Warren Brookes Award for Excellence in Journalism in 1993.
The end of the Cold War marked the turning point. Many conservatives celebrated America’s emergence as the sole superpower. Roberts concluded instead that the Soviet collapse had eliminated the principal justification for a vast military and intelligence apparatus. He grew alarmed at the rise of neoconservatism within the Republican Party and the broader movement. He believed post-Cold War conservatives had abandoned their commitments to limited government, constitutional restraint, and foreign policy realism. He read the first Gulf War, NATO expansion, the Wolfowitz Doctrine, and eventually the War on Terror as evidence that the American right had embraced a vision of global hegemony. Military intervention abroad, in his view, strengthened the national security state at home and threatened civil liberties.
Around the same time, Roberts broke with the conservative establishment on globalization. During the 1990s and early 2000s he emerged as a rare prominent economist from the free-market right to criticize NAFTA and the World Trade Organization. His argument differed from the traditional labor-union critique. Roberts maintained that classical free-trade theory, rooted in David Ricardo‘s (1772-1823) doctrine of comparative advantage, assumed that capital stayed within national economies. In an era of instantaneous communication and global capital mobility, corporations could relocate production to lower-wage countries while selling into American markets. Globalization, he argued, transferred manufacturing capacity, technical knowledge, and middle-class employment overseas. This undermined the tax base, weakened economic sovereignty, and rendered many supply-side policies less effective because capital flowed abroad rather than into domestic investment. He developed these arguments in The Failure of Laissez Faire Capitalism and Economic Dissolution of the West (2013).
Through the 2000s and 2010s, Roberts evolved from conservative critic into broader dissident. Through books, syndicated columns, and his Institute for Political Economy website, he argued that the United States was in institutional decline, driven by financialization, perpetual warfare, media conformity, and the expansion of executive and intelligence power. He grew harsh on American policy toward Russia, the Middle East, and China.
His later writing moved well past heterodox economics into conspiracy theories. He repeatedly suggested that the official account of the September 11 attacks was false. In September 2020, he said: “Cheney, the neoconservatives, and Israel orchestrated the attacks on the WTC and Pentagon…9/11 was a Deep State operation.”
His writing on Ukraine followed the same pattern. Roberts argued that the 2014 change of government in Kiev was a U.S.-orchestrated coup and that subsequent events flowed from Washington’s effort to weaken Russia. Many scholars acknowledge substantial Western support for anti-Yanukovych forces. Roberts presented a more sweeping picture, with American intelligence agencies as the primary drivers of the crisis. A recurring theme in his columns holds that American foreign policy elites push toward war with Russia and China, and he sometimes wrote as though Western leaders consciously pursued a path toward nuclear conflict. Many foreign policy critics share his concern about escalation. Roberts stands apart in portraying these developments as deliberate projects rather than strategic mistakes or bureaucratic failures. He argued that mainstream journalism no longer functions as journalism and instead operates as a centralized propaganda apparatus directed by political and intelligence interests. He suggested that important political outcomes are predetermined by elite interests and that democratic institutions are largely theatrical. During the pandemic he questioned official public health narratives, vaccine policies, and mortality statistics, suggesting that governments used the crisis to expand political control, positions that put him at odds with the consensus of epidemiologists and public health institutions.
A controversial dimension of his later career concerns his writings about Jews and Israel. Three strands require separation. First, Roberts has been a harsh critic of Israeli government policy on Palestinians, settlements, military operations, and American support for Israel. He argues that Washington often acts against its own interests to benefit the Israeli state. These arguments, by themselves, fall within the normal range of political criticism, however contested. Second, Roberts goes further, arguing that pro-Israel lobbying networks exercise disproportionate influence over American politics, media, academia, and foreign policy. Many scholars acknowledge that organizations such as the American Israel Public Affairs Committee carry lobbying weight. Roberts presents a broader picture, with pro-Israel interests among the dominant forces shaping American public life. Critics say he overstates this influence and reduces complex political outcomes to a single cause. Historians and political scientists typically trace Middle East policy to a combination of strategic interests, domestic politics, defense contractors, energy concerns, bureaucratic interests, evangelical Christian support for Israel, public opinion, congressional incentives, and pro-Israel lobbying. Roberts places overwhelming weight on the last factor.
The third strand is outside the Overton Window. When Roberts writes about neoconservatives, media ownership, financial power, or foreign policy elites, his work increasingly features themes associated with classic antisemitic narratives: suggestions that Jewish networks wield hidden power behind governments, portrayals of major media institutions as serving Israeli interests, descriptions of American foreign policy as controlled by Israel or its supporters, and claims that criticism of Israel is suppressed through coordinated influence.
On June 10, 2026, Roberts writes: “Only Israel has an agenda and therefore, the initiative remains with Israel as it has for the past 75 years, during which time Israel has absorbed Palestine into Israel and has used America to destroy Libya, Iraq, and Syria.”
The same day, Roberts writes: “After five years of pretending to fight Ukraine at the expense of many casualties, Putin’s only result is to convince the world that Russia is a paper tiger. Some are even beginning to wonder if Putin is a Zelensky agent.”
The same day, Roberts writes: “The murder of Henry Nowak by a black immigrant-invader discloses Britain’s two-tiered justice system: a harsh one for white people and an easy “understanding” one for black people.”
The suppression of white people by white governments is not limited to official indifference to their rape and murder. It applies across the board. For example, the British are no longer permitted to have historical figures on their currency, and Americans are being dispossessed of their language by diversity…
White American families have disappeared from corporate ads. Black men are with white women, white men are with Asian or Hispanic women. The children are what once were called half breeds. Today the term is regarded a a racial slur, which implies that there is something wrong with being a half breed. If so, why is an euphemism for the term any less of a slur?
There is plenty of room for diversity in the world, but not within a country. Diversity within a country destroys the country. We are witnessing and experiencing the destruction of every Western country. We are living it and are impotent to stop it.
Ron Unz, one of America’s most precious and rare assets—a public intellectual—describes how he came to believe true accounts mislabeled “conspiracy theory” in his in-depth review of Lance deHaven-Smith’s book, about which I recently reported.
I described how the CIA flummoxed insouciant Americans. Ron Unz gives you the intellectual history of how two foreign intellectuals, Karl Popper and Leo Strauss, shoved aside the truth-telling American intellectual, Charles Beard, who, like our founding fathers, had his finger on government’s propensity to deceive the people with conspiracies. Popper said that conspiracies couldn’t happen, and Strauss said they were necessary so that the government could pursue its agendas despite the public’s opposition.
Paul Craig Roberts is an antisemitic columnist and conspiracy theorist. He is a regular contributor to the The Unz Review. He describes 9/11 as a false flag event, claiming that Israel and the U.S. government orchestrated the attacks. Roberts similarly claims that the 2015 terror attack at the Charlie Hebdo office in Paris was a false flag operation committed by Israel to nefariously influence the French government’s policies on the Middle East—claims which he articulated in his contribution to a book of essays about the attack edited by fellow antisemite and 9/11 conspiracy theorist Kevin Barrett.
“The neoconservatives who dominated the Cheney/Bush government identified the Arab Middle East as the enemy and said a ‘new Pearl Harbor’ was needed to provide wars to overthrow 7 countries in 5 years…To provide the ‘new Pearl Harbor,’ Cheney, the neoconservatives, and Israel orchestrated the attacks on the WTC and Pentagon…9/11 was a Deep State operation.” – Paul Craig Roberts, September 2020
His articles assume that major events are best explained by hidden coordination among intelligence agencies, political elites, financial interests, or media organizations, rather than by the ordinary forces historians emphasize: bureaucratic incentives, institutional incompetence, coalition politics, and unintended consequences. In this he followed a path taken by marginal figures on both left and right. They begin by criticizing particular policies, move toward broader critiques of elite networks, and end with explanations in which a small group of actors drives a large share of world events. Whether one reads that as courageous truth-telling or conspiratorial overreach depends on how much explanatory power one grants those networks.
A pattern runs through his whole career. Roberts enters institutions, achieves prominence within them, and then becomes one of their fiercest critics. As a young scholar he challenged prevailing interpretations of the Soviet economy. As a policymaker he fought internal battles within the Reagan administration. As a conservative journalist he attacked globalization and interventionism long before others on the right took up those positions. As a public intellectual he portrayed himself as an outsider confronting a bipartisan ruling establishment.
His historical significance rests on his role in creating and popularizing supply-side economics. His later career shows ideological estrangement. Roberts helped shape the economic philosophy that transformed modern conservatism, then spent decades arguing that the movement he built had abandoned its principles, and finished by writing material that even sympathetic readers struggle to defend. Whether viewed as a visionary economist, an uncompromising dissident, or a conspiratorial contrarian, he remains the most unusual figure to emerge from the Reagan era.
The Coalition Pays in Taboo: Paul Craig Roberts Through Alliance Theory
Paul Craig Roberts presents a puzzle. He runs economic policy at the Reagan Treasury, and then 30 years later he argues positions that no faction of his old world will touch. The standard explanations reach for psychology or principle. Alliance Theory suggests a third reading. Roberts changed coalitions, and his beliefs followed.
The theory, set out by David Pinsof, David O. Sears, and Martie G. Haselton in “Strange Bedfellows: The Alliance Theory of Political Belief Systems,” holds that political beliefs derive from alliance structures rather than from abstract values. People choose allies on three criteria: similarity, transitivity, and interdependence. They support those allies in conflicts through a set of propagandistic biases. They rationalize their allies’ transgressions the way perpetrators rationalize their own. They embellish their allies’ grievances the way victims embellish their own. They credit their allies’ advantages to talent and blame their allies’ disadvantages on mistreatment. The belief systems that result look like patchwork because they are patchwork, stitched from whatever moral material the coalition’s current conflicts require. And the theory makes one further claim that pays the highest dividend with Roberts: motivated reasoning is less a cognitive failure than an honest signal of loyalty. If you refuse to trust your allies’ side of the story, they stop counting you as an ally.
Read Roberts’ career through this lens and the stages organize themselves.
The first coalition forms in the late 1970s around Jack Kemp’s congressional office. The supply-siders are a revolutionary alliance in the primatological sense the theory borrows: lower-ranking players combining to displace a dominant order, in this case the Keynesian consensus and the Republican old guard that had made peace with it. Roberts brings what the coalition needs, academic credentials and a worked-out theory, and the coalition brings what he needs, a vehicle into power. Interdependence runs both ways. The beliefs of this period have the patchwork quality the theory predicts. Supply-siders preach fiscal discipline while proposing tax cuts that swell deficits, and they square the contradiction with the claim that growth covers the difference. The claim is a coalition narrative before it is an economic finding. Roberts spends the rest of his life defending it, which the theory expects, since the belief and the alliance formed together.
The Treasury years show the propagandistic biases working at close range. Roberts attributes the recession of 1981 and 1982 to Paul Volcker and the budget battles to David Stockman’s betrayal of the program. The pattern follows the attributional bias to the letter. The coalition’s failures flow from external sabotage. Its successes flow from the soundness of its ideas. The Supply-Side Revolution reads as an extended exercise in alliance bookkeeping, sorting every figure of the era into those who kept faith and those who defected. That Roberts frames policymaking as coalition warfare rather than as the application of theory is the book’s accidental honesty. He describes the machinery the theory describes, then exempts his own beliefs from it.
Through the 1980s Roberts holds a comfortable position in the conservative super-alliance: Treasury alumni, the Journal editorial page, Hoover, Cato, CSIS, the think tank circuit. Alliance Theory points to transitivity as the strain that snapped it. Transitivity means sharing your allies’ allies and your allies’ enemies. The end of the Cold War rewrote both lists. The neoconservatives, whom Roberts regarded as rivals within the coalition, rose to dominance and redefined the super-alliance’s shared enemy from Soviet communism to any state resisting American primacy. Roberts refused the new enemy list. On globalization he refused a second list, breaking with the free-trade consensus that bound the business wing to the intellectual wing. A member who rejects the coalition’s enemies fails the transitivity test no matter how long his service. From the coalition’s side, Roberts became a betrayal risk. From Roberts’ side, the coalition had filled with the enemies of his friends. Both readings are correct, which is the theory’s point. There is no fact of the matter about who defected first, only a structure that stopped cohering.
What follows expulsion is the part of the career that moral and psychological explanations handle worst and Alliance Theory handles best. A man cut from one coalition does not stand alone. He recruits. The audience Roberts assembled through his syndicated columns and the Institute for Political Economy website is a genuine strange-bedfellows formation: antiwar leftists who once wrote him off as a Reaganite, paleoconservatives, libertarians, European readers hostile to American power, Russian state media, 9/11 researchers, and later vaccine skeptics. By every similarity measure of ordinary politics these groups have nothing in common. The theory says that does not matter. Alliances need no deeper pattern. What binds them is transitivity, a shared enemy list with one entry: the American establishment in all its organs, the agencies, the parties, the press, the universities, the public health apparatus. Roberts’ post-2000 belief system is the patchwork narrative this coalition requires. Each new claim, on Ukraine, on terrorism, on elections, on COVID, extends the same story, that the shared enemy coordinates events from hiding. The story serves the coalition the way all such narratives do. It embellishes the grievances of every member faction at once.
The escalation that critics read as cognitive decline reads here as dues. Roberts’ new coalition cannot pay him in the currencies his old one paid, appointments, prestige, editorial positions, honors. It pays in readership and standing within the counter-establishment, and it charges for membership in the one currency an exiled insider holds, the willingness to say what the establishment forbids. Each taboo broken proves the break with the old coalition is irreversible. A man who still hedges might still defect back. A man who has written that 9/11 required inside complicity cannot. The theory’s account of motivated reasoning as loyalty signal explains why the claims grow stronger over time rather than settling. A signal that costs nothing proves nothing. Within this structure, moderation reads as betrayal, and Roberts’ audience polices it as betrayal, the way his old coalition once policed deviation on tax policy.
The writings on Jews and Israel fit the same structure. The coalition Roberts joined holds, across its factions, one further shared antagonist beyond the American establishment: Israel and its American supporters. The antiwar left arrives at this antagonism through Palestine, the paleo-right through its old quarrel with the neoconservatives, the European and Russian audiences through their own routes. A narrative that fuses the establishment with Israeli influence serves every faction at once, which is what a patchwork coalition narrative is for. Roberts’ drift from criticizing Israeli policy, to overweighting the lobby, to the blurred language about Jewish networks and hidden power tracks the demands of this structure. The blurring is the signal. A writer who maintained the careful distinctions, government from lobby, lobby from donors, donors from Jews, would be writing within the establishment’s rules of discourse, and observing the enemy’s rules is what an ally under suspicion does. Violating them proves loyalty. Roberts experiences his own trajectory as the establishment experiences its trajectory, as principle. The perpetrator bias works from inside. He rationalizes his transgressions as criticism of power, with the same machinery his old colleagues use to rationalize wars as liberation.
The theory also explains the feature of Roberts’ late style that the conspiracy label captures but does not analyze. His articles assume hidden coordination because his coalition’s unity requires a coordinated enemy. A coalition of leftists, rightists, and foreign audiences shares no positive program. It coheres only against, and the “against” must be singular for the coalition to be singular. Bureaucratic incompetence, coalition politics, and unintended consequence, the ordinary explanations historians prefer, dissolve the enemy into a thousand uncoordinated actors, and with it the alliance. The conspiratorial style is the patchwork coalition’s load.
The Voice
Roberts writes like a man filing a brief he expects no court to hear. The dominant register is declarative certainty. He states conclusions as settled facts, rarely hedges, and almost never writes “perhaps” or “it may be.” Where a mainstream columnist writes “critics argue,” Roberts writes “the fact is.” The certainty is the style. It tells the reader that doubt belongs to the deceived.
His diction splits into two layers. The base layer comes from his training: the vocabulary of an economist of the old school, comparative advantage, marginal rates, capital flows, deployed with fluency when the subject is trade or monetary policy. Even hostile readers concede the economics passages read like a man who knows the material. The second layer is the coinage of the late period, and it does heavy work. “Presstitutes” for the media. “Washington” as a singular conscious agent, almost a character, that “wants,” “decides,” and “lies.” “The Matrix” for the constructed reality Americans inhabit. “Insouciant” appears constantly, his pet word for his countrymen, and it carries his contempt with a Frenchified elegance, the Legion of Honor recipient sneering in borrowed silk. The coinages mark coalition membership. A reader who adopts “presstitutes” has chosen a side.
His sentence rhythm runs short and hammering in the late columns. Subject, verb, accusation. He repeats key claims across paragraphs and across columns, the repetition of a man who believes the message fails only because it has not been heard enough times. He favors the rhetorical question as a battering ram: “Where is the evidence? There is none.” He often answers his own questions in the next sentence, a catechism with one voice.
Credential invocation is the signature rhetorical move. Few writers cite their own resume as often. “As a former Assistant Secretary of the Treasury,” “as a former Wall Street Journal editor,” “I held the William E. Simon Chair.” The biography appears in the column because the biography is the argument. His authority rests on having been inside, and the late work has no other warrant, no institution, no peer community, no editor. The resume substitutes for all of them. The move carries a paradox he never addresses: he asks readers to trust him because the establishment once certified him, while teaching them that establishment certification means nothing.
He argues by escalation rather than accumulation. A column might open with a defensible observation about NATO expansion and arrive, six paragraphs later, at deliberate nuclear provocation, with each step asserted rather than built. Transitions like “in other words” and “what this means is” do the work that evidence might, recasting the previous claim in stronger terms and treating the restatement as an inference.
The emotional register is weary prophecy. He writes as a man who has explained everything already, watched no one listen, and expects catastrophe to vindicate him. “Unless something changes, we are headed for nuclear war” is a standing structure in his columns. The weariness flatters the reader, who joins a small company of the awake.
In speech he differs from the page in temperature. On podcasts and in interviews he is courtly, unhurried, Georgia still audible in the vowels, a Southern academic manner from another era. He does not shout. He monologues, answers in long uninterrupted runs, and interviewers on the dissident circuit rarely press him, so the conversations become serial lectures. The calm delivery makes the apocalyptic content stranger and, for sympathetic listeners, more credible. A ranter can be dismissed. A soft-spoken old man with a Treasury pedigree saying the government carries out false flag attacks produces dissonance, and the dissonance does the persuading.
One more feature: the absence of humor. Almost no irony, no play, no self-deprecation anywhere in the late work. Buckley teased, Sobran joked even at his darkest, Cockburn wrote with relish. Roberts writes with none. The humorlessness fits the prophetic stance, since prophets do not banter, but it also flattens him as a writer. Fifty columns read like one column. The style has no second gear, and the sameness, more than any single claim, is what makes the late work feel sealed off, a closed system addressed to readers already inside it.
What they value, first, is a particular kind of knowledge: the truth behind the screen. Not expertise, which they regard as purchased, and not scholarship, which they regard as gatekept, but the hidden account of events that official channels suppress. Possession of this knowledge divides humanity into the awake and the asleep, and the division runs deeper than any political one. A leftist who sees through the screen ranks above a conservative who does not, which is why the set crosses ideological lines that the mainstream treats as impassable. They value independence as the precondition of truth. A man on an institution’s payroll cannot speak it, by definition, so poverty of affiliation becomes a credential. They value memory of an older America, sovereign, industrial, constitutional, and they grieve it the way exiles grieve a country. And they value courage, defined narrowly: courage means saying what costs you standing. Physical courage rarely comes up. The brave man here is the deplatformed man.
The hero system crowns the defector-insider, and Roberts embodies the type. The highest figure is the man who held rank within the system, saw what it was, and walked out or was thrown out, and who now testifies against it from the wilderness. The resume before the fall sets the heroic altitude after it. An ex-CIA analyst outranks a mere blogger; an ex-Assistant Secretary outranks both. Above the defectors stand the martyrs, those who paid in flesh and freedom rather than reputation, with Assange as the crucified figure whose suffering the set narrates in religious cadence. The heroic act is testimony: getting the truth on the record before the catastrophe, so that when the collapse comes, the dollar crash, the nuclear war, the archive proves you said it. The set’s version of immortality is the timestamped column. Members write for a future reader who will sort the prophets from the presstitutes, and being early is being saved. Death holds little terror for a man who expects vindication after it; what terrifies is dying co-opted, having traded testimony for access in the final years.
The status games follow from the hero system. Rank accrues through proximity to former power, through earliness, and through price paid. “I was writing about this in 2003” is a status move, and disputes over priority get conducted with the bitterness of academic priority fights, because earliness is the set’s only patent. Censorship functions as decoration: a PayPal ban, a demonetized channel, a Wikipedia page that calls you a conspiracy theorist, each operates as a medal, displayed in author bios and fundraising appeals. Roberts’ own site banner has long noted that his column is banned from the mainstream. Taboo capacity confers rank as well. The man willing to name what others only gesture at sits higher than the hedger, which builds an escalator into the set’s discourse, since each member can climb by saying the thing the member above him will not. Appearances mark rank too, the RT hit, the podcast tour, translation into other languages, citation by fellow dissidents. The negative statuses are sharper than the positive ones. The worst thing a member can be called is a gatekeeper, a man who tells most of the truth to keep the audience from the rest of it, and the accusation has been leveled at figures as large as Noam Chomsky (b. 1928) for waving off the 9/11 researchers. “Limited hangout,” borrowed from intelligence jargon, does the same work. There is no appeal process for either label.
The normative claims run roughly so. One ought to distrust every official account on arrival, since trust is what the asleep do. One ought to ask who benefits, and the answer to that question carries the force of evidence. One ought to support truth-tellers with attention, money, and defense of their reputations, and abandoning a truth-teller under fire is the set’s gravest sin, worse than error. One ought to wake others, gently or not, sharing the column and the clip as a moral act, the lay member’s form of testimony. And one ought not police allies. The set runs on a tacit omertà: the left members do not press the right members about race, the right members do not press the left about capitalism, and almost no one presses anyone about the material on Jews, because internal criticism is what the establishment wants and supplying it makes you its instrument. The norm against punching inward is what lets the coalition hold, and it is also what lets its worst content circulate unchallenged.
The essentialist claims sit underneath. The establishment lies by nature; deceit is not something it does but something it is, so any apparent honesty from it must be tactical. Washington is a unitary agent with a fixed character, ambitious, reckless, criminal, and the set speaks of it the way medieval writers spoke of the Devil, as a being with intentions. The mass of the people are asleep by nature, Roberts’ “insouciant Americans,” the harder members’ “sheeple,” and the language implies the condition is constitutional rather than circumstantial, which quietly excuses the set from persuading them. The awakened differ in kind, not merely in information, an election of the seeing. Russia, in much of the set, gets essentialized in the other direction, as the last sovereign nation, Christian, rooted, governed by an adult, and the idealization runs as deep as the demonization it mirrors. And in the set’s darker rooms, Jewish power gets essentialized as a coordinated network with a fixed character and a long reach, the point where the set’s habit of treating groups as single agents with single natures produces its oldest and ugliest output. The respectable members deny the essentialism while reprinting the men who traffic in it, and the denial plus the reprinting is the set’s standing contradiction.
The moral grammar organizes all of it. The primary moral axis is not left and right, and not even just and unjust, but true and false, with truth-telling as the whole of virtue and collaboration as the whole of sin. The grammar’s basic sentence is the accusation in question form: who benefits, where is the evidence, why did the building fall that way. Its basic imperative is “wake up.” It conjugates guilt collectively for enemies, “the regime,” “the empire,” “the presstitutes,” and individually for friends, who are always particular men with names and sufferings. It offers instant absolution to converts: the establishment figure who defects is forgiven his decades of service the day he testifies, baptized on his first podcast appearance, because conversion proves the set’s story that any honest insider must eventually break. It offers no absolution at all to the gatekeeper. Its evidentiary grammar treats official denial as confirmation, absence of evidence as proof of suppression, and coherence with the prior story as the test of truth, a grammar in which the set’s account can absorb any fact and be falsified by none. And its eschatology is fixed: the reckoning approaches, the crash or the war, and on that day the grammar’s last sentence gets spoken, the one every member has been writing toward for decades, which is “we told you.”
The Similar Trajectory With Tucker Carlson
The comparison turns on three variables: timing, infrastructure, and temperament. Roberts and Tucker Carlson (b. 1969) hold many of the same positions. The trajectories that carried them there could hardly differ more.
Start with timing. Roberts broke his taboos early, when each one cost him a platform. He attacked globalization in the 1990s, when free trade was the closest thing the American establishment had to a creed shared by both parties. He attacked the War on Terror in 2002 and 2003, when that position ended careers on the right. He went after the official 9/11 account in the mid-2000s, when the move guaranteed exile. Every position arrived a decade or more before an audience existed to reward it. Carlson runs the opposite schedule. He arrives at each position when the audience for it has already formed. He supported the Iraq war, recanted later at low cost, found populism after Donald Trump proved the market for it in 2016, found NATO skepticism when his viewers had already found it, and conducted his interview of Vladimir Putin in 2024, by which point a quarter of his party shared the sympathy. Roberts is a prophet in the strict occupational sense, a man whose message precedes its market. Carlson is a harvester. He has never once been early, and he has never once paid full price.
Infrastructure explains much of the difference in outcome. Roberts fell in the worst possible decade. When the conservative establishment cut him loose in the early 2000s, the only landing zones were marginal websites Counterpunch, LewRockwell, and eventually his own site running on donations. Exile meant poverty of platform. Carlson fell, if his Fox firing in April 2023 even counts as falling, into a built-out creator economy where a name brings its audience along. The same expulsion that buried Roberts made Carlson independent and arguably more powerful. Glenn Greenwald (b. 1967) and Matt Taibbi (b. 1970) prove the same point from the left: both walked out of their institutions, both kept their audiences through Substack and Rumble, both earn more outside than in. The lesson the set never states is that dissidence became a business model around 2020, and the men who crossed before that date wear the scars while the men who crossed after collect the revenue. Some of Roberts’ bitterness is the bitterness of a man who paid retail for what later defectors got wholesale.
Temperament is the third axis. Carlson works in irony, the laugh, the raised eyebrow, the question mark. “I’m just asking” gives him a deniability that Roberts has never once sought. Roberts asserts; Carlson insinuates. Assertion gets a man removed from the conversation, insinuation lets him stay in it, and staying in it is Carlson’s whole craft. He kept his channels open in every direction, the Trump White House, the donor world, the podcast circuit, the foreign leaders, while Roberts sealed every exit behind him. One man treats respectability as a resource to be spent carefully. The other spent it all at once, decades ago, and now holds none.
The closer analogue to Roberts is Joseph Sobran (1946-2010). Sobran was the most gifted writer at National Review, a William F. Buckley protégé, an insider with the highest credential his world offered. His columns on Israel and the lobby got him demoted in the early 1990s and finished by decade’s end, and after the expulsion he drifted darker, eventually appearing before the Institute for Historical Review, the Holocaust revisionist outfit, having concluded he had nothing left to lose with the people who police such lines. He died poor and mostly unread. The Sobran arc, insider, expulsion over Israel, post-expulsion radicalization, is the Roberts arc with a literary temperament instead of an economic one. Both men illustrate the same grim sequence: the punishment designed to deter the writing instead removes the last incentive to moderate it. Once the establishment has taken everything, it has also taken its leverage.
Pat Buchanan held nearly identical positions and managed a different ending. Buchanan said things about Israel’s “amen corner” that drew the antisemitism charge from 1990 onward, opposed the wars, opposed the trade deals, and ran the full paleo program twice in Republican primaries. Yet he kept his The McLaughlin Group chair, kept his MSNBC contract into the 2010s, and retired with honor among his faction. The difference was border control. Buchanan policed his own rhetoric at the line where Roberts and Sobran crossed it, stayed inside the party rather than declaring the whole system fraudulent, and kept friendships across the divide. Whether that restraint reflected conviction or discipline, it preserved him. The Buchanan case shows the positions alone did not doom Roberts. The totalization did, the move from “our policies are wrong” to “the system is a managed lie,” after which no institution could carry him without indicting the system that includes it.
The ex-military and ex-intelligence figures, Douglas Macgregor (b. 1947), Scott Ritter (b. 1961), the McGovern circle, run the Roberts path on a shorter track: credentials, expulsion, escalating claims, Russian state media as the platform of last resort, each man’s authority resting on a resume his current conduct erodes. Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (b. 1954) runs the path in reverse. He spent decades accumulating dissident capital on vaccines and the security state, then converted it back into official power when the realignment made his heresies a constituency. Kennedy got the ending Roberts will never get, the prophet recalled from the wilderness and given an office. The difference, again, was timing and a coalition that needed him. Roberts’ heresies matured a generation too soon, and his Israel material disqualifies him even from a movement that has absorbed nearly everything else.
Carlson has begun touching the material that destroyed Roberts and Sobran, the platforming of Darryl Cooper’s revisionism, the Candace Owens (b. 1989) adjacency, the asides about who runs what. He approaches it the way he approaches everything, late, hedged, and with the audience pre-tested. Whether the old line still holds for a man with his own network and no employer to fire him is one of the live questions of the current media order. Roberts and Sobran hit that wall when the wall had institutions behind it. Carlson is probing it at the exact moment the institutions have lost the power to enforce it. If he passes through without consequence, it will demonstrate that what ended Roberts was never the content alone but the enforcement regime of his era, and that the regime is gone. The Roberts trajectory might then read less like a cautionary tale about a man and more like a dated artifact, the record of what the gatekeepers could do back when there were gates.
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