Who Are The Leading Public Intellectuals Doing The Least Alliance Work?

Alliance work is a behavior, not a property of a man. The same writer can do almost none of it on one subject and a great deal on another. John McWhorter (b. 1965) imposes costs on his own side when he writes about race and language. Watch him on Trump or on most foreign policy and he does standard alliance work for the left. So the honest question asks not who is alliance-free but where, and how often, a given writer breaks transitivity and pays for it.

Fame and low alliance work pull against each other. A coalition amplifies the men who serve it. It builds their audiences, fills their rooms, buys their books, forwards their clips, and defends them when they stumble. A thinker becomes a household name in large part because some coalition has decided he is useful to its self-understanding. Ta-Nehisi Coates (b. 1975), Jordan Peterson (b. 1962), Yoram Hazony (b. 1964), Sam Harris (b. 1967), and Ezra Klein (b. 1984) all earn their reach by telling a coalition who its friends are, who its enemies are, and what story it should believe about itself. They may mean every word. Sincerity and alliance work coexist with ease. The function holds whatever the man feels.

This is why I distrust the standard heterodox roster as an answer to the question of who optimizes most for truth over tribe. The figures usually nominated, Bari Weiss (b. 1984), Glenn Greenwald (b. 1967), Matt Taibbi (b. 1970), Steven Pinker (b. 1954), and Jonathan Haidt (b. 1963), have not escaped alliance work. They have changed coalitions. “Heterodoxy” hardened into a bloc somewhere around 2020, and it now has everything a coalition has: a media economy on Substack and a few podcasts and Rumble, a donor class, a set of enemies (legacy newsrooms, DEI offices, the universities), a canon of grievances, and loyalty tests of its own. Try praising the New York Times in that room. Try defending a campus speech code. The bloc has strange bedfellows like any other. Anti-establishment media populism sits next to anti-DEI politics next to a free-speech brand next to, increasingly, a friendly posture toward the new right. Those positions do not follow from one another by logic. They co-occur because they mark a team. Weiss left one orthodoxy and built another, with a masthead and a payroll and a flag. Greenwald and Taibbi do heavy alliance work for an anti-establishment coalition; their scrutiny runs hard against the institutions they oppose and lighter on the populists who now amplify them. Haidt runs a cause, Heterodox Academy and the campaign about youth and phones, and a cause needs allies, villains, and momentum. He explains alliance behavior in his academic work and performs a version of it in his public life. None of this makes them dishonest. It makes them poor nominees.

So apply the Alliance Theory test. When his allies misbehave, does the man criticize them at cost to himself? When his rivals say something true, does he concede it without hedging? The trap is asymmetric detection. We grade a writer brave when his deviations flatter our side and call him a defector when they wound it. McWhorter reads as courageous to a conservative and as a man giving cover to a liberal. The deviation that counts is the one that hurts the people who pay you. By that standard a few names hold up.

Tyler Cowen (b. 1962) does about as little alliance work as a public figure can while remaining public. His lens is competence, intelligence, institutions, and tradeoffs. He praises and faults people across every camp in the same paragraph, and he sits out almost every moral panic, which alone disqualifies him from coalition leadership, since a coalition runs on panics. He frustrates the right and the left in turn because he will not keep discipline. His audience is large, which by my own argument should worry us, but the audience came for a method, not for a banner, and methods do not march.

Megan McArdle (b. 1973) reaches conclusions that disappoint conservatives and liberals by turns, because she chases incentives and second-order effects rather than verdicts.

Michael Huemer (b. 1969) follows arguments into combinations no party will claim, which is the surest sign a man is tracking the argument and not the room.

Paul Graham (b. 1964) holds political views, yet his attention goes to founders, creativity, and individual agency, and he treats coalition questions as engineering problems, which reads as naïve precisely because he is not running coalition software.

Coleman Hughes (b. 1996) and Thomas Chatterton Williams (b. 1981) are harder cases. Both argue rather than signal, much of the time. Both also occupy a niche the heterodox economy rewards, the dissenting Black intellectual, and a rewarded niche is a coalition position whether the man wants it or not.

Glenn Loury (b. 1948) earns more credit here, because his views shift on their own internal grounds and irritate whichever side assumed it owned him.

The men doing the least alliance work tend to have no movement at all. They study the machinery instead of running it. David Pinsof, Dan Williams, Hugo Mercier, John M. Doris, Randall Collins (b. 1941), and Stephen P. Turner spend their hours describing how coalitions form belief, police defection, and launder interest into principle. Their audiences never become armies. That is the structural reason they stay clean. A scholar of interaction ritual who has no ritual to lead, and no flock to discipline, has little occasion to defend an ally or bury a rival. The cost of his honesty is obscurity, and he pays it.

Among the dead four hold up well against their contemporaries. Thomas Sowell (b. 1930) became coalition-coded late, yet his core method stays empirical and contrarian. Robert Nozick (1938-2002) kept revising himself in public and refused to settle into the libertarian movement that claimed him. Albert Hirschman (1915-2012) built a whole career on confounding the camps, on showing that the same reform serves opposite ends. George Orwell (1903-1950) attacked his own left harder than the right ever could, and paid for it in his lifetime, which is the test.

The closer a thinker stands to fame, the more of his public function is coalition maintenance. The men doing the least alliance work are mostly the ones you have not heard of, describing the engine while others drive it.

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Michael Medved Bio

Michael Medved (b. 1948) is an American radio host, film critic, author, and cultural commentator whose career runs more than half a century across journalism, entertainment, publishing, and broadcasting. He holds a distinctive place in modern American conservatism because his influence grew from cultural criticism rather than partisan politics. Many conservative media figures built careers around campaigns, policy fights, or ideological activism. Medved built his through film, history, religion, and national culture. Across his work he argues that the long health of a society rests less on political victories than on the moral habits, historical memory, religious commitments, and cultural institutions that shape daily life.

He was born in Philadelphia on October 3, 1948, and grew up mostly in Southern California. His father, David Medved, was a physicist and aerospace entrepreneur whose work tied the family to the postwar scientific and defense sectors that helped define modern California. Medved showed academic promise early and entered Yale at sixteen. He graduated with honors in American history in 1969, briefly attended Yale Law School, then left to pursue work in politics and writing. He later earned a graduate degree in filmmaking from San Francisco State.

His political formation came during the upheaval of the 1960s. As a young man he volunteered for the presidential campaign of Robert F. Kennedy (1925-1968) and stood at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles the night Kennedy was assassinated. The experience marked him. Across his later career he returned again and again to questions of leadership, civic virtue, political idealism, and the part historical chance plays in public life.

Like many of his generation, Medved began on the left. He worked as a speechwriter, campaign aide, and political consultant, and served with Congressman Ron Dellums (1935-2018). During these years he grew interested in the gap between ideological hope and social outcome. His move toward conservatism came slowly. He chronicled that change in his memoir Right Turns (2005) and framed it as a response to what he saw in family stability, crime, education, religion, and civic culture rather than a simple party switch.

Medved first reached a national audience as an author. In 1976 he and David Wallechinsky (b. 1948) published What Really Happened to the Class of ’65?, a bestseller that followed members of their high school class a decade after graduation. The book tested romantic assumptions about the Baby Boom generation by setting youthful expectation against adult result. The project marked a theme that runs through much of his later work: doubt toward fashionable cultural narratives and a preference for measurable consequence over slogan.

Through the 1970s and 1980s Medved worked inside the entertainment industry as a screenwriter and television writer while he built a reputation as a film critic. This stretch shaped his thinking. Later conservative critics often attacked Hollywood from the outside. Medved gained firsthand knowledge of the structures, incentives, and personalities of the film business. He drew on that knowledge to argue that the industry served as a cultural institution that shaped social attitude and moral expectation, and not as a commercial trade alone.

His national profile widened through film criticism. He became a regular television presence and co-hosted the PBS review program Sneak Previews for twelve years with the critic Jeffrey Lyons (b. 1944). He later worked as chief film critic for the New York Post and became an instantly recognizable reviewer. He often read films as evidence of broader assumption. Family, religion, patriotism, violence, responsibility, and national identity sat at the center of his criticism.

An early mark on popular culture came through his work with his brother, Harry Medved. Together they wrote The Fifty Worst Films of All Time (1978) and The Golden Turkey Awards (1980). The books mixed scholarship, satire, and fond ridicule. Their naming of Ed Wood’s Plan 9 from Outer Space as the worst film ever made turned the movie into a cult favorite and fed a wider taste for ironic delight in failed popular art. The books also showed Medved’s encyclopedic command of film history and his knack for turning specialized knowledge into popular entertainment.

A turn came with Hollywood vs. America (1992). The book carried Medved from film reviewer to a leading cultural critic of the American right. Drawing on box-office figures, industry practice, and content study, he argued that Hollywood’s creative elite often made material at odds with the values of much of its audience. Accept his conclusions or reject them, the book set a frame that shaped conservative cultural criticism for years. Medved held that entertainment choices tie back to family life, social trust, civic duty, and national cohesion. The book drew wide debate and pulled him into national argument over media violence, popular culture, and public morality.

The next phase came in radio. After he established himself in Seattle, Medved drew a loyal audience through a format apart from the confrontational style common to political talk. He often filled in for Rush Limbaugh (1951-2021) before he launched his own program. By 1996 his show entered national syndication through Salem, and it held a firm place in conservative broadcasting for decades. The program continues today, broadcast from his home station KTTH in Seattle and carried through Cable Radio Network after Genesis Communications Network closed in 2024. By his network’s count the daily three-hour show reaches several million listeners.

What set Medved apart from many peers was his teacherly bent. Rather than fix on the daily political fight alone, he gave long stretches of airtime to historical interpretation, demographic trend, religious question, constitutional debate, and cultural study. His training in history stayed visible across his broadcasts. He treated current events as episodes inside longer histories and urged listeners to see politics through the lens of civilization and institution.

Religion grew central to his public life. Raised in a Jewish home, Medved deepened his commitment to Orthodox Judaism as an adult. His religious life reached past private observance into institution-building and community leadership. With his wife, the clinical psychologist and author Diane Medved, he helped found Orthodox Jewish communal institutions in the Seattle area. The couple raised three children, and home life became a source of his arguments about social stability, marriage, and civic duty.

This commitment shaped his wider outlook. Secular conservatives often rest their case on markets or constitutional procedure. Medved holds that free institutions depend on moral and religious foundations. His work seeks common ground between Jews and Christians and stresses the historical weight of biblical tradition in the growth of American political culture.

These themes reach mature form in The Ten Big Lies About America, The 5 Big Lies About American Business, The American Miracle, and its follow-up God’s Hand on America. Across these books Medved mounts a defense of American exceptionalism grounded in a blend of religious belief, constitutional government, voluntary association, and civic culture rather than economic success or military power alone. He argues that national confidence and historical gratitude serve as needed parts of democratic self-government, and that harshly negative readings of American history weaken the institutions they claim to mend.

His turns toward public service reinforced these interests. In 1995 he served as a member of the United States delegation to the United Nations Human Rights Commission in Geneva. He held no policy office, yet he took up questions of constitutional interpretation, religious liberty, human rights, and citizenship across his writing and broadcasting.

Medved’s significance rests in synthesis rather than theory. He works as a translator among academic history, religious thought, popular culture, and mass media. His career shows a conservatism oriented to history, focused on culture, informed by religion, and concerned with the conditions that sustain democratic life. Across decades of writing and broadcasting he has held that politics runs downstream from culture. Elections, legislation, and policy carry weight, yet they rest on deeper ground laid by families, schools, religious communities, historical memory, and shared moral commitment.

For that reason Medved stands as a cultural conservative in the older sense of the term, more than a radio host or political commentator. His central concern has been the preservation and renewal of the social and moral institutions that make self-government possible. Through film criticism, radio, historical writing, and religious commentary, he has worked to explain how a free society holds itself together across generations and why cultural inheritance stays vital to political liberty.

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The Lee Habeeb Show

Lee Habeeb (b. 1961) runs against the template he helped build. He co-founded Laura Ingraham’s show in 2001 and ran content for Salem Media, the engine room of Christian-conservative talk. Then in 2016 he built Our American Stories, and the whole thing reads as a rebuke of the form he came from. No politics. No opinion. No news of the day. He took the talk-radio apparatus and pointed it at storytelling.
So his on-air voice has two registers, and they pull in opposite directions.
The radio voice is the softer one. On Our American Stories he plays narrator and host more than talker. He sets a scene, lowers the temperature, and hands the microphone to an ordinary American, who carries the segment in his own words. Habeeb frames, then steps back. The delivery runs warm and slow and intimate. He wants you leaning in, not braced for an argument. Where Ingraham or a Salem host fills the hour with himself, Habeeb fills it with other people and keeps his own presence to the cold open and the handoff. He calls storytelling the art of listening, and the show puts that into practice by making the host the smaller voice in the room.
His structural instinct comes through in how he teaches the craft. He told a class at Ole Miss that the beginning should be short, like life itself. He writes for Newsweek on a pay-per-click model, so he learned to hook fast or lose the reader. That trains a certain discipline. Open with a hard image, drop you into the middle of a life, then unfold.
The written voice shows the man’s range and his tics. Look at the prose itself. In a column addressed to Bruce Springsteen he writes, “always you’re moving us. Always you’re surprising us.” In a Father’s Day piece he opens, “I’m one of the lucky sons. One of the blessed sons.” That is the diction: anaphora, the repeated phrase with one word swapped, short declaratives stacked for cadence. He likes the sentence fragment as a beat. He likes the second sentence that echoes the first and turns it slightly. The rhythm owes something to sermon and something to advertising copy, and Habeeb has worked in the neighborhood of both.
The thematic register sits squarely in faith and family and nation. God runs through the columns as a stated presence, not a hint. He praises a filmmaker’s prayer, reads a Catholic impulse toward mercy into Springsteen, builds segments around a soldier who tells a Nazi “we are all Jews here.” The vocabulary leans on blessing, gratitude, courage, redemption. His own family myth feeds it. He repeats that his immigrant grandparents came not to change America but to have America change them, and that line carries his politics without naming a party.
The “no politics” banner is a political position. Habeeb selects which Americans to celebrate and which virtues to call American, and the selection runs in one direction: striving, faith, free enterprise, the cop and the soldier and the entrepreneur, the convert grateful to the country. The show feels apolitical because it never argues. It does something quieter and more durable. It builds an emotional picture of the nation and lets the listener absorb it as mood rather than claim. A man who spent fifteen years producing combative talk knows precisely what he is doing when he chooses warmth as the vehicle. The sentiment is real. The framing is a craft decision made by a movement veteran.
His rhetoric, then, works by accumulation and by feeling. He rarely makes a case head-on. He tells you about a person, lingers on the moment of grace or sacrifice, and trusts the story to do the persuading. The risk is sentimentality, and he often crosses into it. The columns can tip toward the greeting card, the swelling close, the tidy moral. The radio show, because it hands off to real people in their own voices, holds the line better. The amateur teller resists the polish that Habeeb the writer reaches for.
So the man’s gift is curation and framing more than oratory. He has a good ear for the opening beat, a preacher’s sense of cadence, and the patience to get out of the way. He sells warmth the way his old colleagues sell outrage, and he sells it well.

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The Henry Nowak Death

According to Wikipedia:

On 3 December 2025, Henry Nowak, an 18‑year‑old White British university student, was murdered by Vickrum Singh Digwa, a 23-year-old British Sikh, in Southampton, England. Digwa stabbed Nowak five times, including a fatal wound to the chest, with a 21 cm (8.3 in) dagger. When police officers from Hampshire and Isle of Wight Constabulary arrived after an emergency services 999 call made by Digwa’s brother, Digwa falsely accused Nowak of assault and racism. As the police handcuffed him, Nowak repeatedly told the officers that he had been stabbed. One officer responded, “I don’t think you have, mate”. Nowak also pleaded that he could not breathe. While being arrested, he lost consciousness and died at the scene shortly afterward.

Digwa was carrying two knives: a small kirpan—a type of Khalsa Sikh ceremonial knife—and a large dagger, which was used to stab Nowak. Just before the stabbing, Nowak had recorded Digwa walking away from him during a verbal altercation. According to the court, Digwa later grabbed Nowak’s phone to prevent being recorded, which led to a physical struggle; there were no eyewitnesses to the stabbing itself.

The jury convicted Digwa of murder on 28 May 2026. Digwa’s mother, Kiran Kaur, was found guilty of assisting an offender by hiding the murder weapon. The judge rejected Digwa’s accusations that Nowak had physically or racially abused him. Digwa received a life sentence with a minimum term of 21 years. The judge noted that Digwa carried the dagger as a member of the Nihang order of Sikhs, while some Sikh scholars said that it was not required by faith. The murder sparked a debate about carrying ceremonial knives in public, with Nowak’s father and others calling for a review of British knife laws, urging the government to examine the length of legally permitted knives.

The video did something the press releases could not. It put the same fact in front of everyone. A boy lay on a Southampton street, stabbed five times, telling officers he could not breathe, and an officer told him he probably had not been stabbed while putting him in handcuffs. The killer had phoned the police first and called himself the victim of a racist attack. He was lying. A jury said so in May, and Vickrum Digwa got life with a minimum of twenty-one years.
For six months the trial rules held the story down. Contempt law keeps the press cautious while a jury sits. Then the sentence came, the family consented, and Hampshire Police released the bodycam footage. After that the story belonged to no one and to everyone.
What the coverage reveals starts with that release. Visual proof disciplines narrative. The early police account had described two men assaulted by an unknown attacker, which read as if Henry Nowak had brought it on himself. The footage made that account impossible to hold. Keir Starmer (b. 1962) said he felt sick watching it. The argument did not end there, but it changed shape. Once a country can watch the thing happen, the fight stops being about events and moves to causes.
And the causes are where the country splits.
One camp calls it incompetence. Officers reached a confused scene late at night, took the wrong man at his word, missed how badly the right man was hurt, and made a fatal set of assumptions. Medical experts later said the wounds would have killed Nowak regardless. On this reading the horror is ordinary, the kind of bad judgment that kills people when seconds count and no one is thinking clearly.
The other camp calls it two-tier policing. Nigel Farage (b. 1964) led that charge at home, and Elon Musk, JD Vance, and the US State Department carried it abroad, the last calling ideological conditioning a symptom of civilizational decline. Their claim is that anti-racism training has taught officers to fear a racism accusation more than they fear getting the facts wrong, so that when a minority man cries racism against a White victim, the instinct runs one way. Reform’s Zia Yusuf wants diversity policy stripped out of the forces.
The footage proves a catastrophe. It does not prove why. A scene with a prior altercation Nowak had filmed, two accounts in conflict, and a man bleeding out can support either story. The officers believed the wrong account. Whether training bent them toward it or plain incompetence did, one night’s video cannot settle. The right treats a single scene as proof of a system. The thing it shows might come from that system, or might come from the failures any police force produces on a bad night. Proof would need the pattern, not the picture.
The left has its own blind spot. When officials answer public anger with the word misinformation, when the Met commissioner knocks a reporter’s microphone to the ground rather than answer the question, when a force drafts a statement calling a murdered boy an aggressor and then tries mid-trial to push back against online “disinformation,” the claim that all of this is incompetence and far-right invention gets harder to credit. The distrust here is earned. Treating it as manufactured deepens it.
Nowak was Polish British, the son of immigrants. In British racial talk he reads as White, and the two-tier frame needs him to. The frame works less neatly once you notice he came from a migrant family. The people fighting over his death have sorted him into a category that flattens part of who he was. The same sorting ran the other way. A Sikh community in Southampton found itself answering for one man’s lie, pulled into an argument about civilizational decline that had nothing to do with most of them.
Many on the right asked why a dying White teenager, handcuffed and disbelieved, did not draw the coverage that George Floyd drew. The standard answer is that Floyd died at the hands of the state and Nowak was killed by a civilian and failed by the state afterward, different categories that pull different weight. That answer is true and also evasive. The discomfort it dodges is that a story travels fast when it fits the frame the newsroom already carries and slow when it cuts against it. Nowak’s death cut against it. The video forced the speed.
Henry Nowak’s father asked that his son’s death not be used to make more division. It is being used for that, by people who never met him, to win an argument he is no longer here to join.
The country watched one piece of footage and drew opposite conclusions from it, and neither conclusion follows from the footage alone. The video closed the gap over what happened and opened a wider one over what it means. Britain, and the West behind it, has kept its eyes and lost its method. Everyone can see. No one agrees on what they are seeing. And a boy who wanted to walk home is now a symbol his own family is begging the country to put down.

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The Mike Gallagher Show

Mike Gallagher (b. 1960) builds his sound around warmth rather than menace. He brands himself the Happy Conservative Warrior, and the voice carries that label honestly. Where Levin barks and Savage broods, Gallagher grins. You hear the smile in the tone. The pitch sits high and bright, the cadence quick, the energy almost manic at the top of a segment before it settles into something more conversational.
The theater training shows. He spent time on Broadway in Memphis, playing the white DJ, and he handles a microphone the way a stage actor handles a house. He projects. He lands a punchline and waits for it to register. He knows how to drop his volume for a confiding aside and then snap back up to fill the room. That control separates him from hosts who run flat at a single intensity for three hours.
His diction stays plain. He favors the kitchen-table register, short Anglo-Saxon words, the language of a man talking to a friend over coffee. He does not reach for the lecture-hall vocabulary that Prager or Medved use. He sells himself as a regular guy from Dayton who happens to have a national show, and the word choices protect that brand. When he wants to wound an opponent, he reaches for ridicule before argument. The title of his book, Surrounded by Idiots, captures the move. The liberal is not wrong so much as silly, and the laugh does the persuading.
The rhetoric leans on repetition and the listener. Gallagher made his name on caller interaction, and the show breathes through the phone lines. He flatters the audience, treats their calls as the heart of the hour, and uses their stories as evidence for his case. This gives him a populist warrant. He speaks for the common-sense American against the smug expert, and the parade of callers becomes proof that the common-sense American agrees with him.
He yells. The booking-agency notes mention it, and listeners notice it too. But the yelling reads as enthusiasm rather than rage. He gets loud the way a sports fan gets loud, carried away by the excitement of the moment, and then he laughs at himself for getting carried away. That self-deprecation softens the edge. A man who can mock his own intensity seems safer than one who never breaks.
His pacing runs fast. He stacks topics, cuts between them, keeps the segment moving toward the break. The newer pairing with Mark Davis pushes the show toward unscripted banter, two veterans riffing, and Gallagher thrives in that looser frame because he likes the sound of conversation more than the sound of monologue.
The whole package aims at likability. He wants you to enjoy his company. The politics arrive wrapped in good cheer, faith, and a fondness for first responders and his fallen-officer charity. The strategy works on a simple bet. A listener forgives a friend a great deal, and Gallagher spends three hours a day trying to be your friend.

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The Thom Hartmann Show

Thom Hartmann (b. 1951) sounds like a patient teacher who has the whole afternoon. His voice sits in a warm mid-range, even and unhurried, with little of the bark or the snarl that marks most political talk radio. He rarely raises it. When he wants emphasis he slows down instead of getting louder. The effect calms the listener and signals that the host has thought this through and you can relax into his explanation.
His diction runs plain and concrete. He favors short Anglo-Saxon words and everyday examples over jargon. When he reaches for a bigger word he tends to define it on the spot, which keeps the door open for a listener who tuned in mid-sentence. He likes numbers, dates, and names, and he drops them in to anchor a claim. He cites authors and historians by name and often holds up a book on his video feed. He calls back to his own books and to founding-era figures, Jefferson and Adams and Paine, and treats American history as a stock of usable stories rather than decoration.
The signature move is the explainer. He takes a current fight and walks it back to its roots, sometimes a century or two, then walks it forward again to the present. He builds an argument in steps and tells you he is doing so. He repeats a thesis at the top, develops it through the segment, and restates it at the close. This gives his hours a lecture shape. A caller asks a narrow question and Hartmann answers with a small history lesson.
His rhetoric leans on cause and chain. He likes to show how one policy produced a later result, how a court ruling in one decade set up a crisis in another. He frames issues as systems with a history rather than as the latest outrage. He uses the second person to bring the listener in, “here is what happened to you,” and the first-person plural to mark a shared civic project, “we used to do this, we can do it again.” He scolds power more than he mocks individuals. The tone toward opponents is more sorrow and correction than contempt, though he can turn sharp on corporate and billionaire targets, which he returns to often.
On the air he plays the reasonable elder. He thanks callers, lets them finish, and pushes back without cutting them off. He concedes small points to win the larger one. He flatters the audience as informed citizens who want the real story, and he positions himself as the one willing to do the homework. His humor is dry and light, a brief aside before he returns to the argument. He closes segments and the show with set phrases, a steady benediction about democracy and getting active, which gives regular listeners a rhythm to count on.
The whole package reads as professorial populism. He sells calm authority and historical depth in a format that usually sells heat. Where a Limbaugh-style host wins by performing dominance and grievance, Hartmann wins by performing patience and competence. He wants you to feel smarter and a little hopeful at the end of the hour, and he builds his voice, his pacing, and his structure to land you there.

The Set

Thom Hartmann (b. 1951) sits at the center of a world built out of progressive talk radio, independent left media, and the older muckraking tradition. The set runs through the Air America generation and the people who outlasted that failed network. Al Franken (b. 1951), Rachel Maddow (b. 1973), Randi Rhodes (b. 1959), Marc Maron (b. 1963), Janeane Garofalo (b. 1964), Lizz Winstead (b. 1961), Sam Seder (b. 1966), and Mike Malloy (b. 1942) all passed through that experiment. Hartmann’s closest peers on the syndicated dial are Stephanie Miller (b. 1961), Bill Press (b. 1940), and the late Ed Schultz (1954-2018). Younger heirs orbit nearby through internet video: Cenk Uygur (b. 1970), Ana Kasparian (b. 1986), and David Pakman (b. 1984). The distribution runs through Pacifica, Free Speech TV, and the Sanders-era left rather than through corporate broadcasters, and that fact carries weight inside the set.

Above the broadcasters stand the authors and politicians the set treats as authorities. Bernie Sanders (b. 1941), Robert Reich (b. 1946), Ralph Nader (b. 1934), Jim Hightower (b. 1943), Greg Palast (b. 1952), Naomi Klein (b. 1970), and Michael Moore (b. 1954) supply the arguments. Behind them, as patron saints, sit Noam Chomsky (b. 1928) and Howard Zinn (1922-2010), whose A People’s History of the United States furnishes the master plot. The dead heroes are Franklin Roosevelt, the trust-busting Theodore Roosevelt, Thomas Paine, and a Jefferson read as a democrat against the moneyed interest.

What they value is democracy as a working machine for the many against the few. They prize the New Deal social contract as the baseline of a decent country. They prize an informed and active citizenry, the labor union, the public commons, and a government strong enough to check private wealth. They distrust concentrated money, the consolidated press, the national security state, and the donor class. Reading and history rank high as civic equipment. A man earns standing by knowing the deeper story and using it.

The hero is the citizen-scholar who does his homework, names the predators, and rouses ordinary people to act. He digs up the buried history, traces a present harm back to a policy choice made decades ago, and hands the listener a usable past. The villains form a fixed cast: Robert Bork and Lewis Powell and the memo that launched the corporate counterrevolution, Ronald Reagan, the Koch brothers and their network, the Federalist Society, the media conglomerates, and the billionaire who buys an election. Heroism means refusing to sell out to that world.

The status games follow from this. Standing comes from longevity in the cause, from having been right early and stayed right, from a track record no corporate parent could buy. The independent footprint counts as a badge. A host who keeps a national audience without a network master can claim a purity the cable star cannot. Booking the right senator or the right author confers rank. So does citation by the movement and a shelf of one’s own books, and Hartmann, a prolific author, scores high there. Reputational risk runs the other way. Hartmann carried his show on RT America for years, and that association became a liability among peers once the network’s Kremlin funding turned toxic, a debt he has had to manage.

Their normative claims are sharp and repeated. Corporations are not persons. Money is not speech, and Citizens United v. FEC stands as the great modern sin. Democracy depends on an informed public, so a captured press is a wound to the republic. Government can be a force for good, and the proof is the New Deal. A nation that produces billionaires while workers fall behind has made a policy error, not encountered a law of nature. Wealth above a certain height is itself a danger to self-rule.

Underneath the policy talk runs a set of claims about what is real and permanent. The set believes in a true American democratic tradition, founded by men who meant the republic for ordinary people, later hijacked by corporate interests who dress their theft in the founders’ language. It believes in an authentic popular will that the system suppresses. It leans toward a picture of human beings as cooperative by nature, turned predatory only by a predatory economy. Hartmann adds his own twist with the hunter-versus-farmer account of attention deficit, which he treats as an evolved human trait rather than a disorder, an instinct that an old way of life rewarded and the modern classroom punishes.

The moral grammar is the grammar of theft and recovery. The country was stolen from the people by men of money, and the work of the good citizen is to take it back. The story moves in three beats: we once had a fair social contract; they took it from us through court rulings, deregulation, and a long campaign of capture; and we can restore it if we wake up and organize. This is restoration, not revolution, a call to return to a remembered better order rather than to build a new one. Sin in this world is complicity, silence, and selling out. Virtue is doing the reading, naming the guilty, staying independent, and getting the audience off the couch. Hartmann’s closing benedictions, the steady sign-off about democracy and getting active, are the liturgy of that grammar, the ritual that ends each service and sends the congregation back out to work.

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Kevin Walling: A Democratic Voice in Conservative Rooms

Kevin Walling (b. 1985) works at the meeting point of campaign operations, advocacy, political consulting, and television commentary. He holds no elected office of national weight. Yet he has built a recognizable place in Democratic politics through field organizing, paid media, coalition work, and a steady presence on conservative-leaning news programs. His career traces a larger shift in American public life, one where influence runs through networks of consultants, advocacy groups, and on-air commentators as much as through the formal offices of the party.
Walling grew up in Maryland and studied politics at The Catholic University of America in Washington. He came into public life through advocacy and grassroots organizing rather than through government service. His early work centered on LGBTQ rights and civic engagement, and it gave him an education in the everyday labor of persuasion: voter contact, message discipline, and the slow assembly of legislative majorities. He learned to treat politics as a craft of moving persuadable audiences, not as a contest of pure ideology.
The work that he names as his proudest came at Equality Maryland. As a director there during the 2008 election cycle, he helped elect the first pro-equality majority to the Maryland State Assembly and Senate. That majority set the ground for the marriage equality law the state adopted in 2012 and voters upheld at referendum that November. The campaign taught him how a focused coalition turns public sentiment into legislative votes, and how a disciplined message carries an issue past its activist core into the broader electorate.
From advocacy he moved into the operational side of campaigns. He ran voter contact programs, field operations, and political communications across Democratic races in Maryland and beyond. This grounding in the mechanics of elections shaped everything that followed. Like many strategists of his generation, he came up through the practical end of politics before he built a public profile.
In 2010 he helped launch No Labels, the group formed amid rising concern over partisan gridlock in Washington. He served as its first Political and Field Director and as a national spokesman. The organization then sought to encourage bipartisan cooperation and institutional reform, not to break the two-party system. Its later turn toward a possible third-party presidential run in the 2024 cycle shows how institutions drift from the aims of their founders, and Walling’s early role there fits his longer interest in coalition work and cross-partisan communication.
His standing in Maryland Democratic politics rose with his election in 2014 as a Democratic committeeman in Montgomery County. He served a term as chairman of the county party. Montgomery County ranks among the most affluent, educated, and politically active jurisdictions in the state. A chairman there manages a coalition of progressive activists, labor, minority communities, professional-class voters, and party regulars, and he holds it together through negotiation rather than ideological enforcement. The post sharpened Walling’s conviction that durable political organizations rest on broad alliances among groups whose interests overlap without matching.
Over the same years he built a consulting and public affairs practice. He co-founded Celtic Strategies and became a partner at the Democratic media firm HGCreative. His specialty settled into paid media engagement and targeted voter contact. In 2020 he led the paid media effort that passed Medicaid expansion through ballot measures in Oklahoma and Missouri and helped elect several new Democratic members of Congress. This phase of his career ran alongside the rise of digital campaigning and the splintering of the old mass audience. As campaigns leaned harder on targeted messaging and rapid response, strategists who could work across platforms gained value, and he positioned himself as one of them.
Television gave him his widest reach. Since 2016 he has logged more than five hundred hours of commentary across the Fox News Channel, Fox Business Network, CNN, MSNBC, Fox News Radio, and Bloomberg. He serves as the lead political contributor and analyst for Fox5 in Washington, writes opinion pieces for Fox News Digital, and once contributed to The Hill. What sets him apart from most Democratic operatives is the room he chose. He made his name as a Democratic voice on conservative-leaning programs, returning almost daily to hosts and audiences that lean against him.
His success in that room rests on a particular method. He frames Democratic positions through themes that travel past the party’s activist base. He leans on economic growth, patriotism, national service, institutional stability, and pragmatic governance. That vocabulary lets him defend his side while sidestepping the cultural language that hardens center-right viewers against it. The approach has made him a fixture of Fox programming, present for election nights in 2020, 2021, and the 2022 midterms, for each of Joe Biden’s (b. 1942) State of the Union addresses, for the 2024 Biden-Trump debate, and for the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee.
The 2020 race raised his profile further. He served as a surrogate for the Biden-Harris campaign and carried its message largely on conservative outlets, speaking daily to a national audience in venues where Republican voices held the numerical edge. The role rested on a clear premise. Persuasion means going where the persuadable audience sits, even when the room is hostile.
Walling holds a pragmatic, institutional place within his party. He pairs progressive social commitments with a focus on coalition building, incremental gains, and steady engagement with opponents. His influence comes not from movement activism and not from formal authority. It comes from his command of narrative, his willingness to argue in front of unfriendly audiences, and his relationships across constituencies. Earlier generations of party operatives worked in the background. The modern strategist often serves as commentator, advisor, and advocate at once, and Walling fills that hybrid figure.
He belongs to the generation of Democratic strategists formed by the early-century forces that reshaped the country: the marriage equality movement, the spread of digital campaigning, deepening polarization, and the rise of cable news as a central arena of political combat. His career shows how influence now gathers at the seam between advocacy, media, consulting, and party. In that sense he stands for the professional communicator of the present era, a man whose task is not to govern but to help rival coalitions explain themselves to the public.
He and his husband, Alex Stroman, divide their time between Washington and Charleston, South Carolina.

The Voice

Kevin Walling talks fast and warm. He keeps a mid-register, even tone, the cadence of a campaign operative who has filled a lot of dead air on cable. He rarely raises his voice. He smiles through disagreement. On a Fox panel he plays a fixed role, the friendly Democrat in a conservative room, and that role shapes everything about how he speaks.
His diction runs plain and colloquial. He leans on filler that signals ease rather than thought: “look,” “I mean,” “you know,” “at the end of the day.” He reaches for “literally” the way many talkers do now, as emphasis rather than fact. He drops campaign shop-talk into general conversation. He says “the reelect” instead of the reelection campaign. He talks about messaging, the base, swing voters, the map. The vocabulary marks him as an operative first and a commentator second.
His method on air follows the surrogate’s standard sequence. He concedes a small point to look fair. He reframes. He delivers the message he came to deliver. When liberal outlets ran stories about Biden’s 2024 trouble, he waved them off by reaching for history, noting that the same headlines ran in 2012 and 2020, and dismissing the reporters as fairly lazy that want the clicks. The move defangs bad news for his side without attacking anyone in the room. He mocks the press, not the host. Fox News
His rhetoric favors deflection over confrontation. He likes the historical analogy, the pattern that makes today’s problem look ordinary. He repeats phrases for rhythm and sometimes mimics an opponent’s voice to ridicule a narrative. He almost never goes for the throat. He keeps the temperature low because the format rewards it and because his value to the network rests on staying pleasant.
Fox keeps him around as the tame opposition, the Democrat who speaks the audience’s language and poses no danger. He gives the show the look of balance. He hands the hosts a foil who will not embarrass them or himself. He stays on message because comms is his trade, and message discipline is the trade’s first rule. The cost shows in the content. He offers talking points more than argument, fluency more than insight, the practiced reasonableness of a man whose job is to be liked while he loses the segment.
He is good at the job. The job asks for a smooth, agreeable, forgettable Democrat, and he delivers one most nights.

Kevin Walling Through Bourdieu

Pierre Bourdieu (1930-2002) built his sociology on the claim that social life runs in fields, and each field is a structured space of positions with its own stakes and its own currency. A man’s place in a field depends on the capital he holds, and capital comes in forms. Economic capital is the money. Cultural capital is the knowledge, the credentials, the embodied skill. Social capital is the network. Symbolic capital is the recognition others grant him. These forms convert into one another at rates the fields set, and the rates move. A man’s feel for the game, his habitus, grows out of his trajectory and tells him what to do before he reasons it through. Run Walling through this apparatus and the hybrid career stops reading as a string of jobs. It reads as one long act of conversion.
Two fields hold him at once. There is the field of politics, where the stakes are office, influence, and the power to set agendas, and where capital takes the shape of a winning record, donor trust, and party standing. There is the journalistic field, and here Bourdieu sharpens the picture. In On Television he argues that television journalism answers to an economic logic, the ratings, and that this logic pulls the field toward speed, conflict, and the watchable. The TV field rewards the man who can speak fast, land a point inside a segment, and come back tomorrow. Walling does not merely appear in both fields. He earns his living off the gap between them.
Start with what he brought up from the campaign trade. The operative’s craft is embodied cultural capital, the kind Bourdieu calls incorporated, carried in the body and not written down. Walling learned voter contact, message discipline, and the read of a persuadable audience by doing the work across Maryland races and the Equality Maryland fight in the 2008 cycle. This is knowledge you cannot hand someone in a memo. It sits in the hands and the ear. In the campaign field this capital is common. Washington holds thousands of men who can run a field program. There the supply is deep and the price is low.
Add his social capital. The Montgomery County party, where he won a committeeman’s seat in 2014 and chaired the county organization, gave him a working network of activists, labor, and party regulars. No Labels in 2010 gave him a different network, the bipartisan reformers and the donors around them. Celtic Strategies and the partnership at HGCreative gave him the consultant’s web of clients and vendors. Each tie is convertible. Each can be cashed for information, introductions, or contracts.
Now the move that defines him. He carries the operative’s cultural capital across the field boundary into television, where the same skill grows scarce and dear. A Democratic operative is one of a crowd in the political field. A Democratic operative who will sit on Fox five days a week, hold his composure against a hostile host, and not burn out is rare. The journalistic field, hungry for a credible voice from the other side, pays a premium for that scarcity. This is arbitrage. Capital cheap in one field becomes expensive in the next, and Walling lives on the spread.
His tolerance for the crossing is part of the capital. Most Democratic operatives will not enter the conservative subfield of cable. Their habitus recoils from the room, the host, the audience that leans against them. Walling’s habitus does not recoil, and there lies the source of the rent he collects. Bourdieu would not credit this to nerve alone. He would trace it to trajectory. The Catholic University man, the Maryland Democrat formed in a professional-class milieu, the advocate who won marriage equality inside a Catholic setting rather than against it, carries a comportment that reads as reasonable and unthreatening. His hexis, the bearing and the tone of the body, does not perform the affect that sets a conservative audience on edge. He looks and sounds like a Democrat the room can sit through. The body carries the trajectory, and the trajectory sells.
The journalistic field then shapes what he says, and Bourdieu insists on this against any flattering account of personal cleverness. On Television describes the fast-thinker, the guest who must deliver inside the clock and so reaches for the received idea, the commonplace that needs no setup because the audience already holds it. Walling’s themes fit the slot. Economic growth, patriotism, national service, institutional stability. These travel without explanation. They pass the host’s filter and the viewer’s guard. Bourdieu would say the field selects for this repertoire as much as Walling chooses it. The medium rewards the commonplace delivered with conviction, and a man who supplies it on schedule keeps his chair.
His position in the space generates his posture. Bourdieu separates the position a man holds from the position-takings he produces, the actual things he says. Walling occupies a rare slot, the loyal opposition guest inside the rival coalition’s house organ. The slot dictates the bearing. He must defend his party and do it in a register the host’s audience will tolerate, which rules out the cultural language that would mark him as an intruder. The prises de position follow from the place, not from a free hand.
The hours then consecrate him. Five hundred and more since 2016, the lead political contributor seat at Fox5 in Washington, the opinion column at Fox News Digital. Bourdieu treats consecration as the act by which a field certifies a man as legitimate, and symbolic capital as the recognition that certification confers. Recognition on Fox is worth more to Walling than the same recognition on MSNBC would be, because it is scarcer for a Democrat and so signals a rarer competence. The loop closes here. Airtime consecrates him as the strategist who can do the impossible room, which draws clients to the firms, which funds the operation, which keeps him current enough to hold the airtime. Media visibility feeds consulting, consulting funds relevance, relevance buys more visibility. The capital circulates and compounds.
Bourdieu would not leave the account at success, and the critical edge cuts here. The journalistic field is heteronomous. It bends to the economic logic outside it and pulls the fields it covers toward spectacle. To win in the TV field Walling must submit to its terms, the brevity, the conflict frame, the recurring three-minute hit. The deep field knowledge he carried up from campaigns, the part that resists compression, gets pressed into the segment-sized commonplace. The autonomous skill bows to the heteronomous demand. He trades range for the chair. Bourdieu would mark the price and decline to call it free.
The whole career then resolves into a single Bourdieusian figure, distinction through scarcity. In Distinction he shows how men make their standing by occupying positions others cannot or will not take. Walling distinguishes himself from the mass of Democratic operatives by holding the one position they avoid. He builds a brand out of a boundary crossing and collects the rent the crossing earns. No part of him stands outside the fields. His feel for the game, his manner, his themes, his slot, all of it comes from his trajectory through the structure and his nerve at the seam between two of its parts. The man lives on the exchange rate, and the exchange rate is Bourdieu’s whole point.

2Way Morning Show

The setup is a deliberate triangle, and the three men were cast for it.
The show is The Morning Meeting on 2WAY, Mark Halperin’s (b. 1965) interactive video platform. It airs live at nine eastern, then repeats on SiriusXM’s Megyn Kelly Channel an hour later. Halperin built the conceit around the editorial meeting that television networks hold each morning, the gathering where anchors and producers decide what the day’s story is. He invites the audience into that room by Zoom and takes live questions. In May 2026 he added O’Connor and Kevin Walling (b. 1985) as permanent co-hosts, with a rotating bench of contributors split across the aisle, Erick Erickson and Hogan Gidley on the right, Steve Elmendorf and Hyma Moore on the left.
So the arrangement runs left, center, and right by design. Halperin sits at the axis. O’Connor carries the conservative side. Walling carries the Democratic side. Understanding the interplay means understanding what each man wants from the seat.
Halperin is the access journalist. His authority rests on the claim that he knows what the operatives in both parties say in private, the reputation he built at ABC News and through Game Change. He sells process, not ideology. His role on the show is to frame each segment around what the strategists are thinking and to referee the two partisans. His incentives point toward balance and civility for a reason beyond temperament. The platform is his comeback after his career collapsed in 2017, and the brand he is selling is unbiased discourse. He needs the partisans engaged, watchable, and willing to return tomorrow. That gives him a stake in keeping the friction warm rather than hot.
O’Connor brings something Halperin and Walling do not, the trade of a morning-drive radio host. He knows pacing, banter, and how to carry a segment without a script. He came up through Breitbart, so he reads the press as a combatant rather than a referee, which puts him in periodic tension with Halperin’s insider-neutral pose. In this seat, though, he plays a milder hand than he plays alone on WMAL. The format rewards exchange over monologue, and a co-host who only delivers set pieces breaks the show. He supplies the conservative read and the broadcast polish at once.
Walling is the most telling casting choice. He is a Democratic strategist by training, a Biden 2020 surrogate, and for years the in-house Democrat on Fox News and Fox 5 in Washington. He made his name as the lone liberal in a right-leaning room, the man who states the party line without alienating a conservative audience and stays affable while losing the count of who agrees with him. That is the exact skill the 2WAY seat asks for. He is younger than the other two and an operative rather than a broadcaster, so he brings message discipline more than radio instinct.
The show markets itself as neutral ground, and the structure underneath that label is two partisans plus a host with his own history and his own access-based interests. The neutrality is a brand, not a fact. Halperin’s position above ideology is itself a position, the stance of the insider who profits from looking like the only adult in the room. And the left-right span is narrower than it appears. A Biden surrogate and a Breitbart-trained media critic still argue inside a fairly establishment band, both of them Fox-adjacent. The disagreement is real. The rupture risk is low. That tends to produce heat without much breakage, which suits all three men’s incentives.

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The Larry O’Connor Show

Larry O’Connor (b. 1967) built a career that tracks the conversion of American conservative media from talk radio and opinion magazines into a layered network of podcasts, livestreams, digital publishing, and national broadcasting. He hosts O’Connor & Company on Washington’s WMAL, edits Townhall.com, and since May 2026 anchors a national morning program carried across the Salem Radio Network and the Salem News Channel. He reached that position by an unusual route. He did not start in politics, journalism, or law. He started in the theater.
Born in Detroit on June 23, 1967, O’Connor grew up in Plymouth Township, between Detroit and Ann Arbor. In 1980 his family moved to Newport Beach, California, where he attended Corona del Mar High School. He entered the entertainment industry rather than the political class, and he spent more than a decade inside it. From 1986 to 1999 he worked for the Shubert Organization, first on Broadway in New York, briefly at Lincoln Center Theater, then in Los Angeles. From 1991 to 1999 he served as general manager of the Shubert Theatre in Los Angeles, the 2,100-seat house that the company renovated for the American premiere of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s (b. 1948) Sunset Blvd., starring Glenn Close (b. 1947). He oversaw operations during runs of Ragtime and Disney’s Beauty and the Beast and numerous touring productions.
The work taught him how a large cultural enterprise runs. He handled budgeting, marketing, labor relations, and venue management. He sat on the boards of four union benefit plans and presided over Theatre LA, the city’s league of theaters. He helped create the Ovation Awards, the Los Angeles equivalent of the Tony Awards, and produced the ceremony in 1994 and 1995. After he left Shubert in 1999, he kept producing as an independent general manager. His credits include Sweeney Todd with Kelsey Grammer (b. 1955), A Knight Out with Ian McKellen (b. 1939), and Ten Commandments: The Musical with Val Kilmer (1959–2025) and a then-unknown Adam Lambert (b. 1982). The Shubert came down in 2002, three years after he left it.
That theater background shaped everything he did next. He had spent years inside the entertainment business, not outside it firing rocks at Hollywood. He knew how the industry allocated money, managed talent, negotiated with unions, and courted audiences. When he turned to media criticism, he wrote as a veteran of the trade.
His entry into conservative media came in January 2009, when he began writing for Andrew Breitbart’s (1969–2012) Big Hollywood under the pseudonym “Stage Right.” He presented himself as a closeted conservative working among liberal colleagues on Broadway, and he produced a steady stream of posts, many of them about a National Endowment for the Arts conference-call scandal. His theater résumé gave him standing that few political commentators could claim.
The partnership with Breitbart marked the turn of his life. Breitbart taught him to read media institutions as political actors and to treat the distribution of information as a field of combat. In June 2011 O’Connor became editor-in-chief of Breitbart.tv, an early effort to build a video-driven alternative news operation on the Right. Under his watch the network broke videos that moved national events, including footage that contributed to the ouster of Representative Bob Etheridge (b. 1941) from Congress.
O’Connor stood near the center of the early Tea Party media wars. He helped distribute and amplify the undercover ACORN videos recorded by James O’Keefe (b. 1984) and Hannah Giles in 2009, footage that triggered congressional action and hastened the collapse of ACORN. He defended O’Keefe after O’Keefe’s arrest at Senator Mary Landrieu’s (b. 1955) New Orleans office, and he exposed errors in a Salon article by Max Blumenthal (b. 1977) that led the magazine to issue corrections. He also took part in Breitbart’s coverage of Representative Anthony Weiner (b. 1964) during the 2011 social-media scandal that ended Weiner’s House career.
Not every episode favored him. In July 2011 Shirley Sherrod (b. 1948), a former Agriculture Department official, sued O’Connor, Breitbart, and a third defendant for defamation over a selectively edited video clip. The parties settled out of court in October 2015 for an undisclosed sum. The case sits in his record as a reminder that the methods of digital insurgency carried legal and reputational risk.
Andrew Breitbart died in 2012. O’Connor stayed on for a time, then left the organization in 2013. He moved through a sequence of editorial posts that mapped the growth of conservative digital publishing. In June 2014 he joined Independent Journal Review as editor-at-large, a role he held through April 2016. He then served as editor-at-large at HotAir.com through December 2016. Since 2016 he has written for Townhall and HotAir under Townhall Media, a subsidiary of Salem Media Group.
His broadcasting career began online, not on a local AM dial. In January 2010 he launched a daily program on BlogTalkRadio that mixed monologue, interviews, listener calls, and live chat at a time when internet radio sat at the margins. The show drew an audience and led to guest-hosting slots on syndicated programs. He has filled in for Mark Levin (b. 1957), Dennis Miller (b. 1953), and Hugh Hewitt (b. 1956), among others.
WMAL in Washington gave him a foothold in heritage talk radio in the mid-2010s. By 2016 he held his own afternoon program on the station, and he later moved to the morning drive slot as host of O’Connor & Company, heard from six to nine a.m. Broadcasting from the capital set his show apart. His listeners include congressional staff, administration officials, lobbyists, journalists, and policy hands, and he often serves as a conduit between conservative voters and the people who govern.
Television widened his reach. He appears on Fox News, including Fox & Friends and Greg Gutfeld’s (b. 1965) Red Eye, and on Fox Business, Newsmax, and Sky News Australia, with occasional turns on ABC News, the PBS NewsHour, and MSNBC. He married the journalist Meredith Dake in 2015.
Media criticism runs through all of it. Following Breitbart, O’Connor argues that news organizations are participants in political conflict rather than neutral observers. He made the case at book length in Shameless Liars: How Trump Defeated the Legacy Media and Made Them Irrelevant (2025), which frames the clash between the press and President Donald Trump (b. 1946) as a crisis of institutional trust. He contends that the decline of confidence in legacy journalism traces less to technological disruption than to perceived bias and lost credibility.
Two promotions in 2026 confirmed his standing. In January, Salem named him editor of Townhall.com, an opinion platform with roots reaching back decades, giving him authority over written journalism, audio, video, and the site’s daily output. He continues to host his noon streaming show, LARRY, on Townhall and YouTube. Then, on April 30, Salem announced that O’Connor & Company would become the company’s flagship national morning program beginning May 4, airing across more than 140 affiliate stations on the Salem Radio Network with a simulcast on the Salem News Channel, while keeping its longtime slot on WMAL. His executive producer, Heather Hunter, stayed with the program through the expansion. O’Connor is a regular morning host for Mark Halperin’s 2Way show along with Democratic strategist Kevin Walling.
O’Connor represents a type that the conservative movement now produces in volume. He rose through entertainment management, internet journalism, and media entrepreneurship rather than through party committees, think tanks, or universities. His path traces how the Right’s media moved from a scattering of radio shows and magazines into a vertically integrated operation that spans radio, television, websites, podcasts, streaming video, and social platforms. His biography links four worlds, the theater, the digital insurgency of the early Breitbart years, talk radio, and national political journalism, and shows how new distribution technologies redrew the map of political influence in the United States.

The Voice

Larry O’Connor carries the theater into the studio. He spent the 1986 to 1999 stretch inside the Shubert Organization and ran the Shubert Theatre in Los Angeles, where he oversaw the renovation of the house to stage the American premiere of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Sunset Blvd. with Glenn Close. A man learns timing in that world. He learns the value of a held beat, a build, a button at the end of a scene. You hear that training in his radio voice. The instincts come from the wings, not from the newsroom.
His own account of how he works tells you most of what you need. On his Townhall video show he aims for about twenty minutes per topic of straight monologue or playing off clips, building the story arc and the narrative without a break. That is the core of his manner. He thinks in long form. He treats a segment as a unit with a beginning, a turn, and a payoff. Most talk hosts chop the hour into reactions. O’Connor wants the slow construction. He says the long-form muscle opened up the way he presents a story on the radio too.
The diction sits in the conversational middle. He came up writing for Breitbart’s web properties and editing video, so his references run through pop culture, sports, and the Catholic and Navy worlds he claims on his own bio. He says Go Blue and Go Navy and means them. The register is a Detroit Catholic who moved to Newport Beach as a boy and then made his living around Broadway and Hollywood theater. That mix gives him a wider cultural vocabulary than the standard movement-conservative host. He can talk Sondheim and he can talk shutdown politics in the same hour.
His rhetoric leans on narrative and grievance against the press. The 2025 book Shameless Liars lays out the thesis: the legacy media lie, and Trump beat them at their own game. On air he works that frame hard. He builds a case the way a producer builds a show, laying clip on clip, then delivering the verdict. The persuasion runs through story rather than through data dumps. He wants you to feel the arc close.
When WMAL stripped the show down to him alone, reviewers turned on the format. One longtime listener calls the solo version boring and monotonous and says the banter with guest hosts made it entertaining. That tells you something true about his instrument. O’Connor is a strong second voice and a fine builder of a planned segment. He sharpens against another person. Alone, across three live hours, the same measured theatrical delivery can flatten into a drone. The skill that serves the twenty-minute video monologue works against him over a full morning drive without a partner to push.

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NYT: Scott Pelley on the Bari Weiss Era and His Last Days at 60 Minutes

Pelley (b. 1957) gives a powerful account from the man who lost. He has every reason to cast himself as the principled holdout and Bari Weiss (b. 1984) as the unqualified political hire. Much of the interview earns that read. Some of it does not.
Start with his language. He calls the firings a massacre, a murder, a vigil. He likens the day to a spouse being killed. He talks about combat, foxholes, war zones, colleagues who walk pregnant into danger. A television network reorganized and fired people. Pelley keeps folding the risk of war reporting into the experience of getting managed out, and the folding works for him. It turns the correspondents into a priesthood and the new owners into killers. The move is effective. It is also rhetoric.
His strongest charge is narrow and serious. He says Weiss emailed after deadline asking that Renee Good be described as driving toward the officer when the video shows her wheels turned away. If true, that is pressure to misdescribe footage to match the president’s version, and that crosses a line. But Pelley admits he paraphrases and lacks the email. He admits he never raised it with her. He admits she may never have noticed he ignored the notes. The most damning claim in the piece rests on the thinnest sourcing in the piece. CBS says the notes carried no political aim. You cannot settle that from this transcript.
Watch where he pivots. Pressed by Garcia-Navarro (b. 1972) on whether this might be the system working, he drops the bias line and reaches for competence. The real trouble, he says, was the broken deadline and the near-miss. That charge is harder to deny, and he half-knows it. It also cuts against the political story he spent the prior stretch building. If the worst outcome was a late, bad note he ignored with no consequence, then the thumb on the scale starts to look like an inexperienced editor’s clumsy edit rather than a covert operation for Trump. Weiss may be in over her head. That differs from running a political shop. The interview asserts the second while mostly showing the first.
Garcia-Navarro does her job. Her three pushback questions, whether Weiss wanted fairness, whether this is the system working, whether inexperience explains everything, are where Pelley’s case shows strain. His answers retreat each time.
The credential resentment runs under all of it. Weiss and Nick Bilton arrive from outside television, imposed from above by David Ellison (b. 1983) after he bought Paramount. The experience gap looks real. So does a guild defending its ground against owners who paid for the right to change it. Both hold at once. Pelley calls the Trump settlement a bribe, which is his word, and the Times notes Paramount denied the link.
The close is his most polished passage. A combat record set against a president who never served. It lands. It also lets him exit on heroism rather than on the harder question of whether a successful old man got caught in a takeover he could not stop.
The last laugh. He jokes that Fox News will run only the parts where he cries.
My one-line read: a moving, self-interested testimony built around one grave but under-documented allegation, sold inside a martyrdom story that inflates a corporate housecleaning into war.

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The Mark Levin Show

Mark Levin (b. 1957) talks like a prosecutor who never left the courtroom. He served as chief of staff to Attorney General Edwin Meese under Reagan, and the cross-examination habit shaped everything that followed. He builds a case. He lays a foundation, marshals the founding documents, then turns on the witness, who is usually a liberal, a Republican squish, or a member of the press he calls the Praetorian Guard.
The voice itself runs high and nasal, with a New York-Philadelphia edge. He modulates between two registers, and the gap between them carries the show. In one register he reads aloud from John Locke, Montesquieu, Tocqueville, or the Federalist Papers, slow and reverent, the schoolmaster mode. In the other he detonates. The volume spikes without warning. He shouts down a caller, calls him a dummy, a buffoon, an imbecile, and orders him off the phone. “Get off the phone, you big dummy” became a signature. The contrast is the engine. Listeners wait for the explosion the way they wait for a fastball.
His diction leans didactic and coined. He prefers “statism” to liberalism, “the ruling class” to elites, “Democrat Party” as a deliberate jab rather than “Democratic Party.” He minted “Ameritopia” for his book on utopian thinking and uses his own coinages as if they were settled vocabulary. He reaches for the language of the eighteenth century and drops it into a screaming match about cable news. Tyranny, liberty, soft despotism, natural rights. He treats his audience as students who need the syllabus, then as jurors who need the closing argument.
The rhetoric works by accumulation and repetition. He stacks rhetorical questions. He repeats a phrase three or four times, louder each pass, until it lands like a verdict. He addresses absent adversaries in the second person, as if they sat across the table under oath. “You said this. Now you say that. Which is it?” He flatters his own side with the same warmth he denies his targets. A caller who agrees is “a great American.” He name-drops his own bestsellers, his ratings, his audience size, and folds the self-promotion into the argument rather than apologizing for it.
Two softer notes cut the aggression. He loves his rescue dogs and talks about them on air, which humanizes the snarl. And the founding-era reading sessions slow the pace and signal that the anger rests on a body of thought rather than on temper alone. He wants you to believe the screaming is earned, that he has done the reading, that a man who quotes Montesquieu has the right to call a senator a coward.
The persona is the professor who loses his temper because he cares more than you do. Hannity gave him the nickname “the Great One,” and Levin wears it without irony. That absence of irony is the tell. He means all of it. The bombast is sincere, not a bit, and the sincerity is what separates him from hosts who perform outrage as a paycheck.
His books carry the same voice in print: Liberty and Tyranny, Ameritopia, Men in Black, American Marxism, Unfreedom of the Press. Short declarative hammer blows alternating with long catalog sentences, founding quotations as proof texts, and a closing argument that assumes the reader already agrees and needs only the ammunition.

The Set

Start with the men closest to him, because the set is small at the center and wide at the edges.

Sean Hannity (b. 1961) is the friend and amplifier. He crowned Levin “the Great One,” and the nickname tells you how the inner circle works. They confer titles. Rush Limbaugh (1951-2021) sits above all of them as the founding father of the form, the patriarch every host measures himself against. Levin came up in Limbaugh’s shadow and inherited the slot, the syndication model, the idea that one man at a microphone can move a national audience. Glenn Beck (b. 1964) belongs to the set through business as much as ideology. Levin’s LevinTV lived inside CRTV, the subscription venture backed by Cary Katz, and when CRTV merged with Beck’s TheBlaze in 2018 to form Blaze Media, the two men’s operations fused. Around them stand the rest of the radio fraternity: Michael Savage (b. 1942), Laura Ingraham (b. 1963), Hugh Hewitt (b. 1956), and Dennis Prager (b. 1948). They share guests, plug each other’s books, and police the same boundary against the squish.

The second tributary runs through Reagan-era law. Levin served Edwin Meese (b. 1931) at the Justice Department, and he carries that lineage like a credential. He runs the Landmark Legal Foundation. He keeps one foot in the originalist legal world that overlaps the Federalist Society, though he plays the populist tribune rather than the white-shoe litigator. Daniel Horowitz and the Conservative Review writers fill out the policy bench. Threshold Editions, the conservative imprint Mary Matalin (b. 1953) launched at Simon & Schuster, publishes the books that turn his audience into bestseller lists. His wife, Julie Strauss Levin, anchors the home front and appears in the public persona.

A third ring reaches into electoral politics. Levin championed Ted Cruz (b. 1970) in the 2016 primary, backed the Tea Party insurgents, and pushed the Convention of States movement that grew out of his book The Liberty Amendments, which ties him to Mark Meckler and the state-legislature wing of the right. He came late and hard to Donald Trump, and that conversion reordered loyalties across the whole set.

Now the values. The set worships the American founding as a near-sacred achievement and treats the Constitution as a text to be read aloud, quoted, and defended against desecration. The founders had timeless wisdom. Human nature is fixed, and they grasped it. Against this stands the enemy, the “ruling class,” the “administrative state,” the press he calls the Praetorian Guard, and behind all of it the hidden engine he names Marxism. He wrote American Marxism and Ameritopia to argue that the left is not a set of policy preferences but a totalizing creed with utopian ends and despotic means.

The hero system follows from this. The hero is the lone constitutionalist who has done the reading, who stands athwart the encroaching state, who refuses to be managed and refuses to go along. Heroism gets measured by willingness to fight and by refusal to curry favor in Washington. The villain is the collaborator, the Republican who softens, the man who goes native and trades principle for invitations to the right dinners. The immortality project, the thing that outlives the man, is preservation of the founding and its transmission to the next generation. Levin casts himself as the steward of that inheritance, the schoolmaster passing the syllabus forward before the barbarians close the schools.

The status games run on several currencies at once. Ratings and book sales supply the hard numbers, and Levin recites his own with no shame, because the recitation is part of the contest. Longevity counts, and proximity to Limbaugh as the patriarch counts more. The sharpest game inside the set is the purity contest. Status flows to the man who stays most consistent, who attacks his own side’s weaklings, who never compromises, who names the enemy without flinching. Levin plays a second game the pure entertainers cannot. He claims the seat of the intellectual. He reads Locke and Montesquieu on air, writes books with footnotes, and by doing so marks himself above the hosts who only perform. The scholar’s pose is his bid for rank.

The normative claims are firm and few: fidelity to the Constitution as originally understood; natural rights that precede the state; limited government as a moral imperative, not a mere preference; the illegitimacy of the administrative state; the corruption of the press; and loyalty to the cause above comfort or access.

The essentialist claims sit underneath. There is an essential Americanism, a thing with a fixed nature that can be rediscovered, which is the title and argument of Rediscovering Americanism. The left has an essence too, and that essence is Marxist and totalitarian whatever face it wears in a given decade. The founders form a coherent type with a unified wisdom. The ruling class forms its own coherent type, a class with shared interests and a shared contempt for ordinary citizens.

The moral grammar reduces to a few oppositions that govern every segment: loyalty against betrayal, courage against cowardice, the patriot against the collaborator, and purity against compromise. Sin is selling out, softening, seeking the approval of the media or the establishment. Virtue is standing firm, doing the reading, and calling the traitor by his name. The screaming is the grammar enforced in real time, the verdict delivered against the man who failed the test.

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