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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