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.

About Luke Ford

My work has been covered in the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, and on 60 Minutes. I teach Alexander Technique in Beverly Hills (Alexander90210.com).
This entry was posted in Radio. Bookmark the permalink.