Laura Ingraham

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Laura Ingraham
Laura Ingraham by Gage Skidmore (16489846918).jpg
Ingraham speaking in Washington D.C., 2015
Born Laura Anne Ingraham
(1963-06-19) June 19, 1963 (age 60)
Glastonbury, Connecticut, U.S.
Alma mater Dartmouth College
University of Virginia
Occupation Radio talk show host, TV commentator, author
Children 3
Website www.lauraingraham.com
Notes

Laura Anne Ingraham (born June 19, 1963) is an American radio talk show host, best-selling author, and conservative political commentator. Her nationally syndicated talk show, The Laura Ingraham Show, airs throughout the United States on Courtside Entertainment. Ingraham is also the official guest host for Fox News Channel's The O'Reilly Factor and a contributor for This Week on ABC News.

Early life and career

Ingraham grew up in a middle-class family in Glastonbury, Connecticut, where she was born to Anne Caroline (née Kozak) and James Frederick Ingraham III.[2][3] Her maternal grandparents were Polish immigrants.[4] She graduated from Glastonbury High School in 1981.

Ingraham earned a Bachelor of Arts at Dartmouth College in 1985 and a Juris Doctor at the University of Virginia School of Law in 1991. As a Dartmouth undergraduate, she was a staff member of the independent conservative newspaper, The Dartmouth Review. In her senior year, she was the newspaper's editor-in-chief,[5] its first female editor. She wrote several controversial articles during her tenure, notably an article alleging racist and unprofessional behavior by Dartmouth music professor Bill Cole, who later sued Ingraham for $2.4 million. The college paid his legal costs. The suit was settled in 1985.[6] Jeffrey Hart, the faculty adviser for The Dartmouth Review described Ingraham as having "the most extreme anti-homosexual views imaginable", claiming "she went so far as to avoid a local eatery where she feared the waiters were homosexual."[7] In 1997, she wrote an essay in the Washington Post in which she stated that she changed her views on homosexuality after witnessing "the dignity, fidelity and courage" with which her gay brother Curtis and his companion coped with AIDS. Ingraham has stated that she supports civil unions, but still believes that marriage "is between a man and a woman".[8]

In the late 1980s, Ingraham worked as a speechwriter in the Ronald Reagan administration for the Domestic Policy Advisor. She also briefly served as editor of The Prospect, the magazine issued by Concerned Alumni of Princeton. After law school, in 1991, she served as a law clerk for Judge Ralph K. Winter, Jr., of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, in New York and subsequently clerked for U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas. She then worked as an attorney at the New York-based law firm Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom.[9] In 1995, she appeared on the cover of The New York Times Magazine in a leopard-print miniskirt in connection with a story about young conservatives.[10]

In 1996, she and Jay P. Lefkowitz organized the first Dark Ages Weekend in response to Renaissance Weekend.[11]

Ingraham has had two stints as a cable television host. In the late 1990s, she became a CBS commentator and hosted the MSNBC program Watch It! Several years later, Ingraham began campaigning for another cable television show on her radio program. She finally got her wish in 2008, when Fox News Channel gave her a three-week trial run for a new show entitled Just In.[12][13]

Her latest book is titled Of Thee I Zing and was released on July 12, 2011. In August 2013, conservative Newsmax magazine named Ingraham among the "25 most influential women in the GOP".[14]

Radio show host

Ingraham at Conservative Political Action Conference, 2012

Ingraham launched The Laura Ingraham Show in April 2001, which is heard on 306 stations and on XM Satellite Radio. The show was originally syndicated by Westwood One, but moved to Talk Radio Network in 2004. Ingraham is also the official guest host of The O'Reilly Factor on Fox News Channel and a weekly contributor with her segment, "The Ingraham Angle".[citation needed]

In 2012, Ingraham was rated as the No. 5 radio show in America, by Talkers Magazine.[15] On November 27, 2012, she announced her departure from Talk Radio Network, declining to renew her contract with TRN after nearly a decade of being associated with the network. She said, in jest, that she had decided to "pursue my first loves – modern dance and the xylophone".[16] She was the second major host from TRN's lineup to leave the network that year: TRN's other major program, The Savage Nation, left TRN two months earlier. Her new program, syndicated by Courtside Entertainment Group, began on January 2, 2013.[17]

Personal

Ingraham was estranged from her gay brother, Curtis. On February 23, 1997, she had an op-ed published in the Washington Post, in which she noted that her views on homosexuality had changed:

In the ten years since I learned my brother Curtis was gay my views and rhetoric about homosexuality have been tempered, because I have seen him and his companion Richard lead their lives with dignity, fidelity and courage.

According to her brother, they remain divided over the issue of gay marriage.

She was once engaged to conservative author and fellow Dartmouth alumnus Dinesh D'Souza. She also has dated former New Jersey Democratic Senator Robert Torricelli.[18] In April 2005, she announced her engagement to businessman James V. Reyes. On April 26, 2005, she announced she had undergone breast cancer surgery. On May 11, 2005, Ingraham told listeners that her engagement to Reyes was canceled, citing issues regarding her diagnosis with breast cancer. Despite the breakup, she maintained that the two remain good friends and told listeners she was in good health.[19]

She is a convert to Roman Catholicism.[20]

In May 2008, Ingraham adopted a young girl from Guatemala, whom she has named Maria Caroline.[21] In July 2009 she adopted a 13-month-old boy, Michael Dmitri, and two years later in June 2011 she announced the adoption of her third child, 13-month-old Nikolai Peter. Both of the boys were from Russia, a nation where Ingraham had spent considerable time earlier.[22]

Books

  • The Hillary Trap: Looking for Power in All the Wrong Places, first published June 2000, while Ingraham was a talk show host on MSNBC, was updated and reissued in paperback December 25, 2005. It analyzes and reinterprets Hillary Clinton as a faux feminist,[23] whose "liberal feminism has created a culture that rewards dependency, encourages fragmentation, undermines families, and celebrates victimhood".[24]
  • Power to the People, a New York Times number one best seller,[26][27] published September 11, 2007, focuses on what Ingraham calls the "pornification" of America and stresses the importance of popular participation in culture, promoting conservative values in family life, education and patriotism.[28]
  • Of Thee I Zing, a New York Times best seller,[31] published July 12, 2011. The book is a collection of humorous anecdotes meant to point out the decline of American culture, from muffin tops to body shots.[32]

References

  1. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Gale Biography In Context.
  2. https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10152061437129726&l=5479af2c4e&_fb_noscript=1
  3. http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/hartfordcourant/obituary.aspx?pid=168503939
  4. http://articles.courant.com/1999-05-31/news/9906010360_1_anne-ingraham-glastonbury-south-korea
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  6. James Panero and Stefan Beck (eds), The Dartmouth Review Pleads Innocent, pp. 43-58
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  12. Great News on the Laura Ingraham Front by Michael Gaynor, theconservativevoice.com; accessed April 28, 2014.
  13. America's Election HQ Returns Monday - mediabistro.com: TVNewser; accessed April 28, 2014.
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  15. Profile, Talkers.com; accessed April 28, 2104.
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  18. Laura Ingraham profile, NNDb.com; accessed April 28, 2014.]
  19. "Laura Ingraham Recovering from Cancer Surgery", outsidethebeltway.com (April 2005); accessed April 28, 2014.
  20. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found., pp. 307-9.
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  23. Mary McGrory, "The Hillary Trap: Looking for Power in All the Wrong Places", Washington Monthly, Vol. 32, No. 6 (June 2000), p. 51.
  24. Cynthia Harrison, "The Hillary Trap: Women Looking for Power in All the Wrong Places", Library Journal, Vol. 125 No. 12 (July 2000), p. 119.
  25. Kathryn Jean Lopez, "Books in Brief", National Review, Vol. 55, No. 21 (November 10, 2003), p. 51.
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