Early Check Out: The World Gets Crazier and Obama Goes Golfing
PJTV: #1 Public University Producing Idiots
PJTV: No Jeb Bush and No Third Parties
Afterburner w/Bill Whittle -- Showtime: Evil or Stupid?
Zo on PJ -- Israel! How Dare You Fight Back!
Part Five: Are We All Communist Now? Examining a Common Core Survey
Taliban / Bergdahl Swap Scandal Explodes!
The Great One: Mark Levin on Restoring the Constitutional Republic
Young Americans for Liberty Conference Highlights
AFTERBURNER: First, the Grotesque
Fund on Fraud and Franken: Voter Fraud Is Real, and It Gave Us ObamaCare
PJTV's Afterburner w/Bill Whittle --Le Deluge: Obama is Quickly Becoming Louis XV
Zo's Take on Ferguson, MO: Democrat Cities are Dangerous Places to Live
ZoNATION--WMD: Worth Militarizing Damascus?
Early Check Out: The World Gets Crazier and Obama Goes Golfing
PJTV: #1 Public University Producing Idiots
PJTV: No Jeb Bush and No Third Parties
Afterburner w/Bill Whittle -- Showtime: Evil or Stupid?
Zo on PJ -- Israel! How Dare You Fight Back!
Part Five: Are We All Communist Now? Examining a Common Core Survey
Taliban / Bergdahl Swap Scandal Explodes!
The Great One: Mark Levin on Restoring the Constitutional Republic
Young Americans for Liberty Conference Highlights
AFTERBURNER: First, the Grotesque
Fund on Fraud and Franken: Voter Fraud Is Real, and It Gave Us ObamaCare
PJTV's Afterburner w/Bill Whittle --Le Deluge: Obama is Quickly Becoming Louis XV
Zo's Take on Ferguson, MO: Democrat Cities are Dangerous Places to Live
ZoNATION--WMD: Worth Militarizing Damascus?
A Pulitzer Nomination for PJ Media: Reporters Expose Leftists in the Department of Justice
ZoNation with Alfonzo Rachel: The Democratic Party's Long History of Racism
PJTV: September 11th, 2009
Russian Immigrant Warns: America is following the path of Stalin's Russia
PJTV: Chicago Murder Rate Proves That Liberals Do Not Care About Gun Deaths
Mainstream Media Rejecting Obama Propaganda
ZoNATION: Time to Manhandle Anthony Weiner and Piers Morgan
Roger Simon -- co-founder and CEO of PJ Media
TRIFECTA - Obama Flouts Law and Exempts Congress from ObamaCare
PJ Media is a media company and operator of an eponymous conservative opinion and commentary website.
Founded in 2004 by a network primarily, but not exclusively, made up of conservatives and libertarians led by writer Roger L. Simon it was originally intended as a forum to present blogs "with the intention of... aggregating blogs to increase corporate advertising and creating our own professional news service." PJ Media's name, formerly Pajamas Media, is derived from a dismissive comment made by former news executive vice-president Jonathan Klein of CBS during the Killian documents affair involving then-CBS anchorman Dan Rather in the fall of 2004: "You couldn't have a starker contrast between the multiple layers of checks and balances at 60 Minutes and a guy sitting in his living room in his pajamas."
Charles Johnson, the blogger behind Little Green Footballs, teamed up with Roger L. Simon to create PJ Media after his contribution to the Killian documents controversy investigation helped lead to the retraction of a 60 Minutes story critical of President George W. Bush's service in the Air National Guard from 1972 to 1973 and Dan Rather's resignation from CBS News. Johnson and Simon set out to replace the mainstream media with a network of citizen-journalists.
John Ellis "Jeb" Bush (born February 11, 1953) is an American politician who served as the 43rd Governor of Florida from 1999 to 2007. He is a prominent member of the Bush family: the second son of former President George H. W. Bush and former First Lady Barbara Bush; the younger brother of former President George W. Bush; and the older brother of Neil Bush, Marvin Bush, and Dorothy Bush Koch.
Jeb Bush was born in Midland, Texas. When he was six years old, the family relocated to Houston, Texas.
Following in the footsteps of older brother, George, Jeb Bush attended high school at the private Massachusetts boarding school, Phillips Academy Andover. At the age of 17, he taught English as a second language in León, Guanajuato, Mexico, as part of Phillips Academy's student exchange program. While in Mexico, he met wife, Columba Garnica Gallo.
In 1973, Bush graduated Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Texas at Austin with a BA in Latin American Studies. He completed his coursework in two and a half years with generally excellent grades. After considering a career in Hollywood, he instead chose to pursue politics.
Bill Whittle | |
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Born | William Alfred Whittle (1959-04-07) April 7, 1959 (age 53) New York City, New York |
Residence | Los Angeles, California |
Ethnicity | British |
Citizenship | American |
Alma mater | University of Florida |
Occupation |
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Website | |
billwhittle.net |
William Alfred "Bill" Whittle (born April 7, 1959[1]) is an American conservative blogger, political commentator, director, screenwriter, editor, pilot, and author. He is best known for his PJ Media internet videos and short films, one of which, "Three and a Half Days", has been viewed more than 2.4 million times on YouTube as of November 2012[update].[2] He is currently the presenter of Afterburner and The Firewall, and co-hosts Trifecta with Stephen Green and Scott Ott. In addition, Whittle has interviewed a number of political personalities as a PJTV.com commentator.
He is a former National Review Online contributor and has been a guest on the Fox News Channel, The Dennis Miller Show, Sun TV, and national radio programs. His first book, Silent America: Essays from a Democracy at War, was published in 2004. Since 2009, Whittle has been a featured speaker at universities and a number of Republican and Tea Party events throughout the United States. He is also the co-founder of Declaration Entertainment, an independent film studio, and a narrator for Encounter Books.
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Whittle was born in New York City to a British stewardess and William Joseph Whittle (1925–2002), a hotel manager.[3] He spent his youth in Bermuda, where he attended Warwick Academy and Saltus Grammar School, and later moved with his family to south Florida in the early 1970s. At age 13, Whittle began working at the Miami Space Transit Planetarium[4] and was made a console operator by its director Jack Horkheimer after a few months.[5] As a teenager, sometimes called "The Wizard" by co-workers, he wrote and directed the planetarium's light shows.[6]
He had long dreamed of becoming a test pilot for the United States Air Force after watching a Thunderbirds air show at Kindley Air Force Base as a child. At age 17, he applied to the U.S. Air Force Academy but failed the preliminary medical exam due to "soft vision".[4] He developed an interest in filmmaking while helping friends make Super 8 short films and formed a short-lived studio, Mindfire Films, Inc., in the late 1970s.[7] He named Mike Jittlov's The Wizard of Speed and Time as one of his early influences.[8] In 1979, Whittle began attending the University of Florida as a theater major. While there, he wrote and directed the short film The Pigeon Hole which became a national finalist in the Student Academy Awards competition. Whittle was forced to drop out of college when he did not maintain the required GPA and consequentially lost his financial aid.[5] In the summer of 1983, Whittle was part of a volunteer company of actors, directors and set designers which put on stage performances to sponsor a fundraiser for the Boca Raton Hotel's Caldwell Playhouse. Whittle was one of the show's directors and his scene, "Going Too Far", was called an "understated and entertaining pitch for funds" by the Miami Herald.[9]
After leaving the University of Florida, Whittle moved out to Los Angeles where he worked in a number of occupations including driving a limo. He eventually found employment as a freelance editor during the late-1980s and 1990s on television series and specials for The Discovery Channel, The History Channel, and NBC. In 1997, Whittle returned to his alma mater for the Florida Gators victory over the Florida State Seminoles to win their first national championship in its 90-year history. At a post-season celebration held at the Ben Hill Griffin Stadium weeks later, he produced the university's video tribute to the team which played before an audience of 65,000 fans.[10]
Whittle briefly ran a video editing company during this period but he was forced to close down in 1998. He then went to Australia, where he stayed with his uncle in Brisbane for three months, before returning to Los Angeles.[11] He continued working in the TV industry as an editor on the Turner Classic Movies special Movie Monsters Revealed (1999), House Calls (2000), Ed McMahon's Next Big Star (2002), Movie Obsessions (2002), AMC's Sunday Morning Shoot-Out (2007–2008), and Shatner's Raw Nerve (2008). Whittle is among the Shootout staff members that executive producer Jacquie Jordan thanked in her first book "Get On TV! The Insider's Guide To Pitching The Producers And Promoting Yourself".[12]
On July 4, 2010, Whittle announced the creation of Declaration Entertainment, an independent film studio, which used "citizen producers" to finance its projects. Co-founded with Jeremy Boreing, the two had guest hosted for Larry O'Connor's BlogTalkRadio podcast The Stage Right Show earlier that year.[13] Its first feature film, The Arroyo, completed filming in August 2012, and is awaiting an official release date. Whittle is also working on a space adventure film called Aurora.[14]
In December 2002, Whittle started his first blog, Eject! Eject! Eject!, writing personal narratives and long format essays which discussed current events and political philosophy. He was inspired to start writing following the death of his father earlier that year.[8][3] He soon developed friendships with fellow bloggers Frank J. Fleming, James Lileks, and P.J. O'Rourke who praised his unique writing style. Whittle has credited O'Rourke, in particular, for "bringing me home to conservatism". In 2004, a collection of his essays were published in Silent America: A Democracy at War. They were also quoted in several newspapers across the country.[15][16][17]
Six years after starting Eject! Eject! Eject!, Whittle began writing as a guest columnist for the National Review Online.[18] Both his original essays and National Review columns have been cited by authors William DeMersseman,[19] Jim Geraghty,[20] Laura Lunsford,[21] Frank Miniter[22], and Jim O'Bryan.[23] Crime fiction author Robert Ferrigno used an excerpt from Whittle's essay "The Undefended City" for the introduction of his 2009 novel Heart of the Assassin.[24]
In December 2008, Whittle moved to PJ Media where he continued blogging and hosted several of its video segments:
His first official Afterburner segment was broadcast on May 7, 2009, as a rebuttal to Jon Stewart's assertion on The Daily Show that the atomic bombing of Japan in World War II was a war crime.[8][25] One of his first videos to gain media attention was "A message to the Rich" which discussed the Obama administration reducing charitable tax deductions for the wealthy.[26] A June 2009 essay entitled "The Michael Jackson Effect" attracted some criticism from the Toronto Star when he suggested that the federal government used the coverage of Michael Jackson's death to push through cap-and-trade legislation.[27] WorldNetDaily recommended his video on American exceptionalism two months later.[28] In October 2010, Joe Newby of the Spokane Examiner called his "What We Believe" series "a must-see for anyone who does not understand what the Tea Party is all about".[29][30] In February 2011, Laura Baxley of the Atlanta Examiner wrote that Whittle's "The Narrative" was "a brilliant discourse on this Marxist underpinning of critical theory".[31]
Whittle's videos were heard by a national audience for the first-time when "Eat the Rich", explaining the consequences of high taxation on the wealthy,[32][33][34] was played on Glenn Beck's radio talk show in April 2011. He was also on The Rusty Humphries Show that month and has filled in as a guest host for Rusty Humphries multiple times since his first appearance.[8][35] His politically themed videos, initially released through PJ Media and Real Clear Politics, attracted a strong following on video sharing websites such as YouTube. His most watched video, Afterburner's "Three and a Half Days", went viral on YouTube shortly after its release on October 12, 2011, and has since been viewed by over 2.4 million viewers.[2][36][37]
Later that year, Whittle was hired by Encounter Books to narrate a series of animated "whiteboard" videos featured on TheBlaze. In November 2011, the Spokane Examiner reviewed one of these videos, based on the 2010 book "The World Turned Upside Down: The Global Battle over God, Truth, and Power" by Melanie Phillips, which examined the reasoning behind Communist, Islamist and Neo-Nazi support of the Occupy Wall Street protests. The newspaper complimented the video stating that it "ties the groups together rather nicely".[38]
In his role as a commentator for PJTV, Whittle has interviewed a number of personalities including Ed Klein, Ayn Rand Institute fellow Don Watkins, Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes, Andrew Card, David Frum, Lord Monckton, Investor's Business Daily editor Terry Jones, Tim Cavanaugh, and Arizona Governor Jan Brewer.[39] Other PJTV segments featuring Whittle have included:
Whittle also became friends with Andrew Breitbart.[40] After Breitbart's death in March 2012, he participated in a round table discussion with Roger L. Simon, Lionel Chetwynd, and Stephen Kruiser[41] in addition to dedicating an entire episode of "The Afterburner" to his memory.[42]
In May 2012, Whittle started his own weekly podcast, "The Stratosphere Lounge", in which Whittle takes questions from his Facebook friends.[8] It currently airs live on Tuesday evenings via Ustream and is later uploaded on his official YouTube channel. He has expressed interest in developing the podcast as a talk show for broadcast television.[35]
Whittle is an instrument-rated pilot of glider and light aircraft. Having studied to be a U.S. Air Force pilot as a teenager, it is a subject he has discussed extensively in both his essays and videos.[4][43] His EjectEjectEject.com essay "Courage" had been quoted by the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association.[44] Author and screenwriter Michael Walsh, in his 2009 novel Hostile Intent, credited Whittle for teaching him the OODA loop.[45]
On July 9, 2005, Whittle was involved in an incident while attempting to land at Visalia Municipal Airport when the front landing gear failed. The airport's runway was closed for an hour, however, neither Whittle nor the other passenger were injured.[46][47] Whittle has described similar incidents in his flying career.[43]
Whittle is a supporter of Veterans Airlift Command, a national organization of volunteer aircraft owners and pilots, which provides free air transportation to wounded American servicemen, veterans and their families for medical and other compassionate grounds.[48]
An early supporter of the Tea Party movement, Whittle has been invited as a speaker at major political rallies and other public events. On September 12, 2009, Whittle was among the featured speakers at the 912 West Rally which saw the Los Angeles and Orange County Tea Party combine to create the largest Tea Party group in the West Coast of the United States.[49] A few months later, he was part of the 2010 Tax Day Freedom Rally at the Indiana State House.[50]
He was also a guest speaker for Republican groups at Flag[51] and Lincoln Day celebrations. Whittle's appearance at the Orange County Republicans' annual Flag Day dinner in June 2011 inadvertently found him opposing co-speaker New Mexico Governor Susana Martinez who advocated that California Republicans should be focusing its efforts on winning over Hispanic-American voters.[52] Weeks later, he spoke at "Troopathon", a charity event which sends care packages to soldiers serving overseas, held at the Nixon Library in Yorba Linda, California.[53] That same year, he was part of Eagle Forum in San Diego, California, Tax Day weekend in St. Paul, Minnesota with Sue Jeffers and Ernest Istook[54] and, with Tammy Bruce and Krista Branch, the 2nd-annual Patriot Banquet in Scottsdale, Arizona.[55]
In 2012, Whittle was a featured speaker at RightOnline 2012, Oberlin College, and the Wake Up America rally. He subsequently discussed his experience at Oberlin, which has a history of student protests against conservative speakers, comparing it to his own years as a college student in Florida.[56] On September 10, he spoke at St. Michael's College in Toronto, Ontario; he was interviewed on Byline with Brian Lilley during his visit to Canada.[57] On October 22, 2012, the Southwest Metro Tea Party held a "Bill Whittle Movie Night" showing his "What We Believe" and "Dishonorable Disclosures" videos in Chaska, Minnesota.[58]
Year | Title | Role | Notes |
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1999 | Movie Monsters Revealed | Editor | Also camera operator |
2000 | House Calls | Editor | |
2002 | Ed McMahon's Next Big Star | Editor | |
2002 | Movie Obsessions | Editor | |
2007-2008 | Sunday Morning Shoot-Out | Editor | |
2008 | Shatner's Raw Nerve | Editor |
Year | Film | Role | Notes |
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2011-2012 | Red Eye | Himself | Episode: "March 15, 2012" Episode: "June 4, 2011" |
2012 | PolitiChicks | Himself |
Persondata | |
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Name | Whittle, Bill |
Alternative names | Whittle, William A. |
Short description | Author, director, screenwriter, editor |
Date of birth | 1959 |
Place of birth | New York City, New York, United States |
Date of death | |
Place of death |
Mark Reed Levin (born September 21, 1957) is a lawyer, author and the host of American syndicated radio show The Mark Levin Show. Levin served in the administration of President Ronald Reagan and was a chief of staff for Attorney General Edwin Meese. He is president of the Landmark Legal Foundation, has authored bestselling books and contributes commentary to various media outlets such as National Review Online.
Mark Reed Levin was born to a Jewish family in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and grew up in Cheltenham Township, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania. He graduated from Cheltenham High School after three years. After high school, Levin enrolled at Temple University Ambler including summer classes and graduated in 1977 at age 19, magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa. He also earned a juris doctorate from Temple University Beasley School of Law in 1980.
Beginning in 1981, Levin served as advisor to several members of President Ronald Reagan's cabinet, eventually becoming Associate Director of Presidential Personnel and ultimately Chief of Staff to Attorney General Edwin Meese; Levin also served as Deputy Assistant Secretary for Elementary and Secondary Education at the U.S. Department of Education, and Deputy Solicitor of the U.S. Department of the Interior.
Anthony David Weiner (pronounced /ˈwiːnər/; born September 4, 1964) is a former U.S. Representative who served New York's 9th congressional district from January 1999 until June 2011. A Democrat, Weiner held the seat previously occupied by Democrat Charles Schumer and won seven terms, never receiving less than 59 percent of the vote. He was an unsuccessful candidate for mayor of New York City in the 2005 election, and had begun to amass a campaign fund to run again for mayor in 2013.
Previously, Weiner was a New York City councilman from 1992 to 1998, and a congressional aide to then-U.S. Representative Schumer from 1985 to 1991. A New York City native, he attended the public schools and graduated from the State University of New York at Plattsburgh in 1985 with a bachelor of arts degree in political science.
Weiner resigned from Congress due to a sexting scandal, effective June 21, 2011. A special election was held on September 13, 2011, to fill the remainder of his term.
Weiner was born in Brooklyn, New York, one of three sons of Mort Weiner, a lawyer, and his wife Fran, a public high school mathematics teacher. The family lived for a time in the Park Slope neighborhood of Brooklyn. Weiner described his ethnic and religious background in 2011: "We weren't a very religious household," he said, "but we had a very strong sense of our Judaism." His older brother, Seth, was killed at age 39 in a hit-and-run vehicle-pedestrian accident in May 2000. His younger brother, Jason, is a chef and co-owner of several New York restaurants.