Rush Limbaugh has done much more than just change the style of talk radio, he has become
somewhat of a political leader for many Americans. He has been the type of spokesman
many people have been looking for. "Why am I being called the most dangerous man in
America?" Limbaugh asks his listeners. "Because I am right, and I enjoy being right."
(June 3, 1995, The Philadelphia Inquirer) Rush has caused people to change their views
of the country and it's political leaders. He's had many things that have built him up
to the "political preacher" you see today. Rush's early life, his major accomplishments,
and his personal life are just a few of the characteristics that make Rush the leader he
is today.
Rush's early life affected who he is today in many ways. Limbaugh comes from Cape
Girardeau, Missouri, were he was born on Jan. 12, 1951. Rush, or Rusty as he was called
as a kid, was a chubby, insecure youth who craved but rarely received the approval of his
father, writes Paul Colford, author of " The Rush Limbaugh Story". "Rush got his first
job as a shoeshine boy at the age of 13." (People 7-24-95 pgs. 166-168) At the age of
16, serving as a disc jockey, Rush got his first taste of radio. From there, Rusty began
to work at several different stations, none of which were getting him anywhere. During
one of his first radio jobs Rush went by the name Jeff Christie while working for KQV in
Pittsburgh. He was fired by a man named Jim Carnegie, who now says that he was
instructed to fire him, but as soon as Jim got his next job, he hired Rush again. At the
age of 28 Rush took a job organizing community events for the Kansas City Royals. This
paid him $18,000 a year. Rush spent five unfulfilling years with the Royals. "No fault
of people at the Royals," Limbaugh told Talkers, a radio-industry magazine several years
ago. "I was just doing the wrong thing." (June 3, 1995, The Philadelphia Inquirer) In
1983 Limbaugh decided to try radio again. By 1984 he was working as a talk-show host for
a station in Sacramento California. This is were he was encouraged to speak his mind,
and form the style he has today.
Rush Limbaugh has had many great accomplishments through his life as well. "Rush is
viewed as having single-handedly saved AM radio, and I don't think that is an unfair
characterization," says Dave Rimmer, former WWDB-FM program director, who added Limbaugh
to the station's lineup three years ago. Dave also said, "If Rush decided tomorrow that
he was tired of talk radio, it would be a crisis for many stations." (June 3, 1995, The
Philadelphia Inquirer) When Rush's ratings went up literally hundreds of AM stations
made the switch to talk radio. By now Rush had become a millionaire many times over.
"Limbaugh delivered a one-two punch to the nation's bestseller lists. Following his
best-selling The Way Things Ought to Be (1992), which sold over 3 million copies in
hardcover - making it possibly the best-selling hardcover nonfiction book ever - with a
new book See, I Told You So, which had the largest initial printing in American
publishing history, at 2 million copies, and immediately jumped to the top of the
bestseller lists." (Brownstone and Franck, pgs. 228+229) These books also brought
millions to Rush's pocket. In 1992 Rush developed a television show that was a version
of his radio program, "The Rush Limbaugh Show." Rush became and still is a leader and
positive role-model for many Americans. I think Walter Sabo said it best when he said,
"People listen to Rush to hear him bluster, make jokes, and say things the way they can't
at work. They listen to him say things about women that we married guys can't say."
Rush isn't just the voice on the radio or the face on TV, he also has a personal life.
When he is off the air, his friends say that he would more likely stay in his New York
apartment with Chinese take-out and a stack of rented movies than be out hobnobbing with
celebrities. Carnegie, his former program director, says that in the old days they'd get
together to drink a beer, play a round of golf, or take in a ballgame - and talk. (June
3, 1995, The Philadelphia Inquirer) Carnegie also said, "I love the guy to death. He
hasn't changed that much. Jeff Christie, now Rush Limbaugh, is the same way he was over
20 years ago: highly learned, self-educated, politically motivated in discussion, and
always an entertainer."
As you can see Rush Limbaugh has impacted the world as we know it like few others have
ever done, and he does this simply by speaking his mind. This is what makes him such a
great leader and spokesman for many Americans that don't feel as free to speak their
mind. Rush's early life, his major accomplishments, and personal life have help form the
leader that so many "ditto" today. As one radio executive says, "At this point, the only
person who can hurt Rush is Rush." (June 3, 1995, The Philadelphia Inquirer)
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