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Even without listening, US lives in Limbaugh鈥檚 media world

NEW YORK 鈥 You didn't have to like or even listen to Rush Limbaugh to be affected by what he did. Conservative talk radio wasn't a genre before him.
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NEW YORK 鈥 You didn't have to like or even listen to Rush Limbaugh to be affected by what he did.

Conservative talk radio wasn't a genre before him. Without Limbaugh, it's hard to imagine a Fox News Channel, or a President Donald Trump, or a media landscape defined by shouters of all stripes that both reflect and influence a state of political gridlock.

To his fans, Limbaugh's death Wednesday of lung cancer at the age of 70 was an occasion for deep mourning. For his foes, it was good riddance. Somewhere, Rush could surely appreciate it.

He left a legacy.

鈥淗e was the most important individual media figure of the last four decades,鈥 said Ian Reifowitz, professor of historical studies at the State University of New York and author of 鈥淭he Tribalization of Politics: How Rush Limbaugh's Race-Baiting Rhetoric on the Obama Presidency Paved the Way for Trump.鈥

That assessment was freely offered even though Reifowitz, as the title of his book suggests, isn't a fan. He blames Limbaugh for setting a blueprint for white identity politics and the dividing of the nation into uneasy tribes.

Limbaugh's death led Trump to call in to Fox News Channel for his first television interview since leaving office 鈥 and he did it twice.

Former Vice-President Mike Pence told Fox he was inspired by Limbaugh to become a talk radio host himself, which launched his political career. Ex-White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany reminisced about riding as a child in her father's pick-up truck as Limbaugh's show played on the radio.

鈥淚 am the definition of a 鈥楻ush baby,鈥 and it's not just me,鈥 McEnany said on Twitter. 鈥淭here are tens of thousands of us all across the conservative movement.鈥

Radio hosts talked politics before Limbaugh, men like Jerry Williams in Boston and Barry Farber in New York.

But the idea of conservative talk radio didn't take hold until Limbaugh, after bouncing through DJ jobs in Pittsburgh, Kansas City and Sacramento, went national from a perch at New York's WABC in 1988, said Michael Harrison, publisher of Talkers magazine.

Limbaugh was a sensation among people who liked to tweak liberals, outraging with political incorrectness. Before Limbaugh, only 30 or 40 stations did 鈥渢alk radio,鈥 and many weren't political, Harrison said. Now there are thousands.

To the end, Limbaugh led the field. He reached an estimated 15.5 million people each week and lost in the ratings for three months only once in some three decades, to advice host Laura Schlessinger, Harrison said. Bumper stickers proclaimed, 鈥淩ush is Right.鈥

鈥淭here is no talk radio as we know it without Rush Limbaugh. It just doesn't exist,鈥 said Sean Hannity, who has 15 million radio listeners beyond his Fox News Channel show. 鈥淎nd I'd even make the argument in many ways: there's no Fox News or even some of these other opinionated cable networks.鈥

Rupert Murdoch and Roger Ailes launched Fox News in 1996. MSNBC started the same year.

Politics seemed second to entertainment in Limbaugh's early years.

鈥淚'm trying to attract the largest audience I can and hold it for as long as I can so that I can charge advertisers confiscatory advertising rates,鈥 Limbaugh told Steve Kroft of 鈥60 Minutes鈥 in 1991. 鈥淭his is a business.鈥

But he soon became more than a business leader. Republicans credited Limbaugh for helping them win the House majority in 1994.

鈥淚t wasn't just that he transformed the media landscape, but he transformed the Republican Party,鈥 said Nicole Hemmer, author of 鈥淢essengers of the Right: Conservative Media and the Transformation of American Politics.鈥 鈥淗e became a power player and someone who could move voters.鈥

Conservative radio host Mark Levin called Limbaugh 鈥渁 tremendous patriot.鈥 Once a universally accepted compliment, the term 鈥減atriot鈥 has become more complicated through its use by some of the rioters at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6.

鈥淗e refused to accept the attacks that came against this country from within,鈥 Levin said on Fox News. 鈥淗e refused to accept the ideological changes in this country. He defended the traditions of this country. And he spoke for tens of millions of us.鈥

To SUNY's Reifowitz, Limbaugh led the way in getting people 鈥渟cared about the browning of the country.鈥

Some of Limbaugh's language was downright ugly. He invented the term 鈥渇eminazi,鈥 called Chelsea Clinton a 鈥渄og鈥 when she was 12 years old and had to apologize for calling a young woman a 鈥渟lut鈥 for arguing that birth control be covered by health insurance. He mocked the death of AIDS victims and played the parody song 鈥淏arack the Magic Negro鈥 when Barack Obama was elected president.

The headline on HuffPost鈥檚 obituary on Wednesday said Limbaugh 鈥渟aturated America鈥檚 airwaves with cruel bigotries, lies and conspiracy theories.鈥 The Root called him a 鈥渟pouter of racist, hate-filled garbage.鈥

On Foxnews.com, Limbaugh's obituary's headline was 鈥淕reatest of All Time.鈥

Limbaugh didn't embrace Trump right away, but soon fell in line. Trump's appeal mystified many in politics at first, but 鈥渋f you had been listening to Rush Limbaugh for 20 years, he sounded very familiar,鈥 Hemmer said.

As Limbaugh's political strength became evident, many Republican politicians felt they couldn't cross him, or run the risk of alienating his millions of listeners, Hemmer said.

鈥淢any of these listeners didn't care if Rush Limbaugh crossed the line (of propriety),鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey cared more about loyalty to him than any kind of underlying set of principles.鈥

The economic lessons taught by Limbaugh are clear each night on Fox, CNN and MSNBC, routinely the three most-watched cable networks. They're not really news networks in prime time; they present political talk.

鈥淚t鈥檚 hard,鈥 Hemmer said, 鈥渢o overstate his importance.鈥

Harrison, who interviewed Limbaugh several times over the years, said the talk show host 鈥渂egan to take himself more seriously鈥 in his later years.

Limbaugh even appeared to measure words more carefully. After receiving social media blowback in December for suggesting that the nation was 鈥渢rending toward secession,鈥 he later made clear he wasn't advocating that.

To the end, however, he remained loyal to Trump, who awarded Limbaugh a Presidential Medal of Freedom at the State of the Union address last year.

Limbaugh supported Trump's false claims that the election was stolen and, on Jan. 7, compared rioters at the Capitol to people who sparked the Revolutionary War.

____

This story corrects the spelling of Laura Schlessinger.

David Bauder, The Associated Press

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