Obituary: Rush Limbaugh, provocative US radio host
- Published
Rush Limbaugh, the controversial US radio personality and political commentator, has died aged 70.
His wife Kathryn Adams announced his death on his radio show on Wednesday. He had been suffering from lung cancer.
Best known as the host of the long-running talk radio programme The Rush Limbaugh Show, he was a towering figure in the conservative movement for years.
Three presidents appeared on his show, and he received the US Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2020.
But he was as controversial as he was influential, accused of voicing racist, sexist and homophobic views throughout his career.
The climate change denier peddled numerous conspiracy theories on the air, staunchly opposed immigration, and was a hard-line advocate for US exceptionalism.
He was also a vocal supporter of President Donald Trump. Speaking on Fox News, Mr Trump called the radio host "irreplaceable".
Born in Missouri on 12 January 1951, Limbaugh first began working in radio at his local station when he was in high school. After graduating in 1969, he started at Southeast Missouri State University but dropped out and took his first job at a music radio station in Pennsylvania.
Limbaugh initially struggled to succeed in broadcasting. He was fired from his first two jobs. He became the host of a public affairs talk show in Kansas City but again lost his position.
In 1979, he began working for the Kansas City Royals baseball team. During this time he took trips to Europe and Asia, experiences Limbaugh later said reinforced his belief in US exceptionalism.
"I go to Europe and say, 'Wait a minute. Why is this bedroom so damned old-fashion and doesn't work? What the hell is this? They call this a toilet?' So I started asking myself: 'How is it that we, who have only been around 200 years, are light-years ahead of people that have been alive a thousand?'" he told his listeners in 2013, external.
Limbaugh returned to radio in 1983, launching The Rush Limbaugh Show the following year in California.
But the outspoken conservative only began to find widespread success after the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) repealed its fairness doctrine in 1987 - a regulation requiring US broadcasters to present both sides of a controversial opinion. As the Wall Street Journal put it in 2005, this decision led to "hyper-articulate conservative hosts opening their microphones, external to millions of hyper-angry conservative voters".
In 1988 the show became nationally syndicated, broadcast live on hundreds of radio stations around the country. By 2020, it had attracted around 27 million listeners each week.
The programme and its host developed huge influence in the Republican Party and the US conservative movement.
President George HW Bush appeared on the programme during his re-election campaign in 1992, while his son George W Bush appeared six times.
President Donald Trump also came on the show in January 2020, external, when Limbaugh praised him for ordering a US drone strike that killed Iranian General Qasem Soleimani.
Limbaugh's controversial views frequently caused outrage.
He drew strong criticism for his use of racial stereotypes on his show, including once claiming that all newspaper composite images of wanted criminals looked like civil rights activist Rev Jesse Jackson.
He declared his opposition to LGBT rights, and made derogatory remarks about victims of the HIV/Aids epidemic.
He dismissed sexual consent and disparaged advocates of women's rights. "Feminism was established so as to allow unattractive women access to the mainstream of society," he once wrote, frequently dismissing women as "femi-Nazis".
And he voiced a number of lies and fringe theories to his listeners, claiming that President Barack Obama was not born in the US, denying the existence of man-made climate change, accusing environmentalists of deliberately causing the Gulf of Mexico oil spill in 2010, and arguing that the dangers of smoking had been exaggerated while the benefits dismissed.
What else did he say?
"Women still live longer than men because their lives are easier"
"If any race of people should not have guilt about slavery, it's Caucasians. The white race has probably had fewer slaves and for a briefer period of time than any other in the history of the world"
"Everything in Africa's called Aids. The reason is they get aid money for it"
In February 2020 he claimed the coronavirus was "the common cold" and said it was being "weaponised as yet another element to bring down Donald Trump"
Mr Trump awarded Limbaugh the Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian honour, to recognise his "decades of tireless devotion to our country". It came the day after Limbaugh announced he had advanced lung cancer.
Limbaugh married four times and divorced three times but never had any children.
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