

“So he’s gonna hang on, ’cause ain’t no way ain’t no way some Amos ‘n’ Andy thing back in high school is gonna force him out when Donald Trump is sitting there in Oval Office after Stormy Daniels and Access Hollywood. He thinks they don’t really want him gone, and he thinks they don’t really want his lieutenant governor to sit in in the governor’s chair if they’re forcing him out. He thinks they’re just sayin’ it ’cause they have to. Ralph Northam, he doesn’t even think the Democrats really want him to quit. RUSH: (Northam impression) “I’ll tell you something else about old Ralph, Ralph Northam, Ralph Northam from Virginia.

“Americans Are the Unhappiest They’ve Been in 50 Years.” Not half of Americans. I’ve already got a story here of polling data - well, a poll shows that half of Americans are unhappy. You know, to put this in perspective, to show you how we conservatives - look, folks, I don’t want to dispirit you here. Josh Hawley from Missouri got it exactly right when he was complaining about Gorsuch and the decisions on the sexual discrimination cases being lapped into the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Our laws come from regulators, unelected bureaucrats and our judges, as has just been demonstrated by these Supreme Court decisions. The Senate and House don’t actually do anything anymore ’cause they’re all afraid to. So look at that headline right there: “Republicans and Democrats Clash Over Police Reform.” You know what this is about? This is about an actual piece of legislation that is being argued and debated in the United States Senate.Īnd I did a double take because that’s not how laws are made in our country anymore. What’s this? That was obviously audio from a Trump rally, one of the many that occurred before the election last November. You can see it in the people that showed up for this inauguration who didn’t show up four years ago for the Trump inauguration, and I have to tell you, ladies and gentlemen, I just - (crowd chanting “We love you! We love you!”) Wait a minute. You can hear it in the way they’re singing their songs. You can hear it in the words they’re saying to each other. They think they finally have vanquished all of their opposition. I’m watching these people at the Biden inauguration. I have such a range of emotion flowing through my arteries and veins, going to my heart and away from my heart. RUSH: Greetings to you, music lovers, thrill-seekers, conversationalists all across the fruited plain. KFBK in Sacramento, Calif., where he nearly tripled the program’s ratings in four years. From there, he went to New York in 1988 where his record-breaking national show was born. Limbaugh got the broadcasting bug back and re-entered radio as a political commentator for KMBZ in Kansas City. A year later, he was the host of a daytime talk show on

1979 and later served as director of sales and special events.īy 1983, Mr. 1951 in Cape Girardeau, Missouri, to a family with generations of attorneys, he chose to explore his passion for broadcasting at age 16 by working on-air as a disc jockey for a radio station in his hometown. After four years, he left for Pittsburgh to work at the former ABC owned and operated KQV. He later moved to Kansas City where he eventually tired of disc jockey life and left broadcasting for business. He joined the Kansas City Royals as director of group sales in Feb. More than three decades later, The Rush Limbaugh Show continues to be the most-listened-to national radio talk show in America.īorn Rush Hudson Limbaugh III in Jan. The show continued to grow nationwide without the help of a major syndicator, so when listeners inquired about his network affiliation, Limbaugh began referring to his team as the Excellence in Broadcasting network, later dubbed the EIB. Limbaugh and his partners launched The Rush Limbaugh Show on August 1, 1988, with 56 radio stations, and in just a few months, an additional 100 affiliates were added, thus paving the way for the expansion of the Talk radio format. Rush Limbaugh is widely credited with reviving AM radio with the debut and ensuing massive popularity of his nationally syndicated, self-titled program.
