The New Yorker Radio Hour - How Tucker Carlson Became the Prophet of MAGA

Episode Date: January 23, 2026

Tucker Carlson has long been a standard-bearer for far-right views, such as the racist conspiracy theory known as the “great replacement.” He recently did a chatty interview with the white suprema...cist Nick Fuentes, an admirer of Hitler. And yet, Carlson started out as a respected, well-connected, albeit contrarian, political journalist. Jason Zengerle, who recently joined The New Yorker as a staff writer, talks with David Remnick about his new book, “Hated by All the Right People: Tucker Carlson and the Unraveling of the Conservative Mind.” They trace how Carlson’s sense of personal resentment toward the establishment grew; how launching his own website radicalized his politics in the years before MAGA; and his political ambitions as a potential heir to Donald Trump. “I think, if Tucker Carlson concludes that J. D. Vance can’t get elected President, maybe he has to do it himself,” Zengerle says. “So much of politics now is just being a media figure and being an entertainer. And Tucker does those things very well. . . . I think our politics are at a place where that really doesn’t seem as outrageous as it would have even just a couple years ago.” New episodes of The New Yorker Radio Hour drop every Tuesday and Friday. Join host David Remnick as he discusses the latest in politics, news, and current events in conversation with political leaders, newsmakers, innovators, New Yorker staff writers, authors, actors, and musicians. New Yorker Radio Hour listeners, we want to hear from you.  We have a few questions about the show and how you listen to it. The survey takes about twenty minutes, and your feedback will help us make our podcast better.  Take the survey here.

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Starting point is 00:00:01 This is The New Yorker Radio Hour, a co-production of WNYC Studios and The New Yorker. Welcome to The New Yorker Radio Hour. I'm David Remnick. When Tucker Carlson was fired from Fox News in 2023, he had the largest program on cable news. By far, Carlson could draw around 3 million viewers on a given night way, way ahead of MSNBC and CNN. After Fox, Carlson brought a new show to YouTube and his reach has grown. Some of his shows have as many as 7 million views. Carlson has been a standard bearer for the right. Many of us know about the racist conspiracy theory known as the Great Replacement,
Starting point is 00:00:46 only because of Tucker Carlson. He's quite sympathetic to Vladimir Putin, too. He also celebrated Trump's threats to seize Greenland by force, not because he cares about Greenland, but because that would have wrecked the NATO alliance. And yet, Carlson doesn't always stick to the Maga Party line. He called the shooting of Renee Good by an ice agent in Minneapolis a tragedy. And he pointed out that the way people in MAGA were making light of it,
Starting point is 00:01:12 that was exactly what they had condemned after the shooting of Charlie Kirk. Few people have thought more about Tucker Carlson in recent years than Jason Zengarly, who recently joined the New Yorker as a staff writer. Zengali's new book is called Hated by All the Right People. And when Zengarly was first coming up as a political journalist, Tucker Carlson was someone he kind of admired. Let's start at the beginning. How did you first meet Tucker Carlson?
Starting point is 00:01:41 What was your relationship? And what was he like then as opposed to now? So I first met Tucker Carlson when I was an intern at the New Republic. And Tucker was working at the weekly standard, which was kind of the conservative analog to the New Republic. These are two, you know, small circulation, political magazines in Washington that, you know, I would say punched above their weight in terms of influence. And Tucker was only a few years old.
Starting point is 00:02:03 older than me, but he was already, you know, late years ahead of my own career, extremely well established. He was the hot young writer in Washington. So this was in the late 1990s, I think 1997. And Tucker would come to have lunch with another hot shot young writer in town who worked at the New Republic named Steve Glass. And while he waited sometimes for Steve to come out of his office, he would entertain the interns. And he was extremely affable, extremely funny. You He would tell great stories, kind of give us a peek of the stuff that was going on that, you know, we suspected was going on on on Capitol Hill, but we didn't know ourselves. And he was someone we all looked up to and, you know, admired. I think we respected his work.
Starting point is 00:02:46 Why did you guys admire him? I admired his journalism. I thought he was a really talented writer and a pretty brave reporter. He was willing to take on sacred cows in the conservative movement. I mean, he wrote a profile of George W. Bush when Bush was still governor of Texas, was the, you know, presumed frontrunner in the presidential race. And Tucker wrote this, you know, subtly kind of devastating profile that showed Bush to be callow and kind of stupid and stubborn. And all these things that, you know, if you paid attention would have revealed Bush, all the things have made him kind of a bad president. Jason, this is a book about Tucker Carlson.
Starting point is 00:03:30 It's also about the rise of partisan media, which has become such a powerful presence in our lives. And it seems that in your view, Tucker Carlson predicted some changes in the media before his peers did. Tell me about that a little bit. Tucker's always been very good about seeing where things are going. He kind of skates to where the puck is going to be. And I think that he first did that when he left French journalism. You know, I think he recognized maybe before some other people like myself that, you know, if he wanted to, you know, attain the fame and fortune and power that he clearly did, he was not going to be able to do that in print. So, you know, he left his job as a pretty promising young magazine writer and moved in to cable news.
Starting point is 00:04:15 And Tucker Carlson cut his teeth, really as a journalist, at the weekly standard, which was a conservative magazine. Where did he stand on that staff? in other words, was he particularly conservative? Were there signs of what he became early on? Not really. He was actually kind of one of the more non-ideological members of the staff. He was more of a journalist of a reporter than an ideologue. I mean, it was a real power-ass staff.
Starting point is 00:04:42 I mean, you had Bill Crystal, David Brooks, Charles Crouthammer, and Tucker was the guy who was kind of more interested in storytelling. So in 2000, he at one point was the youngest anchor in CNN's history with a program that was then called the Spin Room. From your perspective, does it seem like he thought of himself as part of mainstream media at this time, or was he starting to kind of separate himself out into some other realm? No, he was absolutely part of mainstream media and absolutely a member of the Washington political and media establishment, you know, one of its youngest members, but certainly a member.
Starting point is 00:05:19 He was friends with all of the various anchors and swells. He was good buddy. with the people on the hill. He was, you know, he considered himself kind of a key cog in that ecosystem. I mean, Tucker actually had a show on PBS for two years. Tucker Carlson unfiltered. So he was, he was not at all like the person he is today. So a really formative event in the reputation of Tucker Carlson and probably in his own psyche, although God knows I'm no shrink and even as a biographer, you aren't either.
Starting point is 00:05:54 But in 2004, on Crossfire, John Stewart joined the show as a guest, creating one of the first really viral video moments ever. Let's take a listen. I think you're a good comedian. I think your lectures are boring. Let me ask you a question on the news. Now, this is theater. I mean, it's obvious. How old are you?
Starting point is 00:06:15 35. And you wear a bow tie. Yeah, I do. I do. So this is. I know, I know. I know. So this is theater.
Starting point is 00:06:21 Let me just go. Now, come on. And listen, I'm not, I'm not suggesting that. You're not a smart guy because those are not easy to tie. But the thing is that this, you're doing theater when you should be doing debate, which would be great. You do. It's not honest. What you do is not honest.
Starting point is 00:06:38 What you do is partisan hackery. What impacted that have on Tucker Carlson that moment? Because I remember it pretty well. Yeah, I don't know if Tucker Carlson is the person he is today without that moment. I mean, that was such a humiliating experience for him. he was completely blindsided by it. You know, he thought he was friendly with Stewart because I think John Stewart used to go on Larry King
Starting point is 00:07:02 at the CNN Studios when Tucker was waiting around to do the spin room and he would take smoke breaks outside and Tucker would join him and he thought there were buddies. And I think everybody at Crossfire thought that it was going to be a fun episode. They thought Stewart was in on the joke, basically, that it was all going to be kind of pretend, you know, theater and it wasn't serious. And, you know, it's really funny when you watch that episode, Paul Vagala, who was the chair on the left, he just kind of shuts up and just let Stewart go.
Starting point is 00:07:29 And Tucker's the only one kind of engaging him. And that's why Stewart went after him that way. So what was the impact on Carlson? Well, a few months later, a new president of CNN took over and canceled Crossfire altogether and let Tucker's contract expire. And, you know, basically explained to the New York Times at the time that I agree with John Stewart. I think he was right. And it just, it was, it was just a, it was a humiliation for Tucker. And I think that it, it created him kind of a bitterness and a resentment because I think a lot of the people that he considered his friends and supporters, you know, people in that kind of DCA political
Starting point is 00:08:10 media establishment, they didn't come to his defense. I mean, maybe privately they did, but publicly they didn't. And I think the resentment that he feels today towards, you know, what he calls legacy media or corporate media. I think a lot of it starts right there. Something else happened really interesting that seems formative to me in 2009. He went to CPAC, which is the big conservative gathering of the year, and he rebuked them. Let's listen to that. If you create a news organization whose primary objective is not to deliver accurate news, you will fail.
Starting point is 00:08:43 You will fail. The New York Times is a liberal paper, but it's also, and it is to its core liberal paper, It's also a paper that cares about whether they spell people's names right by and large. It's a paper that actually cares about accuracy. Conservatives need to build institutions that mirror those institutions. That's the truth. You don't believe me? The New York Times?
Starting point is 00:09:06 You don't think... Why isn't there a pub... It is what? But I'm not saying they're not. I'm merely saying that at the core of their news-gathering operation is gathering news. And concern... No, no. And conservatives need to do the same.
Starting point is 00:09:25 Yes, they are. So what is he foretelling there? So at the time he gave that speech, he was already, he had just been fired from MSNBC, and he was plotting to launch a website that eventually was called The Daily Caller. And his original vision for the Daily Caller was kind of a conservative analog to the Huffington Post. I mean, maybe a Huffington Post more than the New York Times. But, you know, if you remember at the time, the Huffington Post was the hot website, site, and Tucker thought that there was a space for this on the right. And he was working at that
Starting point is 00:10:00 time to sort of gin up money for it, but also interest. And I think he was looking for sort of young conservative writers and reporters who were not just kind of pundits or talking heads or ideologs, but who had a dedication to finding out facts. And that was like, he went to give that speech at CPEC. I mean, he knew what he was going to get there. He knew he was going to get booed. but he thought that the negative reaction would appeal to these serious young conservatives and young conservative journalists and also appeal to sort of the DC, you know, media elite who he was still a member in good standing in that group. But, you know, I think he was trying to almost sort of say, look, I went into the wilderness on TV for a little while. I'm coming back as a prodigal son. I'm rededicating myself to, you know, serious journalism, facts, things like that.
Starting point is 00:10:49 And here I am. And he got a fantastic reception. I mean, that's, you know, I think it's hard to imagine now, but the people in Washington, the people he now attacks, I mean, they embraced him and they supported him and he got all sorts of help and advice from, you know, people at Politico and people at CNN and all these other institutions that wanted him to succeed. I'm speaking with Jason Zengarly, author of Hated by All the Right People, Tucker Carlson, and The Unraveling of the Conservative Mind. We'll continue in just a moment. This is the New Yorker Radio Hour. This is the New Yorker Radio Hour. I'm David Ramnik. Few people have played a bigger role in America's turn to the far right than Tucker Carlson. He was and remains a chief proponent of the so-called great replacement idea, the notion that evil forces are conspiring to replace white Christians with racial and religious minorities, thus transforming the United States. I've been speaking today with Jason Zengarly, whose new book about Tucker Carlson is called, Hated by All the Right People. Zengarly traces Carlson's path from being a puckish, right-leaning contrarian. He spent time hosting on CNN and even MSNBC and then moved toward the far right.
Starting point is 00:12:19 After he lost a show on MSNBC, Carlson saw an opportunity to start something online, where he could do a brand of journalism that was unconstrained by editors and bosses. It was a news and opinion website called The Daily Caller. So he goes and co-founds the Daily Caller, that begins to take an extremist drift, at least to my ear. There were pieces that you referred to in your book that were published in the wake of Trayvon Martin's murder. What happened there? Well, Tucker, I think, very quickly realized that this vision he had for this, you know,
Starting point is 00:12:57 fact-based conservative publication was not going to get any traffic. And there was just no, there was no audience for it. So he very quickly pivoted. And most of the original reporters he hired left. And he brought in a new crop of reporters. And these men and women were really pretty far out there ideologically. And at the same time that this is going on, Breitbart is kind of coming onto the scene. And Breitbart's having a lot of success with this really kind of inflammatory, you know, pretty much racist coverage of, you know, black-on-white crime.
Starting point is 00:13:33 That was kind of this obsession that Breitbart had. And the Daily Caller mimicked that. And the trade on Martin shooting, the Daily Caller really went all in on trying to besmirch Martin's reputation, basically, and portray him as, you know, a thug or a hothead or violent. So the discovery is that extremism sells. Yes. He is looking at the web traffic. He's looking at the metrics. And he's recognizing that what the conservative base wants is racism, sexism, nativism.
Starting point is 00:14:05 All these things that, you know, the Republican establishment hasn't really figured out yet, but Tucker's figuring it out while he's running the caller. In November 2016, the program Tucker Carlson tonight on Fox premieres. Here's a promo clip for the show. What's the show going to be about? You can judge for yourself, but here's the basic theme of it. People in power tend to lie, not because they want to, but because they can't help themselves. That's human nature.
Starting point is 00:14:31 The more power people have, the bigger the temptation to misuse it. The press is supposed to be the watchdog against all of this, and it worked fine for a couple of centuries. Then the press decided they had more in common with certain politicians than with readers or viewers, and that's when it fell apart. We're going to get back to basics here. We're going to hold the powerful accountable, pierce pomposity, translate, double speak, mock smugness, and barbecue nonsense. Every night. Hope you'll watch. Now, of course, this is just days in the wake of the election of Donald Trump. to what extent did Tucker Carlson hold power and the president of the United States to account?
Starting point is 00:15:10 I don't think he held power in the president of the United States to account. I mean, if you considered power at the time, you know, fairly obscure liberal academics or activists or journalists, he did a fantastic job of holding those people to account because those were the guests he had on and those were the people that he barbecued. And, you know, in the early days of the Trump administration, the first Trump administration, And Tucker really made kind of a name for himself and got viewers by just humiliating his guests. I mean, he would find these debate partners who, you know, just couldn't sort of hold a candle to him. And he would put them in these studios. They weren't in the studio with him. So they were kind of, their face was framed against him in these two boxes.
Starting point is 00:15:50 And he could control the debate. It wasn't like John Stewart. You know, John Stewart was there. He could sort of call Tucker a dick and they couldn't do anything about it. Right. If anyone tried to call Tucker a dick in this instance, they would just cut the feet. So he, you know, it was a completely unfair fight. And that was, those are the people he was punching.
Starting point is 00:16:07 He was punching down and he was punching left. And what was his relationship with Trump about? He had a complicated relationship with Trump. He was, unlike a lot of the other Fox anchors, he was wary of Trump personally. And he was keeping his distance. He was, I think, alarmed that Trump watched his show and watched so much cable. television. You know, when Trump would call him after his show aired, I think Tucker was, you know, just kind of shocked that the leader of the free world was was watching this much cable news and calling to give notes. And he, he thought maybe Trump would have a better use of his time. So I think initially he was a little taken aback by that. I mean, I think he found Trump entertaining. I think he sort of, you know, thought he was kind of a charming robe, which were the kind of people he used to write about. But I don't think he thought that he was necessarily, you know, equipped to be president. Now, Jason, where did Carlson actively disagree with Trump or the Maga Party line?
Starting point is 00:17:08 Not in many places. I think as, as I think it wasn't so much a sense of disagreement as much as he actually sort of believed it maybe more than Trump did. I mean, I think he was kind of a, he was more committed to the anti-immigration stuff, the anti-crime things, kind of those issues that then Trump was himself. And if he had issues with Trump, it was, it was maybe just too. casual of a racist. He didn't really believe it. Why was Tucker Carlson fired by Fox? I wish I knew the answer to that. I was not able to get to the bottom of that. Does Tucker Carlson know?
Starting point is 00:17:48 No, I don't think he does. I mean, he has a theory as far as I can tell, as I understand his theory. He didn't tell this to me, but I think he's told this to other people. his theory is that he was offered up to Dominion as part of the Dominion settlement. The Dominion case was a lawsuit filed by a company that counts votes. After the 2020 election, Dominion became the center of a number of conspiracy theories that, you know, alleged that the election had been stolen from Trump. Those conspiracy theories were given a lot of air on Fox News, not by Tucker Carlson, it should be said, but by other hosts. and Dominion sued, and Dominion wanted a billion dollars from Rupert Murdoch. Rupert Murdoch wasn't going to go to a billion, so he offered less than a billion in Tucker Carlson's scalp.
Starting point is 00:18:36 Did losing his job at Fox intensify his ideology? I don't think it intensified his ideology. I think it basically just took the guardrails off. I think, you know, people talk about how Trump 2.0 is, you know, there are no guardrails. He's unrestrained. I think Tucker post Fox is similar. There's just no one there anymore. to tell him no. I mean, when he was at Fox, you know, there was nominal corporate supervision. It was a publicly traded company. I mean, he was always testing that, and he was always crossing lines that other anchors there couldn't, and they would let him get away with it. But at the end of the day, there was, I think he still kind of felt a little bit restrained or constrained. He does not feel
Starting point is 00:19:13 that anymore. And I think he also, in addition to not having those guardrails, I think he understands that without the Fox platform, he needs to do things that generate outrage, enough outrage that get him attention. And so, while I think he does believe what he says, I think there's another thing going on where he knows he needs to get people to keep on tuning into him and coming back to him. So anti-Semitism has good business? I think he's made that calculation. Yeah. Well, in recent years, Carlson has taken to overtly putting on extremists on his YouTube channel. One of the most infamous, of course, is Nick Fuentes, who's a white supremacist, who's praised Hitler,
Starting point is 00:19:53 who jokes about it. He shoves. it in your face. And of course, he dined with Trump and Kanye West at Mara Lago. Fuentes in October was on Carlson's show. Let's listen to a clip from that. So I realized that the conservative movement was completely bankrupt in that way. Yeah. And I became very radical.
Starting point is 00:20:14 Well, you became, I mean, let me just say I'm so familiar with, you know, I was much older when it happened to me and much more, much more insulated. I was done a college student. I was like 45. So, you know, and I was in a much better place to withstand the pressure. But I do think one, and I want to, this is my main question to you is when you get attacked, when people call you names, like they always call me racist. And I would always think to myself, I'm actually not, I would tell you if I was racist. I'm a little sexist, but I'm not racist.
Starting point is 00:20:47 And I never understood why they did that. And then I thought maybe the point is to make me racist. where you just get to a point where you're like, well, if you're going to slander me, then I'll just become the thing you're calling me. I do think that's a feature of human nature, don't you? And if you stare too intently at the accusers, at the, you know, whatever Ben Shapiro's or Mark Levins
Starting point is 00:21:08 or Ted Cruz or whoever it is, calling you names, it like distorts you and you actually change and become what they say you are. Have you thought that ever? Do you worry that that happened to you? No, I don't think it ever, did because I know who I am. This is a moment of self-searching, almost, from Tucker Carlson.
Starting point is 00:21:31 Very introspective, yeah. I mean, the Fuentes interview was fascinating because I think the reason he had Fuentes on his show was because he was worried that Fuentes was getting his audience in some ways. You know, they had had this kind of little feud going on where Tucker had said a lot of derogatory things about Fuentes. He accused him of being a Fed. He thought he was a sci-op operation. And Fuentes fired back on his show, and it seemed, and, you know, there was this feud
Starting point is 00:22:04 going on online, and it seemed like Tucker was losing. I mean, all of Fuentes' fans were, you know, just attacking Tucker on X and pillorying him. And he had Fuentes on because I think he recognized that he couldn't afford to alienate Fuentes' audience. So he kind of extended this olive branch and, you know, made nice with him. How influential is Tucker Carlson now? I think he's very influential.
Starting point is 00:22:29 I think he's influential in a couple ways. I mean, I think he's very influential inside the Trump administration. He, when he was president first time around and Tucker was on Fox, he did not talk to Trump that much personally. He kind of avoided it. That is not the case this time around. I mean, I think one reason is, you know, the first time around he knew Trump would watch a show on Fox. He could talk to him through the TV. He does not think that Donald Trump's going to listen to him.
Starting point is 00:22:50 a two-hour podcast now. So he has to talk to him directly. He's very close to J.D. Vance. He has a number of allies in the administration, Bobby Kennedy, Tulsi Gabbard, all the way down to, you know, sub-cabinet positions. He's friends with those people. So there's just that matter of his influence in government. But beyond that, you know, he, people listen to his show. he's able to smuggle ideas that were considered just out of bounds
Starting point is 00:23:20 he's able to smuggle them into the mainstream now because he gives them voice on his show and he's a talented enough communicator and a smart enough guy that he can he can explain them in ways that they maybe don't seem quite as awful as they are when they're presented in their kind of raw form
Starting point is 00:23:37 and he you know the fracturing of the media landscape being what it is, you know, in some ways getting fired from Fox was almost like a blessing for him because he got a head start on figuring out this new media landscape. I mean, cable news is kind of a dying medium. And just, you know, thinking about the people out there today who are, you know, influential voices on the right, you don't really hear about like Sean Hannity that much. You don't hear about, you know, Jesse Waters or Laura Ingraham. You hear a lot about Tucker. You hear a lot about Nick Fuentes. You hear a lot before Charlie Kirk was killed. You heard a lot about
Starting point is 00:24:09 Charlie Kirk. That's where the energy is, and that's where I think younger conservatives are looking for their arguments and ideas. What does Tucker Carlson want? That's a fantastic question, and that's a question that I think is occupying the minds of a lot of people in Republican politics and in the conservative movement, because I think his critics and his enemies hope that he just wants to be a podcaster and sell his tobacco pouches and whatever else in the he'll stop at that. He just wants to be wealthy. I don't think that's, I don't think that's where he wants to stop, though. I think he's as much a political operator these days as he is a media figure. And I think he considers himself a movement leader. And I think he wants to be at the head
Starting point is 00:24:58 of that movement, whether it's in government or out of government. I don't think he's been able to figure that out yet. So you think it's possible that he would run for office? Yeah, I think it is. I mean, I think that in a lot of ways, Trump has completely upended what it means to be in politics these days. And so much of politics now is just being a media figure and being an entertainer. And Tucker does those things very well. Plus, he has some pretty core ideological beliefs. And I think he wants to see those beliefs, you know, take root in the country and be executed. And I think the question for him is, what's the best vehicle for that?
Starting point is 00:25:32 I mean, right now, J.D. Vance is saying all the things that Tucker believes. and I think, you know, maybe if Tucker has his druthers, J.D. Vance can be the person who, you know, becomes president and does all these things, and Tucker will be whispering in his ear. But at the same time, you know, J.D. Vance isn't that talented a politician. And, you know, I think if Tucker Carlson concludes that J.D. Vance can't get elected, can't become president, well, then, you know, maybe he has to do it himself. And I think our politics are out of place where that really doesn't seem as outrageous as it would have, even just a couple years ago. Jason Zangerly, thank you so much. Thanks a lot. Hated by all the right people is the title of Jason Zangerly's new biography of Tucker Carlson. Zangeryl has just joined The New Yorker as a staff writer. I'm David Remnick and this is The New Yorker Radio Hour. See you next time.
Starting point is 00:26:26 The New Yorker Radio Hour is a co-production of WNYC Studios and The New Yorker. Our theme music was composed and performed by Merrill Garbus of Tune Arts, with additional music by Louis Mitchell. This episode was produced by Max Balton, Adam Howard, David Krasnow, Mike Cutchman, Jeffrey Masters, Louis Mitchell, Jared Paul, and Ursula Summer. With guidance from Emily Boutin and assistance from Michael May, David Gable, Alex Parrish, Victor Gwan, and Alejandra Deccan. The New Yorker Radio Hour is supported in part by the Cherina Endowment Fund.

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