New Books in History

A.J. Bauer, "Making the Liberal Media: How Conservatives Built a Movement Against The Press" (Columbia UP, 2026)

Mar 18, 2026
A.J. Bauer, assistant professor and historian of conservative media, discusses the origins of the “liberal media” idea and how conservatives built durable media criticism. He traces radio pioneers, FCC fights, tactics like leveraging the Fairness Doctrine, and the creation of imagined conservative communities. The conversation covers deregulation, the rise of talk radio, and implications for today’s media landscape.
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INSIGHT

Liberal Media Idea Emerged Through Cross‑Ideological Dialogue

  • The idea of a structural "liberal media" emerged in dialogue with earlier progressive critiques that accused the press of being reactionary and pro-business.
  • A.J. Bauer traces this shift from 1940s left-wing media reform to postwar right-wing anti-communist appropriation, showing the concept reversed over time.
ANECDOTE

Finding Fulton Lewis Jr. Started With An FCC Complaint Folder

  • Bauer describes finding Fulton Lewis Jr. in FCC complaint files and then traveling to Syracuse to scan targeted boxes in Lewis's papers.
  • That archival detour started from a name spotted in Mayflower hearing transcripts and opened unexpected threads into 1940s–50s conservative radio.
ANECDOTE

Richard Viguerie Cites Fulton Lewis Jr. As Early Influence

  • Bauer recounts asking conservative direct‑mail pioneer Richard Viguerie where he first heard conservative media and Viguerie replied he listened to Fulton Lewis Jr. on radio.
  • That personal recollection connected archival discoveries to real audience formation for later conservative organizers.
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