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The life of Chris Hayes: How a working-class boy from the Bronx became an award-winning news anchor for MSNBC

Chris Hayes is the host of the MSNBC show "All in with Chris Hayes."

Chris Hayes at 30 Rock's Studio 6A on August 23, 2019.
  • Born and raised in The Bronx, New York, Hayes dreamed of a life in the theater. Instead, he began to write and report when he moved to Chicago after graduating college .
  • By 28, he was the Washington editor of The Nation.
  • He transitioned from print to television and has since hosted two shows and won several Emmys. But i t hasn't all been a smooth run.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories .

Chris Hayes might be the most earnest news anchor in America.

Bookish and serious, he sometimes lacks the charm or charisma of his competitors. He's been described by numerous news organizations as "an intellectual."

For years, Hayes had lower ratings than his competitors in the same much-coveted 8 p.m. timeslot, struggling to compete with rival anchors Anderson Cooper and the now-disgraced Bill O'Reilly .

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But he's hung in there. He's an unlikely success at MSNBC, coming from the relatively small world of left-wing magazines as an editor of The Nation and a socialist newspaper in Chicago before that. He transitioned from print to television thanks, in part, to a shoulder tap by MSNBC anchor Rachel Maddow .

He told the Chicago Tribune that his first job on television simply fell into his lap . "One of many, many, many lucky and fortunate breaks to which I've been subject," he said in 2011. But it hasn't all been luck.

Here's his life so far.

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Source: Esquire

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"It was probably the most important education I got in college, in terms of a practical sense for adult life. A huge amount of it was getting together with other people in a room to have a meeting to make a decision which basically is what all adult life ends up being," he told the Chicago Tribune .

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While attending the Republican National Convention in Philadelphia, he was caught with marijuana by security. What was eye-opening for him was that security let him off. It showed him the difference between his treatment as a privileged white male, and what could have happened had he been African-American.

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"I can tell you as sure as I am sitting here before you that if I was a black kid with cornrows instead of a white kid with glasses , my ass would've been in a squad car faster than you can say George W. Bush," Hayes told Huff Post .

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Hayes worked as the managing director of Walkabout Theater in Chicago and was described by Kristan Schmidt, its founder, as a young man full of intelligence, curiosity, and energy. But he still wasn't sure what to do with it.

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"My theater training I think is with me every day because I perform for a living at some level, making a show," he told the Chicago Tribune . "There's lights and a call time and a collaborative entity, there's a stage manager. So all of that I think is both Chicago theater and my theater upbringing in high school and then in college."

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"He'd always been cause-oriented, but writing about social issues and political issues kind of crystallized who he was going to be," his father-in-law Andy Shaw, a well-known television journalist, told the Chicago Tribune.

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"Chicago is the place I learned to be a journalist, and I'm incredibly lucky to have learned the trade in what might be the best reporter's town in all of America," he told Time Out .

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Hayes says she's the reason he hasn't lost his soul to the TV business.

He's also said she is the most accomplished person in their house Shaw graduated Magna Cum Laude from Brown University, clerked on the Supreme Court, and served as counsel for Obama when he was in the White House. They have two boys, Ryan and David.

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He says he plays like Billy Owens. He told GQ,

"If I could wave a magic wand and it wouldn't mean taking time away from my job, my wife, my kids, and my sleep, I would play pickup basketball five days a week," he told GQ . "If you're a basketball player and you're reading trade rumors, you gotta go out and play. So, I just play. If I didn't do that, I would lose my mind."

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Hayes was announced as Olbermann's successor, but the network reversed that decision as well.

Politico noted Hayes had also made donations to Democrats, in 2008 and 2009, but Hayes said he pulled out of the role because he "did feel comfortable doing it given the circumstances."

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She backed him as an anchor and gave him advice with his own show. For instance, he doesn't dwell on his voice cracking during a monologue, after Maddow taught him content mattered more than a perfect delivery. Like Maddow, Hayes is "forensic" in his analysis, according to The New York Times, which allows him and his fans to position themselves as "smart, sane, and righteous."

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As far as he was concerned, his two-hour slots on Saturday and Sunday mornings were more like conversations or debates rather than typical television. And even though it was in a slot that was typically filled with religious programs, he saw it as a good jumping-off point to begin a career on television.

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"I'm totally blessed to be able to do it in this way," he said to the Chicago Tribune .

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"I feel extremely strongly given the fact that I can't do anything about my own white male straightness that I have the duty to double down in efforts to make sure what we present is reflective of the diversity of the country at large in a way that cable news doesn't always do a good job of," he told Reuters .

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He said he was uncomfortable with the way politicians used it, in a way he viewed could justify more wars.

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He quickly felt the wrath of the nation or, at least, the conservative pundits who came down upon him.

So he apologized, showing he was willing to back down on contentious issues.

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The book looks at recent calamities like 9/11, the Iraq War, New Orleans' slow recovery, and blames the country's ruling class. One of his main arguments is that "meritocracy" has warped so that it is no longer based on merit.

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Two years into "All In," he still had occasional problems reading the teleprompter. During interviews, he could get too caught up in ideas and arguments, or speak too fast and have a jarring effect on segments.

Asked by International Business Times if he had any regrets about each show, he said, "Of course. Do I go home and spend an hour on the way home beating myself up about the question I asked, or the convoluted way I read the prompter? Yes, constantly. But generally, we all care. I care tremendously."

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His episodes were about the impact of Hurricane Sandy and how polarizing climate change could be in politics.

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Traditionally cable news either informs its viewers or entertains them. Hayes was doing something in between, and it wasn't working, according to the New Republic .

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The first factor is that MSNBC chairman Andy Lack was too busy dealing with the fallout from exaggerations made by anchor Brian Williams at the time.

The second was that Lack was also busy trying to find someone to fill a weekend anchor slot first.

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Source: CNN

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The series "Fifty Year War: The Changing Face of Poverty In America" received an Emmy in 2015 for Outstanding News Discussion & Analysis. The win made cancelling Hayes' show difficult.

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As an MSNBC source told CNN, "It's sort of hard to ax the guy you're promoting."

Another source said, "It's possible that by the time Andy comes up with a solution, the solution is to let Chris stay."

Sources: Deadline , CNN

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One thing became clear: He was often most at ease out of the studio. He reported from Ferguson on riots in 2014, and was told by the police they'd mace him if he tried to get past them.

"I do love field reporting," he said. "I love being able to sort of bring some of that thoroughness and storytelling to this medium that you would, say, put into a feature magazine article. That is very satisfying."

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He told Esquire he felt he had a unique perspective since he had grown up in New York in the 1980s and 1990s, when police were working on policies that would later be used in Baltimore and Ferguson.

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What Hayes liked about Trump was the lack of subtlety. The subtext behind his policies was clear. He said things like Trump's declaration that Mexico was sending in rapists showed the "driving force" behind his politics.

"It's harder and harder for people to pretend, for instance, that the immigration-restriction movement isn't fundamentally animated by some sort of bigoted animus," he told The Nation .

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Source: Newsweek

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In it, he interviews thinkers, politicians, and experts on the subjects that "keep him up at night." The idea stemmed from convoluted monologues he made during his daily editorial meetings at MSNBC, which his staff jokingly called "The Chris Hayes podcast."

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Fox News' Tucker Carlson pounced and said Hayes was, "what every man would be if feminists ever achieved absolute power in this country: apologetic, bespectacled, and deeply, deeply concerned about global warming and the patriarchal systems that cause it."

Source: Salon

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He started putting his theatre background to good use at MSNBC by hosting a live version on Fridays.

He had an audience too, that was warmed up by a comedian. Although the audience has to be reminded that not everything on the show was funny. The idea was to harness Hayes' enthusiasm, which he showed while doing a live tour of his podcast, in 2018.

Source: Variety

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"The path of least resistance is always there, beckoning seductively with an entirely plausible cover story," he said at the end of an episode . "But of course, it's the very ease of that path that makes it the enemy of the very work that we as journalists are supposed to do."

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He's going to continue holding truth to power and leaving his mark.

Source: Variety

See Also:

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SEE ALSO: The life of Rachel Maddow: How a Rhodes scholar and AIDS activist became America's most unlikely cable television host

DON'T MISS: The life of Jake Tapper: how a high school prankster became a journalistic icon, author, and champion of truth

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