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The life of Laura Ingraham: How a young conservative became a national figure, then a Fox News firebrand

Laura Ingraham, 56, is the host of the "Ingraham Angle" on Fox News.

Political talk radio host Laura Ingraham delivers a speech on the third day of the Republican National Convention on July 20, 2016 at the Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio.
  • She became a popular radio host in the early 2000s and joined Fox News as an anchor in 2017.
  • She's made a number of controversial calls, including attacking environmentalist Greta Thunberg, immigrants, LeBron James, and Parkland shooting survivor David Hogg.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories .

Laura Ingraham isn't afraid to stir the pot.

As an undergraduate, and editor of a right-wing newspaper, she sent an undercover reporter into a gay university organization to report on who was there.

From the early 2000s, she helmed her own radio program. She got 5 million weekly listeners, across 300 syndicated radio stations, before she joined Fox News in 2017.

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Now, she's the most-watched female news anchor in America.

Here's her life and career, in photos.

Jessica Hill / AP

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Jim Cole / AP

She said: " Here you had all these '60s liberals who used to be storming administration buildings themselves in power at Dartmouth, and they didn't know what to do with this conservative independent paper."

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Mario Anzuoni / Reuters

Source: AP News

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Jim Cole / AP

Cole eventually dropped his case. Afterwards, both parties said they were vindicated.

Cole, who was promoted to full professor during the case, said: "I'm doing what the college pays me to do, and the fact that I was promoted is an indication of that."

Ingraham said, "I'm not sure who won but I feel I've made a point. It is a tremendous breakthrough for investigative journalism in the classroom.

Source: AP News

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Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic / Getty

She said it was done to ensure the group's spending of a college grant was transparent.

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Mary F. Calvert / Reuters

She wrote that it was to find out how student funds were being spent and to "demonstrate the double standard Dartmouth had created by funding the group." She said the newspaper "adopted a purposefully outrageous tone."

But the op-ed didn't end matters. According to CNN , Jeffrey Hart, the faculty adviser for the Dartmouth Review, wrote to the Weekly Standard after she published her op-ed and called it a "phony political confession." He also said she had held "the most extreme anti-homosexual views imaginable."

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AP

Although, according to the Hartford Courant , she was in a cafeteria and it was math-club geeks who were cheering with her.

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Source: Newsweek

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Rich Lipski/The The Washington Post / Getty

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Between political sessions, attendees could kick and punch boxing bags, which had images of prominent Democrats taped to them.

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AP Photo/Nick Ut

These included Ingraham, along with Ann Coulter, and Kellyanne Fitzpatrick (later Kellyanne Conway).

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She said: "If I'd known it was going to be that easy, I never would have clerked for the Supreme Court and worked for a prestigious firm and written as much as I have. All that's as valuable as covering fires in Des Moines.''

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Alex Wong/Getty

He wrote: "She is young, sexy and ambitious. She argues politics the way lawyers argue cases, as if there can be no possible interpretation other than her own, and what can possibly be the matter with her pathetically out-to-lunch opponent?"

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Mary F. Calvert / Reuters

She played the "Flipper" theme song at any mention of former presidential candidate John Kerry.

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Michael Kovac/WireImage / Getty

She later said it should have been called, "Watch it Get Canceled!"

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According to The New York Times , she "turned Hillary into a stand-in for everything she dislikes about the legacy of the 60's, from old-line feminists to people who oppose school vouchers."

She's published frequently since. In 2003, she published "Shut Up and Sing: How Elites from Hollywood, Politics, and the UN Are Subverting America."

Sources: HuffPost , NPR

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Eric Draper / The White House / AP

Ingraham thought Miers was too liberal. According to the Washington Post , Ingraham, along with her conservative peers, "didn't sink the Harriet Miers nomination on their own. But in the blink of a news cycle, they turned against their president, framed the debate and provided the passion that undermined her case."

In 2005, Miers withdrew her nomination.

Ingraham's relationship with the mainstream GOP didn't improve with presidential candidates John McCain or Mitt Romney, who both lost to Barack Obama.

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The White House

Diego Corredor/Media Punch /IPX / AP

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She said: "After much thought and reflection, I have decided to pursue my first loves modern dance and the xylophone. In the highly unlikely event that these efforts do not prove fruitful, I intend to return to radio."

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Brat went on to beat then-House Majority Leader Eric Cantor for Virginia's 7th Congressional District seat.

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Jeff J Mitchell/Getty

Source: Newsweek

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Andrew Harnik / AP

Fox News

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Ross D. Franklin / AP

Source: Politico

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James ended up naming his new television show "Shut Up and Dribble."

Source: Vulture

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Associated Press/J. Scott Applewhite and Rich Schultz

Within 48 hours, the hashtag #istandwithlaura was trending.

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REUTERS/Mike Segar

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Source: Slate

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Fox News / Youtube

She also posted then deleted a tweet that said, "great time to fly if not in at-risk population."

But after Trump declared a national emergency in mid March, she took it more seriously, and called it a "dangerous health crisis," according to the Washington Post.

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Joshua Roberts / Reuters

See Also:

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SEE ALSO: The life of Jake Tapper: How a high school prankster became a journalistic icon, author, and champion of truth

DON'T MISS: The life of Rush Limbaugh: How a loud-mouthed conservative Sacramento disk jockey transformed politics and the media

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