
Radio
Star Rachel Maddow
By Shauna Swartz
Some people really
like to go for high impact when they come out. Air America Radio host Rachel Maddow settled on posting announcements inside all the
bathroom stall doors in her dorm at Stanford. “I guess I'm
preternaturally confrontational or combative or attention-seeking or
something,” Maddow said. Now 33 years old,
she has made a career of tackling important political issues and talking with
guests as diverse as Al Gore, Lili Taylor and Pat
Buchanan on her two-hour Rachel Maddow Show,
which airs each weekday on Air She also injects humor into her
show, and probably into most anything she does. “It's always important
to have more fun than your enemy,” she pointed out. “In political
circles, it's always important to be a) the cute people, and b) the people
who have better parties and more fun. You get more recruits.” Perhaps that's why she even
employed humor when she was coming out in a surprisingly hostile environment.
She said it amused her to know that because she had posted her coming-out
statement in all the dorm bathrooms, within a day everyone would have to see
it. When she started college
at Stanford, Maddow was surprised by the degree of
homophobia on campus, particularly since it was thought of as a liberal “It didn't lead to any
soul-searching conversations with previously homophobic people the way that
with my 17-year-old mind I thought that it would,” Maddow
said, but the results were mostly positive. The only thing she regrets is
not having come out to her parents before doing so to a newspaper reporter.
The article noted that Maddow was one of only two
openly gay freshmen on campus, and it mentioned that she was not yet out to
her parents, even though the reporter had promised not to include that
information. Then someone who had access to official Stanford letterhead
— Maddow suspects her faculty advisor —
mailed the article to her parents. “That was not the kindest way to
treat your parents,” Maddow said. Or your
advisee, for that matter. When asked whether the other
gay freshman was her girlfriend, Maddow laughed and
replied, “Funnily enough, only one other person was out, and she was
not one of the many girls I was sleeping with.” The other young woman was the
daughter of a Liberian fundamentalist Christian minister who had moved to By the time she
was in college, Maddow had already become an
activist. Since age 15 she was involved with “trying to generate some
sort of public, evident response to the really overt racist stuff that was
happening in my town.” That town was in South Castro
Valley, not far from From an early age, it was
important to Maddow to not only recognize this but
to do something about it. She wanted to make sure that hate crimes were
confronted rather than written off as the work of a few bad seeds. Maddow
stressed that they can't be seen as isolated incidents and that they affect
the entire community: “When hate crimes happen in a town, and that
definitely happened in Castro Valley when I was growing up, there are
obviously direct victims of that, but the whole community is terrorized by
that, in that it has an impact where it instills fear and it instills a sense
of the social order for the whole community, that unless somebody else does
something public to counteract that, the bad guys win. They win unless
there's some ostentatious public opposition to them.” She came of age
just outside Maddow
became a strong activist for issues related to HIV/AIDS and prisoners'
rights, and she also worked on labor rights and queer visibility. At Stanford
she majored in public policy with a concentration in health policy and an
honors program in ethics. She said that her whole academic orientation was an
effort to get everything she could out of her education to make her a better
AIDS activist. She later became the first
openly gay American Rhodes scholar and earned her doctorate in political
science from Maddow
has been with Air Maddow
says she preps six hours for each show, even though she has heard that the
rule of thumb in talk radio is that hosts are expected to put in one hour of
prep time for every hour on air. “Apparently I'm very slow,” she
said. Or just thorough. She is a regular commentator on
MSNBC, whose vice president of prime time programming has said that Maddow is “the universal donor of good chemistry.
… You can put her on to talk to just about
anybody about just about anything, and she comes across as just so cheerful
and hopeful and likable.” She rates herself as the second
most, if not the most, left-leaning host on Air Maddow's
co-conspirators on her show include Kent Jones (who joins her on air), a
technical director, a senior producer, a part-time assistant and a very
important woman who books all the guests and writes research files to prepare
Maddow for talking to them. “It's a big team
for doing a two-hour show, but we're all running in a full-out sprint all
day, every day,” Maddow said. It's a pace that
doesn't leave time for much else. “I really thought that I would've
written a book by now,” she admitted. “I thought that I'd be blogging all the time, or working on trying to get myself
a TV show, but this is really a full-time job. It takes everything that I've
got. But it's satisfying to know that I'm working that hard for something
that I'm really proud of.” Although she spends her work
week in While she's adamant about gay
people having equal marriage rights, Maddow has
strong feelings about the ways gay men and lesbians have of respecting
relationships “that aren't dependent on the social-approval stamp that
we call marriage.” She pointed out, “We've come up with ways that
we honor and acknowledge and respect each other's relationships without this
one single hoop that everybody has to jump through to become an official
couple. I like that about us.” Which is why she has
reservations about getting married. “I'm for marriage rights
in terms of what I want the laws to be,” she explained, “but
personally, in terms of how I culturally feel about my community and us
losing something when we gain those marriage rights, I'm ambivalent.” Maddow
has lived in Massachusetts since before gay marriage was legalized
there and feels it has caused a cultural strain on the community: “All
of our old mores, the old ways we honor and acknowledge relationships, now we
have to decide if those are second-class and if marriage really is the gold
standard, and if the old ways we did things actually weren't enough.” In terms of her professional
goals, Maddow hopes to maintain the kind of consistent,
creative, independent vision she sees in one of her favorite radio shows,
NPR's This American Life. She said she never set out to be the
likable liberal to the right wing she has somehow become: “I'm just
trying to give my take on the world. If it's persuasive, great. If it's not
persuasive, I hope you'll at least be entertained and still listen to
me.” And so far, that's exactly what her large and growing audience is
doing. |
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