Finally, a deep-dive on William F. Buckley, Jr.! Matt and Sam are joined by Buckley's biographer, Sam Tanenhaus, to talk about WFB's 1965 campaign for mayor of New York City. Topics include: how Buckley's campaign made him the most famous conservative in America; the importance of his candidacy to the conservative movement's rise; the hardline positions he took on policing and his inflammatory views on race; and more. Along the way, Tanenhaus offers countless details that only Buckley's biographer would know, from WFB dropping LSD with James Burnham to the debate that changed Buckley forever.
(Note: this is a main episode: per various listeners' request, we will henceforth post main episodes here as well as on the Simplecast feed.)
Sources and Further Reading:
Sam Tanenhaus, Whittaker Chambers: A Biography (Random House, 1997)
Sam Tanenhaus, "The Buckley Effect," New York Times Magazine, October 2, 2005
Carl T. Bogus, Buckley: William F. Buckley Jr. and the Rise of American Conservatism (Bloomsbury, 2011)
Matthew Sitman, "There Will Be No Buckley Revival," Commonweal, July 28, 2015
Thomas Arnold
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