Laura Ingraham has been a recognizable face at Fox News for several years now. The 62-year-old is somewhat of a polarizing figure on TV, but she’s certainly been successful in forging a career in an extremely competitive arena.
But what about her private life? Here’s all you need to know about the talk show host.
Laura Ingraham was born June 19, 1963, in Glastonbury, Connecticut. Her upbringing was working-class. Laura’s father, James Frederick Ingraham III, was a World War II veteran and carwash owner.
Her mother, Anne Caroline Kozak, meanwhile, worked at the local school and later as a waitress.
Laura Ingraham’s school life
Ingraham grew up alongside three older brothers. “They were pretty rough and tumble,” she explains.
Perhaps surprisingly, she wasn’t politically involved at school, focusing instead on athletics.
In 1981, she graduated from Glastonbury High School and moved on to college. Ingraham attended the private University of Dartmouth in Hanover, New Hampshire, for her undergrad. There, she worked as the editor-in-chief of the prestigious conservative Dartmouth Review school newspaper. Ingraham became its first female editor, and she sure knew how to stir the pot.
“The Review took over my life,” Ingraham told the Hartford Courant in 1999.
“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. I was sued a couple of times for libel by professors. We ended up on ’60 Minutes.’ It was a real catalyst for political involvement — and made doing ‘Crossfire’ look like nothing.”
During her time with the paper, she sent an undercover reporter into an LGBTQ university organization to report on who was attending, according to Business Insider.
Sued at Dartmouth
She interviewed people like conservative pundit and politician William Bennett, Pat Buchanan, and American Spectator editor Emmett Tyrrell. However, her spell at the newspaper would also be one embroiled in scandal.
Ingraham came under fire from a lawsuit when the paper was sued for libel by then-professor William Cole. She’d written an article about his class, which said that his class was “the most outrageous,” on campus, calling him a “used Brillo pad.”
″Mr. Cole is black; he alleges that the Review purposely publishes articles … to defame and ridicule blacks,” Magistrate Jerome Niedermeier said. ″In fact, the Review makes no secret of its opposition to many blacks present at Dartmouth.”
Ingraham didn’t agree at all, calling the lawsuit “absurd”.
″I’m not sure who won, but I feel I’ve made a point,″ she said. ″It is a tremendous breakthrough for investigative journalism in the classroom.″
After the two-year libel suit, Cole and the Dartmouth Review signed a 21-page statement agreeing to end the dispute. In addition, Cole had sought $600,000 in damages. He didn’t receive any money.
Ingraham would also work with conservative activist Gary Bauer as a speechwriter for William Bennett.
Speechwriter work
Following her graduation, she went on to work as a speechwriter in the Reagan administration and the Secretary of Transportation. She later returned to school, earning her Juris Doctor at the University of Virginia School of Law.
Ingraham went on to serve as a judicial clerk for Ralph Winter, a well-known and respected federal judge, in the Second Circuit Court of Appeals in New York.
Then, she worked for Court Justice Clarence Thomas in the United States Supreme Court and also for law firm Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom. At the law firm, she worked with Bob Bennett, William Bennett’s brother.
“She’s a force of nature,” Bob Bennett said. “She was very able, very bright and had a lot of energy. It was also very clear to me that the law was too confining for her. Listen, if she stuck with practicing law, she would have been a tremendous success. But her real interest and skills lay in politics. She had strong opinions and was very effective in how she articulated them. I thought it would be a good match for her.”
Ingraham’s career in media started off in the mid-1990s. She had her own show on MSNBC called Watch It!
In 2001, she launched the radio program The Laura Ingraham Show. It was heard on more than 300 stations as well as on XM Satellite Radio. The show was recorded in Washington, D.C, featuring Ingraham’s views on a wide range of political topics.
She also appeared as a frequent guest host on The O’Reilly Factor on Fox News, a network she later returned to.
Becoming a “pundette”
For Ingraham, the Clinton-Lewinsky scandal was a big thing since it was the start of young conservative women getting airtime as political pundits, known as “pundettes”, according to the Los Angeles Times.
She had talents that older pundits didn’t like and were afraid of. Unlike others, she didn’t come from a journalism background.
“She is young, sexy and ambitious,” journalist Eric Alterman wrote.
“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?”
In 2004, The Laura Ingraham Show moved to the Talk Radio Network and continued to grow. She was ranked No. 5 on Talkers Magazine’s list of the US’s top radio shows in 2012.
Ingraham also appeared on the cover of The New York Times Magazine in 1995 for a story on young conservatives.
Thereafter, Ingraham quickly rose to become one of the most powerful women in political and cultural commentary.
Laura Ingraham – Fox News
Yet she wanted a bigger platform for her show. In 2008, her wish came true. She got a three-week trial run on the Fox News show Just In.
The same year, Laura Ingraham met and dated entrepreneur James V Reyes. They supposedly met after being set up on a blind date and got engaged in April, 2005.
But just a month later, a tragedy would ultimately end their engagement.
In 2005, Ingraham was diagnosed with an aggressive type of breast cancer. She was preparing for surgery, and the same day called in to tell her listeners about the diagnosis. At the same time, her wedding plans went by the board.
Following her chemotherapy treatment, the cancer was gone.
“The coast is clear,” Ingraham said in an interview with Talkers in 2013.
“I try to go on without obsessing about it all that much. It was not a pleasant experience to go through and I treated it like training for a marathon, or writing a law school essay. I powered through it and did not want people to pity me.”
Laura Ingraham – children
Laura Ingraham’s a supporter of domestic and international adoption, which has led to the 62-year-old talk show host adopting three children.
In 2008, she adopted her first daughter, Maria, from Guatemala. Ingraham later adopted two more children, Dmitri and Nikolai, from Russia. They live together happily in Washington, D.C.!