Megyn Kelly
Megyn Kelly | |
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Born | Megyn Marie Kelly November 18, 1970 Champaign, Illinois, U.S. |
Other names | Megyn Kendall[1] |
Education | |
Occupations |
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Years active | 2003–present |
Employers | |
Notable work |
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Political party | Independent[2] |
Spouses |
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Children | 3 |
Megyn Marie Kelly (/ˈmeɪɡən/; born November 18, 1970)[3] is an American commentator and media personality.[4] Her talk show and podcast, The Megyn Kelly Show, airs live daily on the Triumph channel on SiriusXM, and has 2.3 million subscribers. She had been a talk show host at Fox News from 2004 to 2017 and a host and correspondent with NBC News from 2017 to 2018. Besides her podcast, she is also active in posting to her Instagram page and YouTube channel.
During her time at Fox News, Kelly hosted America Live and, before that, co-hosted America's Newsroom with Bill Hemmer. From 2007 to 2012, the two reporters hosted Fox News Channel's New Year's Eve specials. Kelly also hosted The Kelly File from October 2013 to January 2017. In 2014, she was included in the TIME list of the 100 most influential people. Kelly left Fox News in January 2017 and joined NBC News. She started hosting the third hour of the morning show Today with her program titled Megyn Kelly Today in September 2017. The show was cancelled in October 2018 after a segment discussing blackface, and she left the network in January 2019.
Early life and education
Kelly was born on November 18, 1970 in Champaign, Illinois,[5][6] to Edward Francis Kelly, Ed.D.,[7] who taught in the School of Education at the State University of New York at Albany, and Linda (née DeMaio), a homemaker.[8] She grew up with an older sister, Suzanne (1964–2022) and an older brother, Pete (born c. 1965).[9] She is of Italian and German descent on her mother's side and Irish descent on her father's.[8] She was raised Catholic.[10] Her father died of a heart attack in 1985 when she was 15 years old.[11][12] She also has a step-sister and a step-brother from her mother's second marriage, to Peter Kirwan.[13]
Kelly attended Tecumseh Elementary School in suburban Syracuse, New York. When she was 9, her family moved to Delmar, New York, a suburb of Albany,[14][6] where she attended Bethlehem Central High School.[15] She obtained an undergraduate degree in political science from the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse University in 1992[8][16] and earned a J.D. from Albany Law School in 1995.[17]
Kelly was an associate attorney in the Chicago office of law firm Bickel & Brewer LLP. In fall 1996, she co-wrote an article, "The Conflicting Roles of Lawyer as Director", for the American Bar Association's journal, Litigation.[18] She later worked at Jones Day for nine years, where one of her clients was the credit bureau Experian.[19]
Media career
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Early career
In 2003, Kelly moved to Washington, D.C., where she was hired by the ABC affiliate WJLA-TV as a general assignment reporter.[12] She covered national and local events, including live coverage of the confirmation hearings for U.S. Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito and Chief Justice John G. Roberts, the retirement of Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, the death of Chief Justice William Rehnquist, and the 2004 presidential election.[20] CNN president Jonathan Klein later said he regretted not hiring Kelly as a reporter at the beginning of her career, because she was "the one talent you'd want to have from somewhere else".[21]
2004–2017: Fox News
In 2004, Kelly applied for a job at Fox News.[20] She contributed legal segments for Special Report with Brit Hume and hosted her own legal segment, Kelly's Court, during Weekend Live. She appeared in a weekly segment on The O'Reilly Factor and occasionally filled in for Greta Van Susteren on On the Record, where most of her reporting focused on legal and political matters. She occasionally contributed as an anchor, but more often as a substitute anchor on weekends.[22] On February 1, 2010, Kelly began hosting her own two-hour afternoon show, America Live, which replaced The Live Desk.[23][24] She was a guest panelist on Fox News' late-night satire program Red Eye w/ Greg Gutfeld. In 2010, viewership for America Live increased by 20%, averaging 1,293,000 viewers, and increased by 4% in the 25–54 age demographic, averaging 268,000 viewers.[25] In December 2010, Kelly hosted a New Year's Eve special with Bill Hemmer.[26]
Kelly received media attention for her coverage of the results of the 2012 United States presidential election. On election night, Fox News' decision desk projected that Obama would win the state of Ohio along with a second term after part of the results had been released. Republican operative Karl Rove objected to this projection, whereupon Kelly - with camera following - dramatically walked backstage to the decision desk and spoke with them; she also asked Rove, "Is this just math that you do as a Republican to make yourself feel better? Or is this real?"[27][28][29][30] Kelly left America Live in July 2013 and took maternity leave. That October she began hosting a new nightly program, The Kelly File.[31] The Kelly File was occasionally the channel's ratings leader, topping The O'Reilly Factor.[32][33]
In December 2013, Kelly commented on a Slate article on The Kelly File: "For all you kids watching at home, Santa just is white, but this person is just arguing that maybe we should also have a black Santa," adding, "But Santa is what he is, and just so you know, we're just debating this because someone wrote about it." Kelly also said that Jesus was a white man later in the segment.[34] Soon after, Jon Stewart,[35] Stephen Colbert,[36] Rachel Maddow,[37] Josh Barro,[38] and others satirized her remarks.[39] Two days later, she said on the air that her original comments were "tongue-in-cheek",[40][41][42][43][44] and that the skin color of Jesus is "far from settled".[45] In June 2015, Kelly interviewed Jim Bob Duggar and Michelle Duggar of 19 Kids and Counting regarding their son Josh Duggar's alleged molestation of five girls in 2002. She later interviewed two of their daughters, Jill and Jessa. This show's Nielsen national estimates ratings of 3.09 million viewers, above its average 2.11 million, ranked with the 3.2 million for the Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 shootdown coverage and 7.3 million for the Ferguson riots coverage.[46]
In the Republican Party presidential debate on August 6, 2015, Kelly asked then-presidential candidate Donald Trump whether a man of his temperament ought to be elected president, noting that he has called various women insulting names in the past.[47] Kelly's moderating generated a range of media and political reactions and her professionalism was criticized by Trump.[48][49][50][51] Kelly responded to Trump's criticism by saying she would not "apologize for doing good journalism".[52] Trump declined to attend the Iowa January 28 debate that she moderated.[53] After the debate and off-camera, Ted Cruz said that Kelly had referred to Trump off-camera as "Voldemort", though Fox News denied it.[54] Bill Maher complimented Kelly as being "so much better" than the candidates who attended the January 28 debate and argued that she was a more viable candidate for the Republican nomination.[55]
In an interview with CBS News Sunday Morning, Kelly reflected that she was disappointed with the lack of support she received from coworker Bill O'Reilly and CNN, the latter airing a Trump event the same time as the debate.[56][57] In April, at her request,[58] Kelly met with Trump at Trump Tower, having "a chance to clear the air".[59] The following month, after interviewing Trump and being met with mixed reception,[60] she expressed interest in doing another one with him.[61] In June, she criticized Trump for his claims against judge Gonzalo P. Curiel's impartiality.[62] In October, a contentious discussion between Kelly and Newt Gingrich on The Kelly File regarding Trump's sexual comments in a 2005 audio recording gained widespread social media reaction.[63]
In March 2016, it was announced that Kelly would host a one-hour prime time special on the Fox network wherein she would interview celebrities from the worlds of "politics, entertainment, and other areas of human interest".[64] The special aired in May 2016, which was a sweeps month.[65] It acquired 4.8 million viewers, but placed third in the ratings.[66] Gabriel Sherman wrote of the stakes for Kelly as "high", elaborating that with Kelly being in the final year of her contract with Fox and having confirmed her ambitions, "[t]he special was essentially a public interview for her next job."[67]
In July 2016, amid allegations of sexual harassment on the part of Fox News CEO Roger Ailes, Kelly was reported to have confirmed that she herself was also subjected to his harassment.[68][69] Two days after the report, Ailes resigned from Fox News and his lawyer, Susan Estrich, publicly denied the charge.[70] During her coverage of the 2016 Republican National Convention, her attire received criticism.[71] In a defense of Kelly, Jenavieve Hatch of The Huffington Post commented, "If you're a woman on national television reporting on a political event from hot, humid Cleveland, wearing a weather-appropriate outfit makes you the target of an endless stream of sexist commentary."[72] In September 2016, it was reported that Kelly would be collaborating with Michael De Luca to produce Embeds, a scripted comedy about reporters covering politics, to be aired on a streaming service.[73][74] Kelly appeared on the cover of the February 2016 issue of Vanity Fair.[75] In 2016, she was an honoree for Variety's Power of Women for her addressing child abuse.[76]
2017–2018: NBC News
In late 2016, with her Fox contract in its final months, Kelly was rumored to be actively considering moving to other news networks.[77][78] In January 2017, The New York Times reported that she would leave Fox News for a "triple role" at NBC News, which would include roles as a daytime talk show, hosting a forthcoming Sunday-night newsmagazine, as well as becoming a correspondent for major news events and political coverage.[79][80] She departed Fox News on January 6, 2017, after the last episode of The Kelly File was aired.[81][82] In January 2017 People, quoting an unspecified source, reported that Kelly remained under a non-compete clause with Fox until July 2017, which would prevent her from working for a competitor until the clause expired, unless it would be canceled prior.[83]
On June 2, 2017, Kelly interviewed Russian president Vladimir Putin, first in a panel discussion she moderated at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum and later in a one-on-one interview for the premiere episode of NBC's Sunday Night with Megyn Kelly, which aired June 4, 2017.[84][85][86] Kelly's daytime talk show, Megyn Kelly Today, premiered in September 2017.[87][88][89][90]
Kelly was being paid reportedly between $15 million and $20 million a year at NBC.[91] After an initial run of eight episodes in the summer of 2017, NBC decided to bring her newsmagazine show Sunday Night with Megyn Kelly back for summer 2018 after a hiatus for football and the Winter Olympics, but only periodically. However, this return never materialized.[92][93] Instead, Kelly continued to report stories for Dateline NBC during the summer of 2018, continuing her work for the show which she joined in 2017.[94]
On October 23, 2018, Kelly was criticized for on-air remarks she made on Megyn Kelly Today related to the appropriateness of blackface as part of Halloween costumes. She recollected that "when I was a kid, that was okay as long as you were dressing up like a character", and defended Luann de Lesseps's use of skin darkening spray to wear a Diana Ross Halloween costume.[95] [96] After receiving backlash for her comments, Kelly issued an internal email apologizing for the remarks later that day.[97] On October 26, 2018, NBC canceled Megyn Kelly Today.[98] It had been reported that Kelly was considering ending the program to focus on her role as a correspondent.[99] Her employment was terminated on January 11, 2019, and she was paid the $30 million due for the remainder of her contract.[100][101][102]
2020–present: Sirius XM
Kelly announced the launch of Devil May Care Media, her media production company, on September 10, 2020, with a podcast, The Megyn Kelly Show.[103] Its first episode premiered on September 28, 2020.[104] On July 6, 2021, it was announced that the podcast would move to Sirius XM on September 7, 2021, to broadcast weekdays at 12 noon ET on the talk radio channel Triumph, along with a video simulcast available to Sirius XM subscribers.[105] As of August 2024, her YouTube show had 2.3 million subscribers.[106]
In early 2023, Kelly teased that she had to join SAG-AFTRA for an upcoming secret project. On November 30, 2023, she revealed on her show that she was set to star alongside Danny Trejo, Roseanne Barr, and Adam Carolla in Mr. Birchum, a new Daily Wire adult animated comedy series scheduled to debut in early 2024.[107][108] On December 6, 2023, Kelly returned to the moderator desk to co-host the fourth Republican primary debate alongside Elizabeth Vargas and Eliana Johnson on NewsNation.[109][110][111]
Writing
In February 2016, Kelly signed an agreement with HarperCollins to write an autobiography scheduled for release later that year, in a deal worth more than $10 million.[112][113][114] The book, titled Settle for More, was released on November 15, 2016.[115][116]
Accolades
- In 2009, Kelly received an award from Childhelp for her work as a Fox News anchor covering the subject of child abuse.[117] Kelly was honored with an Alumni Achievement Award from the Albany Law School in 2010 for her 15th class reunion.[118] She was included in the 2014 Time list of the 100 most influential people.[119] On September 26, 2015, Kelly was inducted into the Hall of Fame at Bethlehem Central High School, her alma mater.[120]
In popular culture
Bombshell, a 2019 film depicting Roger Ailes' sexual abuses and his subsequent resignation from Fox News, was released on December 13, 2019. Kelly is portrayed in the film by Charlize Theron, who was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress for her performance.[121] Kelly said she was not consulted for the film's content;[122] however, after viewing a screening of the film, Kelly held a roundtable discussion with other involved parties such as Juliet Huddy, Rudi Bakhtiar, Douglas Brunt, and former Fox News producer Julie Zann. Kelly confirmed and denied several moments in the film, while describing the film overall as an emotional experience for her.[123][124]
Personal life
In 2001, Kelly married Daniel Kendall, an anesthesiologist, in a Catholic ceremony. The marriage ended in divorce in 2006.[125] In March 2024, Kelly revealed that she was going through the Catholic annulment process with Kendall.[126]
In 2008, she married Douglas Brunt, who was then president and CEO of the cybersecurity firm Authentium,[127] and who became a full-time writer and novelist.[128] They have three children: Son Yates, daughter Yardley, and son Thatcher, born in 2009, 2011, and 2013 respectively.[129][130][131][132] All three children were conceived through in vitro fertilization.[133][134] The family lives in Connecticut during the school year, and have a waterfront New Jersey home for the summer.[135]
Kelly is a lifelong Catholic.[136] She has appeared at a fundraiser for the conservative group Moms for Liberty.[137] Kelly has Raynaud's disease.[138] In 2022, Kelly revealed that her older sister, Suzanne Crossley, had died of a heart attack after a battle with addiction.[139] She had left behind three children and a grandson.[140][141]
Political views
Politically, Kelly identifies as an independent, and told Variety in 2015 that she had voted for both Democrats and Republicans.[142] She has spoken out in support of drug legalization and supports accepting more legal immigrants,[143] but objected to Muslim immigration in Europe.[144][145][unreliable source?] After the Parkland high school shooting in 2018, Kelly criticized the National Rifle Association of America for being too powerful and criticized lawmakers for not pushing for reform on guns.[146]
In June 2023, Kelly explained why she had changed her position on "preferred pronouns" from being for them to being against them.[147] She had also begun to express anti-transgender views, especially against LGBTQ figures such as Dylan Mulvaney, referring to Mulvaney's "mockery of womanhood and girlhood";[148] Ava Kris Tyson, who was repeatedly misgendered by Kelly in a response to Tyson coming out as a transgender woman in an interview with Anthony Padilla;[149] and the writers of the Transformers: EarthSpark kids show, calling them "disgusting" for showcasing a non-binary character.[150]
After Taylor Swift endorsed Kamala Harris, Kelly said "screw you Taylor Swift" on The Tucker Carlson Podcast for "picking a side" in a hotly contested election and due to Swift explaining this choice as a result of Tim Walz's LGBTQ stance.[151]
On Nov 4, 2024, the day before Election Day, Megyn Kelly appeared on a stage in Pittsburgh and delivered a speech supporting Trump. [152][153]
See also
References
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On Twitter, a handful of people fumed that Kelly, a conservative and mother of three, had gotten a new show with expanded reach.
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...joining big brother Edward Yates, 22 months. 'Yates was [my husband] Doug's father's name, and we felt we needed a strong name to match it,' Kelly, 40, tells People of their name choice.
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The news was announced at the end of Kelly's former show, America Live...
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But I'm Catholic. I've lived as a Catholic my whole life, but I haven't heard my fellow Catholics speak so snidely about our faith, other than in this email.
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External links
- Megyn Kelly at IMDb
- Appearances on C-SPAN
- Megyn Kelly
- 1970 births
- Living people
- 20th-century American women journalists
- 20th-century American women lawyers
- 20th-century Roman Catholics
- 21st-century American memoirists
- 21st-century American women journalists
- 21st-century American women lawyers
- 21st-century American women writers
- 21st-century Roman Catholics
- Albany Law School alumni
- American people of German descent
- American people of Irish descent
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- Catholics from Illinois
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- Lawyers from Syracuse, New York
- Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs alumni
- NBC News people
- New York (state) independents
- New York (state) lawyers
- Lawyers from Albany, New York
- People associated with the 2016 United States presidential election
- People from Champaign, Illinois