Ed Schultz, Blunt-Spoken Political Talk-Show Host, Dies at 64
He was not on the list.
Ed Schultz, a former conservative radio show host whose
politics moved left before he joined MSNBC’s nightly lineup in 2009 and then
shifted again when he was hired by RT America, Russia’s state-financed
international cable network, died on Thursday at his home in Washington. He was
64.
His death was announced by RT America, which did not specify
a cause. His stepdaughter Megan Espelien said he had heart problems.
Mr. Schultz, a burly former college football quarterback
with a booming voice, ranged across the political spectrum during his radio and
television career, achieving his highest visibility as a blunt-spoken liberal
and champion of blue-collar America as host of “The Ed Show” on MSNBC.
In the 1990s, he had his own conservative radio talk show
broadcast regionally from Fargo, N.D. But by 2000, when he announced he was a
Democrat, he, and his show, had begun turning to the left, gaining listeners
even while others may have dropped him.
While it had nowhere near the listenership of shows hosted
by conservatives like Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity, the Schultz show grew in
popularity as he established himself as a sharp critic of President George W.
Bush.
In his book “Straight Talk From the Heartland” (2004), Mr.
Schultz described the successful, if unusual, arc of his career.
“How did a prairie-dwelling, red-meat-eating, gun-toting
former conservative become the hope of liberal radio?” he wrote. “It all
started with this annoying habit I have of speaking my mind. Sometimes, when I
open my mouth, all hell breaks loose. Other times I feel like a voice in the
wilderness and I wonder, ‘Does anybody get this?’ ”
In 2005, he began a nationally syndicated liberal-leaning
radio show with funding from a New York nonprofit organization called Democracy
Radio. By then he was declaring to The Washington Post that conservative radio
hosts were “meanspirited and intentionally dishonest.”
When MSNBC hired him to host his own show in 2009, he joined
an unabashedly liberal lineup that featured Rachel Maddow and Keith Olbermann.
He had moments of bombast, from calling Vice President Dick Cheney an “enemy of
the country” to declaring President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, or “Putie,” a
hero to Republicans.
Mr. Schultz was suspended by MSNBC for a week without pay in
2011 after calling the conservative commentator Laura Ingraham, on his radio
show, a “right-wing slut.” (He was responding to her criticism of President
Barack Obama for drinking a pint of beer in Dublin instead of flying to the
scene of a tornado disaster in Joplin, Mo.)
Mr. Schultz apologized, and Ms. Ingraham accepted the
apology.
The ratings of “The Ed Show,” which was broadcast on
weeknights, never soared, and he moved to weekend duty before being given a
weekday slot. His and other underperforming shows were canceled in 2015. In April,
he told a National Review podcast that he had been fired for supporting Bernie
Sanders in the Democratic presidential primaries.
At MSNBC, Mr. Schultz was known for his embrace of the labor
movement at a time when the mainstream media was all but ignoring it, said
David Shuster, a former MSNBC host, in a Twitter post on Thursday.
“Ed,” he said, “focused on American blue collar workers most
of the MSM had long forgotten.”
Edward Andrew Schultz was born on Jan. 27, 1954, in Norfolk,
Va. His father, George, was an aeronautical engineer; his mother, Mary, was a
schoolteacher. He played quarterback at Minnesota State University, Moorhead,
where he led the N.C.A.A. Division II in passing in 1977. After graduating he
tried out for teams in the National Football League, including the Jets, and
the Canadian Football League without success. He then began his career in
radio, originally as a sportscaster.
In addition to his stepdaughter Ms. Espelien, his survivors
include his wife, Wendy (Noack) Schultz; his son, David; two other
stepdaughters, Greta Guscette and Ingrid Murray; two stepsons, Christian and
Joseph Kiedrowski; and 15 grandchildren. His marriage to Maureen Zimmerman
ended in divorce.
Several months after losing his job at MSNBC, Mr. Schultz
re-emerged as the anchor of an 8 p.m. program, “The News With Ed Schultz,” on
RT America.
“I could have retired,” he told The West Fargo Pioneer, a
North Dakota newspaper. “That’s not Ed Schultz; I’m not ready to do that. I got
a lot of tire left. I have a lot of desire. This gives me a chance to do
something that I haven’t had an opportunity to do in my career.”
And, he declared, the network’s Russian backing would not
influence him. “Nobody is going to tell Ed Schultz what to say,” he said.
But his new show seemed to reflect a course correction from
his MSNBC days. At RT, he adopted a friendlier tone toward Putin and President
Donald J. Trump, whom he had once called a “racist” for questioning whether
President Obama had been born in the United States.
In 2017, he criticized CNN’s reporting on Russian
interference in the 2016 presidential election.
And, in the National Review podcast, he sidestepped his past
comments about Putin’s “nasty” human rights record by saying: “I think the
United States has a nasty human rights record. I do think that every superpower
on the globe has a very poor record on human rights.”
In a statement, Margarita Simonyan, chief editor of RT,
recalled a displeased Mr. Schultz’s strong reaction when the Justice Department
required RT America to register as a foreign agent.
“Ed set an example for all of us,” she said, “saying: ‘Let
them call me what they want. I am going to speak the truth no matter what.’ ”
His last broadcast was on May 31.
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