![]() ![]() They have gone back through the archives and dug out rants about every right-wing topic known to man. I tuned in the other day to find out that it's not Levin. I've recently considered calling in to Levin's show and when I got on the air, I'd pronounce his name so that it would rhyme with "seven." He, of course, would correct me and say that it's pronounced "Luh-VIN," after which I would ask him why, then, is it okay for him to intentionally mispronounce the name of the Vice-President of the United States. Some thought it would be Mark Levin, who touts himself as a constitutional expert, but appears to only know some of the amendments. There was certainly no shortage of candidates, including the cavalcade of haters, local talk-radio screamers from all different parts of our great land who took turns filling in for Limbaugh in his final days. I listened up until the very end of his life.īut since his death, I have been wondering with whom they would replace him. ![]() He was a broadcasting giant, a Father Coughlin for the modern age. He eventually morphed into a caricature of himself, serving as a blowhard template for those who came after him, the Sean Hannitys of the world, each more shrill and less talented than Limbaugh. I've always thought that it was important to listen to other points of view, and he certainly had those. I started listening to Limbaugh in the late 1980s, not long after he first came on the air. ![]() I have long (unashamedly) admitted that, for decades, I would listen to Rush Limbaugh if I was driving somewhere when his show was on.
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