Charlie Sykes Biography
Charlie Sykes is an American political commentator currently editor-in-chief of the website The Bulwark. Charles Jay Sykes hosted a conservative talk show on WTMJ in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Sykes enrolled at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee after graduating from Nicolet High School, where he graduated summa cum laude in 1975 with a bachelor’s degree in English. At the age of 18, while in Milwaukee, Sykes converted to Roman Catholicism.
Charlie Sykes Age
Sykes is 69 years old. He was born on November 11, 1954, in Seattle, Washington, United States of America. He celebrates his birthday on November 11th every year, and his zodiac sign is Scorpio.
Charlie Sykes Family
Sykes grew up in New York and Wisconsin at Fox Point. He is the son of Jat Sykes and Katherine Kay Border. His father was a lawyer who later worked in New York as a journalist for several small newspapers.
Jay became a board member of the Wisconsin chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union later. It ran unsuccessfully in the 1970 primary against Martin J. Schreiber for Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin.
Charlie Sykes Husband
Sykes is a married man. He is married he has been married twice in his life. He is currently in a marital relationship with Janet Riordan. They exchanged their vows and tied the knot in 2000. The duo also has a child. But his name is not revealed yet.
He currently resides in Mequon, Wisconsin along with his wife and three dogs. He has three kids and two grandchildren.
Before that, he married Diane S. Sykes in 1980. She was a United States District Judge for the Seventh Circuit of the Court of Appeals of the United States. After his first marriage, he had two kids. The couple divorced in 1999, however.
Charlie Sykes Writing
The founder and editor-at-large of The Bulwark, which hosts The Bulwark Podcast, is Charlie Sykes. He is also a contributor to NBC/ MSNBC.
He started his career as a journalist for a year with The Northeast Post weekly in West Allis, Wisconsin, in 1975. Sykes joined The Milwaukee Journal in 1976, beginning with coverage of stories in the suburbs of the North Shore. Sykes came to Cleveland as a staff writer for Cleveland Magazine after seven years of working in the Milwaukee area. By the end of the year though, the magazine went out of business. In 1983, he returned to Milwaukee as managing editor of Milwaukee Magazine and moved in January 1984 to become editor-in-chief. He wrote Milwaukee Magazine profiles, investigative posts, and commentary.
Likewise, Sykes was a published author, mainly concerned with education. In 1988, he made his debut with Profscam: Professors and the Decline of Higher Education, inspired by the essay posthumously published in October 1985 by his father. He has written for The New York Times, and The Wall Street Journal, for Imprimis. He was also an editor of WI Interest magazine and the Right Wisconsin website.
Charlie Sykes Author
Nine books have been published by Charlie Sykes, including A Nation of Victims, The Hollow Men, The End of Privacy, Profscam, 50 Rules Kids Won’t Learn in School, Dumbing Down Our Kids, A Nation of Moochers, and Fail U. He was also a National Review College Guide co-editor.
Similarly, recently, St. Martin’s Press published How the Right Lost Its Mind. In October 2017, it was released. Moreover in October 2018, the revised paperback version was released.
Charlie Sykes Podcast | Radio
As a substitute host for Mark Belling at WISN in Milwaukee, Sykes began hosting talk radio in 1989. By 1992, he had his show on WISN. Later, within a year, he jumped into WTMJ and anchored a mid-day show there until December 19, 2016.
WTMJ settled a $5,000 libel case with Spanish Journal editor Robert Miranda against Sykes on July 26, 2005, over a November 2004 blog post by Sykes claiming that Miranda was in 1991. In response to a “pro-American” rally at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, it organized a demonstration that turned aggressive, details that Sykes later retracted. He did not favor Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign. The movement against him and the decision to cast a written ballot for independent environmental candidate Evan McMullin instead. Sykes revealed in October 2016 that for undisclosed personal reasons, he had chosen late in 2015 to quit his radio show.
Sykes wrote an op-ed in the New York Times in December 2016, claiming that during the referendum, the conservative movement had lost its way. Over time, all the usual guideposts were down, the referees discredited, and we had succeeded in delegitimizing the media altogether.
From January to April 2017, Sykes was part of Indivisible’s revolving set of hosts, a call-in talk show broadcast in New York City by WNYC public radio, among others, along with Brian Lehrer of WNYC and Kerri Miller of Minnesota Public Radio. The show analyzed the first 100 days of the new administration of President Donald Trump and addressed them. Sykes became the new host of The Daily Regular, The Weekly Standard Magazine’s resurrected podcast, in February 2018.
Charlie Sykes Television
In 1983, Sykes was a WISN-TV investigative reporter. He anchored the local Sunday morning talk show, Sunday Insight, for WTMJ-TV from 1993 to 2016. Sykes contributed an essay to the ITVS “Declarations: Essays on American Ideals” series in 1994.
Charlie Sykes Scandles | Rumours
Sykes and fellow WTMJ host Jeff Wagner gained notoriety in 2002, leading a movement to recall Tom Ament, Milwaukee Country Executive. Similarly, for reforming the country’s pension program to give itself and close massive payouts, he was engulfed in controversy.
Charlie Sykes’s Net Worth
Sykes has an estimated net worth of between $2 million – $3 million. His income is mainly attributed to his career as an author.