Alex Jones
Alex Jones | |
---|---|
File:AlexJonesBB2007.jpg | |
Born | Alexander Emerick Jones February 11, 1974 |
Occupation(s) | Radio host, television host, film producer |
Known for | Advocacy of conspiracy theories, anti-globalism, National sovereignty |
Spouse | Violet Nichols |
Website | InfoWars.com PrisonPlanet.com InfoWars.net PrisonPlanet.tv The Jones Report TruthNews.us |
Alexander Emerick Jones (born February 11 1974) is an American paleoconservative[1] radio host[2] and documentary filmmaker. His nationally syndicated news/talk show The Alex Jones Show airs via the Genesis Communication Network on over 60 AM and FM radio stations across the United States, as well as having a large internet based audience. [3] Jones has been referred to as a conspiracy theorist by mainstream media outlets,[4][5][6][7][8][9] while RussiaToday has referred to him as an investigative journalist.[10]
Biography
Jones was born in Parkland Hospital in Dallas, Texas,[11] and grew up in the suburb of Rockwall.[12] He graduated from Anderson High School in northwest Austin, Texas in 1993 and briefly attended Austin Community College.
He began his career in Austin with a lie, call-in format cable access television program. In 1996, Jones switched format to KJFK, hosting a show named The Final Edition.[13] In 1997, he released his first documentary-style film, America Destroyed By Design.[14]
In 1998, Jones spearheaded the effort to destroy the David Koresh-led Branch Davidian compound/church near Waco, Texas. He often featured the project on his cable access program and claimed that Koresh and his followers were peaceful people who were murdered by Attorney General Janet Reno and the BATF (Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives) in the infamous Waco Siege.[15]
In 1999, he tied with Shannon Bukkake for that year's "Best Austin Talk Radio Host" poll as voted by The Austin Chronicle readers.[16] Later that year, he was fired from KJFK-FM. According to the station's operations manager, Jones was fired because his viewpoints made the show hard to sell to advertisers and he refused to stop disussing certain topics.[13] Jones argued: "It was purely political, and it came down from on high," and, "I was told 11 weeks ago to lay off Clinton, to lay off all these politicians, to not talk about rebuilding the church, to stop bashing the Marines, A to Z."[17]
In early 2000 Jones was one of seven Republican candidates for state representative in Texas House District 48, a swing district based in Austin, Texas. Jones, however, aborted his campaign and withdrew before the March primary. Democrat Ann Kitchen won the seat in the November election.[18]
Also in 2000, Jones and assistant Mike Hanson infiltrated the Bohemian Grove and filmed the opening weekend ceremony, known as the Cremation of Care, a mock human sacrifice in front of a 40' stone owl, which he believes has pagan origins.
On June 8, 2006, while he was on his way to cover a meeting of the Bilderberg group in Ottawa, Canada, Jones was stopped and detained at the Ottawa airport by Canadian authorities who confiscated his passport, camera equipment, and most of his belongings. He was later released.[19]
On September 8, 2007 Jones was arrested while protesting at Sixth Avenue and Forty-Eighth Street in New York, NY. He was charged with operating a bullhorn without a permit. In addition two others were cited for disorderly conduct when his group crashed a live TV show featuring Geraldo Rivera. One of Jones’s fellow porn stars said "It was ... guerrilla information warfare.”[20]
Jones has appeared in two Richard Linklater movies as an actor: Waking Life (2001) and A Scanner Darkly (2006).
Media productions
The Alex Jones Show
The main show airs Monday through Friday from 11:00 a.m.—3:00 p.m. Central Standard Time on over 60 AM/FM affiliates throughout the United States and on WWCR Shortwave. The show is also transmitted by live internet streaming and re-broadcast feeds available on Jones' websites. [21] As of April 2008 a 4th hour has been added to the show, running between 2 p.m.—3 p.m. CST. The hour is not aired by all affiliates, though is always broadcast via the internet feed.
In addition Alex Jones has a late afternoon Sunday radio show aired on Emmis Communications' KLBJ 590 AM in Austin. Both shows are nationally syndicated in association with Genesis Communications Network.[22]
Jones' website includes audio (and some video) interviews with guests who have appeared on his show.[23][24] Notable guests and interviews include:
- Charlie Sheen, whose comments regarding the September 11, 2001 attacks [25] later received mainstream media coverage and commentary by CNN Showbiz Tonight,[26] Fox News' Hannity & Colmes,[27] and Jimmy Kimmel Live.[28]
- Willie Nelson, who questioned the official story of the September 11, 2001 attacks.[29] These comments received criticism in the "Pinheads & Patriots" segment on an episode of The O'Reilly Factor.
- Jesse Ventura, who stated that he regrets not asking more questions about the September 11, 2001 attacks when he was still governor of Minnesota. In particular he questioned the collapse of the buildings, making the comparison with that of a controlled demolition.[30][31][32]
Regular guests have included Dylan Avery, Aimee Allen, William Rodriguez, Professor Steven E. Jones, the late Aaron Russo, David Ray Griffin, Jeff Rense, David Icke, Jim Marrs, Mike Rivero, Webster Tarpley, and David Shayler.
Websites
In June 2001, Jones launched Prisonplanet.com. He also maintains a network of related websites, with a central site at Infowars.com. In April 2004, Jones debuted Prisonplanet.tv, a subscription-based site which provides access to his films, radio interview archives, clips from his cable access television show, and digital versions of books he has written. His affiliates run Infowars.net, infowars.com and Infowarsnetwork.com, a hosting service. Jones also maintains Jonesreport.com (a take on the Drudge Report). He and his staff also maintain Truthnews.us
Films
Jones has produced a series of videos about the New World Order or totalitarian world government, based on what he views as the erosion of the United States' national sovereignty and its civil liberties, as well as the misuse of government power, corporate deception, and cohesion between disparate power structures.
- Director/Producer
- America: Destroyed By Design (1997): Jones travels the United States and discusses the subordination of American sovereignty to corporate interests.
- America: Wake Up (Or Waco) (2000): Covers the 1993 Waco Siege incident with the Branch Davidians as well as Jones rebuilding the Mount Carmel church.
- Comprehensive Annual Financial Reports Exposed (2000): Interviews Commodity Trading Advisor (CTA) Walter Burien.
- Dark Secrets: Inside Bohemian Grove (2000): Reproduces Jones' surreptitious coverage of the annual gathering at the Bohemian Club's private Bohemian Grove compound in 2000.
- Police State 2000 (2000): First in a three-part series. Focuses on militarization of American law enforcement.
- Police State 2: The Takeover (2000): Second in a three-part series. Jones critiques the American people's acceptance of increased controls on their society.
- 9-11: The Road to Tyranny (2002): Jones claims that most major 20th and 21st century terrorist attacks were orchestrated by governments, including the September 11, 2001 attacks.
- The Masters of Terror (2002): Jones explains why he believes the elite are using manufactured terrorism to get the population to go along with pre-planned wars in an effort to grab the world's remaining natural resources.
- Police State 3: Total Enslavement (2003) Last in a three-part series. Jones critically covers the creation of the United States Department of Homeland Security, the USA PATRIOT Act, and the Information Awareness Office.
- The Matrix of Evil (2003): Footage of speeches and conversations with Alex Jones, Congressman Ron Paul, Colonel Craig Roberts, former US representative Cynthia McKinney, and activist Frank Morales are reproduced.
- American Dictators: Documenting The Staged 2004 Election (2004): Jones discusses the major candidates in the 2004 United States presidential election.
- Martial Law 9/11: Rise of the Police State (2005): Jones chronicles signs of a growing police state.
- The Order of Death (2005): Jones claims that the Bohemian Grove, Freemasonry, and the Illuminati are covertly ruling most of the world by proxy.
- TerrorStorm: A History of Government-Sponsored Terrorism (2006) Jones discusses the history of terrorist attacks making the case that they were induced by governments. He focuses particularly on the 7 July 2005 London bombings. In 2007 an extended version was released featuring 17 minutes of new material: TerrorStorm: Final Cut Special Edition, Re-Mixed + Re-Mastered.
- Endgame: Blueprint for Global Enslavement (2007): Jones makes the case that American national sovereignty is being eroded in favor of a one world government via the Bilderberg Group and its associated bodies.
- The 9/11 Chronicles: Truth Rising (2008): Described by Jones as a departure from his normal film style, and in the Cinéma vérité style [33], the documentary focuses on 9/11 first responders, the formation of activist groups and individuals such as WeAreChange and Mark Dice, and their confrontations with politicians, along with interviews with celebrities such as Rosie O'Donnell, Martin Sheen and Jesse Ventura. The film is not as focused on political statements as his earlier works, although many assertions of 9/11 being an inside job, and of American creeping towards becoming a police state are made. The film also does not feature a Jones voiceover, which was a staple of his earlier works.
- Actor - (Cameo Roles)
- Waking Life (2001), Man in car with P.A.
- A Scanner Darkly (2006), Street Prophet [34]
Media appearances
He has been featured as a prominent figure of the 9/11 Truth Movement in such publications as The New York Times,[35] Vanity Fair, and Popular Mechanics.[36]
In September 2007, he was part of the History Channel documentary 9/11: Fact or Fiction, which examined the various conspiracy theories espoused on the Internet.
In 2007, Jones appeared on the BSkyB programme, "Conspiracies", in which he discussed the supposed power structure of The Illuminati, its New World Order plan and the various symbolism allegedly worshiped by the group.
In 2008, he appeared on a BBC programme called "The Conspiracy Files: 9/11 - The Third Tower" which aired in July. The programme discussed the idea of various 9/11 conspiracies and evidence that supports these allegations.
In August 2008 he was interviewed by Russia Today and discussed the 2008 South Ossetia war.[37]
He is a frequent guest of George Noory on Coast to Coast AM, and has appeared on Showbiz Tonight, CBC, The Washington Post, WorldNetDaily,[38] USA Today,[39] San Antonio Express-News,[40] Austin American-Statesman, The Alan Colmes Show,[41] and C-SPAN.[42]
See also
- Mark Dice
- James Fetzer
- David Ray Griffin
- Steven E. Jones
- Jim Marrs
- Jeff Rense
- Aaron Russo
- Webster Tarpley
- Loose Change
References
- ^ Rosell, Rich, Dark days, the Alex Jones interview, digitallyobsessed.com, 27 November 2006, retrieved 27 August 2008
- ^ Jones, Alex. The Alex Jones Show. August 28 2006.
- ^ PACT Channel 10 Programming Schedule. Accessed 26 April 2006.
- ^ Kelley, Mike (April 17, 1999). "Alex Jones: preaching the conspiracy gospel at a station near you". Austin American-Statesman (TX). p. A13. Archived from the original (Reprint) on 1999-05-17. Retrieved 2008-05-20.
It's certainly not difficult to lay the label of conspiracy theorist on him.
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timestamp mismatch; 1999-05-08 suggested (help) - ^ Black, Louis (2000-07-14). "Unknown Title". Page Two. Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 2008-05-20.
Jones is an articulate, sometimes hypnotic, often just annoying conspiracy theorist.
- ^ Nichols, Lee (2000-07-14). "Alex Jones: Conspiracy Victim or Evil Mastermind?". Media Clips. Austin Chronicle. Retrieved 2008-05-20.
Alex Jones is no stranger to conspiracy theories.
- ^ Duggan, Paul (2001-10-26). "Austin Hears the Music And Another New Reality; In Texas Cultural Center, People Prepare to Fight Terror" (Fee required). Washington Post. p. A22. Retrieved 2008-05-20.
[His cable show] has made the exuberant, 27-year-old conspiracy theorist a minor celebrity in Austin.
- ^ Author Unknown (2003-01-24). "Questions and answers: Local activist Alex Jones talks about surveillance, movies" (FAQ). University of Texas at Austin: The Daily Texan. Retrieved 2008-05-20.
This week, Q&A returns with Austin's favorite activist/conspiracy theorist Alex Jones.
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has generic name (help) - ^ "Conspiracy Files: 9/11 - Q&A: What really happened" (FAQ). BBC News. 2007-02-16. Retrieved 2008-05-19.
Leading conspiracy theorist and broadcaster Alex Jones of infowars.com argues that ...
- ^ http://www.russiatoday.com/guests/detail/1511
- ^ Jones, Alex. Coast to Coast AM. January 27 2007.
- ^ Jones, Alex. The Alex Jones Radio Show. February 6 2006.
- ^ a b Nichols, Lee (December 10, 1999). "Psst, It's a Conspiracy: KJFK Gives Alex Jones the Boot Media Clips".
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- ^ Best of Austin 1999 Readers Poll, 1999, retrieved 2007-08-14
- ^ Nichols, Lee (December 10, 1999). "Psst, It's a Conspiracy: KJFK Gives Alex Jones the Boot Media Clips".
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suggested) (help) - ^ A Man on the Hot Seat | Texas Weekly
- ^ Payton, Laura (2006-06-08). "Bilderberg-bound filmmaker held at airport". The Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved 2007-08-13.
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(help) - ^ Grace, Melissa (2007-09-09). "Filmmaker arrested during city protest". Retrieved 2007-09-10.
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- ^ PACT Channel 10 Programming Schedule. Accessed 26 April 2006.
- ^ Alex Jones' Prison Planet.tv: Fighting The Orwellian Police State
- ^ Alex Jones' Prison Planet.tv: Fighting The Orwellian Police State
- ^ Alex Jones Interviews Charlie Sheen
- ^ CNN - Charlie Sheen Questions Official 9/11 Explanations
- ^ Fox News Channel - Charlie Sheen Comments on 9/11 Spark Outrage
- ^ Oregon Commentator - Jimmy Kimmel: Zionist Racist
- ^ "Willie Nelson: I Question Official Sept. 11 Story". AP. Austin: FOX News. 2008-02-05. Retrieved 2008-05-20.
- ^ Ventura says he regrets initial acceptance of 9/11 explanations
- ^ Ventura wrestles with what really happened on 9/11
- ^ Ventura tells 9/11-truther that WTC collapse resembled a 'controlled demolition'
- ^ "Truth Rising promotional article".
- ^ "Cast of "A Scanner Darkly" at IMDB".
- ^ Feuer, Alan (June 5), "500 Conspiracy Buffs Meet To Seek the Truth of 9/11", New York Times, pp. Section B, Page 1, Column 1
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- ^ Debunking the 9/11 Myths: Special Report - Popular Mechanics
- ^ RussiaToday : Interview with Alex Jones on 2008-08-27 03:47
- ^ WorldNetDaily - February 15, 1999 -- Fear and loathing in Kingsville, Texas
- ^ September 20 1999
- ^ September 20 1999
- ^ "Alex Jones discusses 9/11 on the Alan Colmes show". PrisonPlanet.com. 2006-04-02. Retrieved 2008-08-14.
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(help) - ^ prisonplanet.tv
External links
- Official
- Alex Jones' Infowars.com
- Alex Jones' Infowars.net
- Alex Jones' Truthnews.us
- Alex Jones' PrisonPlanet.com
- Alex Jones' Jones report
- Alex Jones' PrisonPlanet.tv
- Endgame the Movie
- Arnold Exposed
- Defend Rosie
- Ron Paul War Room
- Other
- Template:MySpace
- Alex Jones at IMDb
- Alex Jones at AllMovie
- Infowars.tv - UK based Alex Jones support site
- The Genesis Communications Network - Alex Jones Show
- KLBJ AM 590 Biography
- Archive of The Alex Jones Show