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Review Online contributing editor Deroy Murdock is a columnist with the
Scripps Howard News Service. His column, "This Opinion Just In
,"
frequently appears in the New York Post, Washington Times,
Orange County Register, and many other newspapers and magazines
in America and abroad. He is a regular panelist on the PBS program Tucker
Carlson: Unfiltered. He was a founding staff commentator on MSNBC
and has appeared on ABC's Nightline and Politically Incorrect,
NBC Nightly News, CNN, Fox News Channel, and C-SPAN, among other
TV and radio programs.
Murdock also has contributed to Economic Strategy and National Security
(Westview Press/Council on Foreign Relations, 2000), The Race Card:
White Guilt, Black Resentment and the Assault on Truth and Justice
(Forum, 1997), Black and Right: The Bold New Voice of Black Conservatives
in America (Praeger, 1997) and The Third Generation: Young Conservatives
Look to the Future (Regnery-Gateway, 1987).
Murdock was an intern on the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee under Senator
Orrin Hatch (R., Utah) between 1982 and 1985. President Reagan appointed
him to the National Advisory Board on International Educational Programs,
on which he served from 1987 to 1989. He was a volunteer and youth organizer
on the 1980 and 1984 Reagan for President campaigns, and was a communications
consultant to Forbes 2000.
Murdock is a senior fellow with the Atlas Economic Research Foundation;
a Media Fellow with the Hoover Institution at Stanford University; a co-founder
and National Board member of Third Millennium, an educational and political-advocacy
group launched by young Americans born after 1960; a member of the Council
on Foreign Relations; and president of Loud & Clear Communications, a
Manhattan-based marketing and media consultancy.
Murdock received an AB in government from Georgetown University in 1986
and an MBA in Marketing and International Business from New York University
in 1989. His MBA program included a semester as an exchange student at
the Chinese University of Hong Kong.
Murdock hopes that someday the free society will bring him and
every American more leisure time to enjoy fine dining, motion pictures,
and live music.
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