
Word is the video of Obama in his college days is in safe hands and will still be released.
His "We're not gonna take your bullshit anymore/f*ck You!" speech 2 weeks ago
In the three years since launching his network of sites, Breitbart had become what Time magazine called the Internetās āmost combative conservative impresarioā, through his antagonistic appearances on cable television and by publishing controversial stories other media outlets wouldnāt touch.
Breitbart, a lifelong resident of Los Angeles, cut his teeth as a sidekick to Matt Drudge, the secretive figure behind the Drudge Report, widely regarded as the most influential news website in the United States.
He then founded Breitbart.com, which aggregated news from the Associated Press and other news wires and was heavily linked to by the Drudge Report.
In 2005 he helped launch the Huffington Post, but parted company with its founder Arianna Huffington when her politics moved sharply to the left.
Branching out in 2009, he launched Big Government, Big Journalism and Big Hollywood, reflecting the three areas of American life which he regarded as institutionally liberal and unreflective of most Americansā view of life.
"Most conservatives are individualists," he told Time. "For years, they've been pummelled by the collectivists who run the American media, Hollywood and Washington. The underground conservative movement that is now awakening is the ecosystem I've designed my sites to tap into."
He quickly courted controversy with a story by conservative student activist James OāKeefe purporting to show employees of the Acorn housing agency giving tips on setting up a brothel to undercover reporters. Its veracity was later questioned when it emerged that clips of OāKeefe dressed as a pimp had been inserted after the event.
His biggest scoop was the scandal that led to the resignation of Anthony Weiner, a rising star in Democratic congressional ranks. One of his websites was the first report that Weiner had sent obscene images of himself to women over the Twitter. As Weiner issued strenous denials and suggested his Twitter account had been hacked, Breitbart stood firm and was soon vindicated.
A tribute to Breitbart on Big Journalism read: āWe have lost a husband, a father, a son, a brother, a dear friend, a patriot and a happy warrior.
























































































