|
Register Now!
|
|
Register now for vtap for the fastest and easiest way to watch web video on your mobile device!
|
|
Alexander Emerick Jones (born February 11 1974) is an American paleoconservative radio host and filmmaker who is known for his outspoken opposition to internationalist organizations such as the United Nations and World Bank. He is sometimes described as a "conspiracy theorist."
Alex Jones is a British actor, playwright and film maker. He is best known for Noise, his violent play about teenage newlyweds who face neighbourly aggression. Noise is associated with the so-called in-yer-face theatre movement.
Alex S. Jones is a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist who has been director of the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government since July 1, 2000. Jones is also a lecturer at the school, occupying the Laurence M. Lombard Chair in the Press and Public Policy.
Jones wrote about the press for The New York Times from 1983 until 1992 and was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1987 . He is the author, with Susan E. Tifft, of The Patriarch: The Rise and Fall of the Bingham Dynasty, and The Trust: The Private and Powerful Family behind the New York Times--which was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle award.
From 1993 until 1997 he was host of NPR's "On the Media," and from 1996 until 2003 he was executive editor and host of PBS's "Media Matters." Jones has been a Nieman Fellow at Harvard University, and sits on the advisory boards of the Columbia Journalism Review, the International Center for Journalists, the Committee of Concerned Journalists, and the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
Was first as a talk radio host in Austin, Texas, USA when the station was bought by a conglomerate. Alex Jones has since joined a non-conglomerate owned radio network called GCN.



