Background
Benson lived much of his early life overseas, then grew up in Ridgewood, New Jersey, where he attended middle school and Ridgewood High School.
Benson lived much of his early life overseas, then grew up in Ridgewood, New Jersey, where he attended middle school and Ridgewood High School.
While at Northwestern, he worked for the campus radio station, WNUR, broadcasting sporting events and hosting a political talk show. Benson also reported for an National Public Radio station in South Florida, broadcast summer baseball games in the Cape Cod Baseball League, and interned at the White House. Benson lived much of his early life overseas, then grew up in Ridgewood, New Jersey, where he attended middle school and Ridgewood High School.
During high school, he was known for broadcasting sports on local television
He also interned for two summers at Fox News, working primarily with Hannity & Colmes, before assisting the channel with its coverage of the 2004 Republican National Convention.
He is a contributor for Fox News, political editor of Townhall.com, and a conservative talk radio personality. in July 2010 to host Sandy Rios in the Morning on AFR TALK on American Family Radio. From to 2008 to 2015, Benson also hosted his own Sunday night radio program, The Guy Benson Show, on Department of Administration and Management 560 WIND in Chicago and Department of Administration and Management 1260 WWRC in Washington, District of Columbia In 2010, Benson became political editor at Townhall.com, where his columns had been published since February 2008. Benson also contributes to Townhall’s sister site, Hot Air.
He previously wrote at Andrew Breitbart’s “Big” sites and National Review Online’s Media Blog.
In addition to serving as a regular guest and substitute host on The Hugh Hewitt Show, Benson is a frequent guest on cable news networks, including Fox News and Consumer News and Business Channel. In April 2008 Benson discovered video from a 2007 reunion of the Weathermen, a radical left-wing group from the 1960s and 70s. Since Barack Obama was criticized during the 2008 presidential campaign for associating with Ayers and Dohrn, the clips made national news, from the Boston Globe to Fox News.
Benson garnered national attention during the 2008 presidential race on two other occasions. Then, two weeks before Election Day, Benson joined with Mary Katharine Ham and Editor Morrissey to pen “The Comprehensive Argument Against Barack Obama,” released on Hot Air.
In May 2015, together with coauthor Mary Katharine Ham, Benson published his first non-fiction book End of Discussion: How the Left’s Outrage Industry Shuts Down Debate, Manipulates Voters, and Makes America Less Free (and Fun), a critique of political correctness in politics, media and culture from the point of view of two Millennial conservatives. In August, after the Obama campaign attacked World's Greatest Newspaper radio in Chicago for allowing Stanley Kurtz to appear on their station, Benson—who was in studio during the interview—detailed his experience.
The footage included quotes from two members, Bill Ayers and Bernardine Dohrn, defending their actions.