William Alfred Whittle (born April 7, 1959)[1] is an American conservative political commentator and YouTuber. He has made videos for PJ Media as the presenter of Afterburner, The Firewall, The Daily Wire, and as co-host of Right Angle with Stephen Green and Scott Ott, his former fellow co-hosts of Trifecta. Whittle has also produced videos and writing for other outlets, such as the NRA and Truth Revolt.
Whittle was born in New York City to William Joseph Whittle, a hotel manager.[2] He is the oldest of four children.[3] Whittle spent his youth in Bermuda, where he attended Warwick Academy and Saltus Grammar School, and later moved with his family to South Florida in the early 1970s. At age 13, he began working at the Miami Space Transit Planetarium[4] and was made a console operator by its director Jack Horkheimer after a few months.[5] As a teenager he wrote and directed the planetarium's light shows.[6]
He had intended to become a test pilot for the United States Air Force. At age 17, he applied to the U.S. Air Force Academy, but was rejected due to a failed preliminary medical eye examination.[4] He developed an interest in filmmaking while helping friends make Super 8 short films and formed a short-lived studio, Mindfire Films, Inc., in the late 1970s.[7] He named Mike Jittlov's The Wizard of Speed and Time as one of his early influences.[8] In 1979, Whittle began attending the University of Florida as a theater major. While there, he wrote and directed the short film The Pigeon Hole which became a national finalist in the Student Academy Awards competition. Whittle did not maintain the required grade point average and dropped out of college after losing his financial aid.[5] In the summer of 1983, Whittle was part of a volunteer company of actors, directors and set designers which put on stage performances to sponsor a fundraiser for the Boca Raton Hotel's Caldwell Playhouse.[9]
Career
After leaving the University of Florida, Whittle moved to Los Angeles where he worked various jobs.[3] He started working as a freelance film editor during the late-1980s and 1990s on television series and specials for The Discovery Channel, The History Channel, and NBC.
Whittle briefly ran a video editing company during this period which closed down in 1998.[10] He continued working in the TV industry as an editor on the Turner Classic Movies special Movie Monsters Revealed (1999), House Calls (2000), Ed McMahon's Next Big Star (2002), Movie Obsessions (2002), AMC's Sunday Morning Shoot-Out (2007–2008), and Shatner's Raw Nerve (2008).
On July 4, 2010, Whittle announced the creation of Declaration Entertainment, an independent film studio, which used crowdsourcing to finance its projects. Co-founded with Jeremy Boreing, the two had guest hosted for Larry O'Connor's BlogTalkRadiopodcastThe Stage Right Show earlier that year.[11] Its first feature film, The Arroyo, completed filming in August 2012, and is awaiting an official release date.[needs update]
On January 31, 2017, Whittle began writing for The Daily Wire.[12] Also in January 2017, Whittle began producing video content for the National Rifle Association's NRATV network.[13] Whittle's show for the NRA, titled Hot Mic, was a critique of "left-wing pop culture's war on our freedom and rights".[14]
On July 11, 2019, Whittle announced that he would host a four-part podcast about the Apollo 11 Moon landing, titled Apollo 11: What We Saw. The first episode aired on July 13, 2019 and the second aired on July 15, 2019. In March 2023, he released a second season of What We Saw about the Cold War, entitled The Cold War: What We Saw. In March 2024, he released a third season of What We Saw about the Russian Revolution and the history of the Soviet Union, entitled An Empire of Terror: What We Saw.
In July 2021, he released a history-focused podcast through The Daily Wire calledAmerica's Forgotten Heroes that reached #1 on Apple Podcasts.[citation needed] The podcasts focuses on one American hero per episode, including Booker T. Washington, Jimmy Doolittle, and Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain.
Blogging
EjectEjectEject.com
In December 2002, Whittle started his first blog, Eject! Eject! Eject!, writing personal narratives and long format essays which discussed current events and political philosophy. He was inspired to start writing following the death of his father earlier that year.[2][8] He soon developed friendships with fellow bloggers Frank J. Fleming, James Lileks, and P. J. O'Rourke who praised his unique writing style. Whittle has credited O'Rourke, in particular, for "bringing me home to conservatism". Initially, much of the blog's content was focused on Whittle's support for the Iraq War. In 2004, a collection of his essays was published in Silent America: A Democracy at War. They were also quoted in several newspapers across the country.[15][16][17]
Six years after starting Eject! Eject! Eject!, Whittle began writing as a guest columnist for the National Review Online.[18] Both his original essays and National Review columns have been cited by authors William DeMersseman,[19]Jim Geraghty,[20] and Frank Miniter.[21] Crime fiction author Robert Ferrigno used an excerpt from Whittle's essay "The Undefended City" for the introduction of his 2009 novel Heart of the Assassin.[22]
PJ Media
In December 2008, Whittle moved to PJ Media where he continued blogging and hosted several of its video segments:
Afterburner (2009–): A weekly three-minute editorial challenging conventional wisdom about politics and society from a conservative perspective.
Trifecta (2009–2016): A weekly program, co-hosted with Stephen Green and Scott Ott, which offers political commentary on current events.
The Firewall (2010–): A series of independently produced video essays based on his early political writing.
Klavan & Whittle (2011–): A Q&A video series with Whittle and author Andrew Klavan discussing various political and social topics.
Whittle's video "Eat the Rich", presenting his position on the consequences of high taxation on the wealthy,[26][27][28] was played on Glenn Beck's radio talk show in April 2011. He was also on The Rusty Humphries Show that month and has filled in as a guest host for Rusty Humphries multiple times since his first appearance.[8][29] His politically themed videos have been released via YouTube through PJ Media and Real Clear Politics.[30][31]
Later that year, Whittle was hired by Encounter Books to narrate a series of animated "whiteboard" videos featured on TheBlaze. In November 2011, the Spokane Examiner reviewed one of these videos, based on the 2010 book "The World Turned Upside Down: The Global Battle over God, Truth, and Power" by Melanie Phillips, which purported to present the reasoning behind Communist, Islamist and Neo-Nazi support of the Occupy Wall Street protests. The newspaper complimented the video stating that it "ties the groups together rather nicely".[32]
Finding Common Ground (2009): A panelist show filmed at CPAC 2009: Conservatism 2.0 with guests Glenn Reynolds, John Avlon, Scott Ott, Alonzo Rachel, and moderated by Whittle. He also conducted interviews with Amil Amani and Nonie Darwish, founders of Former Muslims United, and activist Wafa Sultan at CPAC 2010.
LunarPalooza (2009): A 3-part video series celebrating the 40th-anniversary of the 1969 Moon landing.
The Islamic Infiltration (2010): A 3-part investigative report examining the influence of Islamic extremism in the federal government and accessibility to classified information as claimed by two anonymous whistleblowers.
PJ Pop Quiz (2012): A light-hearted quiz show which has occasionally featured Whittle and other PJTV personalities.
In May 2012, Whittle started his own weekly podcast, "The Stratosphere Lounge", in which Whittle takes questions from his Facebook followers.[8] It airs live on Thursday evenings via Twitch and is later uploaded on his official YouTube channel.[29] The show is still running and episodes typically last between 1 and 2 hours.
Public speaking
Whittle is a frequent guest speaker at political rallies and other public events.
On July 9, 2005, Whittle was involved in an incident while attempting to land at Visalia Municipal Airport when the front landing gear failed. The airport's runway was closed for an hour; however, neither Whittle nor the other passenger was injured.[41][42] Whittle has described similar incidents in his flying career.[39]
^Geoghegan, Jane P. "Jane's Corner". The Planetarian. Vol. 3–5. International Society of Planetarium Educators, 1974. (pg. 21)
^Whittle, Bill (September 19, 2008). "TRINITY (part 1)". EjectEjectEject.com. Archived from the original on February 6, 2013. Retrieved November 14, 2012.
^Arnold, Christine (August 17, 1983). "CALDWELL TRIES OUT SECOND-STAGE CONCEPT". The Miami Herald. An understated and entertaining pitch for funds was made in Whittle's original piece, Going Too Far – would that all those asking for money would do so with such wit.
^DeMersseman, William. Dissed Trust: America's Crisis of Truth, Faith, and Freedom. Bloomington, Indiana: WestBow Press, 2010. (pg. 41) ISBN1-4497-0367-4
^Geraghty, Jim. Voting to Kill: How 9/11 Launched the Era of Republican Leadership. New York: Touchstone, 2006. (pg. 346) ISBN0-7432-9042-9
^Miniter, Frank. Saving the Bill of Rights: Exposing the Left's Campaign to Destroy American Exceptionalism. Washington, DC: Regnery Publishing, 2011. (pg. 313) ISBN978-1-59698-150-8
^Crandall, Daniel (August 22, 2009). "An evening with Robert Ferrigno and 'Heart of the Assassin'". Seattle Examiner.