Michael Savage’s long, strange trip. At first glance, Michael Alan Weiner seems like an improbable candidate to be America’s angriest, most vicious conservative radio host. Born 6. 0 years ago in the Bronx, Weiner has lived in Northern California for most of his adult life, making a living as an herbalist and nutritionist.

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He communed with Fijian traditional healers, got married in a rain forest and studied ethno- medicine at the University of California at Berkeley. He swam naked with Allen Ginsberg, dreamed of being the next Lenny Bruce and wrote a rambling novel about a half- mad alter ego. His son’s middle name is Goldencloud.

For years, he made a name cranking out a pile of books on alternative medicine, recommending bizarre remedies such as using vitamin C to stop AIDS and kicking cocaine with coffee enemas. Cheap Jeremiah Tower (2017) Movie. These days, Weiner’s more interested in purging the body politic.

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Using the pseudonym Michael Savage, he’s launched a one- man mission to save America from its enemies at home and abroad, which on any given day includes liberals, gays, academics, the homeless, the Clintons, immigrants, feminists, CNN, the American Civil Liberties Union, Muslims and other minorities. Broadcasting three hours a day, five afternoons a week, from a rented studio in downtown San Francisco, he gives voice to the right wing’s darkest fantasies.

He muses about launching preemptive nuclear strikes on the Middle East (“I wish to God the hatches were open and the missiles were flying!”), suggests gunning down illegal immigrants (“If we had a government, we’d blow them out of the desert with airplanes!”), dreams of dispatching with “commies, pinkos and perverts” and other undesirables (“I say round them up and hang ’em high!”) and even paraphrases a remark attributed to Nazi leader Hermann Goering (“When I hear someone’s in the civil rights business, I oil up my AR- 1. Woe be unto those who label him racist, sexist or homophobic — or even worse, threaten his livelihood. When an Oregon group started a boycott of his advertisers last summer, he became downright apoplectic. You’re wrong!” Such vitriolic ranting is over the top, even by the ever- declining standards of talk- radio decorum.

Yet, in this time of war fever and hyperpatriotism, inflammatory rhetoric draws conservative ditto- heads and liberal rubberneckers alike, and that translates into big ratings. Since launching “The Savage Nation” on San Francisco’s KSFO 5. AM more than eight years ago, Savage has gone from being just another right- winger with a big mouth, a hyperinflated ego and a sizable chip on his shoulder to becoming the nation’s fifth most- popular talk- radio personality, a host with enough leverage to land Vice President Dick Cheney as a guest.

His book, “The Savage Nation: Saving America From the Liberal Assault on Our Borders, Language and Culture,” has been perched at the top of the New York Times bestseller list for over a month, and now he’s slated to get his own program on MSNBC. Michael Weiner’s long and circuitous road has taken him from being a scientist and entrepreneur, through stints as a hipster, novelist and aspiring comedian, to becoming the personification of straight white male rage. Collide (2017) Full Movie. Today he likes to play up his unconventional career path, to an extent.

He’s the kind of guy who never lets anyone forget he has a Ph. D. His Web site reminds visitors that he is a “World Famous Herbal Expert” and the author of 1. But just as his gap- toothed grin has been replaced by a row of airbrushed pearly whites on the front cover of his new book, he gives his audience a whitewashed version of his past.

The real story is far more interesting, not just for its ironies and contradictions, but for the often disturbing clues it provides about the man now so well known as Michael Savage. He’s gone through at least one political makeover. He’s turned on old friends, or they’ve turned on him. If his semi- autobiographical novel is any guide to his own life, he’s keeping a few skeletons in his closet. In the end, the picture that emerges from his books, from interviews with past and current associates, and from his radio show is that “The Savage Nation” is just the latest undertaking of a man who’s spent his life trying to get the world to notice him.

Earlier interview requests by phone and e- mail prompted an irritated phone call from a woman named Janet, who announced that Savage would not speak with me. Asked if she was his wife — who happens to be named Janet — she said she was not. Savage has come a long way since he emceed school assemblies at P. S. 4. 2 in the Bronx. His father, a Russian Jewish immigrant, made a living selling antique bronzes on Orchard Street.

An imposing figure who died of a heart attack in the early 1. Speaking at a convention sponsored by the trade magazine Radio & Records in March 2. Savage recalled getting his first lesson in politics — and cynicism — from his dad. However, his Jewish upbringing is strictly taboo. And he often makes Joseph Lieberman, Barbra Streisand and Larry King the butt of stale ethnic jokes. Brad Kava, radio columnist for the San Jose Mercury News and a longtime Savage critic, thinks Savage’s ambivalence toward Jews is a misguided attempt to pander to conservative Christians.

In his book “The Savage Nation,” for example, he complains of an anti- Christian bias in America. When Kava, who is Jewish, “outed” Savage several years ago, Savage reported him to the Anti- Defamation League. Cathcart, a longtime friend of the talk- show star, speculated in a telephone interview that Savage says little about his background so that he appears more “neutral” when he discusses Israel or religious topics. Everyone who has ever known Michael Weiner seems to agree that he has always been a big talker. One of his classmates from Jamaica High School in Queens, which Weiner graduated from in 1. He was on the short side, and he was intense — a fast talker, and always hatching some scheme or other.” “The fellow I knew was a natural comic and as reliable as a clock,” remembers another classmate, who says the teenage Weiner was “non- political.” His yearbook page notes his participation in the Chemistry Lab Squad, school government, and the Rifle Squad, presaging his interest in science, politics and firearms. Weiner was also something of a dreamer, and he hoped to follow in the footsteps of his hero, the naturalist Charles Darwin.

After getting a biology degree from Queens College, he went as far west — and as far from home — as possible, winding up in Oahu, Hawaii, where he earned master’s degrees in anthropology and botany from the University of Hawaii. Throughout the late 1. Tonga, Fiji and other South Pacific island nations to study traditional herbal medicine. His new wife, Janet, and their young son, Russell Goldencloud, often accompanied him on his travels. Local healers warmly welcomed him, and he became passionately convinced that their expertise could be used to cure modern ailments. Thus began a quest to salvage– not savage– this “ethnic wisdom” before Western influences destroyed it.

His research on the sedative kava kava and other Fijian medicinal plants served as the basis for his doctoral work at U. C. His 1. 97. 8 dissertation, on file in the U.

C. Berkeley library, shows his degree was in nutritional ethnomedicine. However, the bio in the back of Savage’s book and on his Web site says it was in epidemiology and nutrition science. His family first settled in Fairfax, a sleepy town in Marin County that Michael Savage would lambaste three decades later as “un- Fairfax,” hometown of “Taliban Rat Boy” John Walker Lindh.

From there, he started making trips into San Francisco to hang around the North Beach literary scene. According to Stephen Schwartz, who was then a left- wing activist and writer, Weiner carried an unusual letter of introduction. The two became friends. He’s very smart, intelligent and very lively,” says Cherkovski, who is now writer- in- residence at San Francisco’s New College.