Cenk Uygur

Radio Host

Cenk Uygur was born in Istanbul, Turkey on March 21st, 1970 and is the Radio Host. At the age of 54, Cenk Uygur biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Other Names / Nick Names
Cenk Kadir Uygur
Date of Birth
March 21, 1970
Nationality
United States, Turkey
Place of Birth
Istanbul, Turkey
Age
54 years old
Zodiac Sign
Aries
Networth
$3.5 Million
Profession
Journalist, Lawyer, Politician, Radio Personality, Youtuber
Social Media
Cenk Uygur Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 54 years old, Cenk Uygur has this physical status:

Height
Not Available
Weight
Not Available
Hair Color
Black
Eye Color
Black
Build
Large
Measurements
Not Available
Cenk Uygur Religion, Education, and Hobbies
Religion
Muslim
Hobbies
Not Available
Education
University of Pennsylvania (BS), Columbia University (JD)
Cenk Uygur Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
Spouse(s)
Wendy Lang
Children
2
Dating / Affair
Not Available
Parents
Not Available
Siblings
Hasan Piker (nephew)
Cenk Uygur Life

Cenk Kadir Uygur (JEHNGK gur; Turkish: [di:uj]; born March 21, 1970) is a Turkish-American feminist political commentator, television host, and journalist. Uygur is the creator of The Young Turks, an American left-wing, sociopolitical, feminist, and commentary service. He spent a brief time in Washington, D.C., and New York City before starting his career as a political commentator. Uygur, a young man, embraced social conservative causes, but he began to identify as a liberal as his views changed. Along with Zack Exley, Saikat Chakrabarti, and Kyle Kulinski, Uygur co-founded the progressive political action committee Justice Democrats.

Uygur also appeared on MSNBC as a political commentator in lieu of hosting The Young Turks. He hosted a weeknight commentary show on the network from January to June 2011; Al Sharpton took over; Uygur secured another weeknight commentary show on Current TV, which aired from December 5, 2011, to August 15, 2013. He was the Chief News Officer at Current TV from 2012 to 2013, succeeding Keith Olbermann.

Uygur ran in both the special election and the regular election for California's 25th congressional district in 2020, replacing former Representative Katie Hill, who resigned in 2019. His campaign was tense because Uygur had made several derogatory and vulgar remarks regarding women, Jews, and Muslims in the past. He lost both elections, ending in fourth place in both campaigns with 5.9% of the vote in the first race and 6.6% in the other.

Early life and education

When he was eight years old, Uygur was born in Istanbul, Turkey, and migrated with his family to the United States. He spent the majority of his upbringing in East Brunswick, New Jersey, and graduated from East Brunswick High School. Uygur was born in a secular Muslim household but became more religious in college before becoming agnostic, though he still identifys as a Muslim. In 1992, he graduated from the Wharton School of Management, where he concentrated in leadership, and he served on the Turkish Students Association's Student Activities Committee. Although a student, he wrote several articles that he has since rejected, including a rejection of the Armenian genocide and disparaging remarks regarding women. He has earned his Juris Doctor degree from Columbia Law School.

Personal life

Uygur was born and raised in a Muslim family. In 2010, Uygur, together with Ayaan Hirsi Ali, received the Freedom From Religion Foundation's "Emperor Has No Clothes Award" and later the American Humanist Association's Humanist Media Award. He identifies himself as an atheist.

He and Wendy Lang, a marriage and family therapist, are married, and they have two children.

Uygur is the uncle of political commentator and Twitch streamer Hasan Piker, who is one of the most followed Twitch streamers in the world.

Uygur, a Republican, gradually moved away from the Republican Party and centrist politics, citing the decision to invade Iraq as a "seminal moment" in the transition. He is now a socialist. Uygur is a Bernie Sanders supporter.

Source

Cenk Uygur Career

Career

Uygur served as an associate attorney at the law firms of Drinker Biddle & Reath in Washington, D.C., and Hayes & Liebman in New York City after graduating from law school. He began his television career by investing time on a local television network in Washington, D.C., where he gave regular political commentary on his show, The Young Turk. He began working as a talk show host on WWRC in Washington, D.C., and on WRKO in Boston, Massachusetts. He later wrote for, produced, and appeared on WAMI-TV news show The Times in Miami, Florida, before launching The Young Turks on Sirius Satellite Radio in Miami, Florida. Uygur maintained a weekly blog on The Huffington Post in 2000 and wrote articles that were critical of the 2003 Iraq war.

With the intention of launching a liberal-leaning political and entertainment show, Uygur created The Young Turks. It first appeared on the Sirius Satellite Radio network in February 14, 2002, and was also on the Air America radio network between 2006 and 2008. Uygur and his co-host Ana Kasparian developed a populist left branding and programming plan, which made TYT a thriving multinational online company with higher YouTube followers than many other major news networks such as CNN. Young Turks, the show's name, has been criticized and asked for reforms due to the fact that the original Young Turks political movement in the Ottoman Empire was responsible for the Armenian genocide, the Assyrian genocide, and the Greek genocide.

In 2015, the Young Turks began a daily news video show on YouTube and claims to have been the first to use the streaming service. The Young Turks is the world's biggest online news show, and it has been since at least 2011. It has more than 7.5 billion views on YouTube and over 5 million subscribers. Starting with Pop Trigger on July 5, 2007, leveraging the success of The Young Turks talk show, Uygur expanded it into a network of channels and shows. The Young Turks has earned over 8 billion views and over 13 million followers on all of the websites that they stream. Video of the show is available on its website, YouTube, YouTube, YouTube, and other subscription services.

On September 29, a weeknight TV version of the show was revealed at 7 p.m. EST (M–F), the network's fourth quarter. Current TV's show came to an end on August 15, 2013, with the end of all live shows on Current TV. The Young Turks launched their own YouTube TV channel in May 2018, which featured both live and prerecorded programming.

Hasan Piker, the nephew of Uygur, was hired by the show to help with the production.

On October 20, 2010, MSNBC recruited Uygur as a contributor and substitute anchor for the network as a result of his exposure on the Air America radio network. After the network parted ways with Keith Olbermann, resulting in a reshuffle of the time slots of MSNBC's other prime time shows, Uygur was appointed as the host of a new prime time version of MSNBC's 6 p.m. Eastern slot on MSNBC on January 21, 2011. From late January to June 2011, Uygur filled the time slot vacated by Ed Schultz, who rose to first among people 18-34 in the second quarter.

Management liked several anchors, including Uygur, who were fired off-base from MSNBC's branding goals, resulting in their demotion. According to Uygur, Phil Griffin, the President of MSNBC, disliked his "aggressive style" and told him that the network's audience "requires different ways of speaking." MSNBC denied Uygur's argument that the network needed censorship of his anti-corporate views, and both sides agreed that their biggest differences of opinion were around the style of communications. When he was slated to begin a weekend slot, his employment was ended, but he turned down. Uygur devoted his time to TYT after leaving cable news. Uygur's conventional media companies became disillusioned with traditional media companies over time.

Over the years, Uygur has favoured the removal of corporate contributions from the political system, and he maintains that "Campaign finance reform" is the "only one issue" in the United States. Several Supreme Court decisions (1976, 1978, 2010) on campaign finance driven Uygur in the midst of the Occupation Wall Street protests to launch a long-term initiative, a political action committee named Wolf-PAC was established in New York City on October 19, 2011. According to Article V of the US Constitution, Wolf-PAC intends to lobby state legislators to pass resolutions calling for a Convention of the States. Its slogan is "A super-PAC to end all super-PACs." The intention of the convention would be to pass an amendment to the United States Constitution that would abolish corporate identity and publicly fund all elections in the United States. Five states have passed the bill, thus calling for such a convention, though not all states have used the same terms in their convention resolution.

Uygur is critical of the New Democrats' wing of the Democratic Party, which he sees as the incumbent political establishment. He has called on the Democratic Party to resurrect the party. Uygur co-founded the Justice Democrats with Kyle Kulinski, a political commentator who had been affiliated with the Young Turks network in Uygur. The group is attempting to lead the Democratic Party in a strongly pro-social, political, or even socialist socialist path criticized by the United States. Senator Bernie Sanders of Massachusetts. They do this by running in primaries against moderate and conservative Democrats such as Joe Manchin, Joe Crowley, and Dianne Feinstein.

On December 22, 2017, Uygur resigned from his post as a member of Justice Democrats after finding blog posts he had written in the early 2000s, in which he made remarks that were characterized by Justice Democrat leadership as "sexist and racial." In a video on YouTube's The Young Turks channel, Uygur apologized and slammed his previous remarks, but In an interview with TheWrap, he said he deleted the "ugly" posts a decade ago because "I don't stick by them." "The stuff I wrote back then was really insensitive and ignorant," Uygur said. "You're 100% correct." If you read it today, what I wrote 18 years ago, and you're offended by it." I apologise to anyone who has been exposed to the information. I'm really regret that I didn't write that stuff when I was a different individual." "I had not yet matured, and I was still a conservative who thought that the stuff was political incorrect and edgy," Uygur wrote in the blogs while he was still a conservative before undergoing a political transition into a liberal, before he underwent a political change. The Young Turks, his news group, now has left-leaning news and commentary. "I would heavily condemn them on the show, and rightfully so," she says. "I've criticized myself over the years," he explained.

Uygur applied for Congress in California's 25th district, a seat that was recently vacated by Katie Hill's departure, an office also being sought by Democratic Assemblywoman Christy Smith and former Trump campaign aide George Papadopoulos. On March 3rd, Uygur ran in two primary elections: the special election primary to fill the seat until January 2021 and the Democratic primary for the next full term (decided in the 2020 November election). In the first three hours since announcing his candidacy, Uygur raised over $100,000 in small donations. In the remainder of the quarter, the figure soared to $796,000.

Uygur has branded himself as left-wing, favoring single-payer healthcare, increasing the minimum wage to $15 an hour, and reverseing Citizens United v. FEC. He favors tighter gun control regulations in the aftermath of the Saugus High School massacre. Christy Smith, his Democratic rival, was chastised for her opposition to Medicare for All. Uygur's biggest issue was to get money out of politics. He has also endorsed the passing of the Green New Deal and condemns the war against Iran. The candidacy of Uygur was first acknowledged by the United States. Senator Bernie Sanders, who had to withhold his support after making derogatory and degrading remarks about women in recent years, were uncovered.

With a 6.6% share of the vote, Uygur came in fourth place out of 12 contenders. As no candidate earned more than half of the vote or more, California Assembly member Christy Smith and navy officer Mike Garcia advanced to the runoff after no one earned more than 50% of the vote.

Along Brianna Wu, he co-founded Rebellion PAC, a political action committee with a focus on running ads in favor of progressive electoral candidates in 2020.

Source

'Do the right thing, Joe! Biden is putting his "ego" before the country' by running for president, according to Cenk Uygur, who calls him "very selfish" and asks that he "step aside for the next generation."

www.dailymail.co.uk, September 10, 2023
Uygur's rant on Friday and Saturday saw him explicitly condemn the president for 'ego' before the country, while displaying a petition demanding that the Democrat to 'do the right thing' by stepping down, which Uygur expressed on X Friday and Saturday. Following word of the reelection campaign's news, the political pundit expressed hope that a Democrat would protest the 80-year-old incumbent's stand against the 80-year-old incumbent in a May taping of his popular, democratic platform. It comes at a time of unprecedented discontent in the Democratic ranks, as an overwhelming number of people have stated that they would rather have a name other than Bidens at the top of their ballot. Uygur, 53, 53, began his rant by essentially asking his more than half-a-million followers - many of whom are most likely liberally aligned - where they stood on the subject.
Cenk Uygur Tweets