EPISODE · Apr 27, 2026 · 51 MIN
Reunion 008: Young and Hemmer: Family, Power, and American Conservatism
from Reunion: A Podcast About Family Histories · host jstubyu
In the fall of 1949, a young evangelist named Billy Graham pitched a tent in Los Angeles for what he hoped would be a modest three-week revival. Attendance was sparse, and Graham was discouraged. Then, seemingly overnight, everything changed. William Randolph Hearst, the powerful newspaper magnate, sent a two-word telegram to his editors: “Puff Graham.” The next morning, headlines blazed with his name. The tent filled. The revival stretched for weeks and Billy Graham became a national figure. That moment wasn’t just about media savvy. It was about the convergence of faith, family values, and political ambition, a convergence that would shape the rise of the Religious Right. In We Gather Together, Neil J. Young traces how evangelical leaders like Graham helped build a movement that reached from the pulpit to the ballot box. In Partisans, Nicole Hemmer explores how those media, religion, and family fueled the conservative revolution of the 1990s. Today, Nicole and Neil join us to talk about how political movements are born not just in campaigns, but in living rooms, churches, and family trees and how the personal and the political have always been intertwined in the making of American conservatism.
What this episode covers
In the fall of 1949, a young evangelist named Billy Graham pitched a tent in Los Angeles for what he hoped would be a modest three-week revival. Attendance was sparse, and Graham was discouraged. Then, seemingly overnight, everything changed. William Randolph Hearst, the powerful newspaper magnate, sent a two-word telegram to his editors: “Puff Graham.” The next morning, headlines blazed with his name. The tent filled. The revival stretched for weeks and Billy Graham became a national figure. That moment wasn’t just about media savvy. It was about the convergence of faith, family values, and political ambition, a convergence that would shape the rise of the Religious Right. In We Gather Together, Neil J. Young traces how evangelical leaders like Graham helped build a movement that reached from the pulpit to the ballot box. In Partisans, Nicole Hemmer explores how those media, religion, and family fueled the conservative revolution of the 1990s. Today, Nicole and Neil join us to talk about how political movements are born not just in campaigns, but in living rooms, churches, and family trees and how the personal and the political have always been intertwined in the making of American conservatism.
NOW PLAYING
Reunion 008: Young and Hemmer: Family, Power, and American Conservatism
No transcript for this episode yet
Similar Episodes
Mar 26, 2026 ·1m
Mar 19, 2026 ·34m
Feb 18, 2026 ·11m
Feb 11, 2026 ·45m