Lawrence "Larry" Kudlow (born August 20, 1947), is a conservative American supply-side economist, television personality, and newspaper columnist. He is the host of CNBC's The Kudlow Report. As a syndicated columnist, his articles appear in numerous U.S. newspapers and web sites, including his own blog, Kudlow's Money Politic$.
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| - Lawrence "Larry" Kudlow (born August 20, 1947), is a conservative American supply-side economist, television personality, and newspaper columnist. He is the host of CNBC's The Kudlow Report. As a syndicated columnist, his articles appear in numerous U.S. newspapers and web sites, including his own blog, Kudlow's Money Politic$.
- After several years on the air, Kudlow was finally freed from an awkward pairing with Jim Cramer (a Democrat) that had been forced upon him by his corporate masters at GE. Only then was he able to stop worrying about things like ratings since all the prior show's viewers ignored him while they flocked to Cramer's new show. Kudlow's new show is seen only by in-studio technical staff and occasional channel surfers looking for Fox News. That has freed Kudlow to use the show to reveal the secrets of The Market and other mysteries that Kudlow knows as a revered member of The Knights Templar.
- Kudlow's ardent support for what he calls free-market Kappalism is evident from the inspiring monologue he delivers at the start of each hour of his radio show: "We believe that windfall profits are the mother's milk of stock-market gains! Capital formation through accelerated depreciation is our creed—and the Republican Party is our steed!" Kudlow is widely credited with bringing the exclamation point to the medium of radio.
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| - Roman Catholic, formerly Jewish
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| - News Anchor and Economic Commentator
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| - Kudlow & Company,
- Kudlow & Cramer
- The Kudlow Report,
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| - After several years on the air, Kudlow was finally freed from an awkward pairing with Jim Cramer (a Democrat) that had been forced upon him by his corporate masters at GE. Only then was he able to stop worrying about things like ratings since all the prior show's viewers ignored him while they flocked to Cramer's new show. Kudlow's new show is seen only by in-studio technical staff and occasional channel surfers looking for Fox News. That has freed Kudlow to use the show to reveal the secrets of The Market and other mysteries that Kudlow knows as a revered member of The Knights Templar. Each evening, Kudlow closes his show with a heartfelt Latin (God's language, after all) prayer for the Greatest President Ever.
- Kudlow's ardent support for what he calls free-market Kappalism is evident from the inspiring monologue he delivers at the start of each hour of his radio show: "We believe that windfall profits are the mother's milk of stock-market gains! Capital formation through accelerated depreciation is our creed—and the Republican Party is our steed!" Kudlow is widely credited with bringing the exclamation point to the medium of radio. On CNBC, Kudlow sits patiently in a corner in his three-piece pin-stripe suit until some left-wing woman is brought in for a dippy Point-Counterpoint feature. At that point, he springs into action, interrupting, gesturing, and raising his voice until his adversary retreats in tears to the green room, with Kudlow's falsies sunk into her leg at about the calf.
- Lawrence "Larry" Kudlow (born August 20, 1947), is a conservative American supply-side economist, television personality, and newspaper columnist. He is the host of CNBC's The Kudlow Report. As a syndicated columnist, his articles appear in numerous U.S. newspapers and web sites, including his own blog, Kudlow's Money Politic$.
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