Megyn Kelly used the milestone of five years behind the microphone to remind Americans why independent voices still matter in this country, and she did it with the blunt honesty listeners expect from her. She reflected on what began as a scrappy audio podcast and has become a daily hub for news, interviews, and hard questions that corporate media refuses to ask.
Kelly has been candid about how the show started — recording from a tiny corner of her home in late September 2020 — and how that DIY spirit has powered a real alternative to the media cartel. What began on September 28, 2020, as an audio-only experiment has since grown into a multi-platform operation that refuses to play by the legacy outlets’ rules.
In the same reflection, Megyn shared a warm, personal anecdote about meeting Marlo Thomas, a Hollywood legend and longtime St. Jude champion, calling the encounter uplifting and humanizing in a media landscape built on outrage. The moment underscored something too many in the business forget: reporting and storytelling are about people, not about feeding partisan algorithms.
That human touch is precisely why conservatives and undecided Americans have flocked to shows like hers that speak plainly and refuse to be muzzled by corporate spin. Megyn reminded listeners that her move into independent media was intentional — a choice to be loyal only to the audience and the truth rather than to network managers terrified of controversy.
Let’s be honest: the mainstream media would rather silence dissenting voices than risk losing control over the national narrative, and Megyn’s success is proof that the American people are hungry for something different. Her show’s growth and influence are a rebuke to the idea that audiences will meekly accept watered-down, corporate-approved coverage.
If you’re tired of being lectured to by pundits who recycle the same left-wing orthodoxy, Megyn’s five-year check-in is a reminder that patriotism includes defending free speech and independent journalism. Stand with those outlets brave enough to buck the media gatekeepers — because the future of honest, common-sense reporting depends on it.