Firing Line

Season 19

Firing Line was an American public affairs show founded and hosted by conservative William F. Buckley, Jr., founder and publisher of National Review magazine. Its 1,504 episodes over 33 years made Firing Line the longest-running public affairs show in television history with a single host. The erudite program, which featured many of the most prominent intellectuals and public figures in the United States, won an Emmy Award in 1969.

Where to Watch Season 19

11 Episodes

  • A Murder Case
    E3
    A Murder CaseOn the evening of February 21, 1965, Malcolm X was gunned down in Harlem--"not by Ku Klux Klan agents," as WFB reminds us, "but by agents of Elijah Muhammad, the reigning Black Muslim leader."
  • What's on Malcolm Muggeridge's Mind?
    E6
    What's on Malcolm Muggeridge's Mind?
  • The High-frontier Concept
    E21
    The High-frontier ConceptCould the Strategic Defense Initiative really work? Wouldn't it destabilize relations with the Soviet Union? Dr. Keyworth's technical credentials are unassailable, and he proves able to explain difficult concepts so that non-physicists can grasp them.
  • What's Ahead for the Democrats? Part I
    E22
    What's Ahead for the Democrats? Part I
  • What's Ahead for the Democrats? Part II
    E23
    What's Ahead for the Democrats? Part II
  • The Election: A View from New York
    E31
    The Election: A View from New York
  • The Republican Party and Moderates
    E32
    The Republican Party and ModeratesWilliam A. Rusher, Jim Leach
  • The Dalai Lama Looks Back
    E38
    The Dalai Lama Looks Back
  • Bias in the Press
    E42
    Bias in the PressMr. Braley is a slow and deliberate talker, and so this show lacks the energy of some. But many of the insights are acute. RB: "Watergate was a foreign affair. By that I mean the origins of Watergate and the passion aroused by Watergate was a passion not directed specifically against the instances of Watergate, but against the Administration that continued to pursue the Vietnam War against the advice of the New York Times and its allies."
  • Where Is the GOP Headed?
    E46
    Where Is the GOP Headed?
  • Is There a Liberal Crack-Up?
    E48
    Is There a Liberal Crack-Up?Taped on 12/11/1984. The 1984 election suggested, as WFB puts it, "the collapse of liberalism as we have known it during the past half century," and he asks his two guests, one on the right, the other on the far left, where liberalism is likely to go from here. Messrs. Hitchens and Tyrrell actually talk more about the past than about the future, and it is illuminating (when they don't indulge in billingsgate) to get such different takes on the same set of events. CH: "I believe that the American Left, in starting the civil-rights movement for black Americans, in combating an unjust war in Indochina, and in beginning the emancipation of women ... changed the way everyone thinks and the way everyone lives ... the whole world is in debt to the American Left for these three enterprises." RET: "In the Sixties and Seventies the liberals achieved most of the things they set out to achieve, particularly welfare and civil rights, and then were overtaken by a lust for power. They refused to notice that they had indeed achieved these things ..." - The Firing Line Archives @ The Hoover Institute, Stanford University

 

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