5 radio show in America by Talkers Magazine. It was originally syndicated by Westwood One, but moved to Talk Radio Network in 2004. The show was heard on 306 stations and on XM Satellite Radio. Ingraham launched The Laura Ingraham Show in April 2001. In October 2017, she became the host of a new Fox News Channel program, The Ingraham Angle.
In 2008, Fox News Channel gave her a three-week trial run for a new show entitled Just In. Several years later, on her radio program, Ingraham began campaigning for another cable television show. In the late 1990s, she became a CBS commentator and hosted the MSNBC program Watch It!. She first became a host on MSNBC in 1996. Ingraham has had three stints as a cable television host. Lefkowitz organized the first Dark Ages Weekend in response to Renaissance Weekend. In 1995, she appeared on the cover of The New York Times Magazine in connection with a story about young conservatives. She then worked as an attorney at the New York-based law firm Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, in New York and subsequently clerked for U.S. After law school, in 1991, she served as a law clerk for Judge Ralph K. She also briefly served as editor of The Prospect, the magazine issued by Concerned Alumni of Princeton. In the late 1980s, Ingraham worked as a speechwriter in the Reagan administration for the Domestic Policy Advisor. Ingraham at a political conference in December 2018 In April 2022 one of her tweets meant to criticize student loan forgiveness instead inadvertently gained widespread attention and ridicule when she revealed that she'd allowed her mother, at the age of 73 and still working as a waitress, to continue paying her student loans for her into 1993-94, despite that at this point she'd already been out of school a few years and was presumably earning more than a waitress' salary working at New York law firm Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom. She graduated with a Juris Doctor in 1991. She then attended the University of Virginia School of Law, where she was a notes editor for the Virginia Law Review. She graduated from Glastonbury High School in 1981. Her maternal grandparents were Polish immigrants and her father was of Irish and English ancestry. Ingraham grew up in Glastonbury, Connecticut, where she was born to Anne Caroline (née Kozak) and James Frederick Ingraham III.