Tammy Bruce Bio, Age, Family, Husband, Height, Salary, Net Worth, Fox Channel

Tammy Bruce Biography

Tammy Bruce is a conservative radio host, author, and political commentator from the United States. She is currently an on-air contributor for Fox News and the host of Fox Nation’s Get Tammy Bruce.

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How old is Tammy Bruce? – Age

She is 59 years old as of 20 August 2021. She was born in 1962 in Los Angeles, California, United States. Her real name is Tammy K. Bruce.

Is Tammy Bruce married to Bill Bixby? – Family

Bruce stated in a 2006 interview with C-SPAN that she was bisexual and that identifying as a lesbian was a choice for her. At the age of 17, Bruce began dating Brenda Benet, the former wife of Bill Bixby and an actress who appeared in Walking Tall, Days of Our Lives, and The Incredible Hulk. Bruce and Benet later shared a home for nearly a year before Bruce moved out. Benet committed suicide at her home during a lunch date with Bruce on April 7, 1982, two years after they first met and two weeks after Bruce moved out.

How much does Tammy Bruce weigh?

She stands at a height of 5 feet 6 inches(1.67 m).

Where did Tammy Bruce go to high school?

Bruce earned a Bachelor of Science in Political Science from the University of Southern California, where she graduated with honors. She is currently a Ph.D. candidate at Claremont Graduate University.

Tammy Bruce Net Worth

He has an estimated net worth of $1.5 Million.

Tammy Bruce Photo
Tammy Bruce Photo

Tammy Bruce Salary

When compared to CNN, ABC, CBS, and other national news organizations, Fox News anchors earn the most. The average annual salary for a FOX news anchor is $75,000, or $36 per hour. Fox news anchor salaries are higher than the national average of $58 thousand for all news anchors.

Tammy Bruce Career

Bruce worked on a number of Democratic campaigns in the 1990s, including the senate races for Boxer and Feinstein in 1992, as well as the Clinton for President campaign. Ms. Bruce’s consideration of conservative ideals was influenced by President Clinton’s affair with Monica Lewinsky and the liberal and feminist establishment’s continued support for him.
Ms. Bruce has a long history of supporting conservatives, including President Reagan, both Bushes, and, somewhat reluctantly, John McCain during the 2008 presidential campaign. She also worked on California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s Transition Team following his recall election in 2003.

Ms. Bruce decided not to join any political party in 2008. As a supporter of free speech and the Second Amendment, her experience as a radio talk show host is an important factor in her stance on the issue. The “Tammy Bruce Show” first aired in Los Angeles in 1993 and was nationally syndicated in 2005, with over 200 terrestrial affiliates. Ms. Bruce took her radio show independent in 2009 in order to gain more freedom, making it an exclusively New Media program available online and via podcast. Tammy Radio has been the number one program on the global internet radio hub TalkStreamLive for three years in a row.

Ms. Bruce has also been profiled, and her editorials and commentaries on significant social issues have appeared in a wide range of magazines and newspapers, including the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, USA Today, San Francisco Chronicle, Esquire, and The Advocate, among others. Ms. Bruce is the President of the Independent Women’s Voice (IWV), a nonpartisan organization that supports women and families, in addition to her media work. She also frequently gives her speech, “Contrary to Popular Belief: How Conservative Ideas Empower Women, Gays, and Blacks,” to a variety of groups across the country, including college, business, and civic organizations.

In addition to her blog, radio show, books, and columns, Ms. Bruce has appeared in two short films. She plays the “Inspector General” in “2081,” an adaptation of Vonnugut’s “Harrison Bergeron,” and she appeared in Sarah Palin’s documentary “The Undefeated” in 2010. Ms. Bruce became involved in feminist activism in the late 1980s, focusing on women in the workplace, violence against women, and ending international subjugation of women. Ms. Bruce was elected president of the Los Angeles chapter of the National Organization for Women at the age of 27 just two years after joining the organization, with a brand of feminism that falls somewhere between Donna Reed and Thelma and Louise. She also served on their national board of directors until she saw the light.