Presenter: |
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Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Runtime: | 30 minutes |
Company: | The Hill, Nexstar Media Group |
Genre: | Political news and commentary |
Last Aired: | present |
The Hill's Rising (or simply Rising) is an American daily news and opinion web series produced by Washington, D.C. political newspaper The Hill. The series is available on The Hill website and YouTube.
Gradually gaining popularity on YouTube throughout 2019 and 2020, the show's longest-serving hosts were Krystal Ball and Saagar Enjeti, until their departure in May 2021. The show was hosted by journalist Ryan Grim and Emily Jashinsky until they also left in September 2022.[1] The current host is journalist Robby Soave.
Rising features commentary and analysis of political news and current events, in-studio interviews with politicians, campaign staff and surrogates, political advisors and strategists, and members of the news media. When Ball and Enjeti hosted, the show presented a synthesis of populist left and populist right viewpoints.[2]
The series is available on The Hills website, YouTube, and a streaming channel.[3]
Rising typically produces five episode a week, Monday-Friday. There are usually about eight pre-taped segments per episode. Each host presents a "radar" segment which analyze current events and present commentary in a monologue format, usually organized into three or four bullet-points. This is followed by an open discussion.
In 2018, The Hill announced Krystal Ball and Buck Sexton as presenters of a new slate of original programming to be produced by John Solomon. Rising launched in June 2018 as Rising with Krystal & Buck with Buck Sexton as host. Sexton departed in June 2019, with Saagar Enjeti replacing him. In the press release, Ball was slated as the "progressive co-host on a morning show with a conservative co-host".[4] The show focused on attacking "establishment Democrats such as Joe Biden and Pete Buttigieg."
In late 2019, it had an average of 600,000 viewers daily., the Hill's YouTube channel averaged 1.48 million views per day,[5] [6] and had around 1.2 million subscribers. Enjeti and Ball also co-authored a book, The Populist's Guide to 2020: A New Right and New Left Are Rising.[7] [8] [9] In 2020, the show did a few live-stream analysis programs for important political events like the 2020 Democratic primary and the 2020 general elections.
In March 2022, YouTube suspended Risings channel for seven days for allegedly "violating the platform's rules around election misinformation". Then-Rising host Ryan Grim stated in The Intercept: "Two infractions were cited: First, the outlet posted the full video of former President Donald Trump's recent speech at the Conservative Political Action Conference on its page. Second, Rising played a minutelong clip of Trump's commentary on Russia's invasion of Ukraine, which included the claim that none of it would have happened if not for a “rigged election.”"[10]
In May 2021, Ball and Enjeti announced they were departing Rising in order to release their own independent project, Breaking Points with Krystal and Saagar.[11] [12] They were temporarily replaced with Ryan Grim and The Federalist editor Emily Jashinsky. In July 2021, Kim Iversen took over from Jashinsky,[13] who said on Twitter that she had never intended to do Rising full time.[14] According to The Daily Beast, Iversen was a controversial figure:
Aside from her COVID-19 vaccine skepticism, she also sparked complaints from Hill employees after she defended the Chinese government’s harsh treatment of Uyghurs (prompting co-host Ryan Grim to push back on-air) and seemed to peddle pro-Russian propaganda about Ukraine... [and] Iversen recently got into a back-and-forth with fellow Rising co-host Olayemi Olurin over deadnaming actor Elliot Page.From early 2022, its regular weekday presenters were left-wing Briahna Joy Gray (a former Bernie Sanders campaign spokesperson) and libertarian Robby Soave (an editor for Reason magazine).
Iversen, a vaccine skeptic, left the show in July 2022 after Batya Ungar-Sargon rather than her was picked to interview Anthony Fauci (of whom Iversen had previously been critical) with Soave.[15]
Grim and Jashinsky, who were the regular Friday hosts of Rising, resigned in September 2022.[16] Also in September 2022, Rising refused to air a segment on their show in which left-wing political commentator Katie Halper called Israel an "apartheid government". She was subsequently fired from the show.[17]
As of 2023, Jessica Burbank and Amber Duke presented Rising on Fridays.[18]
On June 7, 2024, Briahna Joy Gray, who had frequently courted controversy during the 2023 Israel–Hamas war,[19] was fired from Rising after allegedly "rolling her eyes" during an interview with the sister of an Israeli woman held hostage by Hamas, who urged her to believe Israeli women’s accounts of sexual assault on October 7. Joy Gray responded by saying “There should be no doubt that @RisingTheHill has a clear pattern of suppressing speech — particularly when it’s critical of the state of Israel.”[20] [21]
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bar:Sexton from: 13/06/2018 till: 13/06/2019 text: "Buck Sexton" bar:Ball from: 13/06/2018 till: 15/05/2021 text: "Krystal Ball" bar:Enjeti from: 13/06/2019 till: 15/05/2021 text: "Saagar Enjeti" bar:Grim from: 15/05/2021 till: 01/09/2022 text: "Ryan Grim" bar:Jashinsky from: 15/05/2021 till: 15/07/2021 text: "Emily Jashinsky"
bar:Soave from: 15/07/2021 till: end text: "Robby Soave" bar:Iversen from: 15/07/2021 till: 15/07/2022 text: "Kim Iversen" bar:Gray from: 01/09/2022 till: 06/06/2024 text: "Briahna Joy Gray"