Talk radio career Having worked as a
DJ and news director at Lansing radio stations from 1968 to 1978, From 2008 to 2011,
Talkers Magazine rated Hartmann the most popular liberal talk show host in America, ranking as No. 8 among all talk-show hosts in 2011 and 2015. According to his then-syndicator Dial Global, more people listened to Hartmann's show on more stations than any other progressive talk show in America.
The Thom Hartmann Program is estimated by industry magazine
Talkers to have 7 million unique listeners per week. As of March 2016, the show was carried on 80 terrestrial radio stations in 37 states, as well as on
SiriusXM Progress channel 127. A community radio station in Africa,
Radio Builsa in
Ghana, also broadcasts the show. Various local cable TV stations
simulcast the program. In addition to
Westwood One, the show is now also offered via
Pacifica Audioport to non-profit stations in a non-profit-compliant format and is simulcast on
Dish Network channel 9415 and
DirecTV channel 348 via Free Speech TV. The program also airs in London, England. Many guests appear on the show expressing a variety of points of view on diverse social and political topics. Some guests proffer progressive views similar to Hartmann's, but more than half are
conservatives,
libertarians, or
Ayn Rand Institute members who espouse opposing views. Due to his eagerness to invite people who disagree with him, vigorous discussion and debate between the host and guests usually ensues; "My goal in my conversations with conservatives is not to create a spectacle, and not to win the argument, not to prove that I'm the smartest guy in the room or that I'm a tough warrior and I can smack down people." For many years, Sen.
Bernie Sanders (I-VT) appeared every Friday for the "Brunch with Bernie" segment. Other regular phone-in guests include
Reps. Mark Pocan (Mid-day with Mark) and
Ro Khanna, both members of the
Congressional Progressive Caucus.
Ellen Ratner of the Talk Radio News Service provides Washington commentary daily. Victoria Jones, who is the
White House correspondent for Talk Radio News Service, appears occasionally, as does
Ravi Batra, an economics professor at
SMU. Like most talk radio shows,
The Thom Hartmann Program takes calls from listeners. When callers asked Hartmann how he was, he used to reply, "I'm great, but I'll get better." After a time, some callers would regularly try to elicit this response, so he's stopped replying this way routinely. Hartmann ends each show with the phrase, "Activism begins with you; democracy begins with you. Get out there; get active!
Tag, you're it!" Michael Harrison, publisher of radio industry trade magazine
Talkers, offered this appraisal of Hartmann:
TV program Hartmann hosted a one-hour daily TV show at 7 p.m. ET Monday to Friday,
The Big Picture with Thom Hartmann, which was editorially directed by his wife and was broadcast from the Washington, D.C., studios of the
RT America news network. The show featured many conservative guests who routinely sparred with Hartmann. Hartmann co-produced the program with RT, who provided studio and carriage, while Hartmann retained full editorial control of his programming. The RT network aired the program via Dish Network, DirecTV, and on selected local-origination and
public-access television cable TV channels globally. After hosting the program for seven years, Hartmann announced his departure as host on September 29, 2017. == Other areas of notability ==