Mehdi Raza Hasan(/ˈmɛdiˈhʌsən/MED-eeHUSS-ən;born July 1979)[1][2][3]is aBritish-Americanprogressivebroadcaster and writer, and founder of the media company Zeteo. He presentedThe Mehdi Hasan Show[4]onPeacockfrom October 2020 and onMSNBCfrom February 2021 until the show's cancellation in November 2023.[5][6]On the final broadcast on 7 January 2024, he announced that he was leaving MSNBC.[7]In February 2024, Hasan joinedThe Guardianas a columnist.[8]
Mehdi Hasan | |
---|---|
Born | Mehdi Raza Hasan July 1979 (age 45) |
Citizenship |
|
Education | Merchant Taylors' School |
Alma mater | Christ Church,Oxford |
Organisations | |
Notable work | Win Every Argument(2023 book) Ed: The Milibands and the Making of a Labour Leader |
Television | The Café,Head to Head,UpFront,The Mehdi Hasan Show |
Children | 2 |
Website | zeteo |
A graduate ofChrist Church,Oxford,Hasan began his television career as a researcher and then producer onITV'sJonathan Dimblebyprogramme. Following a stint on theBBC'sThe Politics Showhe became deputy executive producer onSky's breakfast showSunrisebefore moving toChannel 4as their editor of news and current affairs. In 2009, he was appointed senior editor for politics at theNew Statesman.In 2012, he became a presenter onAl Jazeera's English news channel, and in 2015, moved to Washington, D.C. to work full-time for Al Jazeera onUpFront[9]and host theDeconstructedpodcast produced by the online publicationThe Interceptfrom 2018 to 2020.[10]
Hasan is the author ofWin Every Argument,and the co-author of abiographyof formerLabour PartyleaderEd Miliband.He was formerly the political editor of the UK edition ofThe Huffington Post[11]and the presenter of theAl Jazeera Englishshows:The Café,Head to HeadandUpFront.[12]Hasan returned as host ofHead to Headin June 2024.[13]
He created the digital media company Zeteo News in February 2024: the media "features a broad range of opinions and ideas—not just his".[14]
Early life and education
Hasan was born inSwindontoIndian Shia Muslimparents from the city ofHyderabadinAndhra Pradesh(now inTelangana).[15][16][17]
Hasan was privately educated atMerchant Taylors' School, Northwood,a day independent school for boys at Sandy Lodge in theThree Rivers DistrictofHertfordshire,near the town ofNorthwoodin North West London.[18]Hasan and British actor and rapperRiz Ahmedwere schoolmates.[19]
Hasan then attendedChrist Church, Oxford,where he readPhilosophy, Politics and Economics(PPE),[18]and graduated in 2000.
Career
2009–2011: Early beginnings
Hasan worked as a researcher and then producer onITV'sJonathan Dimblebyprogramme,[20]with a brief period in between onBBC One'sThe Politics Show.[20]Following this, he became deputy executive producer onSky's breakfast showSunrise[20]before moving toChannel 4as their editor of news and current affairs.[21]He was appointed senior editor for politics at theNew Statesmanin late spring of 2009,[22]where he stayed until May 2012, then becoming political director ofThe Huffington Postwebsite.[21]
2012–2020:Al JazeeraandThe Intercept
Hasan became a presenter onAl Jazeera's English news channel in May 2012.[23]Hasan has appeared (six times) on the BBC'sQuestion Timeprogramme,[24]and the Sunday morning programmesThe Big Questions[25]andSunday Morning Live.[26]In October 2013 onQuestion Time,Hasan called theDaily Mail"immigrant-bashing, woman-hating, Muslim-smearing, NHS-undermining, [and] gay-baiting". The newspaper responded by printing an e-mail he had sent them in 2010, in which he asked for a column and praised several of their viewpoints. Hasan said the "sycophantic" letter was his writing but criticised the newspaper's decision to publish it.[27][28]
In 2013, Hasan took part in a debate at theOxford Unionto consider whetherIslamis a peaceful religion. Hasan, who is anIthna'Asheri Shia Muslim,vouched for Islam as a religion of peace, citing political and cultural reasons for violence in Muslim majority countries, as opposed to holding the religion of Islam responsible. In the vote on the motion, the house affirmed with Hasan and the other proposers that Islam is a religion of peace with 286 votes in favor and 168 votes against.[29]In March 2015, Hasan appeared in aGuardianopinion video on UK immigration.[30]Recorded at the Oxford Union,Head to Headwas a programme on Al Jazeera English in which Hasan interviewed public figures; it had run for three series by December 2014. Since 2015, working full-time for the network in Washington, D.C., Hasan has hosted a weekly interview and discussion programme.[9]
Hasan began a podcast in 2018 entitledDeconstructed,produced by theinvestigative journalismwebsiteThe Intercept.On air, Hasan would discuss recent news topics and host guests. Notable topics covered on the podcast includepolice brutality,inequality,QAnon,andDonald Trump'sactivity on Twitter.Notable podcast guests have includedNoam Chomsky,Ilhan Omar,andBernie Sanders.On 2 October 2020, Hasan announced that he would no longer host the show as part of his move to hostThe Mehdi Hasan ShowonNBC's new streaming service,Peacock.[10]
2021–2024:The Mehdi Hasan Showand move from MSNBC toThe Guardian
Hasan hostedThe Mehdi Hasan Show[31]on the online service Peacock since Oct 2020 airing weeknights at 7 pmEastern.[4]Notable guests onThe Mehdi Hasan Showhave includedMark Ruffalo,Jon Stewart,John Bolton,Keith Ellison,Ro Khanna,John Legend,andAlexandria Ocasio-Cortez.In March 2021, Hasan launched the same show onMSNBCevery Sunday evening.[32][33]He was also the fill-in host on MSNBC'sAll In with Chris Hayes,The Rachel Maddow Show,The 11th Hour with Stephanie RuhleandThe Last Word with Lawrence O'Donnell.
During the2023 Israel–Hamas war,MSNBC cancelled Hasan's show.[34]NBC stated the change was coincidental and not due to the host's religion.[35][36]Eric Bazail-Eimil ofPoliticonoted, the decision made by the network "in favor of more straight news coverage of the conflict".[37]On 30 November 2023, it was announced that Hasan's MSNBC and Peacock shows would end.[38]Hasan announced at the end of his final show on 7 January 2024 that he had decided to leave the network.[39]Hasan joinedThe Guardianas a regular columnist in February.[40]
2024: Launching of the digital media company Zeteo and the return ofHead to Head
Forbesinterviewed Hasan in February 2024 when the website Zeteo News was created. Hasan stated: Zeteo "is an ancient Greek word that means to seek out, to inquire, to get to the truth".[14]Zeteo was presented as a subscription-based news organization. He announced that the platform will "bring you hard-hitting interviews and unsparing analysis that you won't find elsewhere".[14]Hasan presents a new video series on the Zeteo News channel,[41]the first one was called "Debunked! Top seven lies about Gaza".[41]
Contributors announced upon Zeteo's launch in April 2024 includedNaomi Klein,Greta Thunberg,Viet Thanh Nguyen,John Harwood,Fatima BhuttoandOwen Jones,who would co-host the podcastTwo Outspokenalongside Hasan.[42]On April 19, 2024, it was announced thatBassem Youssefwill join Zeteo as co-host for their new podcastWe're Not Kidding.[43]
In June 2024, Al-Jazeera announced the return of Hasan as host ofHead to Head.[13]The program returned with two interviews, one with Israeli historian,Benny Morris,and another with the former translator forDeng Xiaoping,Victor Gao,recorded in London in July 2024.[13]
In late October 2024, Hasan appeared as a guest panelist on theCNNshowNewsNight with Abby Phillipto discuss the controversies surrounding statements made at the2024 Trump rally at Madison Square Garden.During the discussion, CNN contributor Ryan Girdusky told Hasan “Yeah, well, I hope your beeper doesn’t go off,” referring to the2024 Lebanon electronic device attackswhich targeted members ofHezbollahby exploding theirpagers.Hasan pushed back against the assertion, asking Girdusky “Did you just say I should die? Did you just say I should be killed live on CNN?”. Other panelists objected to Girdusky's comment and Girdusky was admonished by hostAbby Phillip.When the show returned from break, Girdusky had been removed from the panel and Phillip apologized to Hasan. CNN quickly released a statement stating that “There is zero room for racism or bigotry at CNN or on our air,” and that "Ryan Girdusky will not be welcomed back at our network.”[44]
Views and political beliefs
Islamic faith
During a sermon delivered in 2009, Hasan made remarks aboutthekuffar,the disbelievers, the atheists who remain deaf and stubborn to the teachings of Islam, the rational message of theQuran.Quoting a verse of the Quran, Hasan used the term "cattle" to describe non-believers and called them "incapable of the intellectual effort it requires to shake off those blind prejudices".[45]In another sermon, he used the term "animals" to describe non-Muslims.[46][47]He also includedhomosexualityin a list of categories which he argued were transgressive of Islam.[46]
Quotes from these sermons were first publicized byPeter Hitchensin 2012. When Hitchens reached out to Hasan for a comment, the latter replied these remarks had "been taken wholly out of context".[48]In 2019, Hasan apologized for these earlier statements, which he declared to "deeply regret" now, and called them "dumb", "ranty" and "offensive".[49][50]
Israel–Hamas war
In February 2024, Hasan wrote inThe Guardianthat U.S. presidentJoe Bidenshould end theGaza genocide.[51]During an interview onDemocracy Now!in late March 2024, Hasan expressed his concern about "genocide in Gaza"with regard toIsrael's 2023 incursion into Gazaafter theOctober 7 attack on Israel,and that Palestinian perspectives are not shared in U.S. media.[52]Middle East Eyereported that Hasan "challengesPiers Morgan's treatment of pro-Palestinian guests ".[53]
Abortion
Hasan was formerlyagainst abortion,a position he has since rejected. In an October 2012 online column for theNew Statesmanhe defended his anti-abortion views in print, writing "What I would like is for my fellow lefties and liberals to try to understand and respect the views of those of us who arepro-life".[54]Hasan argued that the issue of abortion "is one of those rare political issues on which left and right seem to have swapped ideologies: right-wingers talk of equality, human rights and 'defending the innocent', while left-wingers fetishise 'choice', selfishness and unbridled individualism."[54]He later expressed regret for his comments.[55]However, the article gained much attention on Twitter[56]and Hasan debated the issue withSuzanne MooreonBBC Radio 4'sToday.[57]
In a 2020 series of tweets, Hasan expressed regrets for "having expressed offensive & illiberal views in the past on everything from homosexuality to abortion" and stated that they were views he no longer holds.[58]
Pakistan
Hasan has been critical of the human rights situation inPakistan,expressing disapproval of the country'sblasphemy law,[59]as well as enforced disappearances inBalochistan.He has also criticised the human rights situation in both Indian and Pakistan-administeredKashmir,and has called out alleged backing from Pakistan for terror groups likeJaish-e-MuhammadandLashkar-e-Taibato carry out attacks in the Indian-administered region.[60]
In a May 2021 interview withCNNon theIsraeli–Palestinian conflict,Pakistan's Foreign MinisterShah Mahmood Qureshisaid that Israelis "are very influential people", adding, "I mean, they control media." Hasan tweeted during the ensuing controversy: "I see some people trying to defend the Pakistani foreign minister's remarks as anti-Israeli & notanti-Semiticbut let's be clear: if you are accusing Israelis of having 'deep pockets' and 'controlling' the media, then yeah, you're invoking some pretty anti-Semitic slurs. Sorry. "[61]
Saudi Arabia
Hasan has made several statements in opposition to theSaudi government,including challenging a statement made byDonald Trump,in which he claimed that he himself had no financial interests in Saudi Arabia, an allegation which Trump called "fake news".[62]Hasan challenged Trump's statements in a video essay published byThe Interceptin October 2018.[63]
In February 2019, during a debate organised byIntelligence Squaredin London,[64]Hasan stated that the West should cut ties with Saudi Arabia, saying: "It's time we make clear that the West needs to cut its ties with Saudi Arabia, especially military ties, arms exports, weapons, bombs."[64]
The comments were made in response to theassassination of Jamal Khashoggi,allegedly ordered by the Crown Prince of Saudi Arabia,Mohammad Bin Salman,as well as several human rights violations which Hasan cited as also being carried out by Saudi Arabia.[65]Hasan had previously interviewed Khashoggi about freedom of speech in Saudi Arabia.[66]
Personal life
Hasan is married. He and his wife have two daughters.[42]Hasan became anaturalised citizenof the United States on 9 October 2020, in time to vote in the2020 United States presidential election.[67]
Awards and recognition
In January 2014, Hasan was awarded the Services to Media award at theBritish Muslim Awards.[68]In 2017, he was named European Young Leader by the Brussels-based think tankFriends of Europe .[69]In 2019, Hasan won the Society of Professional Journalists'Sigma Delta Chi Awardfor Online Column Writing.[70]
Selected works
- With James Macintyre.Ed: The Milibands and the making of a Labour leader,London, Biteback Publishing, 2011.ISBN978-1-84954-102-2
- Summer of Unrest: The Debt Delusion: Exposing ten Tory myths about debts, deficits and spending cuts,Vintage Digital, 28 July 2011.
- Win Every Argument: The Art of Debating, Persuading, and Public Speaking.Henry Holt and Co. 2023. ISBN 9781250853479
References
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- ^Mehdi Hassan [@mehdirhasan] (9 October 2020)."Anyways, back to the oath ceremony. Took the oath. Congratulated my fellow immigrants. Got the naturalization certificate. It's done. I'm officially a citizen of the United States and ready to vote, weeks before the most consequential U.S. election of our lifetimes"(Tweet) – viaTwitter.
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External links
- Hasan at the New Statesman
- Hasan on C-SPAN
- Mehdi Hasanat Al Jazeera English
- Zeteo News, Mehdi Hasan's YouTube channel
- Mehdi HasanatIMDb