Hannity's America

Hannity's America was a weekly American talk show on the Fox News Channel hosted by Sean Hannity. It was replaced in January 2009 with Hannity.

Hannity's America
Title card for Hannity's America
Presented bySean Hannity
Country of originUnited States
No. of episodes50 as of December 9, 2007
Production
Running time60 minutes
Release
Original networkFox News Channel
Original releaseJanuary 7, 2007 
January 4, 2009
External links
Website

Overview

At the beginning of each show, Hannity gives his opinion about the nation as a whole, usually relating to issues happening in politics over the past week.

Additionally, the program also features other segments, including "2 on 2" and "Hannity's Hot Seat." During the "2 on 2" segment, Hannity welcomes one conservative to join his side and two liberals to talk about issues covered earlier in the program, commonly causing conflict between both sides with differing ideals.

The "Hot Seat" section of the program features someone who Hannity has an issue with, debating them about what they have talked about.

Later, a segment called "Beyond Belief" was added, which focused on Christian and spiritual issues, such as angels and ghosts.

Fox News reader Ainsley Earhardt often does an unsolved crime story.

In the final segment of the show, Hannity usually features a segment called "Your America." Hannity describes it as "stories you didn't read about in the New York Times."

Hannity's America shares its theme song with the first part of his ABC Radio talk show.

The show was rebranded as Hannity and follows a similar format as the previous show. "Beyond Belief" is an occasional segment on the new show.

gollark: Please reexplain it?
gollark: You may like trusting people you interact with a lot. You can continue doing this. But having options to minimize necessary trust gives people more options, which I think is good.
gollark: Wondrous.
gollark: Although HTTP tries its best to alienate you from the people you interact with via the stateless request/response model, at least with unencrypted HTTP I am still aware that I am interacting with another server. TLS and so on seek to undermine this further, by forcing you to treat everyone as a faceless certificate surrounded by attackers trying to eavesdrop at all times. It thus depersonalizes and alienates you from the people you are interacting with even further.
gollark: Whoever designed this should rotate at 2519285 mrad/s!

See also

References

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