S3, Episode 6: An Interview with Christopher Rufo
An Interview with Chris Rufo, Bestselling Author, Filmaker, and Commentator
For more than half a century, many of America’s most revered institutions have been infiltrated with ideas that run counter to the country’s founding principles. This ideological capture has been acute within prestigious universities, to the point where the opportunity for viewpoint diversity continues to be under severe threat.
Yet, according to our guest on this episode of Voices of Freedom, all is not lost. In fact, he believes that there has been an ideological shift not only within higher education, but in society, politics, culture and in civic institutions. And, he says, it’s only beginning.
Chris Rufo discusses how his unique background, which is rooted in both scholarship and filmmaking, has led him to believe that it’s possible and vital to restore the principles of American exceptionalism.
Topics Discussed on this Episode:
- Why Chris went into documentary filmmaking upon graduation from Georgetown University.
- What Chris learned directing documentaries and why he focused on urban areas
- How Chris’ filmmaking experience turned him into an advocate for solutions to the problems he was seeing
- Reversing the ideological capture of higher universities and how to turn ideas rooted in scholarship into reality.
- Opportunities to change the culture in institutions that seem permanently captured, such as government, higher education, and entertainment
- Why the younger generation is gravitating towards values and ideals traditionally tied to free enterprise, liberty and free speech
- The rise of independent media and how it has contributed to the cultural shift
- What it means to receive a Bradley Prize
About Christopher Rufo:
Rufo is a bestselling author, filmmaker and commentator, whose work has significantly influenced contemporary American culture and policies. He’s also a senior fellow and director of the initiative on critical race theory at the Manhattan Institute and a contributing editor of City Journal.
Rufo is a 2025 Bradley Prize winner.