tucker carlson com

July 9, 2025

TuckerCarlson.com isn’t just another political website—it’s Tucker Carlson unplugged. Raw, unfiltered, and entirely in control. Think of it as the media version of going off-grid but with global reach and a production team.


The Post-Fox News Pivot

Tucker Carlson didn’t fade after getting cut from Fox News. He launched his own platform—TuckerCarlson.com—and started releasing content on his terms. No corporate leash. No advertisers breathing down his neck. Just him, the camera, and whoever he decides is worth talking to.

And it's working.

Instead of jumping to another network, he leaned into independence. He started posting long-form interviews on X (yeah, Twitter rebranded), using Elon Musk’s infrastructure as a megaphone. But the real base of operations is the website. That’s where the full episodes live, along with members-only extras, archived shows, and everything else that doesn't fit into a 30-second Twitter clip.


Long-Form Interviews That Actually Matter

At the center of the site is a series called The Interview. These aren’t five-minute back-and-forths filled with platitudes. Think marathon sessions with big names who don’t often get a platform like this.

Example? Vladimir Putin. Say what you want about that decision, but Carlson pulled off something few American journalists have done in years—he got the Russian president to talk, directly, at length. No filters, no media spin.

Then there's Nayib Bukele, the Salvadoran president who took on gang violence with iron-fisted precision. He’s polarizing. Carlson didn’t flinch. They sat down and actually talked about whether democracy and safety can coexist in a country overrun by cartels.

Not every guest is a head of state. Some are policy wonks, military vets, whistleblowers. People with stories, receipts, or both.


Hot-Button Topics Without the Hand-Wringing

Tucker isn’t dancing around tough topics. He’s charging straight into them. Iran, Epstein, the Kennedy assassination, American interventionism—you name it. And he’s not softening the blows.

One standout episode? A deep dive into Jeffrey Epstein’s cover-ups and why the Justice Department, according to some guests, is actively stonewalling the truth. Another episode walks through America’s long, bloody entanglement with Iran, not just the headlines, but the real motivations behind foreign policy choices.

He had Scott Bessent, Trump’s would-be Treasury Secretary, break down Trump’s latest tariff plans like you’re sitting in a backroom strategy meeting. No gloss. No vague “experts say” commentary.


It’s Not Just Tucker Talking

This isn’t a one-man YouTube channel. There’s a whole ecosystem behind TuckerCarlson.com. Full production. TV apps. Mobile support. Think Netflix for political content, but without a board of directors dictating the agenda.

And if you’re a paying member? You get the whole library. That means longer interviews, off-camera extras, unreleased segments, and early access drops. It's not expensive, but the paywall filters out the drive-by outrage crowd. It’s made for people who want to go deep, not just scroll and react.


Not Bound by Anyone’s Rules

What sets the site apart is its editorial freedom. Carlson’s no longer tied to Fox’s brand management or their fear of advertiser fallout. He’s not beholden to the YouTube algorithm either. That’s why he’s free to say things that would make traditional newsrooms nervous.

Take the Iran war discussion with Rob O’Neill, the Navy SEAL who killed Osama bin Laden. It wasn’t just a hero’s tale—it was a frank talk about military industrial politics, bad leadership, and the push for regime change. That kind of honesty is rare on TV. Here, it’s the default.


Critics Hate It, and That’s the Point

Legacy media hates that Carlson is doing this. They accuse him of giving oxygen to “dangerous” figures or “platforming propaganda.” But that misses the point.

He’s not endorsing everything his guests say. He’s just letting them speak—and trusting his audience to be smart enough to decide what’s BS. That alone separates him from most broadcast outlets.


People Are Watching. Lots of Them.

This isn't niche internet television. Tucker still commands millions of eyeballs per episode. Even after Fox, even after being kicked off mainstream platforms. He’s drawing viewers from across the political map—conservatives, independents, even some liberals who are sick of being gaslit by MSNBC panels and CNN monologues.

And he’s not relying on the old ways to grow. Clips go viral on X, YouTube, and Telegram. Then viewers follow the trail to TuckerCarlson.com for the full picture. That’s by design.


What’s Next?

Tucker and his team are already working on more features. Things like:

  • Live events where members can ask questions in real time

  • Community forums to share reactions, dig deeper, and connect over shared values

  • New docuseries covering government overreach, border policy, election integrity, and big pharma

It’s clear the goal isn’t just to entertain. It’s to build a parallel media infrastructure outside the legacy system. The kind that isn’t funded by Big Tech, pharmaceutical giants, or political parties.


Final Take

TuckerCarlson.com is Carlson unchained. No time limits. No safe topics. No producers yelling in his earpiece. Just full-spectrum political content without apologies.

Whether you agree with him or not, you can’t ignore what he’s built. He’s reshaping media in real time—on his terms, with his audience, and without a middleman. That’s not just impressive. It’s rare.