Tucker Carlson and his wife, Susan Andrews, have been married for over 25 years. They have four children together — Lillie, Hopie, and Dorothy, and Buckley. He and his beautiful family live in a farmhouse in Alexandria. They renovated the modest house into the dream home it is today.
Though Tucker hoped for his home to be a place of sanctuary, it has been a target for protestors who oppose his blatant political views. People have the right to an opinion, but that’s not to see it doesn’t come with a price.
Public Opinion
As you've probably already guessed, not everyone is a fan of Carlson’s views. In the New York Times, James Poniewozik definitely isn't. He once stated that Carlson does not seek to interview his subjects but to defeat them. That he shifts topics to imply hypocrisies, prods, pounces, guffaws, and interrupts.
He added that the camera holds tight to his face to show every squint of bemusement, contempt, and confusion. Carlson says that he's usually unphased by that kind of criticism.
Climate Change — a Myth?
This one may even be amusing to some, but Carlson doesn't believe in the concept of climate change. He says that it is “unknowable” whether human activities even contribute to changes in our environment.
Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but maybe if someone was pushed out of the newsroom to take a better look at what's going on outside they would change their minds.
Trump Supporter
As one of the most outspoken conservatives on-air and an avid Trump supporter, Tucker Carlson does not really care about being politically correct, to say the least. While he gets ridiculed on a weekly basis it seems that he too has his share of criticism for the views of mainstream conservatism, referring to it as “insufficiently conservative.”
Carlson would like to believe that if more people in the media had his views it would "Make America Great Again".
Family Secret
Susan Carlson’s father, Rev. George E. Andrews, was the headmaster of St George’s school between the years of 1984 – 1989, he then became headmaster at the St. Andrew’s School until 2007 when he retired. In 2o06, Susan's father was accused of not having reported a teacher to the authorities for some allegations. An investigation that took place concluded that Andrews had actually fired him but was not aware of the extent of his assaults and therefore had not broken any laws under the Rhode Island state law.
Despite the controversy, old students of Rev. George E. Andrew, like Grant Dubler, had good memories of the former headmaster, "Rev. Andrews fused life into the school as no other headmaster has ever done," Dubler said. "He was someone you could look to like a wise, grandfatherly figure. But he could be fun, too. Like the time when, in shirt and tie, he jumped in the lake and swam across. For a second, we lost sight of him, then we saw his red socks bobbing up and down."