TNR: The Rise and Fall of the L. Brent Bozells (A really good read)
In The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp, a classic 1943 film that traces, in vaguely allegorical fashion, half a centurys evolution in Englands national character, the actress Deborah Kerr plays a series of roles that represent changing incarnations of the ideal British woman. Were a similar technicolor romance to portray Americas national character over the past seven decades, the right would be represented by a series of characters all named L. Brent Bozell.
In our films dramatic climax, L. Brent Bozell IV (Zeeker to his friends) is shown in a red baseball cap and blue sweatshirt lettered Hershey Christian Academy (with which, that institution assures us, Zeeker is not affiliated) amid an angry crowd chanting treason! inside an abandoned Senate chamber. The National Review brand of movement conservatism, launched 66 years earlier under the joint stewardship of Zeekers namesake grandad and his great-uncle William F. Buckley, Jr. with the admonition to stand athwart history, yelling Stop, now dissolves into violent insurrection as an FBI agent charges Zeeker with disorderly conduct. Fade to black, roll credits.*
But perhaps we should start at the beginning.
https://newrepublic.com/article/161431/brent-bozell-trump-capitol-riot