Dan Gainor

Vice President of Business and Culture

Vice President of Business & Culture for the MRC

Dan Gainor, The Vice President of Business and Culture for the MRC, is a veteran editor with more than two decades of experience in print and online media. He has appeared a number of times on the Fox Business Network and writes for The Fox Forum. He has served as an editor at several newspapers including The Washington Times and The Baltimore News-American. Mr. Gainor also has extensive experience in online publishing – holding the position of managing editor for CQ.com, the Web site of Congressional Quarterly, and executive editor for ChangeWave, published by Phillips International. He has worked in financial publishing in his last two positions, launching new services for ChangeWave and Agora Inc. Mr. Gainor holds an MBA from the University of Maryland’s Robert H. Smith School of Business and a master’s in publications design from the University of Baltimore. As an undergraduate, he majored in political science and history at the University of Maryland Baltimore County. Mr. Gainor lives in Maryland and volunteers as a media and issues speaker with the Close-Up Foundation. 

Gainor has made hundreds of radio and TV appearances. In addition to the Fox Business Network, his appearances include: CNBC’s “Power Lunch,” Fox News’ “Hannity & Colmes” and “Fox & Friends,” as well as CNN’s “Paul Zahn Now.” He has appeared on local or national radio shows in every state including: the Jerry Doyle Show, The John Gibson Show, the Rusty Humphries Show, Phil Valentine Show, POTUS on XM Satellite Radio , the Thom Hartmann Show, Money & More, the G. Gordon Liddy Show, America at Night, Dateline Washington, the Lars Larson Show, the Jim Bohannon Show, Home Talk USA, The Weekend, Mancow, Money Dots on Main Street USA, American Family Radio, the Chuck Harder Show, Battleline with Alan Nathan, The Right Balance, Janet Parshall’s America and Entertainment USA. 

He has been published in a wide variety of publications, including: Investor’s Business Daily, The Washington Times, the Chicago Sun-Times, the Orange County Register, the New York Post, the Baltimore Examiner, Canada’s National Post's Financial Post & FP Investing, the San Diego Union-Tribune, the Augusta Free Press, the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, the Houghton Daily Mining Gazette, the Port Clinton, Ohio Beacon, Contacto Magazine, the Caribbean Voice, the Newtown Bee, the Frederick News-Post, The High Point Enterprise, the Easton Star Democrat, the Midland Daily News, the Findlay, Ohio, Courier, and the Simi Valley, Calif., Acorn.

Author Articles

Times Changes its Hole Position on Ozone Layer

Times Changes its Hole Position on Ozone Layer

A Beef with the Media Over Obesity Bias

A Beef with the Media Over Obesity Bias

A Tough Pill to Swallow

Post spins new drug study to criticize drugmakers even though thats not what the researcher said.

SUPERSIZED BIAS II: Executive Summary

Big Media Continue Skewing Obesity Debate (May-October 2004)

SUPERSIZED BIAS II

Big Media Continue Skewing Obesity Debate (May-October 2004)

Peddling a "Cure" Worse than the Disease

FMP Study: Networks Tout Alleged Harm of Global Warming But Hide Massive Costs of Kyoto Treaty

Destroying America To Save The World: Executive Summary

TVs Global Warming Coverage Hides Cost Of Kyoto Treaty

Destroying America To Save The World

TVs Global Warming Coverage Hides Cost Of Kyoto Treaty

One Economy, Two Spins: Executive Report

Economic Conditions Portrayed as Positive During Clinton Presented as Negative for Bush

One Economy, Two Spins

Economic Conditions Portrayed as Positive During Clinton Presented as Negative for Bush

Patience, Hell, Lets Sue Somebody

The food police are looking to take a healthy bite out of corporate America.

Attack on Drug Industry Urges Even More Regulation

Former New England Journal of Medicine Editor Marcia Angell is promoting her new book attacking the pharmaceutical industry and urging added government regulations at the same time.

SUPERSIZED BIAS: Executive Summary

Big Medias Role In Covering And Promoting the Obesity Debate

SUPERSIZED BIAS

Big Medias Role In Covering And Promoting the Obesity Debate