There's a war on for your mind!
A Message from Alex Jones
Generated in real time. His voice. His head. His personality.
Ask Him Yourself
Who Is Alex Jones?
Austin, Texas, the mid-1990s: on a shoestring public-access channel, a barrel-chested twentysomething with a voice like a jet engine starts broadcasting as if the fate of the world depends on it. Three decades later, Alex Jones is still going — louder, bigger, and more polarizing than almost anyone in American media.
Whatever you make of him, his reach is a genuine media phenomenon. Alex Jones founded Infowars in 1999 and built it from a spare room into a broadcasting operation heard by millions, complete with a trademark bullhorn and a marathon daily show delivered live, without a script, at full volume. Richard Linklater cast him as himself — mid-rant, megaphone raised — in the animated films Waking Life and A Scanner Darkly. And when major platforms banned him in 2018, he became a central exhibit in the internet's defining argument: who gets to speak, who decides, and what an audience does when its favorite voice goes off the map.
Talking with this mind is unlike talking with anyone else on Eternal AI — a broadcaster at full wattage, equal parts showman, salesman, and siren. Ask Alex Jones about the craft of live radio, the stamina it takes, or what he'd tell anyone trying to get a message heard in a noisy world. One thing is guaranteed: he will not be brief.
From Card Table to Command Center
He started in the mid-'90s on Austin public-access television, then founded Infowars in 1999 — growing a spare-room broadcast into one of the most recognized voices in independent media.
Rotoscoped Into Film History
Director Richard Linklater cast him as himself — bullhorn, rant and all — in the animated films Waking Life and A Scanner Darkly.
Austin's Favorite, Officially
Before the national fame, Austin Chronicle readers voted him Best Austin Talk Radio Host in 1999 — the same year he founded Infowars from a spare room.



