

Later, while writing for CBS, Travis began working on a book, Dixieland Delight, where he visited the football stadiums of the 12 then-current members of the Southeastern Conference. In 2006, Travis gave up his law practice for good. Travis began writing online for CBS Sports in September 2005, which for the first year was not paid.

The effort failed, but he blogged about the experience and received media attention.
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A Tennessee Titans fan, Travis was unable to get NFL Sunday Ticket, the satellite TV package to watch NFL games in the islands, and went on a "pudding strike", eating only pudding every day for 50 days, with the goal of forcing DirecTV to carry the package in the Virgin Islands.

Virgin Islands and working for Dudley, Topper and Feuerzeig. He attracted media attention in late 2004 with his personal blog written while he was living in the U.S. Travis originally worked as a lawyer in the U.S. He graduated from George Washington University in Washington, D.C., followed by Vanderbilt University Law School in Nashville. In 1997, Travis graduated from Martin Luther King Magnet at Pearl High School in Nashville. Travis describes himself as a "radical moderate" and claims to have been a lifelong Democratic voter before the election of Donald Trump in 2016. As a sports journalist, Travis founded OutKick.Īs a political commentator, he and Buck Sexton host The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show, a three-hour weekday conservative talk show which debuted on Jas the replacement of The Rush Limbaugh Show on many radio stations. Richard Clay Travis (born April 6, 1979) is an American writer, lawyer, radio host and television analyst.
