Alumni Association
2021 Alumni Award: Tommy Vietor ’94
For Tommy Vietor ’94, Luck and Timing Are Everything By Leslie Bowen
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ommy Vietor ’94 says he is incredibly fortunate to be where he is today. At 40, he has a more impressive resume than most men his age, having served in the White House under President Obama, followed by starting a podcast, Pod Save America, and eventually forming a media company, Crooked Media, with his colleagues from that era, Jon Favreau and Jon Lovett. He attributes his success to luck and timing, beginning with his supportive family. “My parents were incredibly caring and loving and sent me to great schools,” he said. “I recognize there was an enormous amount of privilege going to schools like DCD, Milton Academy, and Kenyon College. Those experiences and that education prepared me to take on difficult jobs.” “I was lucky to get hired to work on Obama’s campaign in 2004, and that set the course for my life,” he said. “It was pure luck, not part of any plan.” Tommy’s political career actually started with an internship in Senator Ted Kennedy’s office in 2002, right out of college. His cousin, Wendy Button, a speechwriter for Mayor Tom Menino, served as a role model for Tommy and connected him to someone in Kennedy’s office. “It was an interesting year to be there,” he said. “I thought the things that Kennedy was fighting for were inspiring and set the course for pursuing politics as a career.” Later he worked for the John Edwards campaign, and when they lost, he interviewed to work on John Kerry’s campaign. In the meantime, he was learning about a young senator from Illinois, Barack Obama. Tommy read Obama’s book, Dreams from My Father, and describes becoming “obsessed” with him, eventually turning down an offer to work for the Kerry campaign and using his connections to work for Obama instead. Tommy spent nine years with Obama, working for him in his senate campaign, senate office, presidential campaign, and for four years in the White House, a journey that left him feeling a little burnt out. After leaving the White House, he worked in DC for a couple of years and then headed to San Franciso, moving away from politics to start a speechwriting/communications company in San 46
Francisco, and doing a little screenwriting on the side. After Trump won the election in 2016, Tommy said he felt “enormous guilt” that he hadn’t done more to prevent it. Now with millions of people listening to his podcast, he’s added a progressive voice to the airwaves to compete with conservative media. Again, he attributes the podcast’s success to luck and timing. He remembers hearing from people from around the country who were shocked after Trump won the election and felt like the world was going crazy around them, that the country they knew no longer existed. “There was something cathartic about the show for a lot of people,” he said. “You’d realize, I’m not alone; I’m not the only one who feels this way.” “Watching Cable TV could leave you feeling despondent, unable to make sense of things,” he said. “We decided to create a show