Ami Horowitz

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Horowitz in 2012

Ami Horowitz is an American conservative documentary filmmaker and activist.[1] He is the writer, producer, and director of Ami on the Loose, a satirical short film series made for Fox News. Horowitz co-wrote, co-directed, and starred in the 2012 documentary U.N. Me, a critical examination of the United Nations.

Horowitz came to some prominence [citation needed] after the release of his 10-minute documentary Stockholm Syndrome, on the relationship between immigration and crime in Sweden. Horowitz's commentary appears to have influenced President Donald Trump's rhetoric on the same subject. Some of Horowitz's statements about Sweden in the film and in subsequent interviews were described as false by fact-checkers, news organizations, criminologists, and by Swedish authorities.[2]

A native of Los Angeles, Horowitz graduated from the University of Southern California with majors in political science and philosophy.[3] Horowitz's mother is from Israel.[4] He is a Modern Orthodox Jew, and spent a year at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in Israel.[5]

Career

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI