Wick Allison, birth name Lodowick Brodie Cobb Allison, is an American magazine publisher and author. He currently is the owner of D Magazine, a monthly magazine covering Dallas-Fort Worth, which he co-founded in 1974, and the principal owner of People Newspapers, which he purchased in 2003. He also serves as president of the non-profit American Ideas Institute, publisher of The American Conservative.
Allison co-founded D Magazine -- a monthly magazine covering Dallas -- in 1974, with backing from Dallas investor Ray Lee Hunt. In 1981, he and a group of investors purchased Sport Magazine, which they sold in 1984. He went on to found and publish Art & Antiques in 1984. In 1985, Allison was asked by William F. Buckley, Jr. to join the board of directors of the National Review, and in 1980 he became its publisher, succeeding William A. Rusher. In 1981 or 1982 Allison sold his company Allison Publications, publisher of Art & Antiques. In 1993, he resigned as publisher of National Review. In 1995, he and investor Harlan Crow repurchased D Magazine, and in 2001, Allison bought out Crow to become the magazine company's sole owner. In 1993, Allison edited a new edition of The Bible To Be Read As Living Literature, published by Simon & Schuster. He is also the author of Is That In The Bible? and Condemned To Repeat It: History Lessons For Leaders. In February 2013, Allison launched "D: The Broadcast," a two-hour daily morning talk show, on local Dallas independent stationKTXD, but the magazine ended its affiliation with the show in August of the same year.
Political views
In September 2008, he published an article in D Magazine entitled "A Conservative For Obama", in which he endorsed then Senator Barack Obama for President. In May 2011, he recanted the endorsement citing "serial disillusionment" with the two major US political parties. However, in September 2012, Allison told The Daily Beast, "I will probably vote for Obama, unless I have a Gary Johnson–inspiration in the voting booth....Romney is the opposite of conservative, with a plan that is fiscally reckless and a foreign policy that is unnecessarily militant. Obama has done about the best that could have been done, considering the united GOP opposition in Congress. My questions about Obamacare and my disappointment that we are not already out of Afghanistan are not enough to make me embrace a candidacy that even George W. Bush would have been repelled by—and, having had time to reflect on his own record, perhaps is.”