Andrew James Breitbart, American political Internet publisher (born Feb. 1, 1969, Los Angeles, Calif.—died March 1, 2012, Los Angeles), skewered liberal targets, frequently with the use of undercover videos; his vigorous online campaigns made him a hero to many on the political right, though in some cases he was shown to have used deceptive or inaccurate sources. After having graduated from Tulane University, New Orleans, Breitbart became an editor for The Drudge Report, a conservative news aggregator Web site, but in 2005 he launched his own site, Breitbart.com. He later added the sites Big Hollywood, Big Government, and Big Journalism. In his first big story, in 2009, he posted videos made by a conservative activist of a sting operation in which workers for the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN) were seen giving advice on setting up a prostitution operation; as a result, the organization lost financial support and disbanded. In 2010 Breitbart posted a video clip purporting to show a black Department of Agriculture official, Shirley Sherrod, admitting racial prejudice in a speech to an NAACP group; she was fired before the misleading nature of the heavily edited video was revealed. (Sherrod later sued Breitbart for defamation.) The following year Democratic Rep. Anthony Weiner resigned from the House of Representatives after Breitbart exposed lewd photographs that Weiner had taken of himself and sent to several young women.