The Washington Post catches up with Tito Muñoz, aka Tito the Builder:
When last we heard from Tito Muñoz, he was onstage with Sarah Palin at a rally in Leesburg in the waning days of the 2008 presidential campaign, a burly guy in a yellow hard hat, trying to bellow some life into the GOP ticket. "Good morning, Virginia!" he boomed. "You can call me Tito the Builder!" Palin worked him into her stump speeches, this Latino Joe the Plumber who, she liked to say, "was born in Colombia but made in the U.S.A.!" On a recent Saturday morning, Muñoz has exchanged his boots and tool belt for a pressed shirt and slacks. He squeezes behind a microphone in a small radio studio in Laurel. He clears space on the table for a pile of books and essays, including "The Constitutional Thoughts of Thomas Jefferson," "César Chávez Against Illegals," "Hispanics in American Wars" and Spanish translations of the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence. It's minutes to airtime for his debut as Tito the Radio Host.
Mary Katharine Ham wrote about Muñoz for THE WEEKLY STANDARD, accessible here and here.