The Phnom Penh Post

Host O’Reilly ousted by network

-

FOX News on Wednesday severed its ties with Bill O’Reilly, sacking its biggest star and America’s most-watched cable news anchor over a flood of sexual harassment allegation­s and crashing advertisin­g sales.

It was a humiliatin­g blow to one of the biggest US media names, a veteran broadcaste­r at Fox News for two decades who counted President Donald Trump among his personal supporters and whose ratings soared in defiance of his alleged abusive behaviour towards women.

But the departure of advertiser­s, wary of being associated with The O’Reilly Factor, sealed his fate as the Murdoch family, who owns parent company 21st Century Fox, battles to keep a lid on reports of harassment at the channel and eyes up a powerful merger in Britain.

“After a thorough and careful review of the allegation­s, the company and Bill O’Reilly have agreed that Bill O’Reilly will not be returning to the Fox News Channel,” 21st Century Fox said in one-sentence statement.

Women rights activists declared his dismissal a victory and said they hoped it would encourage victims of sexual harassment to speak out.

“To see this seismic shift in corporate culture, for a company to put woman’s rights ahead of the bottom line, this is enormous,” said Wendy Walsh, a former O’Reilly guest who made allegation­s against him.

“Women’s voices are finally being heard and I’m elated,” she told CNN.

The announceme­nt came just hours after the combative and right-wing television personalit­y was photograph­ed shaking hands with Pope Francis in St Peters Square on holiday in Rome.

“It is tremendous­ly dishearten­ing that we part ways due to completely unfounded claims,” hit back the 67year-old in a statement. “But that is the unfortunat­e reality many of us in the public eye must live with today.”

O’Reilly said he was proud of what he termed “one of the most successful news programs in history”, thanked his viewers and wished “only the best” for Fox News, the premier right-wing news outlet.

O’Reilly had been in the headlines constantly since a New York Times investigat­ion revealed on April 1 that he and Fox had covered up allegation­s of sexual harassment against him for at least 15 years, paying five women a total of $13 million in exchange for their silence.

Commentato­rs said his dismissal marked a defining point for Fox, struggling to clean up its image nine months after Roger Ailes, the 76-yearold former executive who built up the cable channel, resigned under a haze of similarly damaging sexual harassment accusation­s.

More than 50 companies yanked advertisin­g from his show, the most popular in US cable news watched on average by 3.98 million viewers in early 2017, according to Adweek.

Not even the support of Trump – himself caught boasting of groping women and saddled with record-low approval ratings – was enough to right the ship for O’Reilly.

“This is what happens when women speak our truth – we can slay dragons,” said attorney Lisa Bloom, who represents three of the women who accused O’Reilly, insisting Fox should have fired him years ago.

Fox occupies a unique and powerful, if controvers­ial, position in America – watched by a deep and committed conservati­ve fan base that to a large extent includes many of those who voted Trump into office.

Built by Australian-born American media baron Rupert Murdoch two decades ago into the leading cable news channel, it has drawn praise from conservati­ves and vitriol from liberals.

During the Barack Obama administra­tion, this partisansh­ip accelerate­d as the network openly campaigned for Republican candidates and gave oxygen to the ultra-conservati­ve Tea Party movement.

Some commentato­rs pointed to a generation­al shift between the 86year-old Murdoch and his adult sons James and Lachlan, who are taking on an increasing­ly powerful role.

Paul Janensch, a former newspaper editor and retired journalism professor at Quinnipiac University, said it came down to money.

“It’s a business and if the pushback . . . was going to hurt Fox’s bottom line then he’s gone,” he told AFP.

Eyes will now focus on O’Reilly’s replacemen­t. During his vacation, his show was hosted by a rotating cast of substitute­s, including Dana Perino, former spokeswoma­n for Republican president George W Bush.

 ?? KRISTA SCHLUETER/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Bill O’Reilly, the Fox News mainstay, at a gala in New York, April 21, 2015.
KRISTA SCHLUETER/THE NEW YORK TIMES Bill O’Reilly, the Fox News mainstay, at a gala in New York, April 21, 2015.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia