El Dorado News-Times

Ingraham due back at Fox following tweet backlash, vacation

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NEW YORK (AP) — Fox News Channel host Laura Ingraham is expected back at work on Monday following a backlash by advertiser­s upset over her tweet mocking a Parkland, Florida, school shooting survivor.

Her one-week vacation served as a cooling-off period. The number of companies saying they would not advertise on her show, at 19, according to a count by Media Matters for America, slowed to a trickle while she was away.

Ingraham also picked up a strong statement of support from her boss and backing from an unexpected source in liberal talk show host Bill Maher late on Friday.

Ingraham has apologized for a tweet in which she said 17-yearold high school student David Hogg whined about being rejected by some colleges. Hogg has said it's "time to love thy neighbor, not mudsling at children." Their spat became a symbol of a debate over how minors active in national gun safety talks should be treated by political opponents. Another student, Emma Gonzalez, was falsely depicted in a doctored photo tearing up the Constituti­on.

Hogg has urged companies to reconsider their relationsh­ips with Ingraham, a veteran pundit whose Fox show has aired only for a few months.

Ingraham also was criticized in February for saying Cleveland Cavaliers basketball star LeBron James should "shut up and dribble" instead of talking politics. She has said that was a reference to her 2003 book, "Shut Up & Sing," in which she criticized performers who venture into politics. James, a three-time NBA champion, has vowed to keep talking.

Vacations under fire can be an ominous sign. Another Fox prime-time host, Bill O'Reilly, went on vacation when advertiser­s abandoned him following reports about sexual misconduct complaints against him; he never returned. An advertiser boycott helped cost O'Reilly his job at near-lightning speed. Former Fox personalit­y Glenn Beck fell victim to an advertiser abandonmen­t that was much more gradual.

However, attempts to launch boycotts against Sean Hannity have largely failed, and he remains Fox's top-rated personalit­y.

Earlier this week, Fox News co-president Jack Abernethy said that "we cannot and will not allow voices to be censored by agenda-driven intimidati­on efforts" and promised Ingraham will be back.

Ingraham has not addressed the controvers­y on her show, which airs at 10 p.m. ET.

Meanwhile, HBO's Bill Maher said on his show that even though Ingraham has been "a deliberate­ly terrible person, saying horrible things," the young gun safety advocates have to expect criticism if they are entering the public arena. He said they shouldn't target advertiser­s.

Hogg "complains about bullying," Maher said. "That's bullying. I have been the victim of a boycott of sponsors. I lost a job once. It is wrong."

One of Maher's guests, former New York Gov. Elliot Spitzer, a Democrat who resigned in 2008 amid revelation­s he had sex with prostitute­s, said the First Amendment gives people the right to organize boycotts. Maher called it an "end run" around the First Amendment.

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