Lodi News-Sentinel

Bill O’Reilly to leave Fox News with $25M

- By Meg James

Fox News’ former star personalit­y, Bill O’Reilly, will leave the network with the equivalent of one year’s salary — or $25 million, according to two people familiar with the settlement terms.

Parent company 21st Century Fox on Wednesday fired O’Reilly, 67, after investigat­ors retained by the company began reviewing allegation­s of sexual harassment and payouts to women who brought grievances against Fox News’ biggest star.

O’Reilly’s ouster came just 18 days after disclosure­s of sexual harassment complaints and settlement­s by multiple women, and a call last week to Fox’s corporate hotline by Wendy Walsh, who alleged that O’Reilly promised her a coveted spot appearing on his show but reneged after she refused to have sex with him.

O’Reilly’s firing was an inglorious end to a spectacula­r career with Fox News. O’Reilly’s opinion-based show “The O’Reilly Factor” was a tent pole of Fox News’ prime-time lineup, supporting the suite of programs that surrounded it.

Viewers, particular­ly older men, reveled in O’Reilly’s pugnacious, take-no-prisoners approach and his trademark “No-Spin Zone” version of current events. “The O’Reilly Factor” drew an average of 4 million viewers an episode, according to Nielsen.

In recent months, O’Reilly received a new employment agreement that stipulated that he would receive the equivalent of one year’s salary should he be forced out, according to the informed sources.

Fox also fired the architect of Fox News, Roger Ailes, after women complained that they were subjected to a hostile workplace and that Ailes suggested they provide sexual favors in exchange for career advancemen­t. Ailes received a $40 million payout when he left.

However, after The New York Times detailed settlement­s to at least five women earlier this month, protesters began agitating for change. Rupert Murdoch, the company’s co-chairman and controllin­g shareholde­r, initially wanted to keep O’Reilly on the network but advertiser­s began bailing out of the program, making the situation untenable for the Murdoch family.

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