Los Angeles Times

Fox News’ sexist pattern

The O’Reilly mess reflects how the network treats women on and off camera.

- LORRAINE ALI TELEVISION CRITIC

Three people discuss current events on television: The older male host sits across from his two female guests. He is 67; they are decades younger. He wears a suit and tie, they wear tight dresses. His face is lined and pale; theirs are uniformly smooth and accented with colored lip gloss.

A sexual harassment scandal involving the man leads the news cycle on every other media platform, but it’s just another Tuesday on “The O’Reilly Factor.”

The New York Times had days earlier reported that host Bill O’Reilly and 21st Century Fox had paid out $13 million to five women in exchange for their silence on allegation­s of sexual harassment. According to the story, those claims included “lewd comments, unwanted advances and phone calls in which it sounded as if Mr. O’Reilly was masturbati­ng.”

O’Reilly insisted that none of the accusation­s were true, but after the news broke, high-profile advertiser­s began pulling their spots from “The O’Reilly Factor,” the National Organizati­on for Women and other groups called for Fox News to fire its top-rated anchor, and people began tuning in to the show to watch what the famously bellicose host would say.

Instead, they saw what

they always see on Fox News: an older man in drab office attire sharing the screen with beautiful, younger women in figure-revealing outfits and low necklines.

The O’Reilly scandal is just the latest developmen­t in the queasy revelation­s of Fox News as a predatory environmen­t; in July, chief executive and founder Roger Ailes resigned in a hail of sexual harassment suits and allegation­s, some of which have been settled while other new ones have been filed.

For months after, female employees and former employees came forward to describe a workplace that sounded more like the early grope-happy days of “Mad Men’s” Sterling Cooper than a modern media institutio­n. A place where women were pressured to look a certain way — high heels, lots of makeup, short skirts.

“Fox News masquerade­s as a defender of traditiona­l family values, but behind the scenes, it operates like a sexfueled, Playboy Mansionlik­e cult, steeped in intimidati­on, indecency, and misogyny,” declared a lawsuit filed by Fox anchor Andrea Tantaros alleging sexual harassment by Ailes and others.

Now it appears that O’Reilly also may have been very much a part of that behind-the-scenes culture.

But you don’t need access to the soundstage­s and hallways of Fox News to see that culture at work.

The on-air dynamic of an older, not necessaril­y attractive, male authority figure and his lovely female guest is such a trademark of Fox News that the network probably couldn’t be expected to recognize how bad it looked as yet another sexual harassment scandal unfurled.

And it isn’t just “The O’Reilly Factor.” Compared with CNN and MSNBC, most of Fox News network’s female reporters, anchors and hosts are discernibl­y more dolled up than their competitor­s. Though other networks are also fond of the older male/younger female pairing, women on Fox News are invariably more overtly, and uniformly, styled.

It’s an antiquated vision of the working woman: She can bring home the bacon as long as she never lets him forget he’s a man.

But it’s a high-wire walk not every women is willing to take, especially in those heels. The network’s toprated female anchor, Megyn Kelly, left Fox News for NBC earlier this year after she alleged in her memoir that Ailes made unwanted sexual advances toward her.

Greta Van Susteren also left the network after Ailes’ departure; her refreshing­ly unremarkab­le hairstyle and pantsuits can no longer be used as a shining example of progress at the network.

The dangerousl­y retro culture of Fox News is increasing­ly represente­d outside the studio doors. President Trump, who appears to gain much of his intel from network programmin­g such as “Hannity,” asked that his female White House staffers “dress like women” shortly after he was sworn in.

Vice President Mike Pence has said that he never dines alone with women who are not his wife, nor does he attend functions without his wife if alcohol is being served.

Never mind that the reality of a working American in 2017, or even 1987, ensures that men and women will be alone, near food, at some point during the day. Or maybe not if you work on the Hill. Among Congress’ 535 voting members, only 26 are Republican women.

The president defended O’Reilly on Wednesday from the Oval Office, saying he believed that the Fox News host had done nothing wrong and that he should not have settled with his accusers. No one knows better than Trump that, even if you’re caught on tape bragging about sexually assaulting women, it can be spun six different ways if Fox News is in your corner.

Which also makes O’Reilly a perilous foe.

According to his new book, “Old School,” O’Reilly sees himself as a crusader against all that is PC, a nononsense guy who pushes against the liberal agenda of lefty “snowflakes.” He longs for a simpler time in America (a time too when you could count the number of national female news anchors on two fingers).

Conservati­ve ideals are under attack, he says, and as MacMillan Publishers’ Web page for “Old School” notes: “This book will explain the looming confrontat­ion so even the ladies on The View can understand it.”

But the snowflakes may already be winning. For three weeks in a row, and the first time ever, MSNBC’s “The Rachel Maddow Show” has outperform­ed O’Reilly in the 25- to 54-year-old demographi­c. And she’s done it without a tie or bright lip gloss.

 ?? Andy Kropa AP ?? FOX NEWS’ Bill O’Reilly denies sexual harassment allegation­s.
Andy Kropa AP FOX NEWS’ Bill O’Reilly denies sexual harassment allegation­s.

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