Los Angeles Times

CBS official backs inquiry

TV entertainm­ent chief Kelly Kahl also defends his division’s ‘safe workplace.’

- By Stephen Battaglio and Meg James

Amid Moonves allegation­s, TV entertainm­ent chief Kelly Kahl defends his “safe workplace.”

CBS’ TV entertainm­ent chief went on the defensive Sunday in response to explosive allegation­s of sexual harassment that have roiled the company and threatened to end the reign of his longtime boss Leslie Moonves.

Kelly Kahl expressed support for the investigat­ion into sexual harassment allegation­s against Moonves, chief executive and chairman of CBS Corp. But Kahl also said there was no systemic problem with harassment in the entertainm­ent division he has run for the last year, describing it as a “collaborat­ive, inclusive, safe workplace.”

“Leslie has been an excellent boss and a mentor for a long time,” Kahl said Sunday at the Television Critics Assn. press tour in Beverly Hills. “He put me in this job. At the same time, we must respect the voices that come forward. All allegation­s need to be and are being taken seriously.”

Kahl is the first CBS executive to speak in a public forum about the matter since the company was shaken by a New Yorker magazine report that said its chief executive allegedly harassed six

women, in several cases forcibly kissing them in incidents that mostly date to the 1980s and ’90s. The story also said management tolerated harassment and misbehavio­r at the network’s prestigiou­s newsmagazi­ne “60 Minutes.”

The report led the CBS board of directors to hire two law firms to investigat­e the allegation­s and the workplace culture at the company. Moonves, who has run CBS since 2006, remains on the job.

CBS executives had internal debates over whether Kahl should take his scheduled turn onstage at the press tour, which put him in front of a hotel ballroom full of reporters amid allegation­s that threaten to drop the curtain on Moonves’ much-heralded CBS career.

Kahl wanted the press tour to proceed as planned so that the network’s new show launches this fall will get recognized. The tour is held semiannual­ly so that networks can publicize their upcoming programs.

Kahl did not directly comment on the allegation­s but said he was “very confident that CBS Entertainm­ent is a welcome and safe home.”

He added that many female colleagues had told him they were “saddened” by reports of the allegation­s.

“They said it does not represent their experience at CBS,” he said.

Kahl was pressed on the division’s handling of Brad Kern, the executive producer of the CBS series “NCIS: New Orleans,” who remained on the program after the company’s 2016 investigat­ion of allegation­s of sexual harassment and inappropri­ate behavior on the set of his show. The results of the investigat­ion were inconclusi­ve, CBS said.

The company recently hired outside counsel to conduct another investigat­ion involving Kern after receiving further complaints about his behavior. CBS executives confirmed that Kern was suspended in June while that investigat­ion is underway.

“I believe in terms of keeping him out of the workplace during the investigat­ion, that was to be as fair and open as we could be,” Kahl said. “The investigat­ion is ongoing. I’m told we will have results soon.”

Separately, Jeff Fager, the executive producer of “60 Minutes,” is extending his vacation amid a review into the workplace culture of CBS News. Fager was scheduled to return to work on Monday.

“Having heard the investigat­ion will be wrapping up soon, Jeff has decided to stay on vacation,“CBS News said in a statement Sunday morning.

Fager came under harsh light in the New Yorker, which alleged the producer acted boorishly at afterhours work functions and allowed a culture that tolerated discrimina­tion and inappropri­ate behavior within the newsmagazi­ne he has run since 2004.

CBS earlier this past spring hired the Proskauer Rose law firm to investigat­e CBS News in the wake of allegation­s that Charlie Rose, the former PBS talk show host, “60 Minutes” correspond­ent and co-anchor of “CBS This Morning,” had acted inappropri­ately with three female assistants. The women are suing Rose and CBS News.

While CBS grapples with the crisis, the #MeToo issue — the social media movement ignited by sexual misconduct claims against exmogul Harvey Weinstein — will be popping up in the network’s scripted programs. Diane English, executive producer and creator of “Murphy Brown,” said a #MeToo-themed episode was already in the works for the revival of the sitcom.

“Murphy Brown,” which first ran on CBS from 1988 to 1998, is returning with much of its original cast, which includes star Candice Bergen. The updated series set in a TV newsroom specialize­d in topical commentary and is expected to weigh in on the Trump White House, which describes the American press as “the enemy of the people.”

English said she supports CBS’ harassment investigat­ion. But she noted that she was never subjected to harassment or inappropri­ate behavior during her associatio­n with CBS, which dates to the late 1980s.

“None of us have had any negative experience in that regard at CBS, and I go back to the Bill Paley days,” she said, referring to the network’s founding owner. “I never experience­d any kind of sexual misconduct personally or misogyny and, as far as I know, no one on the crew has.”

 ?? Chris Pizzello Invision / Associated Press ?? CBS CORP. Chairman and CEO Leslie Moonves is facing harassment allegation­s.
Chris Pizzello Invision / Associated Press CBS CORP. Chairman and CEO Leslie Moonves is facing harassment allegation­s.

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