The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

FOX NEWS CO-PRESIDENT BILL SHINE IS OUT

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NEW YORK — Fox News Channel said Monday that co-president Bill Shine is out, the latest high-level departure at a network beset with charges of harassment and discrimina­tion that have already claimed founding CEO Roger Ailes, leading personalit­y Bill O’Reilly and a top financial executive. Shine was not accused of any direct wrongdoing. But the longtime Ailes lieutenant was considered vulnerable because of claims that he looked the other way as charges of toxic workplace behavior piled up, with some believing that the network would never truly be able to move on without him and other Ailes loyalists. His leadership experience learned at Ailes’ feet was considered invaluable for the top-rated cable network, and Shine had been named co-president with Jack Abernethy upon Ailes’ departure. Abernethy, who has spent much of his time at Fox working with Fox-owned broadcast stations and not the news channel, remains. Fox also said that it was promoting two other executives, Suzanne Scott and Jay Wallace, into more prominent newsroom roles. In a memo to Fox News staffers, Rupert Murdoch, executive chairman of parent company 21st Century Fox, said“sadly, Bill Shine resigned today. I know Bill was respected and liked by everybody at Fox News. We will all miss him.” “Fox News continues to break both viewing and revenue records, for which I thank you all,” Murdoch wrote. “I am sure we can do even better.” When New York magazine wrote last week that Shine was possibly in danger, it prompted Fox’s Sean Hannity to leap to his defense on Twitter. Shine began working at Fox with Hannity, whose show is the only remaining prime-time program of Fox’s long-running powerhouse prime-time lineup following O’Reilly’s firing and Megyn Kelly’s departure to NBC News. If Shine was leaving,“that’s the total end of the FNC as we know it. Done,” Hannity tweeted last week. He had no immediate reaction on Monday.

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