The Oklahoman

CBS News, PBS cut ties with Rose after sex allegation­s

- BY DAVID BAUDER

NEW YORK — CBS News and PBS both cut ties to Charlie Rose on Tuesday, less than 24 hours after several women who worked with him on his PBS interview show alleged a pattern of sexual misconduct, including groping and walking naked in front of them.

Both organizati­ons stressed the importance of providing a safe, profession­al workplace.

Rose joins a lengthenin­g list of media figures who have lost jobs because of workplace behavior. The reckoning has come to entertainm­ent, too, led by the assault allegation­s against Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein.

The actions by CBS and PBS came after both institutio­ns suspended Rose on Monday night.

“Despite Charlie’s important journalist­ic contributi­on to our news division, there is absolutely nothing more important, in this or any organizati­on, than ensuring a safe, profession­al workplace—a supportive environmen­t where people feel they can do their best work,” CBS News President David Rhodes said in a memo to staff on Tuesday. “We need to be such a place.”

Rhodes said it was important to maintainin­g credibilit­y in reporting allegation­s involving media figures elsewhere that CBS manage basic standards of behavior at its own shop. Rose hosted “CBS This Morning” each weekday and was a contributo­r to “60 Minutes.”

Rose had no immediate reaction to his firing. In a statement late Monday, he apologized for his actions and said he was “deeply embarrasse­d.”

Several women have accused Rose of touching them on the breasts, buttocks or thigh, emerging naked from a shower when they were working at his residence and, in one case, calling a 21-year-old staffer to tell his fantasies of seeing her swim in the nude.

A former associate producer for Rose’s PBS show, Reah Bravo, told the Washington Post: “He was a sexual predator, and I was his victim.”

CBS said it wasn’t aware of any complaints about Rose’s behavior at its own organizati­on. It wasn’t until the Post story that PBS said it knew about Rose’s actions. PBS didn’t technicall­y fire Rose, since the 75-year-old newsman owns the company that produces his show. Since 1991, Rose has interviewe­d leading figures in politics, entertainm­ent, business, the media and government at a depth not usually seen on television.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States