Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Names and faces

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■ Radio and T V host Tavis Smiley labeled his “indefinite suspension

“a rush to judgment,” saying PBS “overreacte­d” in its investigat­ion of sexual misconduct claims against Smiley. “If having a consensual relationsh­ip with a colleague years ago is the stuff that leads to this kind of public humiliatio­n and personal destructio­n, heaven help us,” Smiley said in a social media post. “This has gone too far. And, I, for one, intend to fight back.” He said PBS didn’t identify his accusers, refused to talk to his staff and failed to let him defend himself “against allegation­s from unknown sources.” On Wednesday, the Public Broadcasti­ng Service said an independen­t investigat­ion by a law firm uncovered “multiple, credible allegation­s of conduct that is inconsiste­nt with the values and standards of PBS.” A spokesman responded to Smiley’s comment by saying “The totality of the investigat­ion, which included Mr. Smiley, revealed a pattern of multiple relationsh­ips with subordinat­es over many years.” The ouster comes weeks after PBS cut ties with anchor and talk show host Charlie Rose, citing “extremely disturbing and intolerabl­e behavior” by him toward women at his PBS talk show. He has been with PBS for 14 seasons and some 3,000 episodes.

■ Former Apprentice star Omarosa Manigault Newman denied Thursday that she was fired from her job at the White House — as she hinted that she has stories to tell about what she’s seen and heard there. In an interview on ABC’s Good Morning America, Manigault Newman also said reports that she made a scene while being escorted from the White House grounds this week are “100 percent false,” and questioned why no photos or video of the alleged ruckus had surfaced. She said she resigned after a conversati­on with White House Chief of Staff John Kelly about some of her concerns. Her White House pass has been cut off, according to the Secret Service, although she will remain on the staff through the administra­tion’s oneyear mark. She also denied reports that she tried to enter the White House residence to see President Donald Trump, calling those reports “ridiculous” and “absurd.” The outgoing presidenti­al adviser who once was a contestant on the first season of The Apprentice alluded to seeing and hearing things during her 11 months in the White House that made her unhappy and uncomforta­ble.

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