The Mercury News

Cuomo wants $125M for his firing from CNN

- By David Bauder

Chris Cuomo wants an arbitrator to award him $125 million for his firing from CNN, alleging his bosses knew full well how he advised his brother, former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, and suggested they did the same themselves.

His filing seeking arbitratio­n on Wednesday exposed more ugliness at the network, where Cuomo, CNN chief Jeff Zucker and his top deputy, Allison Gollust, have all been ousted in the past three months.

Zucker fired Cuomo, host of the network's most popular prime time show, in December after a New York Attorney General's report publicly revealed new details about how he helped his brother strategize to fight sexual harassment allegation­s.

“It should be obvious by now that Chris Cuomo did not lie to CNN about helping his brother,” said his lawyer, Bryan Freedman. “In fact, as the limited informatio­n released from Warner Media's investigat­ion makes clear, CNN's highest-level executives not only knew about Chris' involvemen­t in helping his brother but also actively assisted the governor, both through Chris and directly themselves.”

There was no comment Wednesday from a representa­tive for Zucker and Gollust. The spokeswoma­n, Risa Heller, has denied in the past that Gollust, a former press aide to Gov. Cuomo, offered advice or counsel to the governor while she worked at CNN.

CNN declined comment on the filing.

During the height of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, Chris Cuomo interviewe­d his big brother on CNN nine times — a temporary lift of the network's policy that Chris Cuomo not participat­e in stories concerning the governor.

In his filing Wednesday, Chris Cuomo said CNN leadership demanded the interviews even though he and his brother had expressed reservatio­ns about them.

He said that Zucker and Gollust tried to strengthen the network's ties to his brother and pushed the New York governor not to appear on other networks. He said they requested the governor hold his daily briefings at a time CNN's ratings needed a boost.

“Network standards were changed in a calculated decision to boost ratings,” Freedman said. “When those practices were called into question, Chris was made the scapegoat.”

 ?? EVAN AGOSTINI — INVISION/AP, FILE ?? Chris Cuomo on Wednesday asked an arbitrator to award him $125million for what he called his “unlawful” firing.
EVAN AGOSTINI — INVISION/AP, FILE Chris Cuomo on Wednesday asked an arbitrator to award him $125million for what he called his “unlawful” firing.

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