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Bill O'Reilly Gets In Trouble With His Wiener Again

Little Red Wagon Repairman

Step in my shop and I'll fix yours too.
Who knows how true this story really is but Bill seems good for it judging by past claims and settlements against him.

https://mobile.nytimes.com/2017/01/...ddy.html/RK=0/RS=WEmNzhj8qbK2TfmeKZr6rgGBfsA-

Fox News Settled Sexual Harassment Allegations Against Bill O’Reilly, Documents Show

January 10, 2017
In the weeks after Roger Ailes was ousted as the chairman of Fox News in July, amid a sexual harassment scandal, company executives secretly struck an agreement with a longtime on-air personality who had come forward with similar accusations about the network’s top host, Bill O’Reilly.

The employee, Juliet Huddy, had said that Mr. O’Reilly pursued a sexual relationship with her in 2011, at a time he exerted significant influence over her career. When she rebuffed his advances, he tried to derail her career, according to a draft of a letter from her lawyers to Fox News that was obtained by The New York Times.

The letter includes allegations that Mr. O’Reilly had called Ms. Huddy repeatedly and that it sometimes sounded like he was masturbating. He invited her to his house on Long Island, tried to kiss her, took her to dinner and the theater, and after asking her to return a key to his hotel room, appeared at the door in his boxer shorts, according to the letter.

In exchange for her silence and agreement not to sue, she was paid a sum in the high six figures, according to people briefed on the agreement. The agreement was between Ms. Huddy and 21st Century Fox, the parent company of Fox News. The company and Mr. O’Reilly’s lawyer said her allegations were false.

In the aftermath of Mr. Ailes’s departure, executives declared that such behavior would never again be tolerated. Mr. O’Reilly has continued to host his show on weekday nights at 8 p.m., and he published two more books.

Details about the allegations and the agreement between Ms. Huddy and 21st Century Fox are based on interviews with current and former Fox News employees, the letter written by her lawyers to the company, and three pages of a draft of the settlement agreement.

The letter was mailed anonymously in December to reporters for The Times; its authenticity was verified by several people who have been briefed on it. A person close to Ms. Huddy told The Times that she relayed accounts of Mr. O’Reilly’s unwanted advances at the time they occurred.

The website Lawnewz.com first reported the existence of the agreement Monday afternoon.

In the letter, lawyers for Ms. Huddy also said that a longtime Fox executive, Jack Abernethy, had retaliated against her professionally after she made clear that she was not interested in a personal relationship.

Representatives for Fox News and Mr. O’Reilly dismissed the allegations Monday night. “The letter contains substantial falsehoods, which both men have vehemently denied,” Irena Briganti, a spokeswoman for Fox News, said in a statement.

Speaking for Mr. O’Reilly, Fredric S. Newman, the TV host’s lawyer, said, “There is absolutely no basis for any claim of sexual harassment against Bill O’Reilly by Juliet Huddy.”

Mr. Ailes also denied the charges of sexual harassment that engulfed him and the network last summer.

Jeanne M. Christensen, a lawyer for Ms. Huddy at Wigdor L.L.P., declined to comment.

Ms. Huddy made her allegations known to Fox News in the letter her lawyers sent to the network in August. The settlement was reached on Sept. 5, at a time when the company was finalizing other agreements, including one with Gretchen Carlson, the former anchor whose sexual harassment suit forced the departure of Mr. Ailes.

The company has not reached an agreement with Andrea Tantaros, another on- air personality, after she raised similar complaints about network executives. About a month before Mr. Ailes resigned, Fox News offered Ms. Tantaros nearly $1 million for her silence and a promise not to sue the network, its executives or its employees, including Mr. O’Reilly, according to a draft of a proposed agreement. Ms. Tantaros rejected the offer and filed suit against the company in August.

Mr. O’Reilly has a towering presence at Fox News. He was close to Mr. Ailes, who ran the network with unchallenged authority, and his show generated about $180 million in advertising dollars in 2015, according to Kantar Media, the ad-tracking firm.

He was also viewed by lower-level employees and program hosts as an influential figure in the newsroom; he was the gatekeeper to airtime on his show, and his support could be crucial to advancement.

But Mr. O’Reilly had run into problems before. In 2004, a producer on his show, Andrea Mackris, sued him, asserting that he had made unwanted sexual advances and lewd comments in a series of phone calls and dinner conversations. According to the suit, Mr. O’Reilly told her on multiple occasions to buy a vibrator, called her when it sounded like he was masturbating and described various sexual fantasies.

After two weeks of sensational headlines in New York’s tabloid newspapers, Mr. O’Reilly settled for millions of dollars, according to people briefed on the agreement. Both sides said that no wrongdoing had occurred.

According to the letter related to Ms. Huddy’s case, her lawyers said that Mr. O’Reilly began sexually harassing her in 2011. She started her career at Fox News in 1998 as a reporter based in Miami and went on to co-host a syndicated morning show in New York that was canceled in 2009. In the months afterward, Ms. Huddy tried to find a landing place at the network and appeared as a guest on Mr. O’Reilly’s show.

Ms. Huddy’s father, John Huddy Sr., who was a confidant of Mr. Ailes and a consultant to Fox News, left the network in July. Her brother, John Huddy Jr., continues to work there as a correspondent based in Jerusalem.

In January 2011, Mr. O’Reilly invited Ms. Huddy to lunch near his multimillion-dollar home in Manhasset, Long Island, according to the letter. After lunch, he drove her back to his home, where he showed her every room, including his bedroom, and his collection of presidential memorabilia.

“To shock and disgust, as Ms. Huddy was saying goodbye to Mr. O’Reilly, he quickly moved in and kissed her on the lips,” the letter said. “Ms. Huddy was so taken aback and repulsed that she instinctively recoiled and actually fell to the ground. Mr. O’Reilly, looking amused, did not even help Ms. Huddy up.”

The next week, Mr. O’Reilly asked her to join him for dinner at the Harvard Club, followed by a Broadway show, according to the letter and to current and former Fox News employees.

Ms. Huddy was not interested in having a romantic relationship with Mr. O’Reilly but, the letter said, “she felt compelled to comply with Mr. O’Reilly’s request, given that he had total control over her work assignment.”

During the Broadway show, according to the letter, Mr. O’Reilly moved close to Ms. Huddy in a way that made her feel uncomfortable. He tried to hold her hand but she pulled it away. Then he dropped a key to the room at a Midtown Manhattan hotel he was staying at into her lap, and told her to meet him there after the show. He stood up and left, the letter said.

Ms. Huddy went to the hotel to return Mr. O’Reilly’s key, according to the letter. She asked him to meet her in the lobby, but he refused and asked her to join him in his room.


“Ms. Huddy declined and explained that she was not interested in Mr. O’Reilly on a personal or sexual level,” the letter said.

Mr. O’Reilly persisted and again asked that Ms. Huddy come up to his room, and she ultimately went up give him the key, according to the letter. It is not clear why she did not leave it at the front desk or simply leave.

When Mr. O’Reilly opened the door to his room, he was wearing nothing but boxer shorts, according to the letter. Ms. Huddy was “very embarrassed, handed Mr. O’Reilly his key and quickly left,” the letter said.

In the months after Mr. O’Reilly and Ms. Huddy went to the show in Manhattan, his “obsession with her only escalated,” the letter said.

Mr. O’Reilly started calling Ms. Huddy at all hours, even while he was on vacation. At times, the calls were about work, but they were sometimes “highly inappropriate and sexual,” the letter said. On some occasions, it sounded like Mr. O’Reilly was masturbating, the letter said.

“Disgusted, Ms. Huddy came up with an excuse and hung up the phone,” the letter said.

Mr. O’Reilly’s pursuit continued and Ms. Huddy tried to distance herself from him, it said. She answered and returned fewer of his calls.

“Ms. Huddy’s rejection of Mr. O’Reilly apparently did not sit well with him, as he began to retaliate against her both on and off air,” the letter said.

Mr. O’Reilly “nitpicked her work” and would “berate Ms. Huddy for minor mistakes,” according to the letter. Mr. O’Reilly stopped preparing her for segments and would surprise her with story angles that they had not discussed.

In 2013, Ms. Huddy was replaced on a segment she had on his show. Another segment that she was featured in, called “Mad as Hell,” was quickly canceled. She did not complain, fearing retaliation, she told current and former Fox News employees at the time.

The letter also included a series of accusations by Ms. Huddy against Mr. Abernethy, including that he started “trashing her” after she rejected his attempts to pursue a personal relationship. Mr. Abernethy signed a new multiyear contract with Fox News in September, after having been named co-president of the network in August. At the time, the company was aware of the allegations against Mr. Abernethy, which it has said are false.

As part of Ms. Huddy’s confidential agreement with 21st Century Fox, she agreed not to “disparage, malign or defame” the parties and the company, on its behalf and on the behalf of Mr. O’Reilly and Mr. Abernethy, agreed not to “disparage, malign or defame” Ms. Huddy.

The consequences for breaking the confidentiality of the agreement are severe, costing either side $500,000 per infringement, according to the document. Ms. Huddy is also liable if her lawyers or a person close to her discloses the terms of the agreement.

On Sept. 7, Ms. Huddy, who had hosted “Good Day Early Call” on WNYW, a Fox affiliate, went on the station and gave a tearful goodbye. “Thank you to everyone who has made the last 20 years the most challenging but best of my life,” she said. “Perhaps someday, even someday soon, you’ll see me on television again.”
 
Mr. O’Reilly started calling Ms. Huddy at all hours, even while he was on vacation. At times, the calls were about work, but they were sometimes “highly inappropriate and sexual,” the letter said. On some occasions, it sounded like Mr. O’Reilly was masturbating, the letter said.

“Disgusted, Ms. Huddy came up with an excuse and hung up the phone,” the letter said.

at which point Mr. O'Reilly would call back and say, "hold up, I'm not done yet. oh yeah."


Juliet Huddy was always a favorite of mine back in da day. I can't say I blame that old curmudgeon for having eyes for her.

She looks like Nina Kornikova:



^Talking Points wants to hit that.
 

Little Red Wagon Repairman

Step in my shop and I'll fix yours too.
Great video with content about the trouble O'Reilly got into with producer Andrea Mackris and more with Bill talking about kissing wieners and sexual intercourse with vaginas. Falafel.

 

Will E Worm

Conspiracy...
 

bobjustbob

Proud member of FreeOnes Hall Of Fame. Retired to
She was doing an early morning local Fox thing in NY till a few months ago. Perhaps she disappeared into a pizza cave.
 

xfire

New Twitter/X @cxffreeman
"Bill O'Reilly holding a wiener dog" turned up nothing in Google Image Search, nor did "Bill O'Reilly holding a dog", so I had to improvise.

troubledog.jpg
 

xfire

New Twitter/X @cxffreeman
Oh, I see. Apparently postimg.org blocks traffic from FreeOnes. pimpandhost has been acting like a dildo for the last couple of days, too.

troubledog.jpg
 

Mayhem

Banned
Fox knew of Bill O'Reilly harassment settlement before renewing contract

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/21st-c...-oreilly-settlement-before-renewing-contract/

The parent company of Fox News says it knew about a settlement over sexual harassment allegations against Bill O'Reilly by an on-air analyst before the company extended the ex-host's $25 million contract in February.

In response to a New York Times story published Saturday, 21st Century Fox says it knew of the settlement but not the monetary amount. The Times reports O'Reilly reached a settlement worth $32 million with Lis Wiehl, a longtime Fox News legal analyst. CBS News has not confirmed the amount of the settlement. O'Reilly denied doing anything improper in an interview with the Times.

Wiehl accused O'Reilly of harassment and "a nonconsensual sexual relationship," according to the Times, which cited unnamed sources briefed on the settlement. The paper reports Wiehl's attorneys sent a draft of a lawsuit to O'Reilly on Jan. 2, and the parties reached a settlement a few days later.

Fox News extended O'Reilly's contract six weeks later, boosting his pay from $18 million to $25 million.

"When the company renewed Bill O'Reilly's contract in February, it knew that a sexual harassment lawsuit had been threatened against him by Lis Wiehl, but was informed by Mr. O'Reilly that he had settled the matter personally, on financial terms that he and Ms. Wiehl had agreed were confidential and not disclosed to the company," 21 Century Fox said in a statement to CBS News on Saturday.

"His new contract, which was made at a time typical for renewals of multi-year talent contracts, added protections for the company specifically aimed at harassment, including that Mr. O'Reilly could be dismissed if the company was made aware of other allegations or if additional relevant information was obtained in a company investigation," the company said. "The company subsequently acted based on the terms of this contract."

Mark Fabiani, an attorney for O'Reilly issued a statement denouncing the Times story later Saturday.

"In its latest diatribe against Bill O'Reilly, the Times printed leaked information provided by anonymous sources that is out of context, false, defamatory, and obviously designed to embarrass Bill O'Reilly and to keep him from competing in the marketplace," he wrote.

Fabiani also released an affidavit signed by Wiehl in which she says she and O'Reilly have "resolved all our issues."

"I would no longer make the allegations contained in the draft complaint," she wrote.

O'Reilly was fired in April after settlements with multiple women over accusations of sexual harassment came to light. He had been at the network for more than 20 years.

21st Century Fox said Saturday that it had taken "concerted action" to overhaul Fox News and replace members of the network's leadership. It said it also increased "the channels through which employees can report harassment or discrimination."

"These changes come from the top, with Lachlan and James Murdoch personally leading the effort to promote civility and respect on the job, while maintaining the Company's long-held commitment to a diverse, inclusive and creative workplace," the company said.

Ah Conservatism, thy name is FOX.
 
0.jpg

Wiener goes in, Wiener goes out, you can't explain that...
 

Little Red Wagon Repairman

Step in my shop and I'll fix yours too.
Fox knew of Bill O'Reilly harassment settlement before renewing contract

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/21st-c...-oreilly-settlement-before-renewing-contract/



Ah Conservatism, thy name is FOX.

What's the deal with Lis Wiehl? A "a nonconsensual sexual relationship"? Unless we're splitting cunt hairs here isn't "a nonconsensual sexual relationship" usually considered rape? O'Reilly has denied all that he's been accused of but hasn't put much effort toward a defense. As Gorilla Monsoon used to say, "Stick a fork in him. He's done."
 
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