RAW STORY
A new biography of Fox News chairman Roger Ailes alleges that he
often insulted his own on-air talent and offered at least one employee
money for sex during a contract negotiation.
The New York Times reported on Tuesday
that a section of Gabriel Sherman’s book on Ailes will deal with his
offer to producer Randi Harrison that he would pay her an extra $100 a
week “if you agree to have sex with me whenever I want.”
At the time, Ailes was an executive at NBC. Ailes later served as
president of the network’s cable spinoff CNBC before leaving in 1996 to
begin the process of launching Fox News.
Sherman’s
book also describes a 1995 incident in which Ailes allegedly insulted
to another NBC executive, David Zaslav, by using a phrase that included
the words “little Jew” and profanity, a claim backed by an independent
probe ordered by the network; Ailes’ supervisor at the time, then-NBC
CEO Bob Wright, is quoted in the book as saying, “My conclusion was that
[Ailes] probably said it.”
However, Zaslav — now the head of Discovery Communications — denied the story to the Times.
“We fought with each other and we fought with a lot of other people,” Zaslav said on Tuesday. “But this allegation is false.”
Fox News issued a similar statement on Tuesday, telling the Times,
“These charges are false. While we have not read the book, the only
reality here is that Gabe was not provided any direct access to Roger
Ailes and the book was never fact-checked with Fox News.”
But Random House, which will publish Sherman’s work on Jan. 21, defended it in a separate statement.
“We fully stand by the book,” spokeswoman Theresa Zoro was quoted as
saying. “If anyone has issues with it, we will respond with the facts as
Gabe Sherman has reported them.”
For his part, Sherman told the Times
via email that he wrote the 560-page book — including 100 pages devoted
to a bibliography and source notes — “to shed light on the full scope
of [Ailes'] talents and power.” Sherman reportedly interviewed 614
people during his reporting.
The book will also reportedly cover Ailes’ habit of insulting hosts
like Bill O’Reilly (“a book salesman with a TV show”) and Brian Kilmeade
(“a soccer coach from Long Island”) in private, and his 2012
declaration to network executives that “I want to elect the next
president.”
No comments:
Post a Comment