Posted on 04/20/2017 12:16:07 PM PDT by TBP
Political pundit Kirsten Powers appeared on CNN late Wednesday to discuss Bill OReillys departure from the Fox News network amid sexual harassment claims levied against him.
Powers told CNNs Anderson Cooper that she had her own personal experience with OReilly, in which OReilly made remarks that many would have considered to be overtly sexist.
I was thinking about an incident that had happened early on in my career there where I was on-air there with Margaret Hoover, whos at CNN now, on a regular segment, we were on every Monday, Powers said. And he got Margarets name wrong, and Margaret said, Hey, get my name right, and he said, Oh, Im sorry, theres a lot of blondes in this operation, I cant keep you all straight. Megyn Kellys coming up, starts throwing all these blondes names.
And at the end of the segment, says, Thank you for your blondeness, to both of us, Powers said.
She then told Cooper that she complained to OReillys executive producer and demanded an apology, threatening to stop appearing on his show if she did not receive one. According to Powers, OReillys behavior was excused by a long list of network employees at Fox News, all the way up to former network chief Roger Ailes.
But in 2014, Powers herself was a staunch defender of OReilly after former State Department deputy spokeswoman Marie Harf accused him of being sexist, even going so far as to pen a USA Today op-ed titled, Bill OReilly is not sexist.
Sexism is a serious problem and a serious accusation. Its true there are many people who dismiss women as unserious and out of their depth not because they are, but because they are women. Bill OReilly isnt one of them, she wrote in September 2014.
I know. As a Fox News contributor, Ive worked with him for eight years, including weekly segments where we often disagree heatedly. OReilly does not discriminate when it comes to expressing tough judgments. Anyone with a passing familiarity with his work knows this, which is what makes Harfs accusation so irresponsible. Powers wrote.
Powers clearly stated that OReillys character was being assassinated because of trigger happy Democrats who purposely look for sexism in everything.
Powers did not immediately respond to a request for comment on her change in stance.
I'm old and retired, and sometimes get in a funky mood thinking about all the missed opportunities when I was young. I married young, and stayed true to my wife, never so much as kissed anyone else since marriage. The things that gals did in the workplace to entice me, and attempt to draw me in. Like place their hands in my pockets, saying they're cold, and I yank them out, because it's my pants pockets not my jacket pockets. Missed opportunities, but my relationship with my wife is intact after 46 years.
I never considered making a case of sexism against the gals in the workplace. I think when the tables are turned, in their situation they over-react against some guys flirting on them. Then there was the time a gay male supervisor made overtures towards me and I had to fend him off, I was glad he quit soon after. I could have made a case against him!
O'Reilly's comment was stupid, but when you know the context it would be hard to characterize it as serious harassment.
A lot of things are considered sexual harassment today taht wouldn’t hve been a decade or two ago.
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