By Michelle Malkin
Wednesday, December 20, 2017
At the close of 2017, no less than seven prominent male
hosts and editors of influential government-sponsored radio and television
shows are out of work amid claims of sexual harassment.
According to their accusers, the alleged Malevolent Seven
are powerful pervs and creeps who’ve been running wild at NPR and PBS for
decades, sponsored and subsidized by taxpayers and corporate donors.
In August, award-winning broadcast and radio host John
Hockenberry departed from his public radio program The Takeaway on New York City’s NPR affiliate, which garnered a
peak audience of nearly 3 million weekly listeners on more than 270 stations.
Female producers and interns accused him of harassment and bullying before and
after he deployed his golden parachute. Hockenberry says he’s “horrified” by
the allegations.
In October, NPR’s former editorial director and senior
vice president of news, Michael Oreskes, was ousted from his perch after
several women claimed he forcibly kissed them in the 1990s while seeking jobs
at his previous employer, the New York
Times.
That same month, NPR launched an investigation of veteran
Minnesota Public Radio host Garrison Keillor, creator of A Prairie Home Companion. The liberal icon penned a column
defending fellow sexual harassment suspect Sen. Al Franken, (D., Minn.), in
late November; the next day, NPR fired him for inappropriate behavior involving
at least one female co-worker. Keillor says the only incident he recalls
involves inadvertently slipping his hand up the bare back of a “friend.”
Also on the Thanksgiving holiday chopping block: PBS
fixture and CBS morning news star Charlie Rose, who reportedly groped, grabbed,
phone-harassed and exposed himself to upwards of eight female employees,
interns, and job applicants dating back to the 1990s.
At the end of November, NPR canned Chief News Editor
David Sweeney following an internal review after four of the public radio
network’s female employees lodged formal complaints involving unwanted kisses,
attention and gifts.
In mid-December, Boston-based Tom Ashbrook, host of NPR’s
On Point live morning show broadcast
on 290 NPR affiliates stations for the past 16 years, was suspended after young
women alleged he gave “creepy” sex talks, hugs, and back rubs in the studio.
Ashbrook says he was “stunned” to learn of the charges.
And last week, PBS suspended weeknight host Tavis Smiley,
whose interview show airs in New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, Southern
California, and nationwide — with major corporate underwriting from Walmart. He
also hosted a podcast on NPR. Smiley has waged an aggressive campaign defending
himself against his employer’s witch hunt “gone too far.”
I can’t tell you who’s lying and who’s telling the truth,
but I know with absolute certitude that all seven of these men are left-leaning
journalists and pundits encrusted in the public broadcasting establishment.
This is a golden opportunity for President Donald Trump
to drain the elitist media swamps and inject true intellectual diversity in the
newsrooms of NPR and PBS. Liberal bias at these Beltway institutions is
notorious — from NPR legal analyst Nina Totenberg wishing AIDS upon Senator
Jesse Helms and his grandchildren as “retributive justice,” to Sesame Street’s Oscar the Grouch mocking
Fox News on PBS, to top NPR executives slamming the tea party movement as
“scary” and “racist” to the undercover journalists of Project Veritas.
If pushover Republicans can’t bring themselves to fully
defund NPR and PBS, can’t they at least step up and advocate for hosts and
editors who keep their hands to themselves and refrain from insulting the
people in flyover country who keep their rackets afloat?
What better time, in the wake of liberal hypocrisy and
sexual harassment self-implosions, to bring real balance to
government-sponsored programming?
So far, the moment is being squandered. The replacements
announced for Charlie Rose on PBS are BBC correspondent Katty Kay and former
CNN anchor Christiane Amanpour.
That’s right. Two liberal British female journalists.
Come on, Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Do better,
D.C.
All things considered, we could use a little more
“America First” and a little less globaloney and groupthink from NPR and PBS. I
can think of a conservative female journalist or twelve up to the task.
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