Tag Archives: roger-ailes

Kailyn Lowry: 13 Heartbreaking Details from Her New Memoir

Every single one of the ladies on Teen Mom and Teen Mom 2 have gone through hard times — that's kind of the whole point of the show — but Kailyn Lowry has had more than her fair share of struggles. Kailyn's been open about the things she's been through on the show, but in her new memoir, Heart & Hustle, she gets real personal about it all. Check out the most heartbreaking tidbits below. 1. She came from a broken home. “It sure as hell seemed like my own parents couldn’t muster up any love to send my way. My own parents!” 2. Her parents never taught her how to love. “If I couldn’t look to them for an example of what it means to be loved, how could I imagine what it was like? If my parents couldn’t love me, how could I be sure anyone would?” 3. She feels like her mom didn’t love her enough. “Not enough to numb the embarrassment when she showed up at my elementary school reeking of Jack Daniels. Not enough to dull my hurt and anger when she disappeared and left me on my own for long, long stretches of time. By the time I was a teenager, no one had to tell me to follow my heart.” 4. Her mother was an alcoholic. “The best of my mom’s love went into the bottles she drowned herself in day in and day out. The love that should have been mine went into bottles and empty cans that were tossed in the trash and carried away. I was left with whatever spilled, and it wasn’t enough.” 5. She had a rough childhood. “I acted up in school, smoked too much weed, had sex too young—the list goes on.” 6. She still tried to be a good daughter. “No one can ever say I didn’t try to have a relationship with my mother. I spent the most vulnerable years of my childhood working to hide her drinking from teachers, classmates and neighbors while trying to earn her love.” View Slideshow

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Kailyn Lowry: 13 Heartbreaking Details from Her New Memoir

Megyn Kelly Details Roger Ailes Harassment: He Tried to Kiss Me, Grab Me…

Megyn Kelly has gone into detail over allegations that Roger Ailes sexually harassed her on multiple occasions while he served as the Chairman of Fox News. Radar Online has obtained excerpts from Kelly’s upcoming memoir, “Settle For More,” which was updated at the last minute with passages about Kelly’s history with Ailes. And they paint the disgraced CEO in some pretty terrible light. Ailes left the company in July after former host Gretchen Carlson became the first of several women to accuse him of sexual harassment. She eventually settled her lawsuit against Fox News Corp. for many millions of dollars, with Kelly writing that she was approached over the summer to speak out in defense of her ex-boss. “I refused,” Kelly writes in her book, according to Radar. “There was no way I was going to lie to protect him.” Ailes has strong denied any type of misconduct, despite numerous Fox News employee claiming he acted in inappropriate ways toward them. Kelly is one of these employees, as reports back in July asserted that she told executives at Fox the kinds of things Ailes said to her back in the day. It all starred in the summer of 2005, Kelly now writes, just a few months after she was hired as a legal correspondent in Fox’s Washington bureau. Having “captured the attention” of Ailes, Kelly says she was often summoned to his office for meetings. “Roger began pushing the limits,” she alleges, adding in gross detail: “There was a pattern to his behavior. I would be called into Roger’s office, he would shut the door, and over the next hour or two, he would engage in a kind of cat-and-mouse game with me – veering between obviously inappropriate sexually charged comments (e.g. about the ‘very sexy bras’ I must have and how he’d like to see me in them) and legitimate professional advice.” Kelly claims that he offered to advance her career “in exchange for sexual favors.” After she rejected these offers, Ailes continued to make “physical advances” against her. In January 2006, Kelly says that Ailes “crossed a new line – trying to grab me repeatedly and kiss me on the lips.” When she pushed him away, she alleges, “he asked me an ominous question: ‘When is your contract up?’ And then, for the third time, he tried to kiss me.” After six months of this kind of behavior, Kelly reported Ailes to a supervisor. At that time, the harassment finally ended. “Crossing him was a major risk,” she writes in the book. “But what if – God forbid – he was still doing it to someone?” Therefore, Kelly called the co-chairman of 21st Century Fox, Lachlan Murdoch, and told him and the firm’s general counsel about her experiences with Ailes. Days later, the company announced it had hired an outside law firm, Paul Weiss, to investigate Ailes, with Kelly saying she cooperated fully by providing them with as many details as she could. It’s worth noting, by the way, that Fox News Corp. gave Ailes a $40 million golden parachute when he left the company. Megyn Kelly vs. Newt Gingrich And also that he’s now serving as an advisor on Donald Trump’s Presidential campaign.

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Megyn Kelly Details Roger Ailes Harassment: He Tried to Kiss Me, Grab Me…

Nike Unveils The Kobe 11 ‘Mambacurial’

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Not only did Kobe Bryant just get a day named after him by the city of Los Angeles and start a multmillion dollar company, but his Nike Kobe 11’s are getting the “Mambacurial” treatment. Since Kobe joined the swoosh just over a decade ago, he’s received his own signature sneaker every year. And lately, aside from the slew […]

Nike Unveils The Kobe 11 ‘Mambacurial’

SMH: Find Out What They Call Stacey Dash Behind Closed Doors at Fox News

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A $50 million sexual harassment case against former Fox News CEO Roger Ailes is revealing some not-so-shocking details about the behind-the-scenes culture of the conservative news network — particularly what many have long-suspected as the reason Stacey Dash was hired there. https://twitter.com/DylanByers/status/767955446724304896 Andrea Tantaros’ suit includes specific references to the former CEO’s politically incorrect behavior, including calling host Kimberly Guilfoyle a […]

SMH: Find Out What They Call Stacey Dash Behind Closed Doors at Fox News

Elisabeth Hasselbeck: Leaving The View for Fox & Friends!

In a decision both expected and yet surprising for its immediacy, Elisabeth Hasselbeck is leaving The View … effective tomorrow! According to The New York Post , the conservative host will then take a brief hiatus and premiere as a co-anchor on Fox & friends this September. “Elisabeth’s warm and engaging personality made her a star on The View,” Fox News Chairman & CEO Roger Ailes told the newspaper. “She has proven to be an excellent conversationalist and I am certain she will make a great addition to our already successful morning franchise.” Hasselbeck will join Steve Doocy and Brian Kilmead on the Fox morning program, while Gretchen Carlson will shift move to daytime. Said Barbara Walters in a statement: “When Elisabeth survived Survivor we wanted to make sure she would stay afloat. We have had 10 wonderful years with her and she will now be swimming in new waters. We will miss her and wish her everything good.” Joy Behar, meanwhile, will also exit The View this summer. Possible replacements include Brooke Shields, NeNe Leakes and Jenny McCarthy .

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Elisabeth Hasselbeck: Leaving The View for Fox & Friends!

Roger Ailes Is No Longer Sane [Crazies]

Toadlike Fox News mastermind Roger Ailes has always been thought of as an evil genius—even his detractors admire his media-savvy PR brilliance. It’s not true. In fact, he’s an isolated old man whose anger has driven him insane. More

Roger Ailes: NPR Run By ‘Nazis,’ Jon Stewart ‘Crazy’

Fox News chairman Roger Ailes called NPR executives “Nazis” and said Jon Stewart is “crazy” in the second part of his interview with The Daily Beast's Howard Kurtz. (In the first part of the interview, published on Wednesday, Ailes said that Obama's “socialism” was “too far left” for international allies, and that the president has “a different belief system than most Americans.”) Ailes spoke about NPR in the context of defending Juan Williams, who was fired from the public radio network after his comments about Muslims on Fox News. Ailes gave Williams a new, multi-million dollar contract in response to the firing. He told Kurtz that he had done so because he was “mad,” and wanted to look after Williams and his family. But he reserved his greatest anger for NPR executives: “They are, of course, Nazis. They have a kind of Nazi attitude. They are the left wing of Nazism. These guys don't want any other point of view. They don't even feel guilty using tax dollars to spout their propaganda. They are basically Air America with government funding to keep them alive.” Ailes also blasted Jon Stewart, who has made Fox News perhaps his biggest target on “The Daily Show.” “He hates conservative views,” he said. “He hates conservative thoughts. He hates conservative verbiage. He hates conservatives…he's crazy. If it wasn't polarized, he couldn't make a living. He makes a living by attacking conservatives and stirring up a liberal base against it.” added by: TimALoftis

Roger Ailes Is a Self-Loathing Liberal [Dicks]

Roger Ailes , corpulent prick and president of Fox News , has come out of the closet as a liberal who opposes the war in Afghanistan and thinks wearing lapel pins to prove that you care about something is shallow. In a 7-minute interview with the National Review Online’s Peter Robinson that was posted this morning, Ailes casually undermined the point of Fox News and acknowledged that much of what it peddles to “real Americans” in “the heartland” is just calculated rhetoric that he’s not stupid enough to actually believe. The q-and-a is a maddening parade of hypocrisy and inconsistency, and demands a close reading. We’ll start with the bit of video above, in which Ailes presents a cogent case for why it’s unreasonable to infer from the lack of a pin signifying support a given cause on a person’s lapel that the person therefore doesn’t support said cause: I meet too many people…who want people to think that they care. They wear ribbons for various charity events. I try to contribute to charity I try to help people where I can, but I don’t wear the pins. And so they assume that I don’t care. Of course I care, but I don’t think wearing the right pin makes me a caring person. I think whether I am or I’m not is in my heart. Aside from his false claim that he possesses a heart, this argument makes some sense. It’s actually quite familiar: Shortly after 9/11, particularly because as we’re talking about the Iraq war, that became a substitute for I think true patriotism, which is speaking out on issues that are of importance to our national security. I decided I won’t wear that pin on my chest, instead I’m going to try to tell the American people what I believe will make this country great, and hopefully that will be a testimony to my patriotism. That of course is Barack Obama, explaining in 2007 why he agrees with Roger Ailes , the president of Fox News, that wearing lapel pins in support of a given value is a poor substitute for actually supporting the value. Ailes is has clearly lost control over the news organization he nominally runs, though, because Fox News spent most of 2007 and 2008 wondering why doesn’t Barack Obama where an American flag on his lapel???? If only Ailes had taken the time to explain it to them. We think he’d have a hard time, though, explaining his nuanced opposition to the war in Afghanistan, which he likens to his opposition to Lyndon Johnson’s “surge” in Vietnam: I didn’t think that escalating 400,000 more troops [was] warranted in a jungle where I didn’t know what we were going to win. It’s a little bit like Afghanistan right now. Now I understand the nuclear issue, but there is a problem—when you send people into war, you have to tell them what they’re trying to win. Aside from his reference to “the nuclear issue,” which is utterly unrelated to Obama’s stated goal of waging war in Afghanistan to wipe out the Taliban and Al Qaeda, Ailes’ analysis is essentially identical to Arianna Huffington’s—we are escalating a war that we cannot win because there’s no definition of winning—and diametrically opposed to virtually every utterance on the subject of Afghanistan that his network has ever broadcast. But it’s OK—Ailes’ reasonable and nuanced views on matters of important public debate don’t have to align with the radically oversimplified and barely veiled political attacks he issues every day. He knows his audience, and he knows that they want straight-sounding talk about America without all the talking and chitter-chatter and thinking that goes on on the coasts. He may have escaped from the desperate heartland of Warren, Ohio, and he may be educated and intelligent enough to hold complicated views, but he’s still one of them: I don’t see myself at the Beverly Wilshire hotel or at Le Cirque here in New York. Those are people who aspire to different things—the chattering class. Ailes doesn’t see himself at Le Cirque in the same sense in which he hasn’t seen his own dick in 30 years. It doesn’t mean it’s not there. New York magazine saw him at Le Cirque , and palling around with Elle columnists—if being a columnist for Elle doesn’t certify you as member of the chattering class, nothing does—back in 1997: That’s what Ailes and his allies mean when they always say liberals “just don’t get it” when it comes to Fox News. It’s just a joke. Getting angry at Ailes for operating a political war-room with the implicit aim of deceiving the same “real Americans” they endlessly valorize is like getting pissed off at Larry David for being a Dick to Wanda Sykes on HBO. Laugh it off, kids. He’ll take you to lunch some time.

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Roger Ailes Is a Self-Loathing Liberal [Dicks]