In an interview with the New York Times Monday evening,
Fox News host Bill O’Reilly personally threatened a reporter over the
paper’s coverage of the controversy surrounding O’Reilly’s claims that
he was in a war zone when he covered protests in Buenos Aires in 1982.
O’Reilly has found himself mired in a scandal after Mother Jones released a report Thursday
accusing the host of embellishing stories of his work as a
correspondent for CBS in the 1980s. Over the past few days, O’Reilly has
resorted to personal attacks and insults to defend himself as former
colleagues have come forward and confirmed that the former Inside
Edition exaggerated or outright lied about his experiences.
During the broadcast of The O’Reilly Factor
Monday night, O’Reilly aired footage that he obtained for CBS regarding
a protest in Buenos Aires that he covered for the network in 1982.
O’Reilly has long contended the protest, which occurred in the aftermath
of the end of the Falklands War, constituted a combat or war zone and
that he witnessed extreme violence, including multiple people killed.
He’s also claimed over the years that a soldier pointed a machine gun
right in his face — at times, he’s said it was multiple soldiers — and he also saved the life of an injured photographer.
On his Monday night show, he aired the clips and
stated he was totally vindicated by the video evidence. He also brought
on a former NBC bureau chief to defend him and agree that the
Argentinian protest constituted a combat zone during a time of war.
O’Reilly also said that he hoped this can all stop now and that everyone
can move on.
Of course, airing the video really did nothing to
refute any of the allegations made against O’Reilly, and while he found
one reporter who backed up his claims of being in a dangerous war zone,
there is a growing number of former CBS colleagues and other reporters who dispute his accounts. Both The Guardian and Mother Jones
pointed out Monday evening that the video clips from CBS at the time do
not back up O’Reilly’s claims that multiple people were shot and killed
during the protests, that he saved the life of a seriously injured
photographer or that he was personally threatened by a soldier. Nor does
the video evidence suggest that O’Reilly was in what can be considered a
combat zone in a war-torn country.
As stated before, the Fox commentator has used
bombastic rhetoric over the past few days as a way to discredit and
attack those who are disputing his record as a CBS correspondent.
Generally, he’s called anyone who questions his ‘war’ coverage a
“far-left zealot” (a term he used again Monday night) and has personally
attacked Mother Jones’ David Corn and former CBS colleague Eric Engberg. O’Reilly even suggested that Corn needs to be placed in the “kill zone.” He used that bullying tactic again Monday night with a Times reporter who interviewed him over the scandal.
Below is from the Times’ article:
Mr. O’Reilly’s efforts to refute the claims by Mother Jones and some former CBS News colleagues occurred both on the air and off on Monday. During a phone conversation, he told a reporter for The New York Times that there would be repercussions if he felt any of the reporter’s coverage was inappropriate. “I am coming after you with everything I have,” Mr. O’Reilly said. “You can take it as a threat.”
Times reporter Emily Steel confirmed on
Twitter late Monday evening that she was the one that O’Reilly
threatened. Even though Fox has noted that it has O’Reilly’s back during
this controversy — a far cry from how NBC reacted to the Brian Williams
fiasco — it appears that the Fox talking head is like a cornered rat
and is lashing out in irrational and despicable ways. Seriously,
threatening a reporter?
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