Don Lemon fires back on â15-year-old gossipâ after report alleging misogyny, rule-flouting
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Don Lemonâs team is firing back at a report alleging that the CNN anchor has a history of misogynistic actions, âdiva-like behaviorâ and more on the job, labeling those claims as âpatently false anecdotes.â
The veteran news anchor was the subject of a scathing Wednesday report by Variety, which said it had compiled accounts from more than a dozen of Lemonâs former and current colleagues who âpainted a picture of a journalist who flouted rules and cozied up to power all while displaying open hostility to many female co-workers.â
The report also alleged that the 57-year-old newsman, who has survived CNNâs regime changes, repeatedly charmed his way âout of facing any meaningful consequences.â
The prominent anchor on Monday announced that he has been fired from the cable news network. He got into hot water after making remarks about Republican presidential hopeful Nikki Haley.
But a representative for Lemon objected to those ârecklessâ characterizations shortly after the report was published.
âThe story, which is riddled with patently false anecdotes and no concrete evidence, is entirely based on unsourced, unsubstantiated, 15-year-old anonymous gossip,â the representative said Wednesday in a statement to The Times.
âItâs amazing and disappointing that Variety would be so reckless,â the rep added.
The statement comes on the heels of Lemonâs brief February hiatus following sexist remarks he made on air about former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, a 51-year-old Republican presidential hopeful whom he said was past âher prime.â Lemon returned to âCNN This Morningâ days later after the cable news network said he would undergo âformal trainingâ from CNNâs parent company, Warner Bros. Discovery.
The CNN anchor, who will return to the air Wednesday after making offensive comments about women, will enter a sensitivity training program.
The former âDon Lemon Tonightâ host was trying to critique ageism tied to Haleyâs statements that political leaders older than 75 should be required to undergo competency testing, but his remarks â which conflated data about a womanâs supposed sexual prime â created an uproar among CNNâs female employees, including his co-anchors.
That led to a Twitter apology from the anchor but no on-air acknowledgment of his mistake. Many colleagues privately called for Lemonâs ouster, and there were questions about how Lemon survived the networkâs major regime change last year, Variety reported. This after CNN fired a colleague of Lemonâs, former anchor Chris Cuomo, for advising his brother, former New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who was facing sexual harassment allegations.
The Variety report alleged that Lemon, whose star rose as he publicly took on then-President Trump, treated women in a troubling manner and engaged in unprofessional or volatile behavior. Most of the specific allegations were denied by a CNN spokesperson who was quoted throughout the piece.
Don Lemon apologized to CNN staff over a phone call for his on-air comments about women being in their âprime.â âIâm sorry that I said it,â the host said.
The publication included a story alleging that Lemon, who is Black, got upset when then-colleague Soledad OâBrien landed hosting duties for the networkâs high-profile âBlack in Americaâ docuseries, which launched in 2008. Lemon, the trade outlet alleged, suggested on an editorial call with roughly 30 staffers that his Afro-Cuban colleague wasnât Black.
âDon has long had a habit of saying idiotic and inaccurate things, so it sounds pretty on brand for him,â OâBrien told Variety about the alleged remarks, which were attributed to two witnesses who heard the call.
The CNN spokesperson told Variety that Lemon denied making any âderogatoryâ remarks about OâBrienâs heritage.
The spokesperson also denied allegations of hostile behavior by Lemon â including allegedly sending threatening, anonymous text messages â toward his âLive Fromâ co-anchor Kyra Phillips in 2008. At the time, Lemon was abruptly pulled from the show and moved to weekends. Phillips declined to comment in the Variety story.
Times staff writer Stephen Battaglio contributed to this report.
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