List of on-air resignations
Appearance
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a list of on-air resignations. These are resignations in the public eye.
This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources.
On radio
[edit ]- 1960 - Norm Kraft, the farm broadcaster at WGN, resigned his position on-air to join the John F. Kennedy presidential campaign. His successor, Orion Samuelson, would hold the position the next 60 years.[1]
- October 1967 and again in 1985 – Announcer and DJ William "Rosko" Mercer resigned on-air twice: first from WOR-FM in New York City in October 1967 over the station's employment of radio consultants; and then again in 1985, when he left WKTU-FM in Lake Success, New York, while on the air, again over a dispute with the station management.
- April 24, 1972 - Jim Santella, evening host at WPHD-FM in Buffalo, New York, resigned in response to corporate criticism of his long, conversational interludes and a major cut to his music library as the station shifted from underground to album-oriented rock.[2]
- November, 1991 – Terry Durney became the first radio presenter in the United Kingdom to resign live on-air. He presented the weekend request programme on BBC Radio Lancashire. He cited the reason as the station's new management team who were making the station a more "speech and sport" broadcaster.[3]
- August 8, 1993 – Dave Lee Travis, BBC Radio 1 DJ resigned on-air, citing "There are changes being made at the station that go against my principles" in reference to Matthew Bannister's plans for the station.[4]
- September 24, 2001 – Rugby player Mal Meninga's attempted political career lasted a mere 28 seconds. Becoming fazed in his first radio interview announcing his entrance into the 2001 Australian Capital Territory election, he resigned as a candidate on-air shortly after the broadcast commenced.
- January, 2001 – Juan González, a journalist from the Pacifica Radio Network, announced his resignation whilst co-hosting Democracy Now! , in protest over "harassment and muzzling of free speech."[5] [6] González has frequently returned to the program since then.
- August, 2006 – Inetta Hinton, a presenter on WBLX-FM in Mobile, Alabama, resigned on-air with the phrase "I quit this bitch."[7]
- November, 2006 – Bob "The Blade" Robinson, a presenter on WRDU in Knightdale, North Carolina, resigned on the air after Clear Channel Communications switched the format of the station he was on for 22 years from rock to country. He played "The Song Is Over" by The Who and then left after the song was cut off.[8]
- February, 2008 – Lucas Campbell, a presenter of "Rock of Ages" on Chorley FM, resigned on-air after station chiefs decided to shift the show to a later slot.[9]
- February 9, 2014 – Dublin, Ireland 2FM presenter and former station boss John Clarke quit his daytime Sunday show in dramatic fashion, telling listeners he was "reading the signs" and implying he was leaving the programme before he was forced out.[10]
On television
[edit ]- February 10, 1960 – Host Jack Paar announced his resignation from The Tonight Show and walked off during mid-broadcast, after discovering NBC had censored a joke.[11] [12] Paar returned one month later.
- July, 1997 – Alan Towers resigned from UK regional news programme BBC Midlands Today, telling viewers the BBC was "led by pygmies in grey suits wearing blindfolds."[13]
- November, 2012 – Cindy Michaels and Tony Consiglio, anchors from ABC affiliate WVII-TV in Bangor, Maine, resigned on-air, citing "some recent developments (that) have come to our attention."[14]
- February, 2014 – Liz Wahl resigned from RT America on-air to protest the network's coverage of Russia's annexation of Crimea.[15]
- September 21, 2014 – Charlo Greene, a reporter from CBS affiliate KTVA in Anchorage, Alaska, declared herself as the president of the medical cannabis organization Alaska Cannabis Club, which campaigned successfully for the legalization of the drug in the state via a November 2014 referendum. She ended the outro with a profane statement, resigned on-air and walked off the set.[16]
- October 19, 2019 – Shepard Smith, an anchor for Fox News and host of the Fox Report , resigned on-air after 24 years at Fox, after frequently criticizing and being criticized by President Donald Trump.[17]
- March 2, 2020 – Chris Matthews, host of MSNBC's long-running show Hardball with Chris Matthews , abruptly retired on-air after sexual harassment allegations and controversial critiques of 2020 Democratic Party presidential primary candidates Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren.[18]
References
[edit ]- ^ Orion Samuelson oral history interview
- ^ Anderson, Dale (May 20, 1972). "Free-Form Rock Radio Is Tied By New Rules." Buffalo Evening News.
- ^ Alex Hudson (2 August 2011). "How do you have an honourable resignation?". BBC News . Retrieved 16 November 2012.
- ^ The cull of Radio 1 | BBC Radio
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2007年09月27日. Retrieved 2007年05月21日.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^ Community Radio Report – June 2001 Archived 2007年06月15日 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ American Rhetoric: Inetta the Moodsetta – On-Air Resignation from WBLX Radio in Mobile Alabama
- ^ Danny Hooley (January 29, 2008). "'Blade' returns to air". newsobserver.com. Archived from the original on October 15, 2008. Retrieved 2009年01月11日.
- ^ McCully, Gordon (21 February 2008). "Chorley FM DJ quits on air". Chorley Citizen. Retrieved 2008年06月26日.
- ^ "Former 2fm boss quits live on air, delivers withering parting shot to new regime".
- ^ TV ACRES: Censorship & Scandals – Jack Paar's Water Closet ("WC") Joke Archived 2013年02月05日 at archive.today
- ^ "Jack Paar Walks Off The Tonight Show". YouTube . 30 September 2015. Archived from the original on 2021年12月21日. Retrieved 27 August 2017.
- ^ "BBC man explains why he spoke out" . The Independent . 28 July 1997. Archived from the original on 2020年10月21日. Retrieved 19 October 2020.
- ^ "Maine News Anchors Resign Live On Air Over Station's Unethical Journalistic Practices". Archived from the original on 2021年12月21日.
- ^ "Liz Wahl, Russia Today anchor, quits her job on air". CBC News. 2014年03月06日. Archived from the original on 2014年03月07日. Retrieved 2014年03月13日.
- ^ "Alaska news anchor quits on live TV, reveals she owns cannabis club | KREM.com Spokane". Archived from the original on 2014年09月24日. Retrieved 2014年09月23日.
- ^ Paul Farhi and Sarah Ellison (2019年10月19日). "Shepard Smith, Fox News veteran anchor and frequent Trump target, abruptly resigns from the network". Washington Post. Retrieved 2020年03月02日.
- ^ Grynbaum, Michael M. (2020年03月02日). "Chris Matthews Out at MSNBC". New York Times. Retrieved 2020年03月02日.