Fox News Chief Executive Roger Ailes Sued by Gretchen Carlson for Sexual Harassment

Gretchen Carlson, the well anchor of the Fox Newx Channel has sued the chief executive of the network Roger Ailes for sexual harassment and in her lawsuit she has stated that she was fired from her job as an anchor because she had refused to entertain the advances. According to reports in CBS BOSTON, " Former Fox News Channel anchor Gretchen Carlson sued network chief executive Roger Ailes on Wednesday, claiming she was fired after she refused his sexual advances. Fox News representatives did not immediately return requests for comment on the lawsuit, which was filed in Superior Court in New Jersey's Bergen County.

Carlson, the former host of a daytime show at Fox, alleged Ailes had retaliated against her because of complaints she had made about discrimination and harassment. The 11-year Fox employee was anchoring a 2 p.m. show when she said she was fired on June 23 at the end of her contract."

She went on to add, "She said her firing came nine months after Ailes told her during a meeting that "you and I should have had a sexual relationship a long time ago. The 50-year-old Carlson was Miss America in 1989. She alleged in the lawsuit that Ailes, who is 76, ogled her, repeatedly commented about her legs, urged her to wear clothes that enhanced her figure and told her she was sexy but "too much hard work." Carlson said she was fired as a host of the morning show "Fox & Friends" in 2013, and her pay reduced with the transfer to a daytime slot, because she had complained about sexual harassment.She said that one of her "Fox & Friends" co-hosts, Steve Doocy, "had created a hostile work environment by regularly treating her in a sexist and condescending way." She said that when Ailes heard of her complaints, he called her a "man hater" who needed to learn to "get along with the boys. Carlson said that Ailes punished her by cutting back on political interviews that she conducted and ending a regular appearance she made on Bill O'Reilly's prime-time program, generally Fox's highest-rated show."

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