Finally Fox News has done the right thing and fired Bill O'Reilly (front page, April 20). However the sad truth is that Fox did not come to this decision because it agreed mistreatment of women is wrong. If it believed that, he would have been gone long ago. Fox only reached this decision when it realized that its advertisers were bailing on O'Reilly's show and that its bid for the British Sky Broadcasting Co. was in jeopardy. As a 57-year-old woman, I hope I live long enough to someday see the behavior be the reason in every organization and not wait for the money to tip the scale.
Michelle Hayden Soderberg, Plymouth
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I found the headline "Fox caves, forces out O'Reilly" offensive and insensitive. Suggesting that Fox caved in implies that it was a decision based on pressure and not on the inappropriate and unlawful behavior occurring in the Fox workplace. This story has focused from the beginning on how this situation impacts the Fox ratings and news lineup, with little attention to the impact of this kind of behavior on women in the workplace.
Kathy Capra, Minneapolis
BIAS
Coverage choices show what Star Tribune's decisionmakers favor
The front-page headline on Fox caving was not unexpected, as it is a major setback for the cable leader and is a sad commentary overall. As for the photo of O'Reilly shaking hands with the pope, the Star Tribune had to do a little digging to find that particular one. Its agenda of anti-conservative, anti- Catholic, anti-Trump continues issue after issue. Will it ever change back to only reporting?
Pierre LaFrance, Plymouth
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I am certain the editors were acutely aware of the irony of publishing a full-page ad for Ivanka Trump products on the back page of the April 20 Business section, free of charge, disguised as a news article purporting to examine the potential conflicts of interest her position in the White House creates by her ownership of the Ivanka Trump brand ("Ivanka's brand flourishes in the White House glare," April 20).
They splashed a photograph across the top of the page, three columns wide, of her and her husband sitting at a glamorous dinner with the president of China and his wife, along with pictures of her branded shoes and window displays of her branded merchandise, and they kindly list all the stores where her products can be purchased. (The so-called news article states that she was "gracious" and "charming" to her Chinese dinner mates.)
In the interest of full disclosure, perhaps the Star Tribune could tell us what a full-page ad like that would cost any other advertiser. Send the invoice to the White House.