· Former Fox News host Bill O’Reilly settled a sex harassment claim for $32 million with a former legal analyst Lis Wiehl, according to an explosive report from The New York Times Saturday.
 · Cable news superstar Bill O’Reilly’s fall from the airwaves was years in the making (the first sexual harassment allegation was 13 years ago). But the lawyer who finally helped push the scandal...
 · Bill O’Reilly won’t be collecting $10 million from Michael Klar, the attorney who once represented ex-wife Maureen McPhilmy in a bitter divorce. The former Fox News star alleged in a lawsuit that...
 · In his claim against Mackris and her attorney, Benedict Morelli, O’Reilly said Morelli demanded $60 million in “hush money” not to proceed with her lawsuit. “As a public figure, I …
 · Mackris, then a 33-year-old Fox News producer on the cusp of a promising career, didn’t want to accept her boss Bill O’Reilly ’s offer to settle her sexual harassment lawsuit …
The former Fox News star alleged in a lawsuit that Klar had aided and abetted McPhilmy in fraudulently inducing O’Reilly to enter into a separation agreement back in 2010. According to O’Reilly, his ex-wife made misrepresentations regarding her intent to comply with the terms of the separation agreement. A New York judge allowed the case ...
Bill O’Reilly’s $10 Million Fraud Lawsuit Against Lawyer Is Tossed on Appeal. Bill O'Reilly won't be collecting $10 million from Michael Klar, the attorney who once represented the former Fox News star's ex-wife Maureen McPhilmy in a bitter divorce.
Gawker reported in 2015 that trial transcripts showed O’Reilly’s teenage daughter telling a forensic examiner that she witnessed O’Reilly “choking her mom” as he “dragged her down some stairs” by the neck, and that he struggles to control his rage.
Share this article on Pinit. Share this article on Tumblr. Bill O’Reilly won’t be collecting $10 million from Michael Klar, the attorney who once represented ex-wife Maureen McPhilmy in a bitter divorce. The former Fox News star alleged in a lawsuit that Klar had aided and abetted McPhilmy in fraudulently inducing O’Reilly to enter ...
Billie Eilish Ditches Her Blonde Hair for Brunette Tresses: 'Miss Me?'
"Even though we cleared my calendar for the day, I was still on the phone. There was no resting, you just kept on going," Tammy Duckworth says on an episode of PEOPLE's podcast Me Becoming Mom
In 2017 Bloom represented three women accusing then- Fox News anchor Bill O’Reilly of sexual harassment. Jehmu Greene, a television commentator who had appeared on Fox News, also approached Bloom with sexual harassment allegations against O'Reilly, although she ultimately declined Bloom's services. One of Bloom's clients, Wendy Walsh, filed the complaint that led Fox News' parent company, 21st Century Fox, to initiate an investigation that resulted in O'Reilly's dismissal and the end of his eponymous program.
During the 2016 U.S. presidential election, Bloom offered to represent four women who alleged sexual misconduct by then-presidential candidate Donald Trump. Two of these women came forward publicly with their allegations, including Jill Harth and Lisa Boyne, and two who did not, including a woman from Virginia and another woman who claimed Trump had raped her when she was thirteen years old.
In 2001, Bloom left her mother’s firm, having developed a career in cable news punditry, eventually serving as a legal analyst on CBS News, CNN, HLN, and MSNBC, and appearing on The Early Show, The Insider, Dr. Phil, Dr. Drew, The Situation Room, Reliable Sources, The Joy Behar Show, Issues with Jane Velez-Mitchell, and The Stephanie Miller Show. Bloom returned to practicing law in 2010 when she founded the Bloom Firm, a small, general-practice law firm that handles family, civil and criminal matters. She is licensed to practice law in both New York and California.
She is licensed to practice law in both New York and California. At the Bloom Firm, Bloom has represented several notable clients, including model and actress Janice Dickinson in her defamation case against comedian Bill Cosby, as well as model and actress Mischa Barton in her revenge porn case.
On May 1, 2020, Bloom posted on Twitter that although she believed Tara Reade was assaulted by the former vice president Joe Biden, she would still support Biden.
Kasowitz, on an upper floor of the Paramount Building boasting vertiginous views of Manhattan. Mackris, then a 33-year-old Fox News producer on the cusp of a promising career, didn’t want to accept her boss Bill O’Reilly ’s offer to settle her sexual harassment lawsuit against him for $9 million—$3 million of which would be pocketed by her legal team, Ratner and Benedict Morelli.
Today, Mackris recalls to The Daily Beast for the first time intimate and graphic details of O'Reilly’s alleged harassment, including lewd, menacing telephone calls and conversations in which she says he forced her to listen to his sexual fantasies about her. “I’m going to make you play," O’Reilly would tell Mackris. “Here was my boss, a man who held my career and future in his hands, acknowledging that he knew I’d never consented but he didn’t care,” Mackris tells The Daily Beast.
I want the world to know that the woman who was treated so badly is this extraordinary woman and she's not dead. How dare they take her success away?”
Obama famously skewered Trump in 2011 over his aggressive promotion of the racist "birther" conspiracy theory.
Shine responded that he would speak to O’Reilly, who promptly invited her to dinner. It was May 2002.
This “is as good as it gets!” New York litigator David Ratner shouted at his client, Andrea Mackris, slapping both hands on the highly polished conference table.
Mackris was among the women interviewed in The New York Times’ bombshell 2017 story revealing that O’Reilly and Fox News had settled five lawsuits against him dating back to 2002.
Mackris, who was a producer on Fox News’ “The O’Reilly Factor” at the time, sued the conservative news personality for sexual harassment in 2004 and settled in an agreement that forbade her from speaking about her experience with O’Reilly. Advertisement.
The network fired him in 2017 after the revelations in the Times led to a massive advertiser boycott.
Andrea Mackris , one of the first women to accuse ousted Fox News star Bill O’Reilly of sexual misconduct, broke her silence ― and a nondisclosure agreement ― about the ordeal for the first time in an interview with The Daily Beast on Tuesday.
Andrea Mackris and her lawyer, Benedict Morelli, in 2004. While some of Mackris’s claims were detailed in the lawsuit, many were never made public until now, including a phone call she said was “the most chilling moment of all of Bill’s multiple counts of harassment.”. Here’s how she described it to The Daily Beast:
When the courts unsealed O’Reilly’s multiple sexual harassment agreements in 2018, critics noted that Mackris’ settlement was highly unethical because it required her to lie ― even when under oath in legal proceedings ― if any evidence of O’Reilly’s harassment became public and say it was “counterfeit” or “forgeries.”.
New statement from Bill O’Reilly’s spokesman says the $32 million leak is “obviously designed” to kill his chances of getting a new TV job pic.twitter.com/GTwpICozCK. — Brian Stelter (@brianstelter) October 21, 2017. On Saturday, when the New York Times initially published the bombshell story of O’Reilly’s $32 million settlement with Wiehl mere ...
Here’s five things you need to know: 1. Fox Gave O’Reilly a $100 Million Contract Renewal Weeks After the Settlement. On Oct. 21, the New York Times was the first to break the news about O’Reilly’s $32 million sexual harassment settlement with Wiehl the previous January.
However, Wiehl’s professional relationship with O’Reilly started not on television but on the radio; Westchester mentions Wiehl’s “seven years as Bill O’Reilly’s sparring partner on the nationally syndicated “Radio Factor.”. Before working with O’Reilly and Fox, Wiehl was a legal correspondent for “All Things Considered” on NPR.
Wiehl’s is the sixth known sexual harassment settlement against O’Reilly, and far larger than all previous settlements combined: last April, when 21st Century Fox cancelled The O’Reilly Factor and fired its host, it was known that the company had paid out more than $13 million total, to settle five different sexual harassment claims brought against O’Reilly by either colleagues or guests on his show. (O’Reilly’s firing, in turn, happened in part because news of the previous five sexual harassment suits against O’Reilly inspired a mass exodus of advertisers from the show.)
O’Reilly’s January settlement, which was reached with a 15-year Fox News analyst named Lis Wiehl, as a personal issue between the two of them.
When Fox cancelled The O’Reilly Factor and fired its host in April, this showed that “The company subsequently acted based on the terms of this contract,” as reported by the Times.
O’Reilly faced sexual harassment allegations in 2004, when Andrea Mackris, a producer on his show, claimed he made inappropriate comments and sexual advances. Mackris sued, and O’Reilly reportedly settled that case for millions of dollars. Huddy, 47, is the daughter of John Huddy Sr., who the Times notes was a confidant of Roger Ailes, ...
When she left Fox, Huddy tweeted that she would be creating a website with long-form music interviews and writing a book.
Huddy began working at Fox News in 1998 as a reporter and was later a weekend host at Fox & Friends as well as a regular guest on O’Reilly’s popular show. O’Reilly allegedly made sexually charged comments to Huddy and propositioned her beginning in 2011. According to the Times, Huddy alleged that the host and author repeatedly called her, ...
The newspaper also spoke with current and former Fox News employees, who confirmed that Huddy was “paid in the high six figures” to stay silent and not file a lawsuit when she left the company in September. Huddy began working at Fox News in 1998 as a reporter and was later a weekend host at Fox & Friends as well as a regular guest on O’Reilly’s ...
Juliet Huddy and Bill O’Reilly no longer work together. (Photo: Getty Images) “Juliet Huddy’s letter of intent to sue contained substantial falsehoods which both men vehemently denied,” a Fox News spokesperson told Yahoo Celebrity.
Lisa Read Bloom (née Bray; born September 20, 1961) is an American attorney known for advising Harvey Weinstein amid various sexual abuse allegations, and for representing women whose sexual harassment claims precipitated the firing of Bill O'Reilly from Fox News.
Bloom founded and owns the Bloom Firm, a law firm that has represented clie…
Bloom was born Lisa Read Bray, the daughter of Gloria Bloom (later Allred) and father Peyton Huddleston Bray Jr. Her mother is Jewish. Her parents' marriage was short-lived—they had married and divorced while in college. Peyton Bray, who suffered from bipolar disorder, later killed himself, and Bloom subsequently took her mother's maiden name. When Bloom was seven, her mother married William C. Allred. Bloom received a bachelor's degree from UCLA, where she gra…
After graduating from law school, Bloom began her career in New York and by 1991 worked at her mother’s law firm, Allred, Maroko & Goldberg, assisting in unsuccessfully suing the Boy Scouts of America for sex discrimination on behalf of Katrina Yeaw, a girl who wanted to join the organization. While at her mother’s firm, Bloom also filed a child sexual abuse suit against the Roman Catholic Church and sued the LAPD.
Bloom married her current husband, Braden Pollock, on December 5, 2014. Pollock is the founder of Legal Brand Marketing and works as the Bloom Firm's manager. He was formerly on the board of the web services company Epik. Bloom lives with her husband and a foster son in Los Angeles. Bloom has two adult children, daughter Sarah Wong Bloom and son Samuel "Sam/Sammy" Wong, with her former husband Jim Wong, a LAUSD teacher. A vegetarian since 16, Bloom has been veg…
Bloom has written three books, including Think: Straight Talk for Women to Stay Smart in a Dumbed-Down World, from 2011, and Swagger: 10 Urgent Rules for Raising Boys in an Era of Failing Schools, Mass Joblessness, and Thug Culture, from 2012. In early 2017, The Weinstein Company and Jay-Zannounced plans to adapt Bloom's 2014 book, Suspicion Nation: The Inside Story of the Trayvon Martin Injustice and Why We Continue to Repeat It, into a six-part document…
• Official website
• Lisa Bloom at IMDb