National News

St. Louis TV Commentator Resigns After Threatening David Hogg

A conservative commentator in the St. Louis area has lost his television and radio shows after saying on Twitter that he was preparing to use a “hot poker” to assault a survivor of the Parkland, Florida, school shooting.

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By
NIRAJ CHOKSHI
, New York Times

A conservative commentator in the St. Louis area has lost his television and radio shows after saying on Twitter that he was preparing to use a “hot poker” to assault a survivor of the Parkland, Florida, school shooting.

In the crude tweet, Jamie Allman, the commentator, said that he was “hanging out getting ready” to assault David Hogg, one of the outspoken survivors of the shooting in which 17 people were killed. “Busy working; preparing,” Allman added. (Allman has since made his Twitter account private.)

Allman had shows on KDNL, an ABC-affiliated television station owned by the Sinclair Broadcast Group, and KFTK-FM, a radio station owned by Entercom Communications.

“We have accepted Mr. Allman’s resignation and his show has been canceled,” Ronn Torossian, an outside spokesman for Sinclair, said by email. A spokeswoman for Entercom said that the broadcaster and Allman had parted ways. He had been with the radio station for about 12 years, she said.

Torossian, chief executive of the public relations firm 5WPR, would not say when Allman tendered his resignation, which was reported by other publications Monday. Allman’s relationship with the radio station was severed Tuesday.

The controversy comes as Sinclair, the country’s largest broadcaster, faces accusations of advancing a right-leaning agenda, fueled recently by widely shared videos of anchors at dozens of stations reciting the same script about bias in the media.

Those videos also reignited a debate over Sinclair’s size and its prolonged battle to complete a $3.9 billion blockbuster merger with Tribune Media.

Allman’s tweet, which was posted more than two weeks ago, became the focus of a campaign to pressure advertisers to drop his show, “The Allman Report.” Late last week, a health care provider, a real estate company and a steakhouse announced that they had withdrawn from the program.

That campaign was reminiscent of a similar and successful effort aimed at Fox News host Laura Ingraham after she accused Hogg, a high school senior, of complaining about being rejected from some colleges.

Hogg weighed in on the controversy over Allman’s comment on Twitter on Monday night, suggesting that he found it to be a distraction from the debate over gun violence.

A Twitter account for Allman’s television show was taken down Tuesday and his personal account is now private, meaning only those he approves can read what he shares on the social network.

Allman could not be reached for comment.

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