Son of Fox News host Eric Bolling dies just one day after his father was fired

It's terribly tragic and a weird coincidence if it's unrelated.

hmmm lets see


the young man kills himself a few hours after his dad is fired for trying to fuck the staff at work.



It likley pushed a troubled mind over the edge


not even my Dad is a good person.
 
Eric Chase, 19, the son of fired Fox News host Eric Bolling, died on Friday, it was reported on Saturday
Longtime Fox News Bolling, 54, agreed to leave the network after network launched investigation into claims of sexual harassment
At least two women at Fox Business Network and one woman from Fox News all accuse Bolling of sending them a photo of male genitalia via text message
The women all claim they did not solicit the messages from Bolling, who has been married to his wife since 1997
Network has canceled his new show, The Specialists, which premiered in May
Fox News said: 'We thank Eric for his ten years of service to our loyal viewers and wish him the best of luck'
After the allegations emerged he had tweeted: 'I will continue to fight against these false smear attacks! THANK YOU FOR CONTINUED SUPPORT'



Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...-dies-one-day-father-fired.html#ixzz4sD2iMn7R
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Sad tragedy; the kid was just getting started.

So what's everyone's thoughts on the harassment piece of this story? Was Bolling just being a piece of shit, or was it more like three feminazis gunning for him? Or was it a combination of both?

so what is the total of right wing fucks at fox who hit the skids due to harrassing wowen at work
 
Yeah, it's only Fox employees who are accused of sexual harassment. :rolleyes:

A Swedish journalist reported that she was sexually harassed numerous times in her office by her supervisor and co-workers, who engaged in “touching, hugs, hello kisses too close to the mouth, nibbling! Comments on my dress, my shoes, my makeup, the way I walked and my body. Comments on whether I was pregnant or not. Requests to take pictures of me in a bikini. Downloading porn on the field computer that we all used. Degrading jokes about women.”

The same journalist reported experiencing “grunting when I was looking especially “delectable” and “comments on my sex life.”

One British journalist described a range of incidents spanning several decades, beginning with an incident where she was called to an office as a young journalist and told it was because senior management wanted to gang rape her.

She said she was “sexually threatened (in my mid-twenties), sexually assaulted by my boss, demeaned, diminished, compared unfavorably to young male colleagues, offered an abortion when disclosing I was pregnant (in my early thirties). Told on resigning (in my mid-forties) that my boss “never really believed that the mothers of children should be at work in the evenings.”

The word “ongoing” was used several times by respondents to describe the harassment they faced. Another British journalist said she had been subjected to sexual harassment “most of my life,” adding “now I am over 40 it is a blessed relief to be ignored for my looks and respected for my work.”

A Tunisian reporter said that after being harassed she “even didn’t trust policemen or authorities who could accuse me instead of men harassing me.”

Others said they were implicitly or explicitly discouraged from reporting harassment, as with a crime reporter who was repeatedly harassed by a police officer. When she approached her editor about the officer’s behavior, she was told “he does that to everyone” and urged to ignore it.

Several respondents noted a climate of impunity toward sexual harassment, where those being harassed are ignored. A Russian journalist said that sexual harassment in newsrooms is “familiar and considered normal. Only rape and causing serious bodily harm are considered an occasion to refer to the authorities.”

Some said their organizations had insufficient internal mechanisms for handling sexual harassment reporting. They noted a hierarchical newsroom structure in which the bosses and editors who were perpetrating the harassment were those to whom one would report an incident.

A correspondent from India said, “I didn’t know who I could complain to. We didn’t have HR or any kind of grievance redress system.”

Similarly, a Canadian journalist working overseas wrote: “There was no official or authority to whom I could report. My employer, on another continent was not in a position to do anything about it.”

Some consequences included escalated harassment or job loss, as with an Australian respondent who reported harassment to her station manager, and was told “if I couldn’t stand the heat, I should get out of the kitchen.” She was soon fired and sent a harassing letter by the same manager.

Those who did report sexual harassment were asked “what was the outcome” Responses indicated mostly negative effects, from being disregarded to losing assignments or, in a few cases, being fired.

Other respondents said they faced similar experiences and were discouraged from talking about the harassment by supervisors, colleagues and in some cases union representatives.

Several said they were told to “grow up” or “forget it.”

Another said her editor was sensitive to her complaints, but ultimately “advised me to reject or ignore inappropriate behavior by the harasser” because “making a formal complaint could have endangered my news outlet’s access to the agency.”

Harassment by powerful sources was cited in several other examples, including a journalist in Zimbabwe who said “my boss persuaded me not to complain. Against my better judgment, I dropped it and now wonder how many other women that man went on to harass.”

A few respondents said they were taken off beats or reassigned when they complained of sexual harassment. One journalist in India said reporting harassment “only made sure you were never given plum assignments. One is expected to take it as an inevitable part of the job.”

Some respondents said they experienced positive outcomes when reporting sexual harassment. When harassment took place at work, a few women said the perpetrators were “verbally warned,” censured or fired. Others noted a lack of official response but said their colleagues were supportive.

When asked “how did your experience of being sexually harassed affect you?” many respondents said the harassment had psychological consequences.

Dozens of respondents cited emotional or psychological effects. Others said they blamed themselves for the treatment.

A Spanish journalist said “I kind of tried to forget about it and moved on but ended up in psychological therapy years later, as I suffered from really bad self-esteem, depression, extreme fear of men and being around them.”

Some women said they quit their jobs after experiencing repeated harassment, and a few said they relocated entirely.

Respondents also said they made an effort to change their behavior around others, including not making eye contact, not attending work social functions (when harassment occurred in the workplace) and not forming friendships with anyone related to work. Several women said they have modified the way they dress for work, or make an effort to present themselves as personally conservative.

An Israeli respondent who reported being harassed by interviewees said she became “colder and more critical, more distant, during my interviews.”

Many women said they were able to ignore sexual harassment. A correspondent from the Falklands said, “It doesn’t bother me too much although I do feel a bit nauseated sometimes.”



Who knew Roger Ailes influence was so pervasive? :dunno:

https://www.iwmf.org/blog/2014/03/07/sexual-harassment/
 
I wonder if the young man died of a broken heart. I have almost died from that before. more than once. this world sucks. the young man is better off and justice is done... I got good news: "this" is almost over.
 
certainly, my dear, when i perceive Fox News doing something correctly, I will mention it. To your kind everything is political, even a young mans death.
 
certainly, my dear, when i perceive Fox News doing something correctly, I will mention it. To your kind everything is political, even a young mans death.

Ironic. This forum and social media is littered with "your kind" making hurricanes political and has been for at least a week.
 
New details have emerged after the son of former Fox News personality Eric Bolling died last Friday.

19-year-old Eric Chase Bolling Jr. was found dead last Friday after his father was accused of sending unwanted photos of his genitalia to three female colleagues at Fox News.

There were no suicide notes, narcotics or pill bottles found near Eric Chase Bolling.



https://www.aol.com/amp/2017/09/11/report-eric-bolling-jr-suffered-emotional-torture-before-death/


ARKANICIDE? ARKANICIDE? ARKANICIDE? ARKANICIDE? ARKANICIDE? ARKANICIDE? ARKANICIDE? ARKANICIDE? ARKANICIDE? ARKANICIDE? ARKANICIDE? ARKANICIDE? ARKANICIDE? ARKANICIDE? ARKANICIDE? ARKANICIDE?
 
Could've been Arkanicide.

Maybe the unproven allegations against his father posed a threat to the Clinton crime family. :dunno:

I don't recall Huma offing herself after the allegations against DEMOCRAT Anthony Weiner were proven.

Only a completely worthless POS would politicize the death of someone's child.

Thank you for confirming what everyone suspected for some time now.
 
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