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Factor producer calls controversy over O’Reilly mocking gay-inclusive McDonald’s ad “silly”

June 04, 2010 4:53 pm ET by Karl Frisch

Late yesterday evening, the New York Daily News’ Fred Dreier reported on the controversy surrounding Fox News’ Bill O’Reilly asking, "Do they have an al-Qaeda ad?" during an O’Reilly Factor discussion of a gay-inclusive McDonald's ad.

Dreier managed to get Factor senior executive producer on the record defending his boss:

David Tabacoff, the senior executive producer for The O'Reilly Factor hit back: "This is a very silly controversy. The quote was taken totally out of context."

"If you look at the full segment and think he's actually equating gays with Al Qaeda, you must be crazy."

"By seizing on a handful of words, they have made a really ridiculous argument."

Tabacoff is off his rocker. Watch the video for yourself:

Perhaps Tabacoff should watch the video again for himself.  The context speaks for itself. O’Reilly was talking about a French McDonald’s ad aimed at the LGBT community and after saying it would never run in the U.S. he asked if McDonald's had one prepared for al-Qaeda as well. How can anyone come to a different conclusion than the one reached by several LGBT advocacy groups that O’Reilly was equating gays with terrorists?

Given O’Reilly’s long history of advancing homophobic misinformation about the LGBT community and related issues, I’m not surprised by the reaction of those critical of his latest comments.

Previously:

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    • Author by shaggles (June 04, 2010 6:24 pm ET)
      2  
      I might actually give BillO a pass on this one (if he apologizes.) I don't think he meant to compare gays to terrorists. I think he's sees the ad as political correctness run amouck and the al-Qaeda remark was just taking it to the furthest extreme he could think of. That doesn't mean he shouldn't apologize. At the very least he expressed himself poorly. But then that's all part of that anti-political correctness stance the tough guys like to take. Never apologize, never back down.
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      • Author by Dradeeus (June 04, 2010 10:28 pm ET)
        1  
        I'd agree with you, but I also would agree with people who claim that the association reflects his mindset.

        Even if you take it at it's least offensive interpretation, it's still said in a "Well if we allow this, what's next?" sorta way.

        I was more offended with his guarantee that we'd never see this commercial played in America. (And not just because it's in a different language.)
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    • Author by jediknight65 (June 05, 2010 11:57 am ET)
         
      then the letterman jokes should have been viewed in the same fashion
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