As the nation reckons with police targeting Black Americans in the wake of the George Floyd and Breonna Taylor killings, Sinclair Broadcast Group is giving platforms to two former Fox hosts who have made numerous previous anti-Black, pro-police remarks and who are undermining the ongoing protests.
Eric Bolling, host of Sinclair weekly news talk show America This Week, and Bill O’Reilly, host of No Spin News — which now airs on a handful of streaming platforms, including Sinclair’s streaming platform STIRR — have both called for a crackdown on the protests taking place across the country. Rather than meaningfully engage with the issue of police brutality, Bolling and O’Reilly have instead attempted to scare their audiences with fearmongering and misinformation.
Both figures have long histories of racist — and specifically anti-Black — rhetoric
O’Reilly’s and Bolling’s media careers have followed similar arcs. Both were hosts at Fox News before being forced out after reports of sexual harassment. O’Reilly left the network in 2017 after multiple sexual harassment settlements came to light, and Bolling left the same year after there were reports that he sent unsolicited images of genitalia to coworkers. Now, both hosts are using Sinclair platforms in some fashion to stage comebacks.
The two men are poor commentators on issues of race, given their lengthy history of anti-Black remarks while at Fox. A vocal supporter of birtherism, Bolling once examined President Barack Obama’s birth certificate on-air at Fox Business. The host also suggested that Rep. Maxine Waters (D-CA) “step away from the crack pipe” and once claimed that “there is no racial aspect of [police] profiling.” Bolling made headlines multiple times for trafficking in racial stereotypes when discussing the actions of Obama and other high-profile Black political leaders.
O’Reilly has also directed racist insults at Waters, once referring to her hair as a “James Brown wig,” and he also stated that slaves who built the White House were “well-fed and had decent lodgings provided by the government,” among other ignorant and racist statements.
O'Reilly has responded to the current protests by attacking Black Lives Matter
In his recent commentary on the protests, O’Reilly has downplayed systemic racism in the United States and the ways in which it plagues police forces. On June 3, O’Reilly cited an op-ed by right-wing commentator Heather Mac Donald to argue that “there is no epidemic of police hunting down Blacks and killing them. Doesn’t exist; it’s never existed,” although he acknowledged, “There are bad police officers.”
O’Reilly has also attacked Black Lives Matter, a movement he once compared to the KKK while at Fox. In an appearance on Sean Hannity’s radio show on June 3, O’Reilly claimed that celebrities who support the Black Lives Matter movement are supporting “anarchy.” O’Reilly also called on his audience to “fight back” by boycotting companies and celebrities who support the movement, and he even suggested that fans should boycott the Sacramento Kings after an announcer was forced out for tweeting “All Lives Matter.”