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Garrison Keillor in Lenox, Massachusetts on 24 June 2016.
Garrison Keillor in Lenox, Massachusetts, on 24 June 2016. Photograph: Stephanie Zollshan/AP
Garrison Keillor in Lenox, Massachusetts, on 24 June 2016. Photograph: Stephanie Zollshan/AP

Garrison Keillor fired by Minnesota Public Radio over allegations of improper behavior

This article is more than 6 years old

Former host of A Prairie Home Companion acknowledges touching woman’s bare back but says story is ‘more complicated than the version MPR heard’

Garrison Keillor, the former host of A Prairie Home Companion, has been fired by Minnesota Public Radio over allegations of “inappropriate behavior with an individual who worked with him”, the broadcaster said on Wednesday.

Keillor told the Associated Press of his firing in an email. In a follow-up statement, he says he was fired over “a story that I think is more interesting and more complicated than the version MPR heard”.

“It’s some sort of poetic irony to be knocked off the air by a story, having told so many of them myself, but I’m 75 and don’t have any interest in arguing about this. And I cannot in conscience bring danger to a great organization I’ve worked hard for since 1969,” Keillor said.

“A person could not hope for more than what I was given,” he said.

MPR did not provide details about the allegations in its statement, but Keillor told a local Minnesota newspaper that he had been accused of touching a woman’s bare back.

“I put my hand on a woman’s bare back,” he told the Star Tribune in an email. “I meant to pat her back after she told me about her unhappiness and her shirt was open and my hand went up it about six inches. She recoiled. I apologized. I sent her an email of apology later and she replied that she had forgiven me and not to think about it. We were friends. We continued to be friendly right up until her lawyer called.”

MPR said that it had been notified of the allegation last month, and that it had retained an outside law firm to conduct an investigation, which continues.

Keillor created and hosted the folksy radio variety program A Prairie Home Companion in 1974 and hosted it until 2016, when he turned over the reins to the musician Chris Thile. The popular program featured performances of folk music, skits, and Keillor’s storytelling about a fictionalized Minnesota town called Lake Wobegon.

MPR will terminate its contracts with Keillor and his media companies, stop rebroadcasting Keillor-hosted episodes of A Prairie Home Companion, and change the name of the show’s current iteration.

Keillor has also produced another radio show and podcast, The Writer’s Almanac, since 1993. MPR said it would no longer distribute or broadcast that show, which features poetry and tidbits about history.

“While we appreciate the contributions Garrison has made to MPR and to all of public radio, we believe this decision is the right thing to do and is necessary to continue to earn the trust of our audiences, employees and supporters of our public service,” the MPR president, Jon McTaggart, said in a statement.

Keillor is just the latest powerful man in media and entertainment to face career repercussions over allegations of sexual misconduct in recent months. Also on Wednesday, the longtime Today show host Matt Lauer was fired by NBC News over allegations of inappropriate sexual behavior.

Keillor weighed in on the rash of allegations and firings himself on Tuesday, when he wrote an op-ed for the Washington Post defending Al Franken, the US senator and former comedian who has been accused of sexual misconduct by several women.

Leeann Tweeden, a Los Angeles-based news anchor, shared a photograph of Franken appearing to grope her breasts while she slept in a plane following a USO tour performing for troops. Tweeden also alleged that Franken had forcibly kissed her without consent during rehearsals for a skit.

Keillor compared Franken’s “broad comedy” to Shakespeare, Bob Hope and Joey Heatherton, adding: “On the flight home, in a spirit of low comedy, Al ogled Miss Tweeden and pretended to grab her and a picture was taken. Eleven years later, a talkshow host in LA, she goes public, and there is talk of resignation. This is pure absurdity, and the atrocity it leads to is a code of public deadliness.”

The public radio world has seen a number of high-profile resignations or firings in recent weeks. National Public Radio’s senior vice-president for news, Michael Oreskes, was forced out on 1 November over allegations of sexual harassment from multiple women. On Tuesday, NPR’s chief news editor, David Sweeney, departed the company amid allegations of sexual harassment.

In an email to MPR after the firing, Keillor suggested that two women had made allegations and said, “I think the country is in the grip of a mania – the whole Franken business is an absurdity – and I wish someone who resist it [sic], but I expect MPR to look out for itself, and meanwhile I feel awfully lucky to have hung on for so long.”

  • This article was amended on 29 November 2017. An earlier version said Al Franken was groping, rather than appearing to grope, Leann Tweeden’s breasts in a photo.

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