NEW YORK -- Disc jockey Don Imus, whose career was made and then undone by his acid tongue during a decades-long rise to radio stardom and an abrupt public plunge after a nationally broadcast racial ...
Radio personality Don Imus is back on the air, eight months after MSNBC and CBS Radio fired him for making derogatory remarks. Washington Post columnist and author Marc Fisher joins Richard Prince, ...
This is Diana Nyad for KCRW, and this is The Score. Honestly, I'm shocked. CBS has today fired their cash cow Don Imus, following NBC's decision yesterday to cut Imus loose in the wake of his hateful ...
The two men were fired because of a racist exchange about the Rutgers women’s basketball team, marring, but not ending, their shared radio success. By Ed Shanahan On the air, he was an irascible, ...
There is a predictable pattern to these things. Someone prominent—almost always a male—says something indisputably vile. And when his world explodes as a result, he belatedly begs forgiveness. Don ...
This interview was conducted over the telephone and was broadcast over the radio and on MSNBC TV. DON IMUS, HOST: Please welcome to the “Imus in the Morning” program Senator John Kerry. Good morning, ...
NEW YORK — Don Imus makes no excuses for his offensive remarks about the Rutgers women’s basketball team, but says: “I deserved a second chance.” He’s 14 months into that second chance, trying to make ...
One presidential candidate even asked for his endorsement. — -- Don Imus was back on the air today — and no one seemed to be outraged. The Rev. Al Sharpton, who once railed against the shock jock ...
Radio host Don Imus and his former employer CBS Radio reached a legal settlement Tuesday that could be worth $10 million, and industry talk quickly turned to Imus' next likely radio job. By Georg ...
Kayleigh McEnany refused to acknowledge that the president was pushing a baseless conspiracy theory accusing a journalist of murder. Controversial talk radio host Don Imus, whose popular show was ...
It was a team meeting unlike any other. Seated on straight-backed chairs and couches in a living room of the New Jersey governor's mansion just outside Princeton, 10 members of Rutgers University's ...