![]() ![]() But that’s a seperate post for another day.” I don’t know how they live with themselves. It was the part about how I lost all respect for bush Cheney … Powell and rice because they never publically said they were sorry for the deaths of thousands of Americans and Iraqis based on false information that Iraq had wmd. 13, Somerville told his followers on Facebook that he had deleted a portion of a post about 9/11, writing, “It just didn’t feel right. Then again I have the rare experience of having dealt with this issue personally from both sides.” “It makes abortion illegal in almost all cases. “This Texas abortion law scares me,” he wrote. 3, Somerville’s Facebook post about his perspective on abortion cited his own life and his two daughters. The station barred him from posting on Facebook, the two KTVU sources said. He had already been disciplined this month for voicing what were deemed by the station to be inappropriate political opinions on Facebook, about the new Texas law that bans almost all abortions and about the anniversary of the terrorist attacks of Sept. Somerville has not commented on the incident. subsidiary that owns KTVU, said the anchor was going out on medical leave for two months after he appeared to slur his words during a broadcast. In June, a spokesperson for Fox Television Stations, the Fox Corp. His suspension marks the second time he has left the air this year. Nine years ago, he shared a photo of himself styling his adopted daughter’s hair that went viral. Somerville, who is white, has a Black teenage daughter and has posted on Facebook about how fatherhood raised his awareness of racial inequality. The next day, a human resources manager told Somerville he was suspended for defying a decision made by supervisors, the two sources said. ![]() The shorter version of Somerville’s address did not include the quote from the professor, the copy obtained by The Chronicle shows. Producers cut the tag again, and that day’s coverage of the Petito case ran without tags in all KTVU broadcasts. The producer expressed concerns to the newsroom, the source said. A producer who was not involved in the initial conversation then saw that an amended, 26-second version of the tag was in the broadcast script prepared for the 6 p.m. In a series of messages sent over the station’s internal messaging system, Somerville protested the cut but was overruled, the two station sources said. ![]() One of the sources said newsroom editors had approached Eikel before the broadcast, expressing misgivings about the tag, including that it seemed to suggest police had concluded Laundrie killed Petito. broadcast, Eikel told Somerville she planned to cut the tag, indicating that the topic warranted a separate, broader story with visuals, the station sources said. For The Chronicle’s policy on presenting information from an anonymous sources, visit /anonymous. The Chronicle strives to attribute all information we report to credible, reliable, identifiable sources. Journalist Gwen Ifill coined the phrase “missing white woman syndrome” to describe news outlets’ disparate reporting on missing persons cases, with the disappearance of people of color attracting far less attention than cases involving white people, particularly young women. Somerville also quoted a professor who was critical of the media’s tendency to overlook stories about missing and slain women of color. It went on to cite statistics on deaths, showing that Black women are far more likely to be killed, “but their deaths are rarely reported and almost never get the kind of national attention that Gabby Petito’s death is getting.” “When it comes to domestic violence the numbers are off the charts,” the original tag said, according to a copy obtained by The Chronicle. Somerville wanted to bring in context on domestic violence and coverage of it, according to the two station sources. Somerville sought to add the 46-second tag to the end of an update about Petito, who was slain during a cross-country van trip with her fiance, Brian Laundrie, whom authorities have identified as a person of interest. According to the two people, who were granted anonymity in accordance with The Chronicle’s policy on confidential sources to discuss a sensitive personnel matter, the dispute at KTVU unfolded Tuesday afternoon.
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