Rosie’s stormy stay on ‘The View’ will end
Controversial co-host O’Donnell couldn’t agree on new contract with ABC
![]() ABC via Reuters file The cast of ABC's 'The View' starring, from left, Rosie O'Donnell, Barbara Walters, Joy Behar and Elisabeth Hasselbeck, during taping of the season opener in New York last September. O’Donnell is leaving in June. |
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NEW YORK - Rosie O’Donnell’s stormy tenure on “The View” will be a short one. The opinionated host was unable to agree on a contract with ABC, and she’ll leave the show in June.
“My needs for the future just didn’t dovetail with what ABC was able to offer me,” O’Donnell said in a statement Wednesday.
“This has been an amazing experience,” she said, “and one I wouldn’t have traded for the world.”
O’Donnell has helped raise the ratings for the daytime chat show invented by Barbara Walters. But her outspokenness has caused almost constant controversy, including a nasty name-calling feud with Donald Trump that placed Walters squarely in the middle.
“I induced Rosie to come back to television on ’The View’ even for just one year,” Walters said. “She has given the program new vigor, new excitement and wonderful hours of television. I can only be grateful to her for this year.”
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“I would like to point out that Rosie’s view is not always mine,” Walters said. “I would like to say for the record that I am very fond of Rupert Murdoch.”
In the Trump imbroglio, O’Donnell was reportedly mad that Walters did not come more swiftly to her defense, while Trump said Walters told him she didn’t want O’Donnell on the show — a claim Walters denied.
Statements by public figures are being watched more closely in the post-Don Imus era. The lobbying group Focus on the Family said it was preparing to contact advertisers on “The View” as part of a campaign against O’Donnell. The group is angry at O’Donnell for comments they feel were insulting to Catholics.
Despite controversy — or maybe because of it — O’Donnell was good business for ABC, owned by the Walt Disney Co. Ratings for “The View” during February sweeps were up 15 percent in key women demographics over the same time in 2006.
Bill Carroll, an expert in the syndication market for Katz Television, said he’d be surprised if ABC didn’t try hard to keep O’Donnell, given the attention she brought to the long-running show.
The timing of the announcement doesn’t particularly suit O’Donnell if she wants to remain in daytime television. She wouldn’t be able to introduce a new program to the syndication market until September 2008, he said. But the company that produced O’Donnell’s long-running daytime show has expressed interest in having her back, he said.
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