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Last year, known sexual predator and racist on-air personality Bill O'Reilly was forcefully removed from television. How? Because people steadily protested, eventually successfully pressuring advertisers to pull the plug on ads appearing in Fox News' "The O'Reilly Factor."
Recently, a scandal exposed yet another abuser in television. Les Moonves isn't a household name, but as CEO of the CBS network, he is one of the most powerful people in the entertainment industry today. Six women have reported either being forcibly kissed and touched or physically intimidated by Moonves and dozens more have gone on record about the culture of abuse and discrimination he has led at the network.
Moonves' enablers on the CBS Board of Directors decided to let him stay without facing any consequences. They're hoping they can stall and ride out any public outcry with a sham investigation.
If the CBS board won't listen to survivors, they will definitely listen to paying advertisers. If tens of thousands pressure CBS' biggest advertisers--McDonald's, Pfizer, and Progressive--to stop ads on the network, the Board will be forced to listen.