Walters: Jones going through 'difficult time'
AP
Posted: 2008-05-09 21:10:59
WASHINGTON (AP) - Barbara Walters says she refuses to engage in
a debate with Star Jones, who accused her of revealing a past
affair with a senator just to sell books. Walters said despite the
public rift, she prefers to hold onto the good times the former
co-hosts shared on "The View."
"Star is going through a very difficult time right now, and I'm
going to have very happy memories of how wonderful she was on the
program," Walters told AP Radio on Friday. "I don't want to add
to her difficulties."
Jones is going through a divorce from banker Al Reynolds, whom
she married in 2004.
Jones lashed out at Walters after the veteran journalist wrote
in her autobiography "Audition" that the women of "The View"
were forced to cover up Jones' gastric bypass surgery as she
swiftly lost weight ahead of her wedding. Jones maintained at the
time that she was eating less and doing Pilates.
"We lied for Star," Walters told AP Radio. "She was our
colleague. She didn't want to discuss it, we didn't force her to.
Was that a mistake? I don't know. ... It was Star's decision."
Earlier this week, Jones criticized her former boss for writing
about her, and for including revelations of an affiar with former
U.S. Senator Edward Brooke in the 1970s.
"It is a sad day when an icon like Barbara Walters, in the
sunset of her life, is reduced to publicly branding herself as an
adulterer, humiliating an innocent family with accounts of her
illicit affair and speaking negatively against me all for the sake
of selling a book. It speaks to her true character," Jones told Us
Weekly magazine.
Walters said her intention was to give the book historical
perspective.
"I put it in to show in great part how race relations have
changed," Walters said. "This was 30 years ago, it was an
African-American prominent man. And it would've desroyed his
career, and mine. Today it would have almost no impact."
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.
05/09/08 21:09 EDT