LA news anchor is FIRED after going off-script to berate his own station in rogue monologue

A Los Angeles news anchor has been fired after going off-script and calling out his own television station live on air over the departure of his beloved co-anchor.

Mark Mester, 36, of KTLA, was first suspended and then given his marching orders Thursday after binning a pre-prepared script and launching an impassioned apology to viewers over the exit of ‘best friend’ Lynette Romero, 55.

‘I want to start off right now by offering up an apology to you,’ Mester said live on air Saturday.

‘What the viewers experienced was rude, it was cruel, it was inappropriate and we are so sorry.’

The station had announced the departure of Romero, a long-serving and popular host of the weekend morning show, without giving her an opportunity to say goodbye to viewers, much to their outrage.

News anchor Mark Mester went rogue this weekend when he launched into an apology to viewers that also slammed his own TV station

Mark Mester, (right) of KTLA, was first suspended and then given his marching orders Thursday after binning a pre-prepared script and launching an impassioned apology to 'best friend' Lynette Romero, (left) who had left the station a few days earlier

Mark Mester, (right) of KTLA, was first suspended and then given his marching orders Thursday after binning a pre-prepared script and launching an impassioned apology to ‘best friend’ Lynette Romero, (left) who had left the station a few days earlier

Mester, who was employed at the station from 2014, was furious over how management had handled the departure of Romero

Mester, who was employed at the station from 2014, was furious over how management had handled the departure of Romero

KTLA employees told the Los Angeles Times that station manager Janene Drafs had announced to the newsroom that Mester was terminated during a short speech on Thursday afternoon.

‘[Mester] is no longer at KTLA5,’ she said to staffers who were present. 

Mester, who joined the station in 2014, had taken the opportunity during his Saturday morning show to apologize to viewers on behalf of KTLA for the manner of Romero’s departure in a way that implicitly criticized the station. 

‘We’re going to offer you dignity and grace, which is what this station should’ve done from the beginning,’ Mester said. 

‘I also want to say sorry to Lynette Romero because Lynette, I love you so much, you literally are my best friend,’ he said, his voice cracking. ‘You did not deserve what happened to you.’ 

‘You did not deserve this, it was a mistake, and we hope you can find it in your heart to forgive us.’

Staffers said that producers had written an approved script for Mester to read as a homage to Romero, accompanied by photos and clips of her broadcasts.

But Mester, who had been seen pacing back and forth angrily before the show, rejected it in favor of his own ad-libbed monologue, in which he said there was a plane was in the sky with a message of love and gratitude to Romero.

Mester and Romero had presented KTLA's weekend morning show together for many years

Mester and Romero had presented KTLA’s weekend morning show together for many years

Romero, (pictured) who had become a popular institution over a 24 year career with the station, had left after bosses had refused her request to swap her weekend show for a weekend shift in order to spend more time with her family

Romero, (pictured) who had become a popular institution over a 24 year career with the station, had left after bosses had refused her request to swap her weekend show for a weekend shift in order to spend more time with her family

He had hired the plane to fly over the station with a banner saying ‘We love you Lynette’, which he had pitched to producers for footage to include in the segment, but it had been rejected. 

Many viewers applauded Mester for his emotional rogue monologue, and news that he had been immediately suspended was greeted with even more outrage over how KTLA had handled the situation.

According to witnesses in the newsroom, after the controversial segment, Mester ignored management’s requests to step into their office for an emergency meeting.

Several staffers said that at one point a furious Mester told one of the news director to ‘shut up’ and then refused to leave the building after being asked to. 

The news anchor was also alleged to have shouted obscenities at management that rang out across the newsroom.

The same sources said that there has long been concern within the newsroom about Mester’s temper and there have been complaints to management about his ‘disrespectful’ behavior towards women.

‘You would not believe the temper tantrums and the weird things that set him off,’ one longtime newsroom employee was reported as saying. ‘You’re constantly afraid you’re going to say the wrong thing.’ 

Mester had hired the plane to fly over the station with a banner saying 'We love you Lynette', which he had pitched to producers as footage to include in the segment, but it had been rejected

Mester had hired the plane to fly over the station with a banner saying ‘We love you Lynette’, which he had pitched to producers as footage to include in the segment, but it had been rejected

Romero, who had become a popular institution over a 24 year career with the station, had left after bosses had refused her request to swap her weekend show for a weekend shift in order to spend more time with her family.

It is reported that she has been hired by KNBC-TV, LA’s NBC affiliate, to host one of its weekday morning shows, sources said. 

‘After nearly 24 years, Lynette Romero, our friend Lynette, has decided to move on from anchoring our weekend morning news,’ entertainment reporter Sam Rubin read out in a statement written by news director Peter Saiers during a segment on September 14.

‘KTLA management had hoped she would stay here her entire career, and KTLA worked hard to make that happen,’ Rubin added. 

‘But Lynette has decided to move to another opportunity elsewhere. Lynette, we wish you luck, we miss you and we thank you for everything you’ve done for KTLA. … On behalf of everyone here, we wish you and your family nothing but the best.’ 

Saiers also said that Romero had declined the opportunity to record a farewell address to viewers upon her abrupt departure. 

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