Retailers Walgreen Co and Payless Shoesource Inc, and hotel
chain group Choice Hotels International Inc on Tuesday followed
the lead of General Mills Inc in removing their ads from the
program.
TLC, which is owned by Discovery Communications, had pulled
episodes of the show last week and said Tuesday it had no
comment on whether it would cancel the show.
Some of the advertisers took to Twitter to address consumer
complaints.
"We share your concerns and we have decided to remove our
advertising from the show," said Choice Hotels, which runs
Comfort Inn and Econo Lodge chains, among others.
The network pulled all episodes after In Touch magazine last
week published information that Josh Duggar, now 27, had
molested several female minors when he was a teen.
Duggar issued an apology on Thursday acknowledging "wrongdoing"
12 years ago and quit his job at the Family Research Council, a
Christian lobbying group. But he did not directly address the
allegations.
The controversy over the Duggars, an Arkansas family of devout
Christians, has spilled into the political realm as
conservatives rallied to the family's side.
Parents Jim Bob and Michelle Duggar have become popular among
conservatives for embodying an honest family struggling to raise
19 kids with wholesome values.
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Former Arkansas governor and U.S. presidential hopeful Mike Huckabee
came out in support of the family on Friday, while several petitions
circulated asking TLC to cancel the program.
The show has been on the air since 2008 and finished its most recent
season in May. It is not in production and it is unclear when a new
season was scheduled to begin filming.
The most recent season averaged 3.5 million viewers per episode,
down from 3.9 million the previous season, according to figures from
Nielsen.
With such a devoted following, TLC may take its time to decide the
program's fate, said Jeff McCall, a media studies professor at
DePauw University in Indiana.
"Right now there may be a lot of outrage, a lot of concern," said
McCall. "On the other hand, the American audience is pretty
forgiving."
TLC could take weeks or months working with advertisers behind the
scenes to find a palatable future for the program, he said.
(Editing by Chris Reese, G Crosse and Richard Chang)
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