Jan Slagter has called on television to put Frederieke Leeflang on non-active, and not much later the NPO boss was forced to step up. “A guerilla war.”

© Elvin Boer, Michel Schnater

The role that Jan Slagter played in the downing of Frederieke Leeflang is extremely questionable. The Max boss broadcaster was always averse to anonymous accusations, until it concerned the so-called boss of the NPO. He called on television to put her on non-active-not much later she decided to step as a broadcaster.

False role

Jan then suddenly tied in and expressed a sort of regret, but Tina Nijkamp thinks he played a very wrong role in this matter. “Of course he liked it,” she says about Frederieke’s departure.

Her co-host Mark Koster then in the podcast The Media Week: “Well, he was just not cheering.”

Tina: “Yes, exactly. I find it striking that you suddenly saw a very different Jan Slagter.”

Guerrilla war

What does Mark think that after Frederieke’s exit, Jan suddenly bound that? “That could not be otherwise, right? He had started a Guerrilla war.”

Tina: “Yes, it was really his thing. She had to leave, right?”

Mark: “She had to leave. He fired everyone against her. He also applied me. Then he just applied from:” Yes, do you know what it’s like? ” He was just a one-man … he was a guerrilla war, also publicity. “

Tina: “Yes, yes, yes.”

Something for Tina?

Is the function of Frederieke not something for Tina? “I absolutely don’t want to be. I was asked for the Supervisory Board. I have already rejected that, because I don’t want anything to do with it.”

“If I did something, I said that before, then the director would have been video, but I think it is now such a mess that I really don’t want that anymore. I don’t feel like it at all, dude, in that bullshit.”

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