Jan Slagter literally had to puke from the sensation piece that the AD wrote about him for days last month. “That article touched me physically. I got pain in my stomach,” says the broadcaster Max boss.
The AD really reacted very false after Jan Slagter had more or less fired their columnist Özcan Akyol via Shownieuws as a presenter of stars on the canvas. The newspaper put the broadcaster Max boss On the front page with the head: “Jan Slagter after Eus-Rel himself under fire: employees Max are disturbed by the director of director”.
Wafer -thin
A solid head and a very prominent place for an article that ultimately turned out to be incredibly paper thin. “The Max-Man has certainly produced his contradictory set-up, but also causes irritation. Also at Omroep Max himself, some employees report on the basis of anonymity,” wrote the journalist in question.
Jans position would be questioned internally. “His aversion to protocols and procedures has yielded him the reputation to be decisive and decisive, but more and more people feel uncomfortable with a director who so openly opposes many of the recommendations from the report of the Van Rijn Commission.”
Revenge
According to Johan Derksen, it was a revenge to protect his own columnist. “Their columnist Eus got a twist around his ears, everyone agreed with the facts that Eus deserved a twist around his ears and then the AD came out of nowhere with a tendentious story,” anxiety culture in the workplace at Max. “”
“From:” The management of the NPO is going to get involved. ” All sucked out of the thumb to protect EUS. “
Chaosend Jan
Apologies did not come from the AD, but Jan was sitting at home in the meantime. “At that hassle about Eus stood on the front page of the AD ‘Unrest in employees Max’. That was not based on anything: two anonymous reports, without hearing or rebuttal,” he says in an interview with Mouthpiece.
He continues: “I didn’t know this was possible. I also get anonymous letters about fellow managers. They go so pfffff into the shredder here. That article touched me physically. I got pain in my stomach. I really spit the stress for three or four days.”
Tissue
It was suddenly over again, according to Jan. “On the way home I had to surrender again. I am standing in such a parking port, an older lady comes to me in the eighty. She held my arm and offered me a tissue. She said:” When I see you, I always have to think about my father. “
“It was an angel. That did a lot to me, luckily there are still normal people, I thought. That hit me a lot. The next day I lost the pain and all the studies were good.”

