Offline
She says she was bullied at work.
They say her performance wasn't up to par.
Both former Q107 on air personality Jennifer Valentyne and Corus have very different interpretations of why she left her job in 2019, prompting her to reveal she was allegedly being abused and bullied by her co-hosts, while management did nothing.
On Tuesday, lawyers for the company got their first chance to question her directly on the allegations.
"Valentyne also alleges her co-hosts Ryan Parker, Johnny Garbutt and John Derringer engaged in 'inappropriate' behaviour like watching pornographic videos, making sexual remarks about women’s bodies and referring to women using degrading terms...
Lawyers told Valentyne her former co-hosts will testify she took the lead making comments about women’s bodies and those of her male colleagues. Valentyne laughed at the suggestion and said that was not true."
The situation eventually led to morning man John Derringer losing his own job and he has not been back on radio since. He will be testifying at the hearing.
It's a pretty sordid affair, with both sides accusing the other of being at fault. And there's a lot more testimony scheduled to come.
Corus defence lawyers question former Q107 radio host on job performance at tribunal
Offline
is she tied in with same city coven that had Mulligans back
Last edited by ToRon (October 22, 2025 9:26 am)
Offline
Part of Corus’ solution was to shift Jenn over to Global News Morning where she got to work with me
and based on my couple of years with her I find the suggestion that she suffered “performance issues” or had a hard time adjusting to radio to be HILARIOUS. She is a hard-working, high-energy, creatively competent, professional. I look forward to doing some fun, creative work with her again.
Offline
There’s a recurring pattern in broadcast media where on-air talent cultivates a provocative or risqué persona as part of the brand, fully embracing it while it serves their career interests. However, when the role or contract ends, that same conduct is often recast as exploitation or harassment. A local example out here would be Sue Tyler, who built her profile around that image for years, only to later reposition herself as a victim once the employment relationship concluded.
Offline
Knapp Lane wrote:
There’s a recurring pattern in broadcast media where on-air talent cultivates a provocative or risqué persona as part of the brand, fully embracing it while it serves their career interests. However, when the role or contract ends, that same conduct is often recast as exploitation or harassment. A local example out here would be Sue Tyler, who built her profile around that image for years, only to later reposition herself as a victim once the employment relationship concluded.
Apparently when MOJO Radio was a thing HR policy prohibited posting the MOJO Girls Calendar in the building. They they could be given away, but not looked at.
Offline
I don't remember that at all. If anything, the Mojo calendar represented what the station was all about, a Maxim magazine on the radio.
Caveaut, If this was after Hayes darkened the doors, all bets are off, he was far more concerned about investors in the US Bible belt than he ever was about a radio station format, and those investors were where his loyalties lay, He was perfect for Corus though, had corporate doublespeak down to an art form.
ig.
MonteVideo wrote:
Knapp Lane wrote:
There’s a recurring pattern in broadcast media where on-air talent cultivates a provocative or risqué persona as part of the brand, fully embracing it while it serves their career interests. However, when the role or contract ends, that same conduct is often recast as exploitation or harassment. A local example out here would be Sue Tyler, who built her profile around that image for years, only to later reposition herself as a victim once the employment relationship concluded.
Apparently when MOJO Radio was a thing HR policy prohibited posting the MOJO Girls Calendar in the building. They they could be given away, but not looked at.
Offline
That can't be true - I heard Johnny B interview Mojo Girls on the air
MonteVideo wrote:
Knapp Lane wrote:
There’s a recurring pattern in broadcast media where on-air talent cultivates a provocative or risqué persona as part of the brand, fully embracing it while it serves their career interests. However, when the role or contract ends, that same conduct is often recast as exploitation or harassment. A local example out here would be Sue Tyler, who built her profile around that image for years, only to later reposition herself as a victim once the employment relationship concluded.
Apparently when MOJO Radio was a thing HR policy prohibited posting the MOJO Girls Calendar in the building. They they could be given away, but not looked at.
Offline
Dparker wrote:
That can't be true - I heard Johnny B interview Mojo Girls on the air
Hearing someone speak =/= ogling them in their unmentionables.
I landed at 640 toward the end of the Mojo years. I have no recollection of an edict about the displaying of the calendar.
Knapp Lane wrote:
Love this account handle.
Offline
I do recall that the staff were told to NOT display the calendars in common areas when the cluster moved to 1 Dundas West. By then the experiment had already morphed into the “new” MOJO radio…a mix of salacious titty jokes combined with hard-hitting investigations of Toronto’s water supply safety.
Offline
Dparker wrote:
That can't be true - I heard Johnny B interview Mojo Girls on the air
MonteVideo wrote:
Knapp Lane wrote:
There’s a recurring pattern in broadcast media where on-air talent cultivates a provocative or risqué persona as part of the brand, fully embracing it while it serves their career interests. However, when the role or contract ends, that same conduct is often recast as exploitation or harassment. A local example out here would be Sue Tyler, who built her profile around that image for years, only to later reposition herself as a victim once the employment relationship concluded.
Apparently when MOJO Radio was a thing HR policy prohibited posting the MOJO Girls Calendar in the building. They they could be given away, but not looked at.
The woman I've been with for over 20 years was a MOJO model...I had those girls on the air and on every show I hosted or produced either in studio or live on location when MOJO was at its height...when I did remotes for Monday Night Football games at the bars for example, there was always a MOJO model with me and I would sometimes include her in the promo...most of them were great, pretty ladies just looking to make some extra cash...as for the calendars...I had one hanging in my cubicle at 1 Dundas...no one said shit about it to me.
Offline
I remember those calendars. All the women were pulchritudinous.
Offline

mace wrote:
I remember those calendars. All the women were pulchritudinous.
You did not just use that word! 🫡
Offline
"We were Maxim not Hustler."
Imagine putting that on your resume. Jesus Tapdancing Christ.
Online!
I guess they can't afford to write her a cheque.
Offline
Dial Twister wrote:
mace wrote:
I remember those calendars. All the women were pulchritudinous.
You did not just use that word! 🫡
Years ago I read a column somewhere by John Derringer and he used this word which I had never heard or seen before. Naturally I had to look it up in a dictionary. Yes I have one. This is also before I had a Smartphone. When you look up the meaning of a word, it will stay with you forever.
Offline
ig wrote:
I don't remember that at all. If anything, the Mojo calendar represented what the station was all about, a Maxim magazine on the radio.
Caveaut, If this was after Hayes darkened the doors, all bets are off, he was far more concerned about investors in the US Bible belt than he ever was about a radio station format, and those investors were where his loyalties lay, He was perfect for Corus though, had corporate doublespeak down to an art form.
ig.
MonteVideo wrote:
Knapp Lane wrote:
There’s a recurring pattern in broadcast media where on-air talent cultivates a provocative or risqué persona as part of the brand, fully embracing it while it serves their career interests. However, when the role or contract ends, that same conduct is often recast as exploitation or harassment. A local example out here would be Sue Tyler, who built her profile around that image for years, only to later reposition herself as a victim once the employment relationship concluded.
Apparently when MOJO Radio was a thing HR policy prohibited posting the MOJO Girls Calendar in the building. They they could be given away, but not looked at.
Yes. John Hayes was there at this time.
Offline
Dparker wrote:
That can't be true - I heard Johnny B interview Mojo Girls on the air
MonteVideo wrote:
Knapp Lane wrote:
There’s a recurring pattern in broadcast media where on-air talent cultivates a provocative or risqué persona as part of the brand, fully embracing it while it serves their career interests. However, when the role or contract ends, that same conduct is often recast as exploitation or harassment. A local example out here would be Sue Tyler, who built her profile around that image for years, only to later reposition herself as a victim once the employment relationship concluded.
Apparently when MOJO Radio was a thing HR policy prohibited posting the MOJO Girls Calendar in the building. They they could be given away, but not looked at.
You could certainly talk to them, and they could be in the building of course and at events, you just couldn't put the calendar up in your cubicle.