Shine began working for Fox News as the senior producer of
Hannity & Colmes. By 1999, Shine was the senior prime-time producer for
Fox News. The following year Shine was the
executive producer of Fox News Channel's prime-time programs. In 2001, on Fox News Channel's
The Edge,
psychic Sylvia Browne said that she knew where the body of
Chandra Levy was located. On Fox News Channel's
Judith Regan Tonight, psychic
James Van Praagh discussed Chandra Levy. The following year, Shine was Fox News Channel's senior vice president of programming. In 2005, when asked why the U.S. media carried many stories about missing white women (
missing white woman syndrome) and disproportionately few about missing black women, Shine commented that "the stories that go national have a twist or an emotional aspect to them that make them interesting". In 2007, after
Bill O'Reilly dined at
Sylvia's soul-food restaurant in
Harlem, he found his naive preconceptions challenged. O'Reilly admitted he "couldn't get over the fact" that eating at the restaurant "was like going into an all-white suburb in the sense of people were sitting there, and they were ordering and having fun. And there wasn't any kind of craziness at all." Responding to criticism of O'Reilly's statement, Shine said, "This is nothing more than left-wing outlets stirring up false racism accusations for ratings." In 2009, Fox News host
Glenn Beck said that
President Barack Obama "has a deep-seated hatred for white people or the white culture" and "is racist", after President Obama said that
Cambridge police officers acted "stupidly" by
arresting Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr. for breaking into his own home. Responding to Beck's comment, Shine said that Beck had "expressed a personal opinion which represented his own views, not those of the Fox News Channel. And as with all commentators in the cable news arena, he is given the freedom to express his opinions." In 2014, Shine was promoted to FNC's senior executive vice president of programming. Shine worked alongside of FNC
chairman and
chief executive officer Roger Ailes for two decades. After Ailes left Fox, the new executive chairman,
Rupert Murdoch named Shine and Jack Abernethy as
co-presidents of Fox News in August 2016. Shine headed the network's news and programming operations. Shine was named in at least four lawsuits against FNC alleging
sexual harassment or
racial discrimination by the company. In April 2017,
New York magazine reported that Shine was uncertain about his future at Fox and that he did not think that Rupert Murdoch had been supportive enough of him. A Fox spokesperson denied that the conversations described in the report took place. Fox host
Sean Hannity supported Shine, saying that it would be "the total end of the as we know it" if Shine were fired. On May 1, 2017, Shine was forced out of Fox News. Suzanne Scott, who had served as the organization's senior vice president of programming and development since 2009, was promoted to co-president to take his place. ==Trump administration==