President Donald Trump weighed in on the Roseanne Barr controversy with a complaint Wednesday that he never got an apology from ABC for the 'for the HORRIBLE statements made and said about me on ABC.'

It was uncertain which statements from the TV network Trump was referring to, although White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders later said he was referring to media bias.

Trump has not spoken to Barr since her firing, according to the White House.

'I'm not aware of any conversations that have taken place. The president is merely calling out media bias. No one is defending what [Roseanne] said,' White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said her press briefing Wednesday afternoon.

President Trump was calling out media bias in his tweet on Bob Iger, the White House said

'The president is merely calling out media bias. No one is defending what [Roseanne] said,' White House press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders said her press briefing Wednesday afternoon

Sanders expanded on what the president was angry about, citing ESPN anchor Jemele Hill calling Trump a white supremacist, comments made on ABC's daytime talk show 'The View,' and ESPN's hiring of Keith Olbermann, who regularly tweets criticism of Trump.

ABC News and ESPN are owned by the same parent company, Disney.

'Where was the Bob Iger's apology to the White House staff for Jemele Hill calling the president and anyone associated with him a white supremacist? To Christians around the world for Joy Behar calling Christianity a mental illness? Where was the apology for Kathy Griffin going on a profane rant against the president on "The View" after a photo showed her holding President Trump's decapitated head?' Sanders asked.

'And where was the apology from Bob Iger for ESPN hiring Keith Olbermann after his numerous explicative laced tweets attacking the president, calling him a Nazi, and even expanding Olbermann's role after that attack against the president's family. This is a double standard is speaking about. No one is defending her comments. They're inappropriate but was the point he was making.'

Hill voluntarily left her role as a co-anchor of ESPN's SportsCenter, to work on ESPN's Undefeated, an online vertical focused on race, sports, and culture. ESPN disavowed her tweets on the president.

Behar publicly apologized in May for mocking Vice President Mike Pence's Christian faith and suggesting that his religious views made him mentally ill. She had said of Pence: 'It's one thing to talk to Jesus. It's another thing when Jesus talks to you. That's called mental illness.'

Griffin also apologized for her photo shown on 'The View' holding a bloody, decapitated head of the president. She later took the apology back. Asked if she took the photo too far, she said: 'No, not now. Not when I see his policies.'

Olbermann is known for his liberal views. Last week ESPN announced he was returning to the airwaves for his sixth stint at the network. He regularly refers to Trump as a Nazi in his tweets.

ABC said Tuesday that it was cancelling Barr's television show just hours after the comedian assaulted Obama White House adviser Valerie Jarrett on Twitter.

President Donald Trump weighed in on the Roseanne Barr controversy with a complaint Wednesday that he never got an apology from ABC with an apology for the 'for the HORRIBLE statements made and said about me on ABC'

It was uncertain what statements from the TV network President Trump was referring to but it could be about a retracted Brian Ross report or his twitter war with Jimmy Kimmel

ABC cancelled Roseanne Barr's show Tuesday after the comedian insulted former Obama adviser Valerie Jarrett

ABC released a statement on Tuesday afternoon, calling Barr's tweets 'abhorrent, repugnant, and inconsistent with our values'.

'We have decided to cancel her show,' Channing Dungey, President of ABC Entertainment, announced.

Disney CEO Bob Iger also tweeted about the decision, saying: 'There was only one thing to do here, and that was the right thing.' Disney owns ABC Television Group.

Barr was widely condemned after she tweeted that Jarrett looked like the 'Muslim brotherhood & planet of the apes had a baby'.

Iger reportedly called Jarrett before the network announced the cancellation to apologize to her.

'He wanted me to know before he made it public that he was canceling the show,' Jarrett told MSNBC.

Trump, in his tweet Wednesday, complained he never got a call from Iger with an apology.

In June of last year, Iger quit Trump's business advisory council, protesting the president's withdraw from the Paris climate deal. Tesla CEO Elon Musk resigned at the same time.

Iger confirmed to Vogue magazine in April that he had thought of challenging Trump in 2020 with a presidential bid but decided instead to focus on his work at Disney, which had just purchased 21st Century Fox.

'The thought I had was coming from the patriot in me, growing up at a time when we respected our politicians not only for what they stood for but because of what they accomplished,' Iger told the magazine. 'I am horrified at the state of politics in America today, and I will throw stones in multiple directions. Dialogue has given way to disdain. I, maybe a bit naively, believed that there was a need for someone in high elected office to be more open-minded and willing to not only govern from the middle but to try to shame everyone else into going to the middle.'

Trump railed against the network last year after ABC News investigative reporter Brian Ross incorrectly reported that former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn would testify that Trump had instructed him to make contact with Russian officials during the presidential campaign.

Ross was suspended for four weeks without pay in December of 2017.

'We deeply regret and apologize for the serious error we made yesterday,' ABC News said in a statement at the time. 'The reporting conveyed by Brian Ross during the special report had not been fully vetted through our editorial standards process.'

Trump celebrated the suspension when it happened.

'People who lost money when the Stock Market went down 350 points based on the False and Dishonest reporting of Brian Ross of @ABC News (he has been suspended), should consider hiring a lawyer and suing ABC for the damages this bad reporting has caused – many millions of dollars!' Trump said in a tweet at the time.

The president also has gotten into a Twitter spat with comedian Jimmy Kimmel, whose late night show appears on ABC.

In March, Trump mocked Kimmel for hosting the 'lowest rated Oscars in HISTORY.'

'Thanks, lowest rated President in HISTORY,' Kimmel tweeted back.

Oscar ratings this year did hit a nine-year low after four consecutive years of decline.

President Trump complained Disney CEO Bob Iger never called him to apologize. Iger, who had considered challenging Trump in 2020, is pictured here in early May at the premiere of 'Solo: A Star Wars Story'

Former Obama White House adviser Valerie Jarrett said Disney CEO Bob Iger called her to apologize and to say he was cancelling Roseanne Barr's show

Barr's iconic comedy show was a ratings juggernaut when it premiered on ABC to a whopping 25 million viewers in April.

Ratings dropped steadily thereafter, with last week's season finale garnering 10.33 million viewers.

ABC initially ordered 13 episodes for the second season and said the show would move away from its controversial politics and focus on family.

The president has commented on soaring ratings that Barr's show had in the past, however, giving himself a pat on the back for the 18.2 million viewers that premiere of the reboot raked in.

'Even look at Roseanne, I called her yesterday. Look at her ratings! Look at her ratings!' Trump declared at an Ohio rally in March. 'I got a call from Mark Burnett, he did The Apprentice. He's a great guy. He said, 'Donald, I called just to say hello and to tell you did you see Roseanne's ratings?' '

Trump says he asked Burnett, ' 'How big where they?'

'They were unbelievable. Over 18 million people. And it was about us,' the president boasted.

Barr is a longtime Trump supporter who endorsed him in his 2016 campaign.

The White House originally said on Tuesday the president was dealing with other matters and White House Press Secretary Sarah Sanders wouldn't comment on the Roseanne cancellation.

Sanders told reporters riding with the president to Tennessee on Air Force One, 'That's not what the president's looking at.

'And I think that we have a lot bigger things going on in the country right now, certainly, that the president's spending his time [on]when it comes to policy,' she said of the controversy.

The show most recently came under fire for featuring an episode in which Barr's character believes her new Muslim neighbors are terrorists.

Roseanne's mention of the 'Muslim brotherhood' in her Tuesday tweet seems to be due to the long-running conspiracy theory that Jarrett is Muslim.

Jarrett, who was Obama's senior adviser during his presidency, was born in Iran to American parents and lived in Shiraz for six years.

The family had moved to Iran because her father was part of a program that sent American physicians to help developing countries. He ran a children's hospital.

There has never been any indication that Jarrett or her parents are Muslim.

Barr later claimed the comment was a 'joke.'

Donald Trump Jr. retweeted some of the offensive comments posted by Barr during her racist Twitter rampage that ultimately led to her show being cancelled.

Despite clearly retweeting one of Barr's posts on Tuesday, the son of President Trump denied that he retweeted anything that was anti-Semitic.

The tweet in question was one in which Barr called billionaire Democratic donor George Soros, who is Jewish, a 'nazi' who 'turned in his fellow Jews.'

Donald Trump Jr. retweeted some controversial Roseanne Barr tweets but the president's son denied he was anti-semitic.

Barr had tweeted the false conspiracy theory about Soro, which has been pushed by alt-right activists, after she claimed that Chelsea Clinton was married to one of the billionaire's nephews.

After Clinton clarified that she wasn't related to Soro, Barr fired back with an apology that included the anti-Semitic claims.

'Sorry to have tweeted incorrect info about you!I Please forgive me! By the way, George Soros is a nazi who turned in his fellow Jews 2 be murdered in German concentration camps & stole their wealth-were you aware of that? But, we all make mistakes, right Chelsea?' Barr tweeted.

'Soros' goal; the overthrow of us constitutional republic by buying/backing candidates 4 local district attorney races who will ignore US law & favor 'feelings' instead-and call everyone who is alarmed by that 'racist'.'

Those two tweets were the ones then retweeted by Don Jr.

The President's son made his denial on Twitter as he referenced a Page Six story detailing the retweets.

'Page Six is doing what they normally do, lying and obfuscating. They know full well that I did not RT anything that was anti-semitic, but I guess facts don't matter when you're a dishonest, clickbait rag. #FAKENEWS,' he tweeted.

Shortly after Barr's show was cancelled, talent agency ICM Partners revealed they were dropping her as a client.

'We are all greatly distressed by the disgraceful and unacceptable tweet from Roseanne Barr this morning,' ICM said in an internal note to employees that was obtained by the Hollywood Reporter.

'What she wrote is antithetical to our core values, both as individuals and as an agency.'

'Consequently, we have notified her that we will not represent her. Effective immediately, Roseanne Barr is no longer a client.'

It appears the cancellation of the show will also affect the cast's Emmy prospects, as ABC revealed it is suspending the show's FYC (For Your Consideration) campaign.