Alec Baldwin has found himself in trouble with the law after he allegedly hit a man in the jaw on Friday during a curbside brawl - but not his employer.

ABC will air The Alec Baldwin Show on Sunday night as planned and declined to even offer up comment on Baldwin's latest arrest, for which he was booked on charges of assault and harassment.

It is a far cry from the network's decision back in May to fire Roseanne Barr for posting a racist tweet about Valerie Jarrett just hours after the offense, thereby dismantling an entire cast and crew of workers.

Over at NBC there was also no comment from Saturday Night Live, who treated the incident as a throwaway punchline at the end of the cold open.

Eight days prior, on the same network, Megyn Kelly was ousted from her spot on Today following her defense of blackface.

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Teflon: ABC and Saturday Night Live have both declined to comment on Alec Baldwin after his arrest for assault and harassment on Friday (Baldwin above on Sunday)

Barred: ABC said that The Alec Baldwin Show would air on Sunday as planned, five months after firing Roseanne Barr (above) within hours of her posting a racist tweet

No day: NBC, which airs SNL, ousted Megyn Kelly (above) from Today just one week ago for her defense of blackface but made light of Baldwin's arrest on the variety show

Kelly and Barr's offenses certainly had a greater impact than Baldwin's alleged assault of his victim - and the actor has denied punching Wojciech Cieszkowski - but this is not the first time he is run into trouble.

In fact, Baldwin was hired by both networks after incidents in which he hurled homophobic slurs at a photographer, told a female reporter of his desire to see her die as a result of physical violence and been belligerent with cops.

His run-in with law enforcement came after he was ticketed for riding the wrong way down a one-way street, which is a minor infraction.

That ended with him in handcuffs however and charged with disorderly conduct after he became belligerent with the officers.

In 2013, Tara Palmeri was covering Baldwin for the New York Post when he decided to come up alongside the young female reporter and state: 'I hope you choke to death.'

Baldwin has also been using homophobic language for decades now, starting back in 1992 when he called a horse-drawn carriage driver a 'f*****.'

George Stark, who was writing for DailyMail.com at the time, was hit with a barrage of homophobic tweets in 2013 after he wrote a story claiming Baldwin's wife Hilaria was tweeting at James Gandolfini's funeral.

'I'm gonna find you George Stark, you toxic little queen, and I'm gonna f*** ... you ... up,' wrote Baldwin at one point.

He later added: 'If [sic] put my foot up your f***ing a** George Stark, but I'm sure you'd dig it too much.'

Baldwin also encouraged everyone who followed him on Twitter at the time 'and beyond' to 'straighten out this little b****.'

The actor later issued a statement to GLAAD, stating: 'My anger was directed at Mr. Stark for blatantly lying and disseminating libelous information about my wife and her conduct at our friend's funeral service. As someone who fights against homophobia, I apologize.'

GLAAD accepted that response and wrote posts heralding all that Baldwin did for the community, noting his work for marriage equality and the fact that he appeared on the sitcom Will & Grace.

And yet, just a few months later, Baldwin elected to voice his frustration with a photographer outside his home by calling the man a 'c***-s***ing f*****.'

NBC did respond to that outburst by pulling baldwin's MSNBC show off the air for two weeks, and eventually cancelling the program.

Baldwin, once again, had an apology.

'I did not intend to hurt or offend anyone with my choice of words, but clearly I have – and for that I am deeply sorry,' said Baldwin.

'Words are important. I understand that, and will choose mine with great care going forward.'

He then added: 'What I said and did this week, as I was trying to protect my family, was offensive and unacceptable.

Alec attack: Baldwin attacked a photographer in 2013 (above) outside his home in Greenwich Village

That came after he initially denied the remarks by claiming he said the word 'fathead,' much like he tried to claim his use of the word 'queen' was not meant to be used in a homophobic manner when directed at Stark.

Baldwin also called a barista at Starbucks an 'uptight queen' and said Daily News editor-in-chief Colin Myler was an 'English Queen' in tweets.

Other times he turns to physical violence, having been caught attacking photographers multiple times over the years.

In 1995, he was placed under citizen's arrest for going after a man who filmed him returning home from the hospital with then-wife Kim Basinger and newborn daughter Ireland.

He was photographed shoving and punching a photographer in 2012 as well after he was spotted leaving City Hall with his marriage license.

There were at least two fights in 2013 with Baldwin and photographers, including one that ended with him throwing a man against the hood of a car.

Baldwin has also been open about his mistreatment of women, having called reporters words like 'hag and even his own daughter a 'rude, thoughtless little pig.'

She was 11 at the time.

'I certainly have treated women in a very sexist way. I’ve bullied women. I’ve overlooked women. I’ve underestimated women. Not as a rule,' said Baldwin during a Paley center event last year.

'From time to time, I’ve done what a lot of men do, which is when you don’t treat women the same way you treat men. You don’t. I’m from a generation where you really don’t and I’d like that to change. I really would like that to change.'

Then the incident on Friday, for which he has been charged with assault and harassment.

'Normally, I would not comment on something as egregiously misstated as today’s story. However, the assertion that I punched anyone over a parking spot is false,' said Baldwin on Twitter.

'I wanted to go on the record stating as much. I realize that it has become a sport to tag people w as many negative charges and defaming allegations as possible for the purposes of clickbait entertainment.'

He then added: 'Fortunately, no matter how reverberating the echos, it doesn’t make the statements true.'