Laura Ingraham returns to Fox News after ad boycott spurred by Parkland's David Hogg

Michael James | USA TODAY

Show Caption Hide Caption Parkland shooting survivor David Hogg goes after Fox News host David Hogg goes after Laura Ingraham and her advertisers.

Fox News host Laura Ingraham returned to the air Monday night, quipping that she is "glad that I don't have a Google alert on my own name" after a week in which several of her show's major advertisers pulled back after she mocked a Parkland school shooting survivor.

Other than a few quick jests with fellow Fox talk-show host Sean Hannity, Ingraham did not tackle the Parkland controversy. She moved right into her opinion-based program, The Ingraham Angle, and referred to her week off as "my Easter break."

Hannity introduced her Monday by saying, "I've been saying it for a week. Laura Ingraham is back on Monday. Laura Ingraham is back on Monday." Ingraham quipped, "Hey Sean, did anything happen while I was gone? It's boring."

She quickly launched into her on-air commentary in a segment titled, "The Left's Plot to Silence Conservatives."

Ingraham lost about half of her show's on-air advertising after David Hogg, a 17-year-old survivor of the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, called on Ingraham's advertisers to boycott the show. His appeal to advertisers came in the wake of Twitter post in which Ingraham wrote, "David Hogg Rejected By Four Colleges To Which He Applied and whines about it. (Dinged by UCLA with a 4.1 GPA...totally predictable given acceptance rates.)"

Among the advertisers that pulled their ad sponsorship are Bayer, Hulu, Johnson & Johnson, Wayfair, TripAdvisor, Nestle, Honda, and over a dozen other large companies.

On Monday, TheWrap.com reported that Allstate joined in the advertising boycott.

"Laura Ingraham's comments about David Hogg were inconsistent with our values," Allstate company officials wrote in an internal memo to employees, according to TheWrap. "Allstate believes in youth empowerment ... We hope our youth can help us find a path to a less divisive future."

Ingraham has publicly apologized to Hogg for her remark. Fox News Co-President Jack Abernethy has said that the network supports Ingraham. "We cannot and will not allow voices to be censored by agenda-driven intimidation efforts," he said.

More: Conservative TV show host out at Sinclair station after David Hogg comment

Related: Ted Nugent continues to bash Parkland survivor David Hogg, praises Fox's Laura Ingraham

The Ingraham Angle has been a significant advertising draw in the past for Fox. It was the fourth-most popular cable news show in February with 2.6 million total viewers, its highest monthly rating since launching in October, according to CBS and AdWeek.

Hogg spoke up early after the school shooting and had even taped real-time reactions from fellow students inside barricaded classrooms during the rampage. He quickly became a target of conservative pundits.

Other allegations included false claims that he was part of a group of young actors who show up at the scene of shootings to go on camera, pretending to be a student. Some bloggers also questioned whether he was actually at the school at the time of the shooting, a claim dismissed by Politifact.