FILE - In this July 20, 2015, file photo, Garrison Keillor, creator and host of "A Prairie Home Companion," appears during an interview in St. Paul, Minn. The former radio host said he hopes the sexual allegations against him are fading way and believes Minnesota Public Radio made a grave mistake when it cut its ties with him. The Daily Courier in Prescott, Ariz., reported that Keillor made his comments Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2018, after appearing before hundreds of fans in Arizona in his first show after Minnesota Public Radio distanced itself from him in November. (AP Photo/Jim Mone, File)

FILE - In this July 20, 2015, file photo, Garrison Keillor, creator and host of "A Prairie Home Companion," appears during an interview in St. Paul, Minn. The former radio host said he hopes the sexual allegations against him are fading way and believes Minnesota Public Radio made a grave mistake when it cut its ties with him. The Daily Courier in Prescott, Ariz., reported that Keillor made his comments Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2018, after appearing before hundreds of fans in Arizona in his first show after Minnesota Public Radio distanced itself from him in November. (AP Photo/Jim Mone, File)

PRESCOTT, Ariz. (AP) — Former radio host Garrison Keillor said he hopes the sexual allegations against him are fading and believes Minnesota Public Radio made a grave mistake when it cut ties with him.

Keillor’s comments followed his first appearance before an audience since the controversy erupted in November, The Daily Courier in Prescott, Arizona, reported.

MPR has said that a woman who worked with the station as a freelance contributor accused Keillor of dozens of sexually inappropriate incidents over several years.

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During Keillor’s Wednesday night show at Yavapai College in Prescott, the ex-host of the once popular “A Prairie Home Companion” joked about how the allegations against him must have been contagious in light of other scandals involving former Rep. Al Franken, Charlie Rose and Harvey Weinstein.

He said the controversy made him appreciate his friends.

“In the newspaper, they refer to you as a disgraced broadcaster. They refer to this as a scandal, but your true friends, and you don’t need that many of them, but you find out for absolute sure who they are in the first two weeks after all of this happens,” he said.

In an extensive interview with The Associated Press last month, Keillor described several sexually suggestive emails he exchanged with the woman — a former freelance researcher for his show — as “romantic writing” that never resulted in a physical relationship.

He also rejected the idea that because he was her boss, and the driving force of a hugely popular radio program, it could be interpreted as sexual harassment.

The woman responded to the AP via her attorney and said that Keillor’s power over her job made her afraid to say no to him. The Associated Press does not typically name alleged victims of sexual harassment unless they have chosen to go public.

Keillor told the Courier said that since November, he’s written a western play, a Lake Wobegon screenplay and a novella called “Unseemly Behavior,” based on events surrounding the harassment allegations.

MPR announced in November it would stop distributing Keillor’s program “The Writer’s Almanac” and would no longer rebroadcast “The Best of A Prairie Home Companion.”

MPR spokeswoman Angie Andresen said after the AP interview that it stands by its handling of the claims against Keillor.