Vorderman 'forced' to quit quizPresenter Carol Vorderman felt forced to leave Channel 4 quiz show Countdown after she was told to take a 90% pay cut, her manager has claimed.
Agent John Miles said Vorderman had been told the show had survived the death of host Richard Whiteley in 2005, and could "easily survive without you".
Vorderman, 47, said she wanted "viewers and all the team to know the truth" about her departure from the series.
A Channel 4 spokeswoman said: "We never comment on presenters' salaries."
Vorderman announced on Friday she was leaving the show she has co-hosted since 1982.
Mr Miles said his client had offered to accept a pay cut of one-third, in line with a 33% budget cut being imposed on the show by ITV Productions, which makes Countdown for Channel 4.
But he said she felt she was left with no alternative but to leave after she was told to take or leave an offer of 10% of her current salary, and given 48 hours to decide.
'Cavalier manner'After that period ended, he said one of the show's bosses - who he refused to name - said the programme could "easily survive" without her.
"I was stunned that my client's 26 loyal years were discarded in such a cavalier manner," he said.
"Having said that, Carol has never claimed she is indispensable."
Mr Miles refused to say how much Vorderman - who is also a newspaper columnist and a best-selling author of detox books - earned, but said it was less than £1m a year.
"I am devastated that my joyous time with one of the best programmes on TV has ended this way," Vorderman added.
"I was happy to continue doing the numbers and letters for years to come," she said.
"I wish all of my friends and colleagues every success in the future. I'll miss them all."
Future in doubtMr Miles said he had released the statement because of "a series of 'off the record' media briefings that insinuated that Carol had exited the programme because she was demanding more money".
"This is not true," he added.
Initially, Vorderman had claimed that she did not want to go through the upheaval of working with a new main presenter after current host Des O'Connor announced his departure on Saturday.
Vorderman's decision to follow O'Connor in leaving the show - the first to be seen on Channel 4 - will put its future in doubt.
She became a household name after forging a famous partnership with Whiteley before his death.
Former sports presenter Des Lynam took on the role, but left a year later, complaining that the commute from his home in Worthing, West Sussex, to the show's base in Leeds was too tiring.
O'Connor, who replaced Lynam, announced on Thursday he was stepping down after two years with the show to concentrate on music and light entertainment projects.
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