Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn CNN's New Day. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
Hiển thị các bài đăng có nhãn CNN's New Day. Hiển thị tất cả bài đăng
I spoke to Harvey Weinstein on Monday night.
'Harvey…how's your life?' I asked, winning myself the Most Stupid Question of the Year Award.
He sighed loudly, paused for a second or two, then chuckled, wryly.
'My life? It's really not that great right now to be honest, Piers…'
At the time, he was still fighting to save his movie mogul career, and his marriage, after the New York Times bombshell report disclosing he had paid off eight women for sexual harassment.
Weinstein asked to go off-the-record, and we talked for another minute or so before I heard urgent mutterings and he suddenly said: 'I have to go….this is a very important call… I'm sorry… I'll call you straight back.'
He didn't call back.
Within 24 hours, a blizzard of horrific new revelations erupted in the New York Times and New Yorker magazine featuring fresh allegations against Weinstein from myriad famous and non-famous women of rape, sexual assault and harassment.
Perhaps that 'very important call' was from one of those publications, or his lawyer, who knows?
It doesn't really matter now.
As I write this, Harvey Weinstein's career is gone, his marriage is gone, and his reputation as one of the greatest, and most successful, power brokers in Hollywood history is gone too.
Fired by his own company, and dumped by his wife Georgina, beleaguered Weinstein has escaped to a sex addiction clinic somewhere in Europe.
It's a staggering fall from grace, even by the brutal standards of Hollywood.
Yet it's a fall that deserves not a scintilla of sympathy, given the scale of his appalling behaviour.
I've known Weinstein for a decade.
He's an unquestionably brilliant movie producer – his films have generated over 300 Oscar nominations - and a very smart, charismatic guy.
I've only ever seen the best side of Harvey: the fast-talking, quick-witted, pugnacious, determined and driven side with a genuinely passionate love for film.
I've always got on very well with him and enjoyed his company, and hope he gets the treatment he clearly needs. 
But now we've seen another side exposed, one that's made very grim reading: that of a ruthless, selfish, bullying, misogynist prone to harassing women into trading sexual favours for movie roles.
We've also heard the tape - that shocking minute-long wire-tapped audio of him terrorizing a young, frightened actress outside his New York hotel room, a woman he admits to having groped the day before.
You can't hear it without feeling utterly repulsed.
Nor can you hear it without now believing every word all his other accusers are saying.
As Weinstein himself admitted: 'I appreciate the way I've behaved with colleagues in the past has caused a lot of pain.'
Yes, it has.
And I applaud the courageous women who first came forward last week to lift the lid off Weinstein's decades of depravity when he was still in a position of great power to make or break their careers.
But this scandal goes much further and murkier than just Harvey Weinstein.
It goes right to the heart of Hollywood's sickening deceit and hypocrisy.
Take his great friend Meryl Streep, for example; the woman who called Weinstein 'God' at an awards ceremony.
Streep, eventually, after four days of silence, described the revelations as 'disgraceful' and said they 'appalled those of us whose work he championed.'
Then she insisted: 'One thing can be clarified. Not everybody knew. I didn't know about these offenses. I did not know about his settlements with actresses and colleagues. I did not know about his having meetings in his hotel room, his bathroom, or other inappropriate, coercive acts.'
She ended by saying: 'The behavior is inexcusable, but the abuse of power familiar. Each brave word that is raised, heard and credited by our watchdog media will ultimately change the game.'
Fine words, but how exactly do they sit with Streep's public displays of support for another notorious Hollywood sex abuser – Roman Polanski?
In 2003, Polanski won Best Director at the Oscars for The Pianist.
When Harrison Ford announced his name, the audience – comprising all the great and good of the movie business - burst into prolonged loud clapping and cheering.
Leading the applause was Meryl Streep, who sprang to her feet to give Polanski a standing ovation.
It is worth reminding ourselves about why Polanski was not himself able to receive the award in person.
In March, 1977, the director was arrested and charged in Los Angeles with five offenses against Samantha Gailey, a 13-year-old girl: rape by use of drugs, perversion, sodomy, lewd and lascivious act upon a child under 14, and furnishing a controlled substance to a minor.
Polanski, then 43, did a deal with prosecutors in which he pled guilty to a charge of engaging in unlawful sexual intercourse with a minor.
He thought he was going to get off with probation, but then heard rumours he would more likely face lengthy imprisonment - so Polanski fled the country to France, hours before he was due to be sentenced.
He has never returned, and has avoided visiting any countries since that may extradite him back to the USA.
It is important to recount exactly what Polanski did to that 13-year-old girl:
He plied her with champagne, took topless photos of her, and then asked her to lie down on a bed.
'It got a little scary,' Samantha said decades later. 'I realised he had other intentions and I knew I was not where I should be. I just didn't know how to get myself out of there. I said, 'No, no. I don't want to go in there. No, I don't want to do this. No!' I didn't know what else to do. We were alone and I didn't know what else would happen if I made a scene. So I was just scared and after some resistance, I figured well, I guess I'll get to come home after this.'
Samantha testified that Polanski gave her part of a quaalude drug, and despite her protests, he performed oral, vaginal and anal sex upon her, each time being told 'No' and being asked to stop.
Now, you might think that moralistic Hollywood would have revolted against this sickening fugitive child rapist.
This is the same Hollywood, after all, that led the global outrage against Donald Trump when a tape emerged of him talking in a lewd, disgraceful manner about how his celebrity status enabled him to grab women 'by the p***y.'
Meryl Streep was almost as shocked and offended by Trump's behaviour as she now says she is by her great friend Weinstein's.
Within days, she appeared in a video called 'Not Okay' that challenged Trump's characterization of his comments as 'locker room talk'.
The video, paid for by independent Hillary Clinton campaign fund-raising group 'Humanity for Hillary', began with powerful evocative testimonials from women and teenagers who had experienced groping and sexual harassment, intercut with the Access Hollywood video featuring Trump's lewd boasts.
It ended with a series of famous women, including Whoopi Goldberg, Maggie Gyllenhall and Amy Schumer, giving their own response.
'Not Okay,' said Meryl Streep, shaking her head.
It was a strong public statement from Hollywood's most successful female star that sexual harassment from rich, powerful men was unacceptable.
At the Golden Globes in January 2017, Streep said of Trump: 'This instinct to humiliate, when it's modelled by someone in the public platform, it filters down into everybody's life, because it kind of gives permission to other people to do the same thing. Disrespect invites disrespect. When the powerful use their position to bully others, we all lose.'
A month later, she attacked the now President again: 'Evil prospers when good men do nothing…ain't that the truth.'
Yes, it is, Meryl.
But it thus beggars the question: why, then, did you give a standing ovation to Roman Polanski, when you KNEW every single sordid little detail of how he had raped a child?
Why, when asked about him at a press conference, did you say: 'Roman Polanski? I'm very sorry that he's in jail.'
Why have you never said a public word of criticism about a man who used his powerful position to bully and sexually abuse a young girl? This despite three more women alleging he assaulted them: British actress Charlotte Lewis claimed Polanski forced himself on her just after her 16th birthday in 1983. Another woman identified only as Robin claimed she was 'sexually victimised' by Polanski in 1973 when she was 16. And only this week, a German woman claimed that Polanski raped her too in 1972 when she was 15.
The truth is that Harvey Weinstein was able to get away with what he did for so long because Hollywood, led by two-faced Ms Streep, doesn't really give a damn about powerful men abusing young women.
That's why they cheer Polanski and still finance and star in his movies.
That's why Woody Allen is feted as a beloved genius despite running off with his own adopted daughter.
And it's why Casey Affleck was given the Oscar for Best Actor at this year's Oscars despite settling sexual harassment cases with two female work colleagues, cinematographer Magdalena Gorka and producer Amanda White, who accused him of bragging of his sexual exploits, propositioning and grabbing White, sliding into Gorka's bed uninvited and instructing a crew member to display his penis.
Harvey Weinstein has witnessed all this at first hand, and doubtless calculated that nobody in his town, and his industry, really cares about sexual harassment or abuse.
In fact, they reward, applaud and enrich people for it.
And the really dreadful part of this horrendous saga is that until now, he was right. 
Hillary Clinton broke six days of silence on the Harvey Weinstein scandal hours after he was alleged to have committed three rapes, saying she was 'shocked and appalled' - but saying nothing about returning his tainted donations. 
The 2016 presidential loser issued a statement through her spokesman saying his behavior 'cannot be tolerated' - shortly after Gwyneth Paltrow and Angelina Joloie said they too were victims.
'I was shocked and appalled by the revelations about Harvey Weinstein,' Clintoin said.
'The behavior described by the women coming forward cannot be tolerated. Their courage and the support of others is critical in helping to stop this kind of behaviour.'
Her statement ended silence but left open the crucial issue of the vast amount of cash Weinstein donated directly to her and her family, and brought in frm his celebrity friends.
And it came after two public appearances in which she said nothing about her mega-donor friend's sexual harassment scandal, even as she spoke atone, at UC Davis on Monday, about the 'double standards' faced by women running for president.
The Clinton Foundation has also continued to duck requests for comment from DailyMail.com about its up to $250,000 donor.
The final pressure to speak came from Tim Kaine, her running mate.
Speaking on CNN's New Day, he said: 'Any leader should condemn this. These allegations are low-life behavior.
'Whether it's in government, business or media, it's unacceptable and you've got to call it out.' 
He also distanced himself form the 2016 loser, saying: 'I'm nobody's press secretary.' 
One of Clinton's former senior staffers, Patti Solis Doyle, who was her 2008 campaign manager, told CNN it was 'disappointing' that her ex-boss 'hasn't come out and condemned Harvey Weinstein'. That was before she spoke.
Since the scandal was revealed last Thursday, Clinton has found time to discuss birth control funding and her re-released children's book It Takes a Village and the problems she says women face in politics. 
She has also continued her lucrative speaking tour with engagements at Stanford University and University of California, Davis.
Clinton told the UC Davis audience on Monday about the struggle of running for president as a woman. Ticket prices started at $250, and included a copy of her memoir What Happened.
'You have to have a high pain threshold, because the double standard is alive and well,' said Clinton.
'This is endemic to our political system, to business, to the media, to every part of society. So don't be afraid to talk about it and take it on.'
The former presidential candidate also weighed in on the recent fire fires in northern California and hurricanes across the U.S.
She said people must start 'acknowledging climate change and the role that it plays in exacerbating such events.'
Media figures expressed shock that Clinton never once mentioned the sexual harassment allegations against Weinstein during her 90 minute speech.
'HRC spoke for 90 mins last nite, didn't mention Harvey Weinstein. She won't give women a 'pass' for not voting for her, but she gave him one,' wrote CNN's Erin Burnett on Twitter.
Weinstein was fired from Miramax on Sunday, just a few days after it was revealed he had reached financial settlements with at least eight women regarding sexual harassment allegations over the past two decades.
He is now facing allegations of rape, with Italian star Asia Argento describing to the New Yorker how she was attacked by him in a French hotel room. 
Ashley Judd told the New York Times that when she was a young actress Weinstein asked her to watch him shower and tried to give her a massage during a purported business meeting he arranged in his hotel room.
Other women who worked for Miramax reported that Weinstein made similar sexual advances toward them.
Weinstein, a major Democratic political donor, has faced condemnation from Washington politicians and Hollywood celebrities since the scandal was exposed by the New York Times last Thursday.
At least seven Democrats and the Democratic National Committee stepped forward to say they are returning Weinstein's campaigns donations or re-gifting them to charity.
Senators Elizabeth Warren and Cory Booker, both considered likely contenders for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination, said they will donate Weinstein's contributions to charity.
Senators Al Franken, Kristen Gillibrand, Richard Blumenthal, and Martin Heinrich also vowed to return the money.
The Democratic National Committee, which received over $250,000 from Weinstein since 2003, also said it would donate $30,000 to women's groups.
Weinstein maxed out his political contributions to Clinton with a $5,400 check to her 2016 campaign and $30,000 to her Hillary Victory Fund. He was also a prolific bundler for Clinton and hosted fundraising events where celebrity guests paid thousands to meet with the presidential candidate.
Weinstein also gave between $100,000 and $250,000 to the Clinton Foundation – joining other controversial donors, including convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and ex-MF Global CEO Jon Corzine.
A growing chorus of Hollywood celebrities continued to speak out against the movie producer on Monday and Tuesday.
'I was deeply disturbed to hear the news about Harvey Weinstein's behavior,' said Jennifer Lawrence in a statement on Tuesday.
'I worked with Harvey five years ago and I did not experience any form of harassment personally, nor did I know about any of these allegations. This kind of abuse is inexcusable and absolutely upsetting.'
George Clooney said he heard gossip going back decades that 'certain actresses had slept with Harvey to get a role,' but said he ignored these rumors because he found them demeaning to women.
'The part we're hearing now about eight women being paid off, I didn't hear anything about that and I don't know anyone that did,' said Clooney. 'That's a whole other level and there's no way you can reconcile that. There's nothing to say except that it's indefensible.'
Lena Dunham, who campaigned for Clinton in 2016, wrote a column for the New York Times denouncing those who have stayed silent on Weinstein's behaviour.
'[H]ere we are, days later, waiting for Mr. Weinstein's most powerful collaborators to say something. Anything,' wrote Dunham. 'It wouldn't be just a gift to the women he has victimized, but a message to the women who are watching our industry closely.'