Open Letter From Dylan Farrow on Abuse by Woody Allan

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Re: Open Letter From Dylan Farrow on Abuse by Woody Allan

Postby FourthBase » Wed Feb 19, 2014 11:49 am

Bro, you are the most holy rolling agnostic I have ever met.


Thank you.
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Re: Open Letter From Dylan Farrow on Abuse by Woody Allan

Postby Project Willow » Thu Feb 20, 2014 1:53 pm

BrandonD » 18 Feb 2014 15:17 wrote:
Anyone with an strong opinion on something that has no bearing on his day-to-day life (such as a stranger possibly molesting another stranger) is either emotionally invested in the subject, or indoctrinated. Either way, that person is incapable of assessing that scenario objectively.


No one has a corner on objectivity here. This is not happening on Mars. It has happened within a culture that is organized around certain beliefs and practices, many of which operate on an unconscious level. From birth to death, from top to bottom, we're all indoctrinated, and affected in our daily lives by the fruits of that indoctrination.

In nearly every area of contention the most powerful operating bias is that which supports the status quo. Everybody fights to maintain whatever privileges they have, and those with fewer privileges internalize the beliefs of those above them. Those who benefit the most are the least inclined to step far enough back to assess how it's affecting their point of view. To ignore all of this, to throw out cultural context and how it impacts individual behavior is to render oneself less objective, not more.

Here are some facts:

1. More than 90% of sexual assaults go unpunished.
2. Sexual abuse of children is at epidemic levels, roughly, 1 in 5 girls, 1 in 7 boys.

There are entire systems of thought and action that maintain this status quo. Victims, bystanders, and perpetrators hold beliefs that both reflect and uphold this reality. To discount this scenario completely, and a number of other cultural forces and factors, is the opposite of objectivity. It is like attempting to describe an object by only examining a third of its physical characteristics. Ironically, those of us who have considered the cultural context, as well as the other material that is available, are accused of inherent bias. At the least what we're doing is incorporating more data, not less, in our assessments.
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Re: Open Letter From Dylan Farrow on Abuse by Woody Allan

Postby FourthBase » Fri Feb 21, 2014 2:49 am

In nearly every area of contention the most powerful operating bias is that which supports the status quo. Everybody fights to maintain whatever privileges they have, and those with fewer privileges internalize the beliefs of those above them.


The status quo where? RI has its own.
Everybody where? Here, too?

There are entire systems of thought and action that maintain this status quo. Victims, bystanders, and perpetrators hold beliefs that both reflect and uphold this reality. To discount this scenario completely, and a number of other cultural forces and factors, is the opposite of objectivity.


Who has discounted that scenario completely? And which scenario, actually?
You mean...the existence of bias, propaganda, power dynamics?

Most of us here have tried our best to pry ourselves out of those systems.
Are you maybe suggesting by implication it is hopeless, that we have no chance?
That none of us has achieved enough freedom of thought to understand you?

Ironically, those of us who have considered the cultural context, as well as the other material that is available, are accused of inherent bias.


Nobody can do Unknowingly Ironic like you, PW.
That took the cake and ate it, too. Bravo.
Record-breaking recursive irony.

To recap: You imply that only you -- and not those who don't more or less completely agree with you about the core of this case -- have considered the cultural context. In fact, we haven't even considered anything that can be termed "material that is available", we are that captive to the pervasive propaganda and ignorant that only you in your wisdom as Priestess of Victimhood can name and dispel our cursed condition, for us, if we merely can give up our culturally-conditioned reflex to keep not agreeing with you.

From birth to death, from top to bottom, we're all indoctrinated, and affected in our daily lives by the fruits of that indoctrination.


Yeah, I'll speak for myself. Thanks, anyway.

If you were right, that'd be okay.
But you are not right; it's not okay.

I am pretty much the furthest fucking thing from indoctrinated.
So is everyone else here, with rare exceptions. (Ahem?)
Where do you think you are? Who do you see us as?
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Re: Open Letter From Dylan Farrow on Abuse by Woody Allan

Postby alwyn » Sat Feb 22, 2014 12:26 am

just an innocent bystander here, but fourth base, you seem to have a hard on (not the friendly kind) for Project Willow...that's why i said 'project much?'....

I'm going to ask a different question. have you been sexually abused? have you ever tried to report it and not been believed? Because if not, you have no objective qualifications for ascertaining the truth in this matter. Your arguments seem quite rational and pointed, but i'm afraid you have missed the heart of the matter.
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Re: Open Letter From Dylan Farrow on Abuse by Woody Allan

Postby smiths » Sat Feb 22, 2014 2:21 am

have you been sexually abused?
have you ever tried to report it and not been believed?
Because if not, you have no objective qualifications for ascertaining the truth in this matter.


i struggled in this thread for days because i just didnt get it, now i do

i cannot ascertain the truth of this matter because i wasnt sexually abused

when i read back on this thread a few days ago i saw that my initial reactions to the Aaron Bady article were confrontational and i fely annoyed with myself,
having just read the quote above, i remembered why i had been so frustrated and reacted the way i did

and further, FB is accused above of having "a hard on (not the friendly kind) for Project Willow" as though PW has been unfairly challenged or dogged by FB but this is an absolutely untrue

PW has been the gatekeeper of this thread, FB has been attacked repeatedly for raising legitimate questions and offering alternative lines of inquiry outside the "Woody Allen is definitely a pedophile" narrative
anyone, including myself, who has moved off that central narrative has been lumped into a collective group of scum made up of men who protect or take part in child abuse
i was very upset to discover what a horrible presence i occupied in the 'rape culture'

and PW, the numbers of abuse you claim without reference are absurd, where did they come from?
the question is why, who, why, what, why, when, why and why again?
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Re: Open Letter From Dylan Farrow on Abuse by Woody Allan

Postby Saurian Tail » Sat Feb 22, 2014 11:09 am

smiths » Sat Feb 22, 2014 2:21 am wrote:and PW, the numbers of abuse you claim without reference are absurd, where did they come from?

smiths ... try googling "sexual abuse statistics" ... it really is that easy.
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Re: Open Letter From Dylan Farrow on Abuse by Woody Allan

Postby brekin » Sat Feb 22, 2014 4:58 pm

alwyn wrote:
alwyn » Fri Feb 21, 2014 11:26 pm wrote:just an innocent bystander here, but fourth base, you seem to have a hard on (not the friendly kind) for Project Willow...that's why i said 'project much?'....

I'm going to ask a different question. have you been sexually abused? have you ever tried to report it and not been believed? Because if not, you have no objective qualifications for ascertaining the truth in this matter. Your arguments seem quite rational and pointed, but i'm afraid you have missed the heart of the matter.


I believe if you review the thread Fourthbase has said that he has. And like he has said having been a victim doesn't make one more right (or objective) on a related matter. I've been boggled by Fourthbase's ascertains on quite a few things, but I think the objective thing goes nowhere fast. One can have been a victim and actually have less empathy for those who have suffered similarly compared to someone who hasn't. There are conservative closeted gay congressman who know what it is like to suffer as a homosexual man in intolerant societies and still seek to aggressively stigmatize gays. Likewise, one can also have experienced something and be more objective about it than someone who hasn't. The conservative congressman who had his ah ha moment when his son came out, etc. So, in the end you come back full circle to where it really comes done to the individual in the moment and how they choose to interface, or not, with the known facts.

Also, while I believe Dylan Farrow's account more than Allen's from what I've read, there is no experience I can fall back on to legitimize my opinion (and that is all it is) as more correct than anyone elses. I mean even someone with years of experience in investigating such matters can make a mistake. And we are all operating long distance and by remote control on this matter. I think thats why its important to deal with what has been reported instead of falling back on identity politics (individual or group) from whatever side of the debate one is on. My take is, go to the evidence and argue from there. The farther we move from there it stops being analysis and just personality politics.
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Re: Open Letter From Dylan Farrow on Abuse by Woody Allan

Postby smiths » Sat Feb 22, 2014 9:13 pm

googled exactly as instructed, every link has different numbers,

here, from the first Australian study in list (number 3 on google search)
"Many Australians are survivors of sexual assault. An estimated 1.3 million women and 362,400 men experienced an incident of sexual assault since the age of 15, according to results from the Personal Safety Survey 2005 (ABS, 2006a). This approximately translates to 1 in 6 women and 1 in 20 men."
http://www.aifs.gov.au/acssa/pubs/sheets/rs5/rs5.pdf

of course there are a number of qualifications, like for instance, "since the age of 15"

my point being, numbers vary wildly by country, by survey, by year - so when you make a claim, provide a link

or perhaps Saurian, you could provide the link for PW with the exact numbers cited (without conferring)
the question is why, who, why, what, why, when, why and why again?
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Re: Open Letter From Dylan Farrow on Abuse by Woody Allan

Postby Project Willow » Sun Feb 23, 2014 6:51 am

smiths » 21 Feb 2014 22:21 wrote:PW has been the gatekeeper of this thread, FB has been attacked repeatedly for raising legitimate questions and offering alternative lines of inquiry outside the "Woody Allen is definitely a pedophile" narrative
anyone, including myself, who has moved off that central narrative has been lumped into a collective group of scum made up of men who protect or take part in child abuse
i was very upset to discover what a horrible presence i occupied in the 'rape culture'


I spoke to a friend of mine today and related to him what's happened in this thread. I asked him how, when I'm delivering what is essentially a cultural critique, people can take it as a personal slight. And he said, of course they do, because they're being jolted into an unpleasant awareness, and an emotional backlash is a understandable response, there's no way of getting around it. Maybe there is no way around it, but I wanted to be clear, as I've already said up thread, I'm not making any character judgements about individual commentators here. FFS, I don't think of you as scum, quite the opposite. As C2W said in the misogyny thread, "It's not about you." Personally, that is. When black people speak about white privilege, I'm not insulted, I take it as a failure of my culture, something that was instilled within me against my will, and from there I can do something about it. That's a more extreme example, but it's along the same lines.

smiths wrote:googled exactly as instructed, every link has different numbers,
This approximately translates to 1 in 6 women and 1 in 20 men."


Yes, the numbers vary widely depending on the study, but they are universally high as a proportion of the population. I use the stats I posted because the majority of assaults go unreported, and those numbers are gleaned from a sampling of self report based studies. It is arguable that even those numbers are too low. Regardless, it is highly difficult to document the exact incidence rates of something that is not generally reported to authorities, and over which there is much pressure to remain silent. Again, what is not in contention is that the numbers are high, proportionally. That anyone can commit a sexual assault with absolute impunity is the overwhelming norm, and if that is not a problem, I do not know what is.

brekin wrote:Also, while I believe Dylan Farrow's account more than Allen's from what I've read, there is no experience I can fall back on to legitimize my opinion (and that is all it is) as more correct than anyone elses. I mean even someone with years of experience in investigating such matters can make a mistake. And we are all operating long distance and by remote control on this matter. I think thats why its important to deal with what has been reported instead of falling back on identity politics (individual or group) from whatever side of the debate one is on. My take is, go to the evidence and argue from there. The farther we move from there it stops being analysis and just personality politics.


What do you mean by "personality politics"? The evidence we have to work with here is not only what has been reported about the case, and the custody hearing transcript, but evidence in the form of what forces shape individual behavior, what motivates the actors on each side. If by identity politics, you mean to discount or deny that we live in a male dominated society, and all of the repercussions and effects that has on individual behavior, then you are throwing out evidence, evidence as to the motivations of all parties involved. I said I believed Dylan. Again, this is not a knee-jerk reaction, I've weighed several different factors in coming to that position, including a cost/benefit analysis of her having come forward as she has done. You and I agree on that point, but I got there with an analysis that relies on, rather than denies, what you might think of as identity politics, namely that women who make these sorts of claims are often subjected to the most heinous vilification. There was little for her to gain, and much cost, in coming forward, and this argues for her veracity. You seem to recognize this too, but reject that male hegemony has anything to do with it, and that makes no sense to me.

FourthBase wrote:
In nearly every area of contention the most powerful operating bias is that which supports the status quo. Everybody fights to maintain whatever privileges they have, and those with fewer privileges internalize the beliefs of those above them.


The status quo where? RI has its own.
Everybody where? Here, too?


Would be happy to clear up all your misunderstandings, if and when you can speak to me without calling me names. Send me a bat signal when you feel you're ready.
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Re: Open Letter From Dylan Farrow on Abuse by Woody Allan

Postby Spiro C. Thiery » Sun Feb 23, 2014 6:57 am

I feel compelled to weigh in on this numbers issue. Many on this forum will be familiar with the case of Sigmund Freud. Very late in the 19th Century, the father of psychoanalysis postulated, I believe, that a roughly quarter of his patients had been sexually molested by an adult within their familial circle before they had reached puberty. Depending on who you believe, he subsequently came to his senses or, revised his theory to maintain his standing within the scientific community. Either way, it resulted in the idea that the larger number of cases he had encountered involved fantasy on the part of the patient. This point in history would seem to represent an archetype of the justification for disbelieving victims of sexual assault: if they are not outright lying, they must be mistaken. I hasten to note that, the slight variation between German and English for the interpretation of the word "fantasy" notwithstanding, this very suggestion could as well be a classic representation of the more-than-dubious "she wanted it" argument that smears unconscious recollections from the distant past all the way to accusations of a rape that happened yesterday.

In general, I find the concern valid that certain folks will entertain the possibility that a vast conspiracy exists when it comes to the institutionalized sexual assault of young men, but be more reluctant in believing that certain celebrated personalities might have been guilty of such a horrible crime. But the confirmation bias does not begin and end there, and this does not mean that anyone who maintains agnosticism in any one particular case, nor the one in this particular thread, is guilty of this bias.

I, for one, belong to the camp that believe Freud buckled under pressure. The evidence of his potential ostracization exists and has been laid out in a number of books on the subject. Put quite simply, the sheer vastness of the problem is something that no one seems able to comprehend or wants to admit.

Nevertheless, the case of Farrow versus Allen versus Farrow is not so cut and dry. This is a shame because there are elements here that might be quite revealing and instructive, not only for Mia, Woody, Soon-Yi, and Dylan, and for Ronan and Moses, but for all of us.

This is not just a story about the abuse of power and influence. This is not just a story about sexual abuse and our inability to admit how widespread it is. It is a story about the shaming of sexuality and our inability to come to grips with it. People will admit to murder before they will admit to having done something untoward with their genitalia. People will admit to beating the living crap out of their children before they will admit that they have put their tongue on them. We as a society will admit to the violent impulse, as long as the impulse is not sexual. I do not say this to downplay the seriousness of sexual abuse. On the contrary: this reality shows just how serious it is.
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Re: Open Letter From Dylan Farrow on Abuse by Woody Allan

Postby FourthBase » Sun Feb 23, 2014 8:28 am

I spoke to a friend of mine today and related to him what's happened in this thread. I asked him how, when I'm delivering what is essentially a cultural critique, people can take it as a personal slight. And he said, of course they do, because they're being jolted into an unpleasant awareness, and an emotional backlash is a understandable response, there's no way of getting around it. Maybe there is no way around it, but I wanted to be clear, as I've already said up thread, I'm not making any character judgements about individual commentators here. FFS, I don't think of you as scum, quite the opposite. As C2W said in the misogyny thread, "It's not about you." Personally, that is. When black people speak about white privilege, I'm not insulted, I take it as a failure of my culture, something that was instilled within me against my will, and from there I can do something about it. That's a more extreme example, but it's along the same lines.


There is nothing unpleasant about the world that I am not already well-aware of or totally willing to be aware of out of a moral responsibility to Know. Literally: Nothing. Do you get that? Nothing on earth could make me uncomfortable enough to react in the way you and your bias-confirming friend assume. What animated me here is not merely personal offense taken, of which there is much in what you term a purely "cultural critique" (How would you like to be essentially told, "You're a [gender, race, this, that], so you are fated to be [insert generalization] and think the things you do, and it is my right and duty as [insert privilege] to educate you, to fix you"? You'd fucking despise it, rightfully.) What has bothered me most is your general approach, the offenses against the principles of intellectual and ethical consistency, the passive-aggressive force you do not see yourself exerting. I will take none of this off-thread, by the way, I will not be PM-ing you.
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Re: Open Letter From Dylan Farrow on Abuse by Woody Allan

Postby FourthBase » Sun Feb 23, 2014 8:47 am

Spiro C. Thiery » 23 Feb 2014 05:57 wrote:I feel compelled to weigh in on this numbers issue. Many on this forum will be familiar with the case of Sigmund Freud. Very late in the 19th Century, the father of psychoanalysis postulated, I believe, that a roughly quarter of his patients had been sexually molested by an adult within their familial circle before they had reached puberty. Depending on who you believe, he subsequently came to his senses or, revised his theory to maintain his standing within the scientific community. Either way, it resulted in the idea that the larger number of cases he had encountered involved fantasy on the part of the patient. This point in history would seem to represent an archetype of the justification for disbelieving victims of sexual assault: if they are not outright lying, they must be mistaken. I hasten to note that, the slight variation between German and English for the interpretation of the word "fantasy" notwithstanding, this very suggestion could as well be a classic representation of the more-than-dubious "she wanted it" argument that smears unconscious recollections from the distant past all the way to accusations of a rape that happened yesterday.

In general, I find the concern valid that certain folks will entertain the possibility that a vast conspiracy exists when it comes to the institutionalized sexual assault of young men, but be more reluctant in believing that certain celebrated personalities might have been guilty of such a horrible crime. But the confirmation bias does not begin and end there, and this does not mean that anyone who maintains agnosticism in any one particular case, nor the one in this particular thread, is guilty of this bias.

I, for one, belong to the camp that believe Freud buckled under pressure. The evidence of his potential ostracization exists and has been laid out in a number of books on the subject. Put quite simply, the sheer vastness of the problem is something that no one seems able to comprehend or wants to admit.

Nevertheless, the case of Farrow versus Allen versus Farrow is not so cut and dry. This is a shame because there are elements here that might be quite revealing and instructive, not only for Mia, Woody, Soon-Yi, and Dylan, and for Ronan and Moses, but for all of us.

This is not just a story about the abuse of power and influence. This is not just a story about sexual abuse and our inability to admit how widespread it is. It is a story about the shaming of sexuality and our inability to come to grips with it. People will admit to murder before they will admit to having done something untoward with their genitalia. People will admit to beating the living crap out of their children before they will admit that they have put their tongue on them. We as a society will admit to the violent impulse, as long as the impulse is not sexual. I do not say this to downplay the seriousness of sexual abuse. On the contrary: this reality shows just how serious it is.


Correct. Nothing on earth more taboo. Shall we really go there?

I mean, just briefly, it's pretty clear to me as someone who doesn't flinch from the discomfort of probing any reality or potential reality, that, at some point, for far longer than we've had operating consciences let alone been civilized or semi-civilized, the human being had been, by our standards, a monstrously perverted species of great ape. Incest must have abounded. Why else would there be any of the subconscious instincts that Freud described which -- however much Freud may have been a total asshole and a semi-fraud -- resonated with most of the thinking world enough for Freud to be canonized. "You secretly lust for your parents", he said, basically, and the world in the 20th century responded, "Hmmm...yep, wow, you nailed it!", basically. Why? Why didn't the world respond: "Wut lol? GTFO!" What does this mean, if Freud is even half-right? To me, it means that if we want to eradicate sexual abuse, which I assume we all do, then we're going to have to do a much better job of dealing with human sexuality, meaning, there's still a lot of ugly shit about the bell curve of human sexual behavior and the roots of human sexuality that society as a whole, even the supposedly liberated outliers, and families and schools individually, are too fearful to examine. Kids have to be better educated, leveled with more, in order to empower them to resist and if that's tragically not possible, then to report. And that can't occur if the adults in charge of preparing kids to defend against sexual abuse are too squeamish to reckon with unpleasant realities.
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Re: Open Letter From Dylan Farrow on Abuse by Woody Allan

Postby brekin » Sun Feb 23, 2014 1:41 pm

Project Willow wrote:
What do you mean by "personality politics"? The evidence we have to work with here is not only what has been reported about the case, and the custody hearing transcript, but evidence in the form of what forces shape individual behavior, what motivates the actors on each side. If by identity politics, you mean to discount or deny that we live in a male dominated society, and all of the repercussions and effects that has on individual behavior, then you are throwing out evidence, evidence as to the motivations of all parties involved. I said I believed Dylan. Again, this is not a knee-jerk reaction, I've weighed several different factors in coming to that position, including a cost/benefit analysis of her having come forward as she has done. You and I agree on that point, but I got there with an analysis that relies on, rather than denies, what you might think of as identity politics, namely that women who make these sorts of claims are often subjected to the most heinous vilification. There was little for her to gain, and much cost, in coming forward, and this argues for her veracity. You seem to recognize this too, but reject that male hegemony has anything to do with it, and that makes no sense to me.


By personality politics I mean the given that the "personal is political". On thread topics that people have strong feelings about and a stake in individually then many times people stop arguing about specifics and start arguing about general abstractions. I don't deny patriarchy exists and has played into this saga from the beginning incidents, Allen's continued insulation and all the way to now and Dylan's reception. I've said as much. But just because patriarchy exists and is evan at play in the Allen/Farrow controversy that alone doesn't prove Allen's guilt.

I know you recognize this to. But I think you have to take into account not everyone is coming into this with the same review of the case specific evidence with the same conclusions. When they bump into posts that are pulling in big picture considerations that aren't Allen specific and more patriarchal abuse related they may assume this is evidence being marshaled against Allen. For example, I would tend to believe the higher prevalence of abuse statistics. But someone could just turn around and say Dylan is among the 4 out of 5 who are not abused. I look at the big picture information as helpful environmental information that can show general tendencies and something that can inform the Allen situation but not prove anything conclusive in the Allen situation regarding his guilt. (I would say, however, with other matters, such as that of Dylan as female whistle-blower public response seems pretty Anita Hill textbook in comparison to say Snowden and Manning's response. But even there others on here would argue that she's being celebrated.)

So, in a nutshell I think some people get and understand the patriarchal dynamic and prevalence of abuse in general, but balk at it being used (in their interpretation) to determine Allen's guilt or innocence. Not saying, you've done this, but I think it may explain some of the hedging and rabidness of counterpoints. And sure, there are some people who don't think patriarchy is at play at all or Allen is just a huge idol to them who they would like to believe the best of in a nasty situation. And so it goes.
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Re: Open Letter From Dylan Farrow on Abuse by Woody Allan

Postby brekin » Wed May 11, 2016 2:16 pm

Good essay from Ronan Farrow on the current state of the Woody Allen scandal and the grand machinery of spin, disbelief, disassociation, acquiescence. Interesting how he interviewed Cosby's biographer on the eve before the Cosby Scandal Garbage bag finally broke open and how he himself is caught up in the machine.

My father, Woody Allen, and the danger of questions unasked
Ronan Farrow is a journalist and the son of actress Mia Farrow and actor/director Woody Allen.

"Woody Allen's son, Ronan Farrow, writes about what he views as the culture of acquiescence surrounding his father and allegations of sexual abuse. "

(The Hollywood Reporter)"They're accusations. They're not in the headlines. There's no obligation to mention them."
These were the objections from a producer at my network. It was September 2014 and I was preparing to interview a respected journalist about his new biography of Bill Cosby. The book omitted allegations of rape and sexual abuse against the entertainer, and I intended to focus on that omission. That producer was one of several industry veterans to warn me against it. At the time, there was little more than a stalled lawsuit and several women with stories, all publicly discredited by Cosby's PR team. There was no criminal conviction. It was old news. It wasn't news.
So we compromised: I would raise the allegations, but only in a single question late in the interview. And I called the author, reporter to reporter, to let him know what was coming. He seemed startled when I brought it up. I was the first to ask about it, he said. He paused for a long time, then asked if it was really necessary. On air, he said he'd looked into the allegations and they didn't check out.

Today, the number of accusers has risen to 60. The author has apologized. And reporters covering Cosby have been forced to examine decades of omissions, of questions unasked, stories untold. I am one of those reporters — I'm ashamed of that interview.

Read more: The Woody Allen interview (Which he won't read)
Some reporters have drawn connections between the press' grudging evolution on Cosby and a painful chapter in my own family's history. It was shortly before the Cosby story exploded anew that my sister Dylan Farrow wrote about her own experiences — alleging that our father, Woody Allen, had "groomed" her with inappropriate touching as a young girl and sexually assaulted her when she was 7 years old.
Being in the media as my sister's story made headlines, and Woody Allen's PR engine revved into action, gave me a window into just how potent the pressure can be to take the easy way out. Every day, colleagues at news organizations forwarded me the emails blasted out by Allen's powerful publicist, who had years earlier orchestrated a robust publicity campaign to validate my father's sexual relationship with another one of my siblings. Those emails featured talking points ready-made to be converted into stories, complete with validators on offer — therapists, lawyers, friends, anyone willing to label a young woman confronting a powerful man as crazy, coached, vindictive. At first, they linked to blogs, then to high-profile outlets repeating the talking points — a self-perpetuating spin machine.
The open CC list on those emails revealed reporters at every major outlet with whom that publicist shared relationships — and mutual benefit, given her firm's starry client list, from Will Smith to Meryl Streep. Reporters on the receiving end of this kind of PR blitz have to wonder if deviating from the talking points might jeopardize their access to all the other A-list clients.

In fact, when my sister first decided to speak out, she had gone to multiple newspapers — most wouldn't touch her story. An editor at the Los Angeles Times sought to publish her letter with an accompanying, deeply fact-checked timeline of events, but his bosses killed it before it ran. The editor called me, distraught, since I'd written for them in the past. There were too many relationships at stake. It was too hot for them. He fought hard for it. (Reached by The Hollywood Reporter, a spokesperson for the Los Angeles Times said the decision not to publish was made by the Opinion editors.)
When The New York Times ultimately ran my sister's story in 2014, it gave her 936 words online, embedded in an article with careful caveats. Nicholas Kristof, the Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter and advocate for victims of sexual abuse, put it on his blog.
Soon afterward, the Times gave her alleged attacker twice the space — and prime position in the print edition, with no caveats or surrounding context. It was a stark reminder of how differently our press treats vulnerable accusers and powerful men who stand accused.
Read more: Full coverage of Cannes Film Festival
Perhaps I succumbed to that pressure myself. I had worked hard to distance myself from my painfully public family history and wanted my work to stand on its own. So I had avoided commenting on my sister's allegations for years and, when cornered, cultivated distance, limiting my response to the occasional line on Twitter. My sister's decision to step forward came shortly after I began work on a book and a television series. It was the last association I wanted. Initially, I begged my sister not to go public again and to avoid speaking to reporters about it. I'm ashamed of that, too. With sexual assault, anything's easier than facing it in full, saying all of it, facing all of the consequences. Even now, I hesitated before agreeing to The Hollywood Reporter's invitation to write this piece, knowing it could trigger another round of character assassination against my sister, my mother or me.

But when Dylan explained her agony in the wake of powerful voices sweeping aside her allegations, the press often willing to be taken along for the ride, and the fears she held for young girls potentially being exposed to a predator — I ultimately knew she was right. I began to speak about her more openly, particularly on social media. And I began to look carefully at my own decisions in covering sexual assault stories.
I believe my sister. This was always true as a brother who trusted her, and, even at 5 years old, was troubled by our father's strange behavior around her: climbing into her bed in the middle of the night, forcing her to suck his thumb — behavior that had prompted him to enter into therapy focused on his inappropriate conduct with children prior to the allegations.
But more importantly, I've approached the case as an attorney and a reporter, and found her allegations to be credible. The facts are persuasive and well documented. I won't list them again here, but most have been meticulously reported by journalist Maureen Orth in Vanity Fair. The only final legal disposition is a custody ruling that found Woody Allen's behavior "grossly inappropriate" and stressed that "measures must be taken to protect [Dylan]."
On May 4, The Hollywood Reporter published a cover interview with Woody Allen, quirky auteur. To me it is a sterling example of how not to talk about sexual assault. Dylan's allegations are never raised in the interview and receive only a parenthetical mention — an inaccurate reference to charges being "dropped." THR later issued a correction: "not pursued."
The correction points to what makes Allen, Cosby and other powerful men so difficult to cover. The allegations were never backed by a criminal conviction. This is important. It should always be noted. But it is not an excuse for the press to silence victims, to never interrogate allegations. Indeed, it makes our role more important when the legal system so often fails the vulnerable as they face off against the powerful.

Here is exactly what charges not being pursued looked like in my sister's case in 1993: The prosecutor met with my mother and sister. Dylan already was deeply traumatized — by the assault and the subsequent legal battle that forced her to repeat the story over and over again. (And she did tell her story repeatedly, without inconsistency, despite the emotional toll it took on her.) The longer that battle, the more grotesque the media circus surrounding my family grew. My mother and the prosecutor decided not to subject my sister to more years of mayhem. In a rare step, the prosecutor announced publicly that he had "probable cause" to prosecute Allen, and attributed the decision not to do so to "the fragility of the child victim."
My mother still feels it was the only choice she could make to protect her daughter. But it is ironic: My mother's decision to place Dylan's well-being above all else became a means for Woody Allen to smear them both.
Very often, women with allegations do not or cannot bring charges. Very often, those who do come forward pay dearly, facing off against a justice system and a culture designed to take them to pieces. A reporter's role isn't to carry water for those women. But it is our obligation to include the facts, and to take them seriously. Sometimes, we're the only ones who can play that role.

Confronting a subject with allegations from women or children, not backed by a simple, dispositive legal ruling is hard. It means having those tough newsroom conversations, making the case for burning bridges with powerful public figures. It means going up against angry fans and angry publicists.
There are more reporters than ever showing that courage, and more outlets supporting them. Many are of a new generation, freed from the years of access journalism that can accrete around older publications. BuzzFeed has done pioneering reporting on recent Hollywood sexual assault stories. It was Gawker that asked why allegations against Bill Cosby weren't taken more seriously. And it is heartening that The Hollywood Reporter asked me to write this response. Things are changing.
But the old-school media's slow evolution has helped to create a culture of impunity and silence. Amazon paid millions to work with Woody Allen, bankrolling a new series and film. Actors, including some I admire greatly, continue to line up to star in his movies. "It's not personal," one once told me. But it hurts my sister every time one of her heroes like Louis C.K., or a star her age, like Miley Cyrus, works with Woody Allen. Personal is exactly what it is — for my sister, and for women everywhere with allegations of sexual assault that have never been vindicated by a conviction.

Tonight, the Cannes Film Festival kicks off with a new Woody Allen film. There will be press conferences and a red-carpet walk by my father and his wife (my sister). He'll have his stars at his side — Kristen Stewart, Blake Lively, Steve Carell, Jesse Eisenberg. They can trust that the press won't ask them the tough questions. It's not the time, it's not the place, it's just not done.

That kind of silence isn't just wrong. It's dangerous. It sends a message to victims that it's not worth the anguish of coming forward. It sends a message about who we are as a society, what we'll overlook, who we'll ignore, who matters and who doesn't.
We are witnessing a sea change in how we talk about sexual assault and abuse. But there is more work to do to build a culture where women like my sister are no longer treated as if they are invisible. It's time to ask some hard questions.

Farrow's investigative reporting series, "Undercovered With Ronan Farrow," airs on NBC's 'Today.'

http://www.cnn.com/2016/05/11/entertain ... ttommedium

And this was right on target--->

Cannes Opening Night Starts With Rape Joke Aimed at Woody Allen
http://variety.com/2016/film/news/canne ... 201771564/

The 69th annual Cannes Film Festival got off to an awkward start when Woody Allen, whose new film “Cafe Society” kicked off the fest, was subject of a rape joke during Wednesday night’s opening ceremony.
“It’s very nice that you’ve been shooting so many movies in Europe, even if you are not being convicted for rape in the U.S.,” said master of ceremony Laurent Lafitte.
The joke, which drew gasps from the audience, was perceived as a knock on Allen and director Roman Polanski.


Lafitte co-stars in Paul Verhoeven’s rape drama, “Ellen,” that premieres next week at Cannes.
“Thank you for coming tonight, sir,” he continued to Allen in French.
The 80 year-old filmmaker had received a standing ovation just minutes prior as he entered the Palais theater.
Allen, joined by cast members Kristen Stewart, Jesse Eisenberg and Blake Lively on the red carpet, was making his 12th Cannes appearance with the movie. It was his third time opening the international fest. “Cafe Society,” a fairy tale set in 1930s Hollywood, made for an appropriate launch to a festival that focuses on classic movie-star glamour.
If I knew all mysteries and all knowledge, and have not charity, I am nothing. St. Paul
I hang onto my prejudices, they are the testicles of my mind. Eric Hoffer
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Re: Open Letter From Dylan Farrow on Abuse by Woody Allan

Postby elfismiles » Thu May 12, 2016 10:29 am

D'OH! :wallhead:

Nordic » 12 May 2016 05:46 wrote:Here's the original thread. It spells Allen as Allan in the headline which is what made it somewhat hard to find

viewtopic.php?f=8&t=37699&hilit=Woody


Cannes: Woody Allen Says He Is Not Offended by Rape Joke at Opening Ceremony
5:10 AM PDT 5/12/2016 by THR Staff
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/c ... -he-893105

My Father, Woody Allen, and the Danger of Questions Unasked (Guest Column)
3:00 AM PDT 5/11/2016 by Ronan Farrow
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/m ... ger-892572
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