Friday, October 13, 2017

Hollywood has always used the "Casting Couch" For the sex trade for glory

Scandals by celebrities have always been a common staple of media
attention. Despite their wealth and fame, movie stars are essentially
disposable, given the large number of candidates who would sell their soul
for a shot at stardom. However, Hollywood gift t end problems with them.
Harvey Weinstein

In particular, the spotlight focuses earlier in the food chain Harvey
Weinstein, producer 65 years old involved in over 300 films and television
shows since 1981. Some of his most famous films were the Kill Bill series,
Pulp Fiction, Inglorious Bastards, and Mandela: long Walk to Freedom. If
recent allegations are true, it could be symptomatic of a larger problem?
A recent New York Times begins:
There are two decades, Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein invited Ashley
Judd at the Peninsula Beverly Hills hotel for what the young actress should
be a breakfast business meeting. Instead, he sent her to his room, where he
appeared in a bathrobe and asked if he could give her a massage or she
could watch the shower, she recalled in an interview.
"How can I leave the room as fast as possible without alienating Harvey
Weinstein? "Ms. Judd said she remembers thinking.
This n t one he said / she said incident; describes several other very
similar meetings. Another mentions an alleged groping of an Italian model.
The article said that often these have given rise to a cash settlement,
often with a confidentiality agreement. Journalists have failed to report
these incidents. It no coincidence that own Hollywood & # Big Six MSM 8217;
s Big Ten movie studios. Despite some exceptions, the magnates are rarely
thrown under the bus.

Despite all that can or can not be reached, Weinstein has strong feminist
reputation. The article in the New York Times says that his company
distributed a feature on the subject of sexual assault on campus. He raised
money for Hillary in the campaign, Malia Obama internships, recently helped
fund a professorship at Rutgers University in the name of Gloria Steinem &
# 8221; and participated in a woman s in March during the Sundance film
Festival.
His lawyer says the allegations are false, and legal action may result
against time. According to a follow-up article in the New York Times, a
third of his company left the board. Moreover, Weinstein apologized,
acknowledging that this has caused much pain & # 8221; and take some time
indefinitely.
Yet perhaps the public hasn & # 8217; t seen the last of these conflicts,
as several news stories recently resurfaced elsewhere. Some claims are
worse. Even Hillary and had to take Lightworker opinion.
Although most turns out to be true, it would be just the tip of
Tinseltown's very dirty iceberg.
Hollywood's sordid history

Sexual harassment is particularly thorny issue. On the one hand, being a
sleazebag is obviously reprehensible. No one should be asked to trade
sexual favors for employment. Secondly, legal developments have created a
climate of fear and unfounded accusations can be very damaging. Moreover,
the rich and famous should meet the same rules for everyone.
The film industry has long been a staple of American culture. Thomas Edison
and D. W. Griffith created his debut. Soon after, Hollywood was created by
the Central and Eastern European immigrants. All the leaders ended up
ditching their starting wives for nubile movie stars. Despite this, the
casting couch Gambit is legendary for a century.
In other words, where there's smoke, there's fire. Although remarried in
America's most beautiful women exchange sex for the lead roles was
something planned many other actresses to open the doors. Marilyn Monroe's
1955 statement (after getting a major contract) is revealing:
I'll never have to suck another cock [adjective of nationality] again.
Julia Phillips even wrote a bestseller about the industry s moral turpitude
during the 1970s and 1980s called You never eat lunch in this town again.
How deep does the dirt go?
The sordid continues with global reach, noted in the European film scene,
and even Puritan institution outside of Bollywood. It's so bad that the
movie industry is the only place where feminists have actually a point on
this institutionalized & # 8221; and & # 8221 structural;. However, as with
most of the real problems being, women generally take relatively little
notice.
There are worse

Typical casting couch incidents involved young adult women, and deals were
quid pro quo they could accept or reject. Again, it is clear that being
sleazebag is wrong. Unfortunately n t end there.
Teens & # 8212; and even the youngest & # 8212; of both sexes were
subjected to inappropriate behavior. Shirley Temple wrote about a producer
himself exposed when she was twelve. As disgusting as it is outright
coercion arrived too amid a culture of secrecy. Sometimes this includes
minors being crisscrossed with medication. Hollywood's answer to Roman
Polanski is fundamentally This happened long ago; In addition, it s & #
8221 fresh !;
application of the conventional law has generally struggled notorious
treatment of high profile cases. So what can we do about these problems?
The solution
Exit financing their degeneration and propaganda.
Thus, Hollywood tolerated grotesquely immoral behavior from day one. Apart
from this, they have used their position to push the cultural Marxism.
Lately, their propaganda is so bad that it affects the quality of their
product. Then they have the nerve to give us lectures rubes in Flyover
Country on the policy to their Oscar ceremonies, making what was once a fun
event seem like a sociology professor s sermon. When the subject turns to
women and # 8217; the rights and welfare of children, they're bigger
hypocrites than televangelists.
There one thing that Hollywood types are listening: the bottom line. After
reading all the above, how motivated are you to purchase an overpriced
ticket last shlockbuster? How are you prepared to keep your subscription to
cable TV which sends royalty checks for them? Their virtue signaling may
redeem the feminists, but s time for the public to the tune.
More: 6 Reasons to Boycott Hollywood Forever

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