Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eleanor the Great is on Netflix. Another Wayfarer & Sony collaboration with scarjo as director and Justin as EP. Seems like everyone managed to get on just fine once you removed one person from the equation. As Steve Sarowitz said, “everyone’s nice, and then there’s Blake.”
Even Justin wouldn't stoop to leering at a 90-year-old and calling her sexy.
You’re a contemptible a-hole on a few levels.
I think PP meant his a-holery at least has some limits, aka respect for elders. At least I'm hoping Squibb wouldn't be among the TEN women who went on the record about his series of offensive behaviors.
At least half of those women had nothing to do with Blake, and went on the record independently. But the Justin stans have no answer for why they would do that except, maybe just maybe, he is a sexist creep who enjoys exerting power over women. I wish I could wipe my memory clean of how he discussed a *teenage sex scene* with that poor young actress. Glad Blake succeeded in getting some of the more prurient, unauthorized scenes scrubbed.
No one cares about the other women because none of their allegations have any substance. Meanwhile, Blake’s claims fall apart by the hour.
Right. That many claims about hostile work environment do not come out of nowhere. I bet you consider yourself a feminist, which is a joke. The fact that no one from that set, or the prior one with complaints, is going on the record to defend him speaks VOLUMES.
The fact that the complaints are not limited to the IEWU set is important for establishing a pattern. No one can claim Blake's undue influence in the former case. Complaints about Justin necessitating his removal from another set are highly relevant.
Heath testified under oath that Baldoni was not removed from another set. I believe that Claire wrote in his affidavit that he raised his voice, which is not sexual harassment
Baldoni raising his voice with other women (Claire, Alex Saks) and admitting in an email apology to Alex Saks after one such occasion that he has been struggling with conflict with women, specifically, is relevant to whether what happened with Blake was sexual harassment and retaliation, though. It shows someone who struggles to work with women and listen to them. It shows a pattern of negative behavior towards women on sets, and supports Blake's assertion that Baldoni would not have done the things he did to/with her to a man.
I think a lot of people have the mistaken impression that sexual harassment is limited to hitting on a coworker or touching them inappropriately. Those things can definitely be sexual harassment, but so can showing someone explicit videos, making gender or sex-based comments, walking in on a colleague while they are undressed, etc., if the behavior is unwanted and makes the other person feel uncomfortable or makes it difficult for them to do their job.
Thank you for the clear explanation. And the fact that formal complaints were lodged on two separate sets absolutely matters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eleanor the Great is on Netflix. Another Wayfarer & Sony collaboration with scarjo as director and Justin as EP. Seems like everyone managed to get on just fine once you removed one person from the equation. As Steve Sarowitz said, “everyone’s nice, and then there’s Blake.”
Even Justin wouldn't stoop to leering at a 90-year-old and calling her sexy.
You’re a contemptible a-hole on a few levels.
I think PP meant his a-holery at least has some limits, aka respect for elders. At least I'm hoping Squibb wouldn't be among the TEN women who went on the record about his series of offensive behaviors.
At least half of those women had nothing to do with Blake, and went on the record independently. But the Justin stans have no answer for why they would do that except, maybe just maybe, he is a sexist creep who enjoys exerting power over women. I wish I could wipe my memory clean of how he discussed a *teenage sex scene* with that poor young actress. Glad Blake succeeded in getting some of the more prurient, unauthorized scenes scrubbed.
No one cares about the other women because none of their allegations have any substance. Meanwhile, Blake’s claims fall apart by the hour.
Right. That many claims about hostile work environment do not come out of nowhere. I bet you consider yourself a feminist, which is a joke. The fact that no one from that set, or the prior one with complaints, is going on the record to defend him speaks VOLUMES.
The fact that the complaints are not limited to the IEWU set is important for establishing a pattern. No one can claim Blake's undue influence in the former case. Complaints about Justin necessitating his removal from another set are highly relevant.
Heath testified under oath that Baldoni was not removed from another set. I believe that Claire wrote in his affidavit that he raised his voice, which is not sexual harassment
Baldoni raising his voice with other women (Claire, Alex Saks) and admitting in an email apology to Alex Saks after one such occasion that he has been struggling with conflict with women, specifically, is relevant to whether what happened with Blake was sexual harassment and retaliation, though. It shows someone who struggles to work with women and listen to them. It shows a pattern of negative behavior towards women on sets, and supports Blake's assertion that Baldoni would not have done the things he did to/with her to a man.
I think a lot of people have the mistaken impression that sexual harassment is limited to hitting on a coworker or touching them inappropriately. Those things can definitely be sexual harassment, but so can showing someone explicit videos, making gender or sex-based comments, walking in on a colleague while they are undressed, etc., if the behavior is unwanted and makes the other person feel uncomfortable or makes it difficult for them to do their job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eleanor the Great is on Netflix. Another Wayfarer & Sony collaboration with scarjo as director and Justin as EP. Seems like everyone managed to get on just fine once you removed one person from the equation. As Steve Sarowitz said, “everyone’s nice, and then there’s Blake.”
Even Justin wouldn't stoop to leering at a 90-year-old and calling her sexy.
You’re a contemptible a-hole on a few levels.
I think PP meant his a-holery at least has some limits, aka respect for elders. At least I'm hoping Squibb wouldn't be among the TEN women who went on the record about his series of offensive behaviors.
At least half of those women had nothing to do with Blake, and went on the record independently. But the Justin stans have no answer for why they would do that except, maybe just maybe, he is a sexist creep who enjoys exerting power over women. I wish I could wipe my memory clean of how he discussed a *teenage sex scene* with that poor young actress. Glad Blake succeeded in getting some of the more prurient, unauthorized scenes scrubbed.
No one cares about the other women because none of their allegations have any substance. Meanwhile, Blake’s claims fall apart by the hour.
Right. That many claims about hostile work environment do not come out of nowhere. I bet you consider yourself a feminist, which is a joke. The fact that no one from that set, or the prior one with complaints, is going on the record to defend him speaks VOLUMES.
The fact that the complaints are not limited to the IEWU set is important for establishing a pattern. No one can claim Blake's undue influence in the former case. Complaints about Justin necessitating his removal from another set are highly relevant.
NP. I'm not following this super closely, but the pattern of offensive behavior toward women on two different sets plus the timing of hiring someone to "shine a light on BL and RR" right when the complaints about Baldoni started coming out (suggesting retaliation) seems to constitute a credible case. I'll be very curious to see how it plays out.
I'm not a lawyer of course, but I don't understand the independent contractor argument. If she fulfilled the duties of executive producer, and was credited as such, she's an employee of the production company (Sony), right? Please clarify if I'm missing how this works in employment laws. Also, is this a point Baldoni's lawyers are pursuing or just something being tossed around on social media?
This has been explained many times on this thread. There isn’t really a strong pattern of offensive behavior.
Blake and Jenny clearly had a problem with Baldoni and Heath but people are doubting whether it will meet the definition of sexual harassment. A lot of Blake’s claims have fallen apart now that we’ve seen video and text message and documentation, etc. Jenny’s claims were very vague and didn’t seem to be about SH.
Claire A never actually met Baldoni, she worked with wayfarer on another project and there was disagreement on set, but not harassment claims.
Liz worked with Justin on 124 episodes ever several years of their man enough podcast, dramatically quitting when the New York Times article hit, and then partnering in a production company with Ryan Reynolds so it looks a little suspect
Isabel seem to really like Justin as video and text show, admitting in her deposition that she didn’t have a problem onset, but then later revisiting things had problems. This looks sketchy because Blake styled her, had her over for sleepovers, flew her to private events, and pushed for her to get an introducing credit.
Colleen Hoover also seemed to be fine with Justin until Blake got involved. Admitting in her deposition when asked why she unfollowed Justin, she said because Blake told me too.
Blake didn’t seem to have a lot of substance so she tried to pump up the volume of claims, but they tend to fall apart. The main question I have is why she was referring to Justin with such distain very early on, mocking him to others, calling him names, etc., all while leaving him very flattering voice notes, and texts as if they were really close - and this was before she had any allegations so just not sure why she hated him so much from the start. and that really has me questioning this whole case.
Wait. Claire Ayoub definitely met Justin. The disagreement on her set was with Justin.
One of Jenny's claims was Justin calling actresses (including Jenny) "sexy" on set even after Jenny had told him it was inappropriate to do so. That is definitely related to SH.
You didn't mention Alex Saks.
Also Colleen testified that her issues with Justin started before she'd ever even had a conversation with Blake.
I think it's more nuanced than you are presenting. I don't know if Blake really has a case or not and am waiting to see what the judge decides on the summary judgment motion, but it's not as lopsided as you are presenting it. There were definitely multiple women who were uncomfortable around Justin or felt his behavior was, at minimum, sexist. You can be sexist or hard to work with and not sexually harass someone, of course. But this case seems to come down to a matter of degree and interpretation.
What you describe above is not actionable as sexual harassment or hostile work place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eleanor the Great is on Netflix. Another Wayfarer & Sony collaboration with scarjo as director and Justin as EP. Seems like everyone managed to get on just fine once you removed one person from the equation. As Steve Sarowitz said, “everyone’s nice, and then there’s Blake.”
Even Justin wouldn't stoop to leering at a 90-year-old and calling her sexy.
You’re a contemptible a-hole on a few levels.
I think PP meant his a-holery at least has some limits, aka respect for elders. At least I'm hoping Squibb wouldn't be among the TEN women who went on the record about his series of offensive behaviors.
At least half of those women had nothing to do with Blake, and went on the record independently. But the Justin stans have no answer for why they would do that except, maybe just maybe, he is a sexist creep who enjoys exerting power over women. I wish I could wipe my memory clean of how he discussed a *teenage sex scene* with that poor young actress. Glad Blake succeeded in getting some of the more prurient, unauthorized scenes scrubbed.
No one cares about the other women because none of their allegations have any substance. Meanwhile, Blake’s claims fall apart by the hour.
Right. That many claims about hostile work environment do not come out of nowhere. I bet you consider yourself a feminist, which is a joke. The fact that no one from that set, or the prior one with complaints, is going on the record to defend him speaks VOLUMES.
The fact that the complaints are not limited to the IEWU set is important for establishing a pattern. No one can claim Blake's undue influence in the former case. Complaints about Justin necessitating his removal from another set are highly relevant.
Heath testified under oath that Baldoni was not removed from another set. I believe that Claire wrote in his affidavit that he raised his voice, which is not sexual harassment
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eleanor the Great is on Netflix. Another Wayfarer & Sony collaboration with scarjo as director and Justin as EP. Seems like everyone managed to get on just fine once you removed one person from the equation. As Steve Sarowitz said, “everyone’s nice, and then there’s Blake.”
Even Justin wouldn't stoop to leering at a 90-year-old and calling her sexy.
You’re a contemptible a-hole on a few levels.
I think PP meant his a-holery at least has some limits, aka respect for elders. At least I'm hoping Squibb wouldn't be among the TEN women who went on the record about his series of offensive behaviors.
At least half of those women had nothing to do with Blake, and went on the record independently. But the Justin stans have no answer for why they would do that except, maybe just maybe, he is a sexist creep who enjoys exerting power over women. I wish I could wipe my memory clean of how he discussed a *teenage sex scene* with that poor young actress. Glad Blake succeeded in getting some of the more prurient, unauthorized scenes scrubbed.
No one cares about the other women because none of their allegations have any substance. Meanwhile, Blake’s claims fall apart by the hour.
Right. That many claims about hostile work environment do not come out of nowhere. I bet you consider yourself a feminist, which is a joke. The fact that no one from that set, or the prior one with complaints, is going on the record to defend him speaks VOLUMES.
The fact that the complaints are not limited to the IEWU set is important for establishing a pattern. No one can claim Blake's undue influence in the former case. Complaints about Justin necessitating his removal from another set are highly relevant.
NP. I'm not following this super closely, but the pattern of offensive behavior toward women on two different sets plus the timing of hiring someone to "shine a light on BL and RR" right when the complaints about Baldoni started coming out (suggesting retaliation) seems to constitute a credible case. I'll be very curious to see how it plays out.
I'm not a lawyer of course, but I don't understand the independent contractor argument. If she fulfilled the duties of executive producer, and was credited as such, she's an employee of the production company (Sony), right? Please clarify if I'm missing how this works in employment laws. Also, is this a point Baldoni's lawyers are pursuing or just something being tossed around on social media?
This has been explained many times on this thread. There isn’t really a strong pattern of offensive behavior.
Blake and Jenny clearly had a problem with Baldoni and Heath but people are doubting whether it will meet the definition of sexual harassment. A lot of Blake’s claims have fallen apart now that we’ve seen video and text message and documentation, etc. Jenny’s claims were very vague and didn’t seem to be about SH.
Claire A never actually met Baldoni, she worked with wayfarer on another project and there was disagreement on set, but not harassment claims.
Liz worked with Justin on 124 episodes ever several years of their man enough podcast, dramatically quitting when the New York Times article hit, and then partnering in a production company with Ryan Reynolds so it looks a little suspect
Isabel seem to really like Justin as video and text show, admitting in her deposition that she didn’t have a problem onset, but then later revisiting things had problems. This looks sketchy because Blake styled her, had her over for sleepovers, flew her to private events, and pushed for her to get an introducing credit.
Colleen Hoover also seemed to be fine with Justin until Blake got involved. Admitting in her deposition when asked why she unfollowed Justin, she said because Blake told me too.
Blake didn’t seem to have a lot of substance so she tried to pump up the volume of claims, but they tend to fall apart. The main question I have is why she was referring to Justin with such distain very early on, mocking him to others, calling him names, etc., all while leaving him very flattering voice notes, and texts as if they were really close - and this was before she had any allegations so just not sure why she hated him so much from the start. and that really has me questioning this whole case.
Wait. Claire Ayoub definitely met Justin. The disagreement on her set was with Justin.
One of Jenny's claims was Justin calling actresses (including Jenny) "sexy" on set even after Jenny had told him it was inappropriate to do so. That is definitely related to SH.
You didn't mention Alex Saks.
Also Colleen testified that her issues with Justin started before she'd ever even had a conversation with Blake.
I think it's more nuanced than you are presenting. I don't know if Blake really has a case or not and am waiting to see what the judge decides on the summary judgment motion, but it's not as lopsided as you are presenting it. There were definitely multiple women who were uncomfortable around Justin or felt his behavior was, at minimum, sexist. You can be sexist or hard to work with and not sexually harass someone, of course. But this case seems to come down to a matter of degree and interpretation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eleanor the Great is on Netflix. Another Wayfarer & Sony collaboration with scarjo as director and Justin as EP. Seems like everyone managed to get on just fine once you removed one person from the equation. As Steve Sarowitz said, “everyone’s nice, and then there’s Blake.”
Even Justin wouldn't stoop to leering at a 90-year-old and calling her sexy.
You’re a contemptible a-hole on a few levels.
I think PP meant his a-holery at least has some limits, aka respect for elders. At least I'm hoping Squibb wouldn't be among the TEN women who went on the record about his series of offensive behaviors.
At least half of those women had nothing to do with Blake, and went on the record independently. But the Justin stans have no answer for why they would do that except, maybe just maybe, he is a sexist creep who enjoys exerting power over women. I wish I could wipe my memory clean of how he discussed a *teenage sex scene* with that poor young actress. Glad Blake succeeded in getting some of the more prurient, unauthorized scenes scrubbed.
No one cares about the other women because none of their allegations have any substance. Meanwhile, Blake’s claims fall apart by the hour.
Right. That many claims about hostile work environment do not come out of nowhere. I bet you consider yourself a feminist, which is a joke. The fact that no one from that set, or the prior one with complaints, is going on the record to defend him speaks VOLUMES.
The fact that the complaints are not limited to the IEWU set is important for establishing a pattern. No one can claim Blake's undue influence in the former case. Complaints about Justin necessitating his removal from another set are highly relevant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eleanor the Great is on Netflix. Another Wayfarer & Sony collaboration with scarjo as director and Justin as EP. Seems like everyone managed to get on just fine once you removed one person from the equation. As Steve Sarowitz said, “everyone’s nice, and then there’s Blake.”
Even Justin wouldn't stoop to leering at a 90-year-old and calling her sexy.
You’re a contemptible a-hole on a few levels.
I think PP meant his a-holery at least has some limits, aka respect for elders. At least I'm hoping Squibb wouldn't be among the TEN women who went on the record about his series of offensive behaviors.
At least half of those women had nothing to do with Blake, and went on the record independently. But the Justin stans have no answer for why they would do that except, maybe just maybe, he is a sexist creep who enjoys exerting power over women. I wish I could wipe my memory clean of how he discussed a *teenage sex scene* with that poor young actress. Glad Blake succeeded in getting some of the more prurient, unauthorized scenes scrubbed.
No one cares about the other women because none of their allegations have any substance. Meanwhile, Blake’s claims fall apart by the hour.
Right. That many claims about hostile work environment do not come out of nowhere. I bet you consider yourself a feminist, which is a joke. The fact that no one from that set, or the prior one with complaints, is going on the record to defend him speaks VOLUMES.
The fact that the complaints are not limited to the IEWU set is important for establishing a pattern. No one can claim Blake's undue influence in the former case. Complaints about Justin necessitating his removal from another set are highly relevant.
NP. I'm not following this super closely, but the pattern of offensive behavior toward women on two different sets plus the timing of hiring someone to "shine a light on BL and RR" right when the complaints about Baldoni started coming out (suggesting retaliation) seems to constitute a credible case. I'll be very curious to see how it plays out.
I'm not a lawyer of course, but I don't understand the independent contractor argument. If she fulfilled the duties of executive producer, and was credited as such, she's an employee of the production company (Sony), right? Please clarify if I'm missing how this works in employment laws. Also, is this a point Baldoni's lawyers are pursuing or just something being tossed around on social media?
This has been explained many times on this thread. There isn’t really a strong pattern of offensive behavior.
Blake and Jenny clearly had a problem with Baldoni and Heath but people are doubting whether it will meet the definition of sexual harassment. A lot of Blake’s claims have fallen apart now that we’ve seen video and text message and documentation, etc. Jenny’s claims were very vague and didn’t seem to be about SH.
Claire A never actually met Baldoni, she worked with wayfarer on another project and there was disagreement on set, but not harassment claims.
Liz worked with Justin on 124 episodes ever several years of their man enough podcast, dramatically quitting when the New York Times article hit, and then partnering in a production company with Ryan Reynolds so it looks a little suspect
Isabel seem to really like Justin as video and text show, admitting in her deposition that she didn’t have a problem onset, but then later revisiting things had problems. This looks sketchy because Blake styled her, had her over for sleepovers, flew her to private events, and pushed for her to get an introducing credit.
Colleen Hoover also seemed to be fine with Justin until Blake got involved. Admitting in her deposition when asked why she unfollowed Justin, she said because Blake told me too.
Blake didn’t seem to have a lot of substance so she tried to pump up the volume of claims, but they tend to fall apart. The main question I have is why she was referring to Justin with such distain very early on, mocking him to others, calling him names, etc., all while leaving him very flattering voice notes, and texts as if they were really close - and this was before she had any allegations so just not sure why she hated him so much from the start. and that really has me questioning this whole case.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eleanor the Great is on Netflix. Another Wayfarer & Sony collaboration with scarjo as director and Justin as EP. Seems like everyone managed to get on just fine once you removed one person from the equation. As Steve Sarowitz said, “everyone’s nice, and then there’s Blake.”
Even Justin wouldn't stoop to leering at a 90-year-old and calling her sexy.
You’re a contemptible a-hole on a few levels.
I think PP meant his a-holery at least has some limits, aka respect for elders. At least I'm hoping Squibb wouldn't be among the TEN women who went on the record about his series of offensive behaviors.
At least half of those women had nothing to do with Blake, and went on the record independently. But the Justin stans have no answer for why they would do that except, maybe just maybe, he is a sexist creep who enjoys exerting power over women. I wish I could wipe my memory clean of how he discussed a *teenage sex scene* with that poor young actress. Glad Blake succeeded in getting some of the more prurient, unauthorized scenes scrubbed.
No one cares about the other women because none of their allegations have any substance. Meanwhile, Blake’s claims fall apart by the hour.
Right. That many claims about hostile work environment do not come out of nowhere. I bet you consider yourself a feminist, which is a joke. The fact that no one from that set, or the prior one with complaints, is going on the record to defend him speaks VOLUMES.
The fact that the complaints are not limited to the IEWU set is important for establishing a pattern. No one can claim Blake's undue influence in the former case. Complaints about Justin necessitating his removal from another set are highly relevant.
NP. I'm not following this super closely, but the pattern of offensive behavior toward women on two different sets plus the timing of hiring someone to "shine a light on BL and RR" right when the complaints about Baldoni started coming out (suggesting retaliation) seems to constitute a credible case. I'll be very curious to see how it plays out.
I'm not a lawyer of course, but I don't understand the independent contractor argument. If she fulfilled the duties of executive producer, and was credited as such, she's an employee of the production company (Sony), right? Please clarify if I'm missing how this works in employment laws. Also, is this a point Baldoni's lawyers are pursuing or just something being tossed around on social media?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eleanor the Great is on Netflix. Another Wayfarer & Sony collaboration with scarjo as director and Justin as EP. Seems like everyone managed to get on just fine once you removed one person from the equation. As Steve Sarowitz said, “everyone’s nice, and then there’s Blake.”
Even Justin wouldn't stoop to leering at a 90-year-old and calling her sexy.
You’re a contemptible a-hole on a few levels.
I think PP meant his a-holery at least has some limits, aka respect for elders. At least I'm hoping Squibb wouldn't be among the TEN women who went on the record about his series of offensive behaviors.
At least half of those women had nothing to do with Blake, and went on the record independently. But the Justin stans have no answer for why they would do that except, maybe just maybe, he is a sexist creep who enjoys exerting power over women. I wish I could wipe my memory clean of how he discussed a *teenage sex scene* with that poor young actress. Glad Blake succeeded in getting some of the more prurient, unauthorized scenes scrubbed.
No one cares about the other women because none of their allegations have any substance. Meanwhile, Blake’s claims fall apart by the hour.
Right. That many claims about hostile work environment do not come out of nowhere. I bet you consider yourself a feminist, which is a joke. The fact that no one from that set, or the prior one with complaints, is going on the record to defend him speaks VOLUMES.
The fact that the complaints are not limited to the IEWU set is important for establishing a pattern. No one can claim Blake's undue influence in the former case. Complaints about Justin necessitating his removal from another set are highly relevant.
Yes, they were afraid RR and BL would try destroy their careers and lives too! Those people are sick narcissists
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eleanor the Great is on Netflix. Another Wayfarer & Sony collaboration with scarjo as director and Justin as EP. Seems like everyone managed to get on just fine once you removed one person from the equation. As Steve Sarowitz said, “everyone’s nice, and then there’s Blake.”
Even Justin wouldn't stoop to leering at a 90-year-old and calling her sexy.
You’re a contemptible a-hole on a few levels.
I think PP meant his a-holery at least has some limits, aka respect for elders. At least I'm hoping Squibb wouldn't be among the TEN women who went on the record about his series of offensive behaviors.
At least half of those women had nothing to do with Blake, and went on the record independently. But the Justin stans have no answer for why they would do that except, maybe just maybe, he is a sexist creep who enjoys exerting power over women. I wish I could wipe my memory clean of how he discussed a *teenage sex scene* with that poor young actress. Glad Blake succeeded in getting some of the more prurient, unauthorized scenes scrubbed.
No one cares about the other women because none of their allegations have any substance. Meanwhile, Blake’s claims fall apart by the hour.
Right. That many claims about hostile work environment do not come out of nowhere. I bet you consider yourself a feminist, which is a joke. The fact that no one from that set, or the prior one with complaints, is going on the record to defend him speaks VOLUMES.
The fact that the complaints are not limited to the IEWU set is important for establishing a pattern. No one can claim Blake's undue influence in the former case. Complaints about Justin necessitating his removal from another set are highly relevant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Eleanor the Great is on Netflix. Another Wayfarer & Sony collaboration with scarjo as director and Justin as EP. Seems like everyone managed to get on just fine once you removed one person from the equation. As Steve Sarowitz said, “everyone’s nice, and then there’s Blake.”
Even Justin wouldn't stoop to leering at a 90-year-old and calling her sexy.
You’re a contemptible a-hole on a few levels.
I think PP meant his a-holery at least has some limits, aka respect for elders. At least I'm hoping Squibb wouldn't be among the TEN women who went on the record about his series of offensive behaviors.
At least half of those women had nothing to do with Blake, and went on the record independently. But the Justin stans have no answer for why they would do that except, maybe just maybe, he is a sexist creep who enjoys exerting power over women. I wish I could wipe my memory clean of how he discussed a *teenage sex scene* with that poor young actress. Glad Blake succeeded in getting some of the more prurient, unauthorized scenes scrubbed.
No one cares about the other women because none of their allegations have any substance. Meanwhile, Blake’s claims fall apart by the hour.
Right. That many claims about hostile work environment do not come out of nowhere. I bet you consider yourself a feminist, which is a joke. The fact that no one from that set, or the prior one with complaints, is going on the record to defend him speaks VOLUMES.
The fact that the complaints are not limited to the IEWU set is important for establishing a pattern. No one can claim Blake's undue influence in the former case. Complaints about Justin necessitating his removal from another set are highly relevant.