redpandasarecute
redpandasarecute
redpandasarecute

I feel like you’re missing the point. The comment came from respect. She named someone she feels should have all the power and money she can handle. She isn’t calling out Dunaway she’s calling out a patriarchal power structure that has left one of the greatest actors of her generation without any real financial or

I didn’t see it as a dig, quite the opposite. Faye Dunaway is a fucking legend but she doesn’t have the economic power to match, and the only explanation for that is sexism.

She’s not dragging Faye, but rather pointing out how dispossable women are in Hollywood. Faye was huge in the late-60s/70s, was in films that made money, had massive critical acclaim, and an Oscar to boot. Then, she made two films that flopped, and her career was dead. She has tried resurrecting it - even going over

I am genuinely horrified that anyone is covering who a goddamn 13-year-old is “dating.”

Don’t think that’s going to happen. Word is her parents are the epitome of ‘stage parents’ and enjoy the money.

From what I understand, her family is part of the problem. :-(

Thank you. The whole way Millie Bobbie Brown’s career has been handled is incredibly gross.

she’s such a sweet kid. They’re going to make her into the next Amanda Bynes or Lindsay Lohan. Hell, they already had “Sexy Eleven” Halloween costumes. I hate this fucking society

Well I suppose one out of (how ever many she did) ain’t bad.

Conq. Conq West. (or Konq...or Konk, because they love doubling up on Ks...)

There some parts to the story that show these two people were on two completely different wavelengths and had a lot of misunderstandings. At one point, she sits on the floor in front of him and says she wanted him to play with her hair. She says he thought she wanted to reciprocate oral sex after he already performed

I agree. I don’t feel like he sexually assaulted her and don’t feel like this should be included in the same realm as “me too.” I think he was very wrong and acted like an asshole, but she was always free to go. He didn’t force anything on her. This reminds me of the type of stuff they tell you in high school (“If a

I think that reinforces the point though — the conversation here should be a lot more nuanced and handled more deftly. I’m in my 30s now and I know how to say no, but pretty much throughout my 20s as I explored my sexuality I consistently ran into situations that I didn’t know how to handle. There’s a lot of pressure

He was absolutely tacky. And we’ve all been there. But to call this an “assault” diminishes assault and removes agency from women. (Not arguing at you - just thinking out loud!)

Further, he is not the only person who uses those moves, however stupid they are. Dudes are dumb. It is known.

Looking into the story as well, I thought the same thing, but didn’t want to be the first person to voice that thought. I’ll always give the benefit of the doubt, but the story made it come off like petty airing of dirt rather than actually pointing at predatory behavior.

This was a bad date. She had a horrible date with a clueless guy who thought he was being sexy and hot. She was made to feel uncomfortable, and it wasn’t right.

The story reads to me like a groupie dissatisfied she was treated like a groupie.

Just here for the comments:

Well, Cameron’s statement about how a director really isn’t told about on set drama is pretty accurate. Hell, I’ve only done some student films but it takes up 100% of your brain to do that kind of job and its generally the job of assistant directors and other crew people to deal with this thing.