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Oprah Winfrey Says Gayle King Is Receiving Death Threats Over That Kobe Bryant Interview


Oprah Winfrey is defending best friend Gayle King in the wake of her controversial interview about the late Kobe Bryant, who died in a helicopter crash in January.

On February 5, King received backlash from viewers for asking WNBA star Lisa Leslie about a sexual assault accusation made against Bryant in 2003. For the CBS This Morning segment on Bryant’s legacy, King asked Leslie if she felt, as a woman and a basketball player, that the case complicated his contributions. “It’s not complicated for me at all,” Leslie responded. “I have [never] seen him being the kind of person that would do something to violate a woman or be aggressive in that way. That’s just not the person that I know.

“I think the media should be more respectful at this time,” Leslie continued. “It’s like, if you had questions about it, you’ve had many years to ask him that. I don’t think it’s something that we should keep hanging out his legacy.”

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After an onslaught of furious reactions from fans and celebrities like Snoop Dogg and 50 Cent, King took to Instagram to explain that CBS had edited the interview in a way she did not approve of. “I know that if I had only seen the clip that you saw, I’d be extremely angry with me too,” King said on IGTV. “I am mortified, I am embarrassed, and I am very angry.

“For the network to take the most salacious part, when taken out of context, and put it online for people who didn’t see the whole interview is very upsetting to me. That’s something that I’ll have to deal with with them,” she said. “There will be a very intense discussion about that.”

On February 7, Oprah Winfrey—King’s longtime friendgave an update on the situation on the Today show.

“She is not doing well,” a tearful Winfrey revealed. “She has now death threats, has to now travel with security, and she’s feeling very much attacked. You know, Bill Cosby is tweeting from jail.

“In the context of the interview, everyone seemed fine, including Lisa Leslie,” Winfrey continued, defending King’s line of questioning. “And it was only because somebody at the network put up that clip. And I can see how people would obviously be very upset if you thought that Gayle was just trying to press to get an answer from Lisa Leslie.” Winfrey also warned against “misogynist vitriol” and online attacks.

“Obviously all things pass, she will be okay,” Winfrey said. “But she hasn’t slept in two days.”





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Gayle King Kept Her Cool in the Face of a Terrifying R. Kelly


Watching R. Kelly’s sit down with Gayle King on CBS This Morning was intense. Thanks to teasers and some photos King posted last night on her own Instagram, I knew going in that Kelly would, at some point, lose his temper. But seeing it all play out was more terrifying than I expected. I can only imagine how it must have felt for the women who have been brave enough to come forward and share their stories about alleged sexual abuse on his part, or for any other survivors for that matter.

Kelly, in his first interview since the airing of the Surviving R. Kelly documentary series on Lifetime, categorically denied all the allegations against him. “I’m very tired of all of the lies,” he said when King asked why he agreed to talk to her. “I’ve been hearing things, and you know, and seeing things on the blogs, and you know, you know, I’m just tired.” When she named the women who participated in the documentary, he replied, “They are lying on me,” a phrase he repeated multiple times.

According to Kelly, his accusers (and the world, it would seem) are conspiring against him and making up stories for their own gain. “All you have to do is push a button on your phone and say, ‘So and so did this to me, R. Kelly did this to me,’ and if you get any traction from that, if you’re able to write a book from that, if you’re able to get a reality show,” he says, “then any girl that I had a relationship in the past that it just didn’t work out, she can come and say the same exact thing.”

Sharing your deepest pain with the world in the name of justice has never, to my mind, seemed self-serving. And while it will be up to the courts to decide whether Kelly will face legal punishment this time around (he was previously acquitted on child pornography charges and is currently facing 10 new charges of sexual abuse), the evidence in the court of public opinion is damning.

Kelly, by talking to King, must have thought he would somehow be able to change that. When he eventually blew up in anger and frustration, I recoiled. Thoughts of the Brett Kavanaugh hearings also came to mind, another moment where we saw a man scream and rage and cry in order to try to make his point. Like the women of the Senate Judiciary Committee, King remained steadfast and tough in her questioning. Even what he was saying sounded familiar: “I didn’t do this stuff! This is not me! I’m fighting for my fucking life! Y’all killing me with this shit! I gave y’all 30 years of my fucking career!” He believes he has been “assassinated” and “buried alive.”

To me, he seemed unhinged.

Others on social media had similar reactions to his aggressive behavior.

There was also (much deserved) praise for the way King handled herself in the face of an angry, menacing man. I cannot say that I wouldn’t have gotten up from my chair and walked away. King said that she did not feel like she was in danger of being hit by Kelly, but I wasn’t so sure watching from the safety of my living room.

If Kelly’s interview proved anything to me, it is that he is a man who seems to hold a deep contempt for women. He put that publicly on display for the world today. And in the face of his anger, a woman remained steadfast—much like his accusers before her.

That’s what I’ll take away.





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State Senator Gayle Goldin: Why Speaking Out Against Sexual Harassment Backfires for Women in Office


When #MeToo started filling up my Facebook feed, I wavered about whether to join in. As a Rhode Island state senator, I know I’m already judged by the clothes I wear, the tone of my voice, and if I’m likable enough. I’m expected to be a fierce champion and a team player—all while wearing lipstick and nice shoes.

I don’t have a salacious story of sexual harassment at the State House. What I have is the story of sexism that permeates our daily lives.

Politics is all about relationships. We aren’t just making friends at work; we’re building rapport to advance our legislative agenda. When you call out your colleagues for everyday sexism, you earn a reputation of being “difficult,” “sensitive,” or worse. Too many men who are not perpetrating this behavior often turn their colleagues’ comments into jokes or simply shrug. This creates an internal struggle for elected women: Is it more important to gain your colleague’s support on legislation than to remind him that he should stop calling you “one of the girls” when he’s talking to you?

Sadly, for many women in office, if you start speaking truth to power, power talks back—by killing your bills, changing your committee assignments, and smearing your reputation.

In politics, your reputation and your word are everything. When women legislators raise the issue of sexism among our male colleagues, the price we pay is often subtle. We aren’t included in impromptu social gatherings. We’re passed over as bill sponsors. No one asks our opinions on legislation. Suddenly, a colleague who pledged to support your bill changes his mind. We risk losing our colleagues’ trust for not keeping their secrets.

When women in office start speaking truth to power, power talks back—by killing your bills, changing your committee assignments, and smearing your reputation.

And when sexism crosses the line and becomes sexual harassment, an elected woman must face a harsh truth: questions about the credibility of her story often lead to questions about her credibility as a legislator. If our male colleagues decide it just isn’t worth the “hassle” of working with us, it can be fairly easy to work around us. After all, three-quarters of all state legislators are men.

While we may be effective fighters for our policy ideas, confronting everyday sexism is exhausting.

When I was first elected to the state Senate, a strong woman leader who had been in office for decades gave me a piece of advice that made my stomach turn: Smile more, it’ll make some of the men more comfortable. A male colleague once stopped me in the middle of a policy discussion with another senator to tell me I looked pregnant. Work-related events involve alcohol served by women in low-cut shirts and plenty of “locker room talk.” Colleagues interrupt me and tell me to stop asking questions, to calm down, to be helpful. I am often one of the only women in the room.

PHOTO: Courtesy of Gayle Goldin

Senator Gayle Goldin (left) attends a bill signing with Rhode Island Governor Gina Raimondo (center).

Individually, these incidents can seem small. Collectively, they are a relentless reminder of how hard women must work to earn basic respect. Sexual harassment and sexism are used to make the victim feel powerless. We learn to quickly calculate the repercussions for speaking up and keep our opinions quiet. We serve as advocates, but we spend too much energy and time trying to placate our colleagues and please the public.

The trouble is, the impacts of this behavior reach beyond me and my female colleagues. When men are not challenged to address their biases, the laws they make reflect them. Equal pay becomes “too difficult for business.” Child care subsidies are “not a priority.” Paid family leave is a “nice perk, but not a necessity.” Threats to reproductive rights are “not worth worrying about.” Removing guns from domestic abusers takes a back seat to guarding a man’s Second Amendment rights.

As more stories of sexual harassment come pouring out, I have thought about why, as women, we pick our battles. I’m finally realizing we shouldn’t have to. We should be able to do our jobs without getting comments about our looks, without having to avoid going into certain rooms alone, and without having to fear for our safety. And we shouldn’t have to mollify our male colleagues and tolerate their bad behavior in order to get a shot at passing legislation that improves the well-being and health of half the population.

We shouldn’t have to tolerate our male colleagues’ bad behavior in order to get a shot at passing legislation that benefits women—like equal pay or paid family leave.

We are elected to be powerful voices, but the reality is we must work twice as hard to be heard. It’s time that women in politics—regardless of party—stand together. I was lucky enough to be elected at a time when the Rhode Island Senate had its first woman president, who hired smart, talented women for our staff and moved women senators into committee chair positions. But the toxic environment won’t change until women are equally represented in every level of government. We need to recruit more women, elect more women, and pledge to support women in office. We need to hold men accountable for their actions and stop electing sexist men, and sexual predators, to office. We need our male colleagues to feel uncomfortable and insulted when a woman is discriminated against or harassed—and to stand up with her.

Mostly, we need to change not only our laws but also how we make them. Yes, we need laws that help create gender equity. But we also need to pay attention to how those laws are made — and to who is in the room. Let’s see state houses where at least half of all committee chairs are women, where every committee has equal representation. Let’s have transparent bill hearing processes and open access to information. Let’s have a government that represents all of us, equally, so that the next generation of women leaders has no reason to join me in saying #MeToo.

Now in her third term in office, Senator Gayle Goldin represents District 3 in Rhode Island. She is one of only 254 Democrat women state senators in the country. She also serves as the family and medical leave insurance campaign advisor to Family Values@Work, a national network of 25 state coalitions leading the movement for better family-friendly workplace policies.



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