I hope there's a good outcome for this, for both the victims and Nick. He obviously has issues, but he has comedic skill and is a good entertainer, his content with Griffin has brought me a lot of happiness. My hope is that this is a wake up call for him and he realizes what his actions did to the people he did this to, and that he can get help for his problems and get it under control. It's sad that this could have brewed in the first place. I wish the industry was in a state where this could have been brought to light and nipped in the bud the first time he tried something like it.
His wake up call can be that he switches industries, because if all this is true, I don't see any publication wanting that linked to them. And neither should they. I don't care about his comedic skill and how good of an entertainer he is when he apparently can't even grasp how sexual harassment is wrong.I hope there's a good outcome for this, for both the victims and Nick. He obviously has issues, but he has comedic skill and is a good entertainer, his content with Griffin has brought me a lot of happiness. My hope is that this is a wake up call for him and he realizes what his actions did to the people he did this to, and that he can get help for his problems and get it under control. It's sad that this could have brewed in the first place. I wish the industry was in a state where this could have been brought to light and nipped in the bud the first time he tried something like it.
Nick Robinson is not Jian Ghomeshi and the situations obviously don't line up completely. But for a lot of reasons, it seems quite possible that people would know exactly what his crimes are without being able or willing to step forward, and that other people--even close friends--would be clueless, or see a different side of him, or ignore the warning signs because he never did anything too obvious in public.
I think the core difference is that Robinson didn't actually commit any crimes, whereas Ghomeshi was accused of serious assaults (though, for the record, he was found not guilty and cleared of all charges).
Robinson's actions were piggish, unprofessional and inappropriate and Polygon has every right to terminate him, but we can't criminalize a person being a creep online. Not unless we suddenly want hundreds of thousands of teenagers and single men in their thirties to have criminal records.
Well yes, even though sexual harassment towards women is much more common and often much more severe nobody should be a victim of it regardless the gender.People say a lot of things and gossip gets spiced up to make entertaining. If you reverse the sexes here would you have the same opinion?
There is a not enough here for me to have an opinion of Marks guilt or innocence.
If he did it, he should be fired. If not, he keeps his job. He does seem a bit of a asshole but is that enough to be fired?
Yeah but people say
People say a lot of things and gossip gets spiced up to make entertaining. If you reverse the sexes here would you have the same opinion?
Nobody should be terminated from a job on hearsay and because that's how people are in this industry I am also not thrilled that this ball for rolling by someone angered by an unrelated tweet.
That said, I can also sympathise with the women since due to possiblity of litigation most companies would try to downplay sexual harassment. But going public would bring on the wrath of people who have shown outright hate for victims of proven cases of this type of abuse. Truly a shitty position to be in.
I just don't know enough yet.
There is a not enough here for me to have an opinion of Mark's guilt or innocence.
I just don't know enough yet.
You're right that there are people likely a lot of them who would be far more entertaining were they given his career position, (hopefully) without stooping to this kind of behavior. But a lot of people have come to like Nick's brand of humor (moreso on Polygon's videos, where he's barely abrasive at all), and there's no way to copy or supplant it exactly. A lot of people are losing entertainment that they could consistently count on getting multiple times a week. The cost's worth it to ensure people can feel safe and secure, but that's still a big loss.So, here's my thinking on the matter when I see a take like this, I know it's preferred to be forgiving and to believe in second chances but I can't help but think why give a guy like this the opportunity? There's countless people out there who are just as if not more talented than Nick Robinson and manage to not sexually harass people. Why not raise up those people instead of spending an iota of effort on giving scumbags a chance to salvage their careers? It almost feels normalizing of such behavior (not at all accusing you of not coming from a good place with your sentiment, just sharing my own).
I was more addressing the comments in this thread asking why people didn't come forward sooner, or how it could be that people knew this guy was a creeper and didn't do anything (with an implication that this is actually evidence of his innocence). I agree that the severity of the alleged offenses are completely different.
So, here's my thinking on the matter when I see a take like this, I know it's preferred to be forgiving and to believe in second chances but I can't help but think why give a guy like this the opportunity? There's countless people out there who are just as if not more talented than Nick Robinson and manage to not sexually harass people. Why not raise up those people instead of spending an iota of effort on giving scumbags a chance to salvage their careers? It almost feels normalizing of such behavior (not at all accusing you of not coming from a good place with your sentiment, just sharing my own).
If you live in Canada, especially in Toronto, you've probably heard about Jian Ghomeshi. He was a popular musician for years who later became the host of a marquee radio show and podcast at the CBC, the country's public broadcaster. He was supposed to be one of the Good Guys: intelligent, thoughtful, sensitive, earnest, progressive. He also turned out to be a piece of work.
Rumors spread for years about his shitty treatment of women, culminating in the CBC firing Ghomeshi in 2014 with little commentary. Ghomeshi tried to pre-empt stories he knew were coming about his conduct but to no avail; a number of women later stepped forward with stories about Ghomeshi's predilection for rough and non-consensual sex, including at least one workplace allegation from 2010 that the CBC essentially buried.
In the wake of this, there was a lot of soul-searching. How did everyone miss this when it seemed like everyone knew what kind of person Ghomeshi was under his enlightened, progressive exterior? Some tried to speak out and were shunned for it. Others talked about how easy it is to know but not know.
Maybe you knew he was a bad dude, but not know specifics. Maybe someone close to you hard a story about someone else being assaulted, or having a bad date, or Ghomeshi being creepy, but how is that something you can act on? If everyone kind of knows what's going on but doesn't really know, who's responsible for figuring out what to do about it?
I don't know what people suspected or didn't suspect about Nick Robinson, and I don't know much about the allegations regarding his treatment of women in the industry. Nick Robinson is not Jian Ghomeshi and the situations obviously don't line up completely. But for a lot of reasons, it seems quite possible that people would know exactly what his crimes are without being able or willing to step forward, and that other people--even close friends--would be clueless, or see a different side of him, or ignore the warning signs because he never did anything too obvious in public.
We don't come forward because more often than not, we are ignored, shunned, mocked, or even fired. I and 6 other women had pages of written complaints about a coworker who was sexually harassing us. We took them to management who immediately brought in HR to cover their asses. I was told I had to "be nice" to my harasser because he was really a good guy.
I swear just typing that made me feel enraged all over again and it happened quite a while ago.
lol clearly
I assume you wouldn't have been very happy if you confided in a friend about the sexual harassment and their immediate reaction was HOT DIGGITY, WHAT A SCOOP FOR ME!
I'm not saying you're unreasonable here. I'm not even saying you're unreasonable, but (something). I'm merely worried that, internet communication being what it is and lacking all nuance, someone is going to think I'm attacking shiba5 here, which I'm not.
what the fuck are you saying
Is it just me or is the OP now impossible to follow and tell what's going on? or what's happened?
Even after clicking all the twitter posts in the OP and them giving no other information about what happened, only just general badness about women in the industry.
Is it just me or is the OP now impossible to follow and tell what's going on? or what's happened?
Even after clicking all the twitter posts in the OP and them giving no other information about what happened, only just general badness about women in the industry.
Yes would be great if he himself would come clean about this and understood his own wrongdoings. The responsibility is on him.Change that last about to towards and I agree with you. We need more information on what NICK did.
I assume you wouldn't have been very happy if you confided in a friend about the sexual harassment and their immediate reaction was HOT DIGGITY, WHAT A SCOOP FOR ME!
I'm not saying you're unreasonable here. I'm not even saying you're unreasonable, but (something). I'm merely worried that, internet communication being what it is and lacking all nuance, someone is going to think I'm attacking shiba5 here, which I'm not.
I think the core difference is that Robinson didn't actually commit any crimes, whereas Ghomeshi was accused of serious assaults (though, for the record, he was found not guilty and cleared of all charges).
Robinson's actions were piggish, unprofessional and inappropriate and Polygon has every right to terminate him, but we can't criminalize a person being a creep online. Not unless we suddenly want hundreds of thousands of teenagers and single men in their thirties to have criminal records.
I don't think that's it. I think they tried tried to draw parallels between what Shiba went through and what Nick's accusers did, but then they really lost the thread. They mentioned that they feared the ambiguity that you can sometimes get on the internet, but it's more that they didn't take the time to organize their thoughts.I think they're trying to downplay sexual harassment.
I don't think that's it. I think they tried tried to draw parallels between what Shiba went through and what Nick's accusers did, but then they really lost the thread. They mentioned that they feared the ambiguity that you can sometimes get on the internet, but it's more that they didn't take the time to organize their thoughts.
Botched condolences, basically.
Ouch. really sorry you had this. I hate that this event already has legions of shitbags keen to defend Nick regardless of what happens. Even if he confesses everything and more his supporters will blame the victim.
I don't think that's it. I think they tried tried to draw parallels between what Shiba went through and what Nick's accusers did, but then they really lost the thread. Less internet ambiguity and more not taking the time to gather one's thoughts.
Why have mine and 2 other posts about why is there so many posts in here been deleted?
Mods?
Uh
It is a crime to harass, menace, or expose yourself to another person
So, here's my thinking on the matter when I see a take like this, I know it's preferred to be forgiving and to believe in second chances but I can't help but think why give a guy like this the opportunity? There's countless people out there who are just as if not more talented than Nick Robinson and manage to not sexually harass people. Why not raise up those people instead of spending an iota of effort on giving scumbags a chance to salvage their careers? It almost feels normalizing of such behavior (not at all accusing you of not coming from a good place with your sentiment, just sharing my own).
At the VERY least we should take a look at ourselves and reassess our personal behaviors toward women and other peers.
Lmao it's always the anime avatars.
I've been banned for this type of comment before.
Is any of that being accused? Criminal harassment and menacing typically involves repeated unwanted advances towards a single person.
Having just come off of reading an Atlantic article about how 65 million Americans have criminal records, many of which resulted from the increased prosecution of non-harmful social faux-pas (don't sleep on a bench in public, don't shout curses in the middle of a crowd, J-walking, etc), I'm really not keen on the idea of criminalizing piggish online behavior.
So, is there any actual evidence or is everyone lynching a person's life and career over allegations?
So, is there any actual evidence or is everyone lynching a person's life and career over allegations?
Who is the "we" in this situation? Not to be rude, but I'm comfortable with my behavior toward women. It's something I consider fairly regularly, so I don't need to "reassess".
If you mean society as a whole, then certainly, but not everyone struggles with what you mentioned.
So, is there any actual evidence or is everyone lynching a person's life and career over allegations?
Yes and you aren't entitled to it because it's really personal shit for the victims, sorry.So, is there any actual evidence or is everyone lynching a person's life and career over allegations?
There is enough evidence for his closest friends to quit his podcast and for VOX to suspend him. That's good enough for most people since those harassed shouldn't be forced to share their DMs with the publicSo, is there any actual evidence or is everyone lynching a person's life and career over allegations?
So, is there any actual evidence or is everyone lynching a person's life and career over allegations?
I mean, people he has worked with aren't defending him. If that doesn't show you that something is up, I don't know what will (and no, we don't need to see the evidence ourselves)So, is there any actual evidence or is everyone lynching a person's life and career over allegations?
Yes and you aren't entitled to it because it's really personal shit for the victims, sorry.