Worked for Trump"It's all just a joke, brah." Convenient.
Worked for Trump"It's all just a joke, brah." Convenient.
It seems that we can go off decades of good will or a comedy routine on show that likes to shock audiences. It seems like a easy choice for me unless more compelling evidence comes in.
Jason
In his comments about the Stern thing, Takei does refer to the whole routine as a "sketch." So this means that it was not meant to be taken at face value as a straightforward/serious/real-life interview.
I am genuinely curious, is this common for the Howard Stern show? I'm not familiar enough with his show to know if such satirical routines are SOP. I always assumed that Stern's shows were "actual" interviews. And anybody else who doesn't understand the subtleties of Stern's program would probably think the same way if they came across the Takei/Stern routine, and assume that it was meant to be taken for real.
Kor
Worked for Trump
THR spoke to four longtime friends of Brunton — Norah Roadman, Rob Donovan, Stephen Blackshear and Jan Steward — who said that he had confided in them about the Takei encounter years ago.
No offense, but you seemed pretty strident about Takei being guilty, but now because he offered an explanation you find palatable, you change your mind?
That's probably the best reason why the mob being driven merely by accusations is not a good way to adjudicate a crime.
The Hollywood Reporter and Variety are by far the two leading (and competing) US entertainment industry news sources.Has there been any more news about this?
I'm asking this seriously, Is the "Hollywood Reporter" a credible news source?
These are just some of the comments you made. The lines in boldface are pretty clear, though perhaps you will try to spin them differently now:I disagree with that characterization of my position. I never said Takei was guilty of what he is being accused of(the person claiming he was drugged). I said his comments on the Stern show were inappropriate and actually describe sexual assault. And guess what? He even admitted they were wrong in his response to them and said he shouldn't have said what he did. So I have not "changed my mind" about anything.
And no crime is being adjudicated here. We are people talking about something on a message board, not a crowd of people in the street.
You repeatedly linked his comments on the Stern show about groping men to his current accusation of having done something similarly to Mr. Brunton. These are your words, and you continued to make those links adamantly throughout your posts until Takei offered another explanation. Then suddenly, you were okay with it.
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Either way, playing this out in the media is non-productive. If they have a case, let the legal system decide.
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Yeah, ok. Fine. But the 30+ year thing doesn't pass my smell test. YMMV.Well, in cases where the statute of limitations is over for either criminal or civil proceedings, then getting an acknowledgment and apology from the offender may be the only way for the victim to try to get some kind of closure.
Kor
Yeah, ok. Fine. But the 30+ year thing doesn't pass my smell test. YMMV.
Don't know who Brunton is, and frankly, I don't care. This stuff has gone on since the beginning of time. The outrage now by the Internet cognoscenti is, at best, a big yawn. People in Hollywood have at the very least some idea what they're getting into. The casting couch is no secret. Read "Ecstasy and Me" by Hedy Lamarr for a titillating taste of Hollywood.How on earth can you believe the passing of 30+ years makes the claims suspect? Individuals react and process abuse in different ways, and have equally different ways of responding to/reporting it. There's not always going to be some instant "he did it! he did it last week!" reaction (expected in this social media-battered society).
If Stephen Collins, Cosby, and other sexual predators' abuses can be believed after the passing of decades, then Brunton should be considered--at the very least--credible, particularity after Takei is now trying to rewrite his Stern comments as "humor", when the format of Stern's show has never meant that guests were always joking about their lives and beliefs.
... The casting couch is no secret. Read "Ecstasy and Me" by Hedy Lamarr for a titillating taste of Hollywood.
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