An article, hashtag, and viral tweet: the birth of #MeToo

An article, hashtag, and viral tweet: the birth of #MeToo

It has been 5 years since the movement was started by a 'New York Times' article, and fuelled by actress Alyssa Milano on social media.

It has been five years since the #MeToo social movement against sexual abuse, harassment, and rape culture spread like wildfire across the globe. (Wikipedia pic)
PARIS:
On Oct 5, 2017, the “New York Times” published a bombshell investigation into allegations of sexual harassment against one of the giants of Hollywood, Harvey Weinstein, who had until then proven untouchable despite rumours of misconduct.

The article proved to be a watershed moment, triggering what rapidly became known as the #MeToo movement.

Times journalists Jodi Kantor and Megan Twohey wrote about a subject wildly talked about inside Hollywood circles, but never broached in public: that the legendary producer behind “Shakespeare in Love” and “Pulp Fiction” had promised to help actresses’ careers in return for sexual favors, had attempted to massage several of them in hotel rooms and forced them to watch him naked, then used his power to silence them.

The two journalists had been working on the article for months, using all their patience and ingenuity to convince the actresses to speak out.

So damning were the claims that it took just days for Weinstein to be fired from the company that bore his name. He tried to “sincerely” apologise, pleading that he had grown up in the 1960s and ’70s, “when all the rules about behaviour and workplaces were different”.

His lawyers, for their part, strove to minimise the damage. But the movement had been launched, and the fall of this once all-powerful mogul, who had organised fundraisers for the likes of Hillary Clinton, was dizzying.

A 2017 ‘New York Times’ exposé on film producer Harvey Weinstein sparked the movement that would take the world by storm. (AP pic)

On Oct 10, another article followed in the “New Yorker” magazine, written by Ronan Farrow, who had also spent several months investigating. Italian actress Asia Argento and two other women claimed to have been raped by the co-founder of Miramax studios.

As the days went by, others began to open up. One by one, leading actresses came out with their own stories, or pledged their support to victims.

Lighting the fuse

Then on Oct 15, a tweet from actress Alyssa Milano lit the fuse on social media. She, too, had read the avalanche of articles that followed the revelations about Weinstein.

“If you’ve been sexually harassed or assaulted write ‘me too’ as a reply to this tweet,” wrote the star of “Charmed”.

Her post triggered a deluge of testimonies from people from all walks of life, many of whom said they were sharing their experience in public for the first time.

In the wake of the Weinstein revelations, the #MeToo hashtag spread around the world like wildfire: #quellavoltache (this time) in Italy, #EnaZeda in Tunisia, and #AnaKaman in Egypt (me too).

Milano might have helped ignite the movement, but the original #MeToo hashtag was coined 11 years earlier, in 2006, by African-American activist Tarana Burke.

She had begun using the expression of “empathy” as a way for victims of sexual violence, especially those in marginalised communities, to establish connection among themselves, and to say it out aloud to the world.

Actress Alyssa Milano’s post on Oct 15 triggered testimonies from people from all walks of life who had experienced sexual harrassment and/or assault. (Wikipedia pic)

“Initially I panicked,” Burke later said. “I felt a sense of dread, because something that was part of my life’s work was going to be co-opted and taken from me and used for a purpose that I hadn’t originally intended.”

Milano, who said she was unaware of the genesis of the phrase, quickly gave the activist back what was hers.

“What the #MeToo campaign really does, and what Burke has really enabled us all to do, is put the focus back on the victims,” Milano said in an interview on “Good Morning America”.

“This is just the start, and I’ve been saying from the beginning it’s not just a moment, it’s a movement and movements take time,” said Burke, with Milano at her side, in a 2017 appearance on “The Today Show”.

Weinstein was sentenced in 2020 to 23 years in prison for sexual assault and rape.

Kantor, Twohey and Farrow were awarded the Pulitzer Prize in public service for the reporting that brought him down – and triggered a global reckoning.

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