Tuesday, November 7, 2017

Reputation of Hollywood in Crisis in the wake of Harvey Weinstein




When the Harvey Weinstein scandal reached a fever pitch last month, Ben Affleck’s handlers found themselves with a problem.

It wasn’t just that Weinstein had helped launch Ben Affleck’s career in the 1990s with “Good Will Hunting” and “Shakespeare in Love,” or that the movie star had his own history of troubled relationships with women, including an on-camera groping of an MTV host.

The scandal was also coming just as Affleck prepared to hit the circuit for his role as Batman in one of the biggest movies of the year — November’s “Justice League” — which aims to make $1 billion globally.
So Affleck and his team at the high-powered public relations agency Sunshine Sachs came up with a damage-control strategy, according to a person familiar with the matter, speaking on the condition of anonymity to describe the plan.
They posted a message on Facebook saying Affleck was “saddened,” “angry” and “sick” over the revelations and that as a father he shared people’s grave concerns.
But when the actress Rose McGowan accused Affleck of knowing about Weinstein’s behavior and lying to cover it up, and then others accused him of groping women at the 2014 Golden Globes, the star went the other way.
He stayed silent, reasoning he could only lose by engaging popular anti-harassment activists.
His team’s next major action, according to the person, was to provide information to the celebrity news site ETonline.com about a rather different subject — Affleck’s adoption of an adorable husky.
But that piece caused its own social-media snickering. Sunshine Sachs declined to provide a comment for this article.
Affleck’s inability to adopt an effective strategy showed how Hollywood’s reputation-management machine is struggling with the best way to protect celebrities’ image in a new era of sexual-harassment awareness.
For years, a behind-the-scenes network of personal publicists, assisted by agents and managers, sought to divert interest from the misdeeds of the Hollywood elite.
But the newly hot climate has thrown the image industry into crisis, according to nearly a dozen publicists who spoke anonymously because of the background nature of their work — pitting their traditional instinct to suppress negative attention against the growing demands for candor.
The challenge is particularly pressing as celebrities begin to get in front of journalists to hype their work for upcoming holiday movies and the Oscar campaigns that run until the March show.
It’s a no-win situation,” said a veteran publicist who represents several high-profile film personalities, speaking on the condition of anonymity to avoid drawing attention to clients. “Nobody knows what to react to or what to respond with.”
What path they choose could determine whether the film-promotion circuit finally begins to tackle hard truths — or an age-old system remains in place.

For far too long sexual trauma hasn’t been talked about in Hollywood,” said Angela Rose, founder of PAVE, a Washington-based advocacy group that does outreach to the entertainment industry. “We need these questions to shatter the silence.”
Read the original article on: https://www.washingtonpost.com

No comments:

Post a Comment