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#MeToo, Phase 2: Doc Explores Heavy Burden on Women of Color

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In the early morning darkness of Dec. 13, 2017, former music executive Drew Dixon walks to a coffee shop and buys the New York Times.

Beyond that, it shines an overdue light on the music industry, where sexual harassment is ”just baked into the culture,” in the words of Sil Lai Abrams, another Simmons accuser featured in the film.

The film weaves together Dixon’s and multiple other accusations against Simmons with key voices of women of color like Tarana Burke, who founded the #MeToo movement, and law professor Kimberle Williams Crenshaw.

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When black women do seek to come forward, they risk not only not being believed, but being called traitors to their community, both Burke and Dixon explain.

Dick and Ziering, who’ve made several films about sexual assault, say they saw it as essential to go beyond the current #MeToo discussion and focus on the experience of black women.

Source: Black America Web
This Black Fact was brought to you by Association of Latino Professionals For America (ALPFA) Boston Professional Chapter

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