Memo to powerful men: If you're caught in the crosshairs of a major news story filled with years of sexual harassment claims,Tayuan don't even consider responding the way Harvey Weinstein just did.
In a bizarre statement released in response to a New York Timesarticle Thursday morning, the Hollywood mogul veered from citing his childhood in the 1960s as a mitigating factor, to dragging the NRA and Donald Trump, to bringing up his Bar Mitzvah and his mom -- all in an apparent attempt to deflect the growing scandal.
SEE ALSO: Harvey Weinstein's harassment was an open secret in Hollywood. He's far from alone.But by far the strangest moment was when Weinstein claimed to quote Jay-Z -- who "wrote in 4:44'I’m not the man I thought I was and I better be that man for my children.' The same is true for me."
As Spinwas the first to note, this is not a Jay-Z lyric. It does not feature anywhere on the 4:44album or the song 4:44. The closest the rap star gets to that line is "And if my children knew/I don’t even know what I would do."
4:44, in a nutshell, is about Jay-Z's marital infidelity and his fear that daughter Blue Ivy might read about it. This isn't remotely comparable to Weinstein, who is accused not of infidelity but of multiple counts of harassing female employees and actors over decades.
So quoting 4:44accurately would be inappropriate enough, but misquoting it -- perhaps in a bid to burnish the pop culture credentials of a 65-year-old man, perhaps to remind us that Weinstein, too, has kids! -- is pretty much the worst.
It has a lot of competition in this statement, which opens with "I came of age in the 60's and 70's, when all the rules about behavior and workplaces were different."
Legally speaking, this is about as accurate as the Jay-Z quote. Unwelcome sexual advances in the workplace -- such as a boss asking an employee to watch him shower -- is a violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, which passed in 1964 when Weinstein was 12 years old.
The phrase "sexual harassment" was coined in 1975, when Weinstein was 23 years old and when there was an uptick in Title VII lawsuits. He really can't hide behind the "old dinosaur" claim his lawyer made Thursday.
What Weinstein probably meant to say is that the rules often weren't enforced, which is hardly a winning argument. And it's already getting dragged mercilessly on Twitter:
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Weinstein's statement moves on to a brief apology, which seemed less than sincere once his attorney announced the mogul would be suing the New York Timesover its story.
In true type-A style, Weinstein also insisted that he was the bestat resolving his issues, having known about them for a whole decade. "I've asked [civil rights attorney] Lisa Bloom to tutor me and she's put together a team of people," he wrote. "I've brought on therapists."
Kudos for going into therapy, Harvey, but how many people does it take to teach you that you just shouldn't make sexual advances towards women with whom you have a business relationship? It's really not that difficult a concept.
And then we get to the final paragraph of this epically bad apology, which is so scattershot it's worth quoting in full:
I am going to need a place to channel that anger so I've decided that I'm going to give the NRA my full attention. I hope Wayne LaPierre will enjoy his retirement party. I'm going to do it at the same place I had my Bar Mitzvah. I'm making a movie about our President, perhaps we can make it a joint retirement party. One year ago, I began organizing a $5 million foundation to give scholarships to women directors at USC. While this might seem coincidental, it has been in the works for a year. It will be named after my mom and I won't disappoint her.
We're going to leave it to you to figure out exactly what's going on here. It seems this was composed in haste ("one year ago .... in the works for a year") and takes aim at two targets Weinstein hopes we will agree are worse than him, NRA CEO LaPierre and Donald Trump.
Beyond that, though, there are a galaxy of questions. What is this "retirement party" of which Weinstein speaks? (LaPierre started reporting millions in retirement benefits in 2015, but remains as CEO.) Why is it important that the party will happen at his Bar Mitzvah location? How can a movie about how awful Trump is, something we all already know, bring about his impeachment? How exactly does a $5 million fund for women directors mitigate years of harassing women employees?
And why the reference to channeling your anger, which reads like a vague threat? Shouldn't you just be angry with yourself over what you did? Lashing out at other targets, however repellant, is not a great sign that you've learned anything.
And most importantly, is there anything Weinstein won't use -- his supposed familiarity with rap, his mother-- to try to burnish his credentials with his audience?
Memo to powerful men: If and when you need to write an apology, don't make it read like you ran it through a really bad focus group first.
Just apologize.
31 matching holiday pajamas for the ultimate lounging experienceHow Donald Trump profits by keeping his home base in Trump TowerTrump's campaign manager hangs with singing Naked Cowboys'Hearthstone: Mean Streets of Gadgetzan' is coming Dec. 1Will there be another 'Gilmore Girls' revival? Amy ShermanCNN courts the YouTube generation by partnering with Casey NeistatThis Instagram account needs your McDonald's sign sunset pics pleaseSassy dancing lizard is breakout star of 'Planet Earth II'Facebook gears up for Express Wifi launch in IndiaLarge parts of West Antarctic Ice Sheet could collapse 'in our lifetimes'People are mad at this prank video making fun of Thai people's EnglishFacebook gears up for Express Wifi launch in IndiaHomelessness survivor tweets journey from sleeping rough to writing booksThis theme park thought skating on 5,000 dead fish would be fun and not creepy at allHow to make spammy calendar notifications go awayMichigan fined $10,000 for Jim Harbaugh's postgame rantWar between Reddit CEO and TheIn other (nicer) news, the whole of New Zealand is doing a Secret SantaTaylor Swift partners up with AT&T for streaming 'video experience'Banks set to lose their last stand against Apple Pay Notre Dame vs. Penn State 2025 livestream: kickoff time, streaming deals, and more Protect your digital life: Key strategies for online safety Catch this CES Get a $100 preorder credit on select Samsung TVs and audio Best Amazon deals of the day: AirPods Pro 2, Ultimate Ears Megaboom 4, 50 Everything Nvidia announced at CES 2025 Best free AI courses you can take online The story behind Pluto's huge moon bodes well for distant ocean worlds Best tool deal: Get the Dewalt 142 Best Apple iPad deal: $80 off 11 How to unblock XVideos for free Best free online courses from Stanford University Pegula vs. Putintseva 2025 livestream: Watch Adelaide International for free CES 2025: The Withings Omnia Smart Mirror offered to connect me to a specialist for a health issue Best LG TV deal: Save $170 on 43 Keys vs. Samsonova 2025 livestream: Watch Adelaide International for free Best Audible deal: 3 months for $0.99 per month Google's 'Daily Listen' AI generates customized mini podcasts Meta, Zuckerberg threaten human rights by allowing dehumanizing speech, advocates warn CES 2025: How to buy (and save $390 on) the Dreame X50 Ultra robot vacuum