Kamis, 19 Desember 2019

'Survivor' contestant finally able to open up about sexual misconduct - Yahoo Celebrity

During Wednesday’s Survivor: Reunion Special, contestant Kellee Kim was given an opportunity to voice her feelings concerning how CBS and the shows producers handled her claims of being inappropriately touched by another contestant.

Earlier in the season, Kim spoke out about being repeatedly touched by Dan Spilo, despite her requests to stop. At the time, producers spoke with Spilo and told him to stop touching Kim and all the other women on the show. He, however, was allowed to stay on the show and compete, much to Kim’s disbelief.

Kim told executive producer Jeff Probst, “I think one of the things that has been the hardest thing was the fact that Dan remained in the game even after I spoke up.” Kim explained, “When someone goes through something like this or anything remotely like it, to not be supported and not be believed is really the hardest thing.”

Probst admitted the incident was not handled properly. He told Kim, “You were right to step forward, despite a lot of risk, and to speak your truth, and I want to acknowledge and apologize for your pain.”

Soon after voicing her concern to producers, Kim was eliminated from the competition. Two weeks later, Spilo was kicked off the show after more allegations of inappropriate behavior were reported by one of the show's producers.

While upset with the handling of the situation, Kim was glad it opened up dialogue for change. “I think the most important thing, when I think about this situation and what happened, is that I hope that this season of Survivor isn't just defined by inappropriate touching sexual harassment,” said Kim. “I hope that it's defined by change, you know?”  

In the end, Kim hopes this incident, and how it was handled, helps create change in other industries and institutions. “Ultimately my biggest hope is that each one of us, each individual, each institution, each organization, and especially CBS and survivor can take this, learn from it, and do better,” said Kim. “You know, I fundamentally believe that we can do better.”

For more on Survivor visit the show’s page at CBS.com.

See why Charlize Theron credits women at Fox News for launching #MeToo movement:

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2019-12-19 09:06:00Z
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Tekashi 6ix9ine's Victim Happy He's Not Home for Xmas, Wants Him Bankrupt - TMZ

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2019-12-19 09:00:00Z
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George Lucas Camps Out & Reacts to Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker - Deepfake Saga - Collider Videos

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2019-12-19 07:24:40Z
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Rabu, 18 Desember 2019

Disgraced 'Survivor' contestant breaks his silence after being kicked off the show - CNN

Dan Spilo has remained silent ever since news of his forced departure from the show made headlines last week but now he is issuing a public apology.
"I am deeply sorry for how my actions affected Kellee during the taping of this season of Survivor," Spilo said in a statement to People. "After apologizing at the tribal council when I first learned that Kellee still felt uncomfortable, I want to make sure I do so again, clearly and unambiguously."
Spilo continued, "I truly regret that anyone was made to feel uncomfortable by my behavior. In my life, I have always tried to treat others with decency, integrity and kindness. I can only hope that my actions in the future can help me to make amends and show me to be the kind of father, husband, colleague and friend that I always aim to be."
CNN reached out to CBS for comment, but has not heard back.
Following an episode last week the show briefly flashed a title card on the screen that read that Spilo, 48, a talent manager contestant had been "removed from the game after a report of another incident, which happened off-camera and did not involve a player."
CBS, at the time, did not reveal any additional details.
Kellee Kim, who Spilo mentions in his apology was one of the contestants on "Survivor" this season, and had made it known that she was uncomfortable with the way in which Spilo touched her.
She even took to Twitter following his ousting and criticized how it was handled.
She has now spoken out about Spilo's apology, questioning its timing.
"It's curious that Dan has decided to publicly apologize to me -- and just me -- on the eve of the #Survivor39 finale for a series of inappropriate incidents that occurred months ago and impacted a number of women on set," Kim said in a tweet.

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2019-12-18 14:45:00Z
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CBS and 'Survivor' admit they could have handled Dan Spilo incident 'differently,' set new procedures for show - Fox News

CBS and “Survivor” have issued a statement in regards to the recent Dan Spilo controversy.

The statement comes in the wake of Dan Spilo’s ousting from the show following several alleged misconduct incidents in which Spilo was accused of touching contestant Kellee Kim and a female production member in an inappropriate manner.

The abrupt exit of Spilo, for what CBS said was an off-camera incident, didn't end questions about whether the network fumbled a #MeToo-era issue that it knew about months ago.

EX-'SURVIVOR' PRODUCER CRITICIZED WIFE IN EMAILS TO MISTRESS

Dan Spilo was removed from "Survivor: Island of the Idols" last week. After the show, a message appeared on the screen for viewers, reading: "Dan was removed from the game after a report of another incident, which happened off-camera and did not involve a player."

Dan Spilo was removed from "Survivor: Island of the Idols" last week. After the show, a message appeared on the screen for viewers, reading: "Dan was removed from the game after a report of another incident, which happened off-camera and did not involve a player." (Robert Voets/CBS Entertainment)

“Season 39 of ‘Survivor’ has been unprecedented for all of us, with important social issues and inappropriate individual behavior intersecting with game play in complex ways that we’ve never seen before,” the statement to Fox News began. “During the course of the production, we listened to the players intently, investigated responsibly and responded accordingly, including taking the unprecedented step of removing a player from the game.”

“At the same time, we are responsible for the final outcome of this season. We recognize there are things we could have done differently, and we are determined to do better going forward,” the statement continued.

'SURVIVOR' PRODUCER CONVICTED OF WIFE'S MURDER RELEASED FROM MEXICAN PRISON AFTER 7 YEARS

The statement then addressed what steps the network and the “Survivor” production teams will take to ensure a smooth operation following the latest season’s controversy.

“For Season 40, which has already filmed, the show added to its pre-production cast orientation specific guidelines regarding personal space, inappropriate behavior, and how to report these issues. For Seasons 41 and beyond, the producers are reviewing all elements of the show to further support appropriate interaction, including how the players live during, as well as after they are eliminated from, the competition,” the statement noted.

'SURVIVOR' SPARKS OUTRAGE AFTER CONTESTANT OUTED AS TRANSGENDER ON SHOW

Dan Spilo's departure was the first time in "Survivor" history that a cast member had been removed from the CBS show.

Dan Spilo's departure was the first time in "Survivor" history that a cast member had been removed from the CBS show. (Screen Grab/CBS Entertainment)

CBS’ statement then discussed the additional measures that will be implemented for “training, reporting of issues and prohibited forms of game play.”

“The production will add another on-site professional to provide a confidential means of reporting any concerns, so that the production can address them promptly apart from the game. The full range of reporting processes will be communicated clearly to the players during pre-production orientation.  The new executive will add to a support system that already makes mental health providers available to players on location and after they leave the island.”

More new rules include, “[Enhanced] pre-production orientation with new anti-harassment, unconscious bias and sensitivity training for cast, producers and production crew on location,” in addition to the introduction of “a third-party expert in the field to review, evolve or add to these new policies and procedures going forward.”

Furthermore, “A new rule will be implemented stating unwelcome physical contact, sexual harassment and impermissible biases cannot be brought into the competition and will not be permitted as part of gameplay. This will be covered in the cast orientation for each season, along with clear instructions on how to report violations.”

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

The statement concludes: “CBS Entertainment will develop appropriate enhanced policies and procedures equivalent to the new “Survivor” measures and adapt them for the network’s other reality programming going forward.”

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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2019-12-18 13:56:18Z
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Prince William and Kate Middleton Are a 'Great Double Act' as They Prepare for the Throne - Yahoo Entertainment

Kate Middleton and Prince William stole the spotlight at Queen Elizabeth‘s Buckingham Palace last week, making it clear that they are ready for the next step on their royal journey.

Entering the glittering palace ballroom behind the monarch and Prince Charles and Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, Kate and William mingled expertly with partygoers at the Dec. 11 reception for diplomats.

“They combine grace and regal presence with a lovely human touch,” a guest who attended the annual bash tells PEOPLE in this week’s cover story. “They are gracious and natural and yet able to really connect.”

The future King and Queen, who have been married for eight years, are honing their expertise as they go.

RELATED: Are Prince George and Princess Charlotte Making Their Royal Christmas Walk Debut This Year? 

“They are being prepared every day,” says royal biographer Ingrid Seward. “There was no school for princesses when Princess Diana was around, and there is no school today for monarchs. They learn by observing and by experience.”

Their teamwork was also on display during the couple’s triumphant tour of Pakistan in October.

“They are a great double act,” says a senior royal source. “People make much of William giving the big speeches, but Kate is there too, asking questions of presidents and their wives. These things are easier when they are side by side.”

For more on how Prince William and Princess Kate are making new strides in their royal work, pick up a copy of PEOPLE on newsstands on Friday.

Increasing travel and work commitments bring added pressures on their own family, especially as older children Prince George, 6, and Princess Charlotte, 4, are more aware of their parents’ away time. (Little Louis is 19 months.) And occasionally, something’s got to give. Kate recently had to cancel an appearance with William at an evening event for the Tusk Conservation Awards because of a childcare issue. A source close to the royal household says, “That is good for other mothers out there.”

Kate Middleton | Victoria Jones/PA Wire
Prince William | Victoria Jones/PA Wire

Next week, the family of five will spend Christmas with the Queen at her Sandringham estate in Norfolk. While Prince Harry and Meghan Markle have opted to spend the holiday apart from the royal family, William and Kate will take their place alongside the Queen for their annual church walk — with George and Charlotte possibly making their Christmas Day debut as well.

They are also preparing for a busy year ahead. The couple are expected to go abroad on at least two overseas visits and continue with their efforts at home in the U.K. promoting mental health initiatives and supporting families with young children.

RELATED: Kate Middleton Says Prince William Used to Make This Dish in College to ‘Impress Me’ 

Tim Rooke/Shutterstock

Can’t get enough of PEOPLE‘s Royals coverage? Sign up for our free Royals newsletter to get the latest updates on Kate Middleton, Meghan Markle and more!

As they near 40, both royals are also keenly aware of the passage of time — and how much closer it brings them to the throne.

“The monarchy is approaching a very challenging period of change,” says royal historian Robert Lacey. “Charles is going to have his work cut out coping with the transitions. It’s good to have that reassurance in the new generation that there is someone stepping up to the plate.”

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2019-12-18 13:00:00Z
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Review: An Exciting But Effortful 'Rise Of Skywalker - NPR

Chewbacca (Joonas Suotamo), Poe (Oscar Isaac), Rey (Daisy Ridley) and Finn (John Boyega) take on the Empire one last time in Star Wars:The Rise of Skywalker. Lucasfilms hide caption

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Lucasfilms

The thing about the act of plate-spinning is: It's not about the plates. Not really.

We sit there in the audience, watching those various dishes spin atop their dowels; while it's aesthetically pleasing, in the abstract, to see so many pieces of Wedgwood china twirling away contentedly, what matters — the compelling drama of the whole affair — comes not from watching them, but from watching the poor schmuck running back and forth behind them. If we happen to notice one plate starting to wobble, after all, the first thing we do is look away from it, to see if the plate-spinner sees it, too.

We want them to succeed. The whole cheesy novelty act is predicated on this. The sheer skill it takes to keep the plates from falling — the eye, the timing, the light touch — that's what we're drawn to, really. The work of the thing.

J.J. Abrams is spinning a great many plates in Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker, the final chapter in the third and final trilogy of what we are now apparently supposed to call "The Skywalker Saga." He's not simply called upon to end the trilogy he began in 2015, with The Force Awakens, but the whole space-operatic, science-fiction-with-generous-helpings-of-fantasy, embrace-your-destiny, Joseph-Campbell, daddy-issues megillah. He's got to land a Corellian light freighter that's been loaded down with everything that got kicked off in 1977, when the saga's first film (but fourth chapter — long story, literally) A New Hope debuted, establishing the Star Wars formula:

  • 1/3 epic space battles
  • 1/3 high-adventure narrow escapes for our doughty heroes
  • 1/3 characters intoning blissfully hokey dialogue about the Force and the Dark Side

He nails that 42-year-old recipe dutifully — effortfully, it must be said — but the flavoring's off. The story doesn't require him to toss in as many ingredients from earlier films in the saga as he does here, but he dumps them all (callbacks, references, echoes, events, characters) into the mix anyway. The result leaves you feeling not so much bloated — the film moves too quickly, and is too much fun for that — but certainly overstuffed.

The Rise of Skywalker is ostensibly positioned as a culmination, but it seems less momentous, less inevitable than the term would suggest. Instead, it's an accretion — a buildup of plotlines and characters that rolls toward its conclusion by dint of momentum lent to it by all that's come before.

That lack of clear focus is largely a result of this most recent trilogy's peculiar provenance. In The Force Awakens, Abrams created its main characters and teased some intriguing mysteries for future films to explore before handing the reins to Rian Johnson, whose The Last Jedi in 2017 proceeded to explore some and (justifiably, in my opinion) abandon others, in an effort to shake things up. Now that Abrams is back at the helm, several plot threads that Johnson had summarily sealed away in boxes — including the parentage of Rey (Daisy Ridley) — get hauled back down from narrative deep-storage and unpacked for fresh inspection.

It's the directorial equivalent of a particularly petty game of Exquisite Corpse, wherein one partygoer writes the first sentence of a story, then hands it to a second partygoer who writes a sentence undercutting the first sentence, then the first partygoer takes the paper back and doubles down on what they'd written in the first place.

But then, that first sentence — The Force Awakens, in this case — was powered by the easy chemistry among its leads: Rey's steely resolve, Finn's (John Boyega's) comic timing, and Poe's (Oscar Isaacs') preternatural charm. Johnson's The Last Jedi, for understandable story reasons, split them up — and for all the good and worthy risks that film took, the sundering of our trio was the one that didn't pay off. In Skywalker, Abrams reunites our heroes and pointedly keeps them that way, allowing their interpersonal energy and humor to ground us through an extended series of planet-hopping fetch quests that can't help but blur together.

The mysterious connection between Rey and Kylo Ren (Adam Driver) is allowed to become less so, as is only fitting in the final chapter of their story. Abrams shows an admirable willingness to maintain the shades of gray that Johnson introduced into Star Wars' black-and-white cookie of a moral universe. Here again, characters make choices that do not always strictly accord with their wardrobe's color scheme.

Less successful are the return appearances of various characters from previous trilogies, most of whom have been forcefully (heh) inserted into events. (Abrams wields a shoehorn with the same determination that Rey wields her lightsaber.) Some viewers will cry "fan service!" Many more will consider themselves fans, and be grateful for being so rigorously and exhaustively serviced.

The blockbuster conclusion to an era-defining film franchise is a spectacular feat of plate-spinning --with one vital difference. With The Rise of Skywalker, the spinner — Abrams — wants us to focus on the plates alone. And there are certainly moments when we do: tender scenes featuring previously unused footage of the late Carrie Fisher (and her back-of-the-head stand-in), a chase through the desert, a lightsaber battle on some familiar wreckage amid a roiling ocean.

But there are many more moments — especially towards the film's conclusion, when a sequence showing just how hopelessly dire things get for our heroes just goes on and on and on -- when the spinning plates disappear, and all we can see is poor J.J. Abrams darting back and forth and back again, frantically struggling to keep them going.

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2019-12-18 11:47:00Z
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