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Sunny Hostin says she did whatever it took to cover her body curves while working as a young lawyer.
While discussing Joy Behar’s newly published essay on workplace harassment. About “The View” On Friday, the 55-year-old revealed that she sometimes binds her breasts during meetings in order to be taken more seriously.
“When I was a young lawyer, I remember many interviews where the men wouldn’t look at me. They just looked straight at my chest,” she said. “And I started strapping my chest to get jobs based on my qualifications.”
Hostin, who said she has since “got her breasts reduced,” explained that she and her female colleagues were never afraid to report harassment for fear it would hurt their careers.
“When I joined the Department of Justice, when I joined a law firm…we had a choice. [to report harassment], but I don’t have the courage to use them,” she said. “Don’t let the patriarchal structure cause you to lose your position.”
While some anchors argued that things have changed for women these days, Alyssa Farrah Griffin has received similar treatment despite being much younger than the rest of the panel. He pointed out that there was.
“I was talking to some of the younger producers, and it reflected some of our experiences in the workplace,” the 34-year-old former White House director of strategic communications said of Behar’s essay.
“When I worked on Capitol Hill, I had a direct supervisor. It was all the same thing,” she continued. “We were wearing high-necked tops and even worse, loose pants. And…surprisingly, there’s actually no human resources in Congress.”
But Griffin said she and the other women eventually “banded together” and “fired” the unnamed man.
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“It’s like every woman experiences harassment,” she concluded. “The difference we have today is because of women like:” [Behar] And your generation, do we have a place to report it, and do we have the words to describe what we’ve been through? We don’t just deny it. ”
The conversation was spurred by the publication of Behar’s witty yet disturbing essay, “#MeToo: The Early Years,” published in Airmail this week.
In her letter, Behar detailed her experiences with workplace harassment in the 1960s, when she worked as an English teacher.
She recalled one particular moment when her boss told her that a lesson on subject-verb agreement was “so exciting” that she “felt like I needed to throw an ice cube.” [his] pants. ”
“[He] “After the lesson, he came up to me and said, ‘You were so good that I could have banged you on the blackboard,'” she recalled.
“I was torn. On the one hand, I was disgusted. On the other hand, I was an independent, single woman with no trust fund waiting for me, but the head of the English department She loved the lessons,” Behar wrote. “My heart skipped a beat.”
She “thought of reporting” him, but the principal at the time was “only interested in catching students smoking drugs in the restroom” and not concerned with protecting staff, so “it was a waste of time.” I knew that.”
But she said things only got worse, and the man continued to make unwanted advances until she asked him out on a date. very A sharp lesson on bullying.
When asked on Friday’s “The View” if she elaborated on the details of the essay, Ms. Behar replied, “Everything is true.”
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