"At this time we are postponing the launch of the new stand
up comedy special 'Bill Cosby 77'," a Netflix spokeswoman said
in a statement.
Allegations that Cosby, 77, drugged and sexually assaulted
several young women decades ago gained renewed attention after
comedian Hannibal Buress called him a rapist during a stand-up
comedy routine last month.
The move from Netflix comes just days after the airing of a
National Public Radio interview in which Cosby, who is married,
declined to answer questions about the sexual assault
accusations. He has never been charged with the alleged crimes.
Among his accusers is former aspiring actress Barbara Bowman,
who wrote in a Washington Post op-ed this month that Cosby had
assaulted her on multiple occasions in 1985, when she was 17,
including one occasion when he drugged her at his New York City
brownstone.
Bowman said she never went to the police because she feared she
would not be believed.
She said she had prepared to testify in a lawsuit filed by
another woman, Andrea Constand, who claimed Cosby drugged and
sexually assaulted her. That suit was settled in 2006 for an
undisclosed amount of money, and Bowman never testified.
Cosby is best known for playing Cliff Huxtable, the father of an
affluent black family on the TV sitcom "The Cosby Show" that was
a top-ranked program from 1984 to 1992, making Cosby a wealthy
man.
He is currently developing a new sitcom for NBC. NBC declined to
comment on Tuesday.
(Reporting by Curtis Skinner in San Francisco; Additional
reporting by Piya Sinha-Roy in Los Angeles; Editing by Jeremy
Laurence)
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