Facing backlash, Rolling Stone writer
posts second apology for 'hurtful' book
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[November 02, 2017]
By Dan Whitcomb
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A Rolling Stone
writer who has come under fire for a 17-year-old book that critics say
depicts his own mistreatment of women at a newspaper office made a
second apology on Wednesday, saying he wrote "hurtful" things but did
not sexually harass anyone.
Matt Taibbi posted the lengthy repentance on his Facebook page hours
after an event intended to promote his latest book was scrapped in
Washington, D.C. without explanation.
The furor over Taibbi's early work comes as a string of accusations
against film producer Harvey Weinstein have galvanized outrage over
abuse of women that has been covered up or ignored. Weinstein has denied
engaging in non-consensual sex with anyone.
"I’ve done a lot of wrong things in my life. As a young man, I wrote and
said some very dumb and hurtful things." Taibbi, 47, said in the
Facebook post. "I’m sorry for all of this."
"But it was never more than that. I know the list of revealed harassers
is growing, but I am not on that list, nor should I be. I belong to a
much bigger group. I was young once, and a jerk. And I am sorry for
that," he said.
The journalist has faced outrage in recent days over the 2000 book "The
Exile: Sex, Drugs and Libel in the New Russia," which chronicles his
time as the editor of an English-language newspaper in Russia.
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Critics say the book, co-written by Taibbi and another editor at the
now-defunct paper, Mark Ames, contains passages seemingly detailing
mistreatment, sexual harassment and even assaults on their female
staff and other young women.
Taibbi and Ames insist that the book is fiction, intended as a
satire of American expatriates in Russia.
That explanation has done little to mollify critics in the media and
on Twitter who point out that "Exile" contains a note making clear
that it is nonfiction.
Taibbi in his latest Facebook message said the book's publisher,
Grove Press, had put out a statement calling the note incorrect
because it contains "exaggerated, invented satire and nonfiction
reporting."
"I continue to deny absolutely that I have ever sexually harassed
anyone in any office, here or in Russia," Taibbi said.
"No woman anywhere has ever accused me of anything of the sort, and
I am confident that my former co-workers will report (many already
have) that I have never exhibited anything like that kind of
behavior, at work or elsewhere."
(Reporting by Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Shri Navaratnam)
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