Schlosser85
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If he’s throwing out very serious accusations and calling Whedon a racist without properly fact checking them first, he’s doing it to himself.
Same here as well. Mostly everyone here can admit that they know Whedon is a jerk so is it REALLY that hard to believe that he isn't arrogant enough to have this convo in front of a black person? There are worse stories from other actors about things people in Hollywood do. People are just dismissing Fisher way to fast.My suspicion has aways been that this is more of an ethical issue rather than an illegal or criminal one. I think this really is about Fisher witnessing and hearing about very morally questionable behavior and abuse of power that, again, while technically may not be criminal, still unacceptable nonetheless. The same kind of behavior that Hollywood has let fly for decades. Thats just what my gut tells me.
Same here as well. Mostly everyone here can admit that they know Whedon is a jerk so is it REALLY that hard to believe that he isn't arrogant enough to have this convo in front of a black person?
Or it could mean that everything before the Forbes article had just been generic accusations and calling names and Whedon replied to the only thing where Fisher gave specifics to his claims against him.Like I said, it's telling he's been quiet about everything else (which tells me the stories about him being an @$$hole on set and yelling at/bullying the cast and crew are mostly true), but this is where he finally got an attorney involved and publicly stated Ray's allegation was untrue.
Sheraz Farooqi - Former Contributor
Wow.Homeboy really got canned from Forbes' contributor network over this, looks like.
Lol....they published it at the end of the day so obviously they couldn't cope with the heat.Homeboy really got canned from Forbes' contributor network over this, looks like.
More like a trainwreck.Haven’t been keeping up with this lately...so next week Ray comes back with direct evidence of coloring controversy, to keep the roller coaster ride going? =P
It’s been cancelled, which many people believe is the reason for Fisher’s behavior.Wasn’t there a highly anticipated Cyborg movie in the works? I haven’t been following this or the history of JL production problems too closely
That seems so unnecessary. Farooqi was just reporting Fisher’s claims, it was in no way an opinion piece. Whedon’s lawyers must’ve scared the pants off of tbe Forbes editors.
This thing is gettin ugly fast guys...
He’s lucky that he was only fired. Accusing people of racism without proof opens you up to a major lawsuit.That seems so unnecessary. Farooqi was just reporting Fisher’s claims, it was in no way an opinion piece. Whedon’s lawyers must’ve scared the pants off of tbe Forbes editors.
This thing is gettin ugly fast guys...
No different than what the actual media does today.The article itself was rather unprofessionally written, though. Lots of thinly veiled opinion and editorializing on his part rather than trying for objectivity. Which is consistent with what else I've seen of his writing (his Superman article in particular, where he just straight up omitted facts that didn't fit his central claim that audiences absolutely loved Zack Snyder's take on Superman and want more dark Superman stories in that vein).
The death knell, however, was almost certainly printing that whitewashing quote without actually fact checking it. He did claim that he contacted Whedon for a response and was ignored, but given Whedon did end up responding (and how!) I'm somewhat skeptical Farooqi was as thorough as he should have been. That's the sort of thing where the publication was likely worried about potential of a lawsuit. Which begs the question of how that actually got past editorial to begin with.
As does copyright infractions, which Scott Mendelson blatantly did during Fandome, but didn't get fired for. Bit of a double standard here from Forbes.
He didn’t post it. He watched it. Just like thousands of other people. Vaguely unprofessional, but not in the same ballpark.As does copyright infractions, which Scott Mendelson blatantly did during Fandome, but didn't get fired for. Bit of a double standard here from Forbes.