Bernie Madoff
Banned
So you believe her? Cause if not, she is out to ruin the guy because she's a hoe who got put on front street...
So you believe her? Cause if not, she is out to ruin the guy because she's a hoe who got put on front street...
FSU fukked up not investigating this immediately. shyt probably would have saved Jameis in the long run. She's basically capitalizing off that
So you believe her? Cause if not, she is out to ruin the guy because she's a hoe who got put on front street...
Yet the media refuses to report this shyt
Reviews are coming in.... hollywood/industry taking notice..
http://www.slate.com/articles/doubl...cumentary_that_fails_to_provide_a_full.2.htmlAt the emotional heart of the film are a few extended stories, and they are wrenching. But these accounts leave out the kind of crucial details that show how complicated these cases can be. One is about Lizzy Seeberg, a 19-year-old who committed suicide by taking an overdose of antidepressants after reporting that a University of Notre Dame football player had forcibly kissed and touched her. (There was no allegation of rape.) It is agony to hear her father describe his daughter’s last days. But surely the filmmakers have an obligation to mention that Seeberg had long been treated for depression and anxiety and that her therapist noted she’d previously had “suicidal thoughts.” And fairness would require them to acknowledge the accused’s differing version of the evening.
The longest set piece concerns the rape allegation against Jameis Winston, the former Florida State University quarterback. Winston was not charged after a criminal investigation and was [URL='http://www.foxsports.com/college-football/story/full-copy-of-jameis-winston-hearing-decision-122114']found not responsibleafter a campus hearing in December not responsible[/URL]after a campus hearing in December. The New York Times wrote that the film challenges the National Football League to reconsider drafting him. In the movie his accuser, former FSU student Erica Kinsman, goes public. She says that after drinking a shot at an off-campus bar she started feeling strange: “I’m fairly certain there was something in that drink.” Slipping in and out of consciousness, she says she found herself in a cab with three men—Winston and his roommates—and woke to find him brutally raping her. But the filmmakers fail to note that two toxicology reportsfound that she had no drugs in her system and little alcohol. They don’t reveal that at the December hearing she did not assert that she was drugged or unconscious. And because Winston is on the record denying the charges, fairness would mean acknowledging this.
Reviews are coming in.... hollywood/industry taking notice..
at Fisher's replies when told the facts are to "watch the movie" or "watch the movie, then we'll talk"
You can't make this shyt up
*edit*
and I see that Diane Warren didn't hesitate to promote her song that appears in the movie either![]()
What they saying in the comments section?
Jameis Winston doesn't look good on film. That isn't something you could say until now, given the Florida State star performed so well by losing only one game in two seasons with the Seminoles.
Where Winston's reputation will take another hit is in The Hunting Ground, a documentary released Friday about sexual assaults on college campuses.
The film features assault survivors who have faced retaliation and harassment for reporting they had been raped on campuses from Harvard to Cal. That group includes Winston's accuser, Erica Kinsman, a former FSU student and Pasco County resident who spoke publicly for the first time for the film.
With the release of the film, Kinsman has a public face for the first time since the encounter with Winston in 2012, while she was an FSU student. She is someone's daughter. She has parents who speak in the film. She is described as "the girl next door.'' And she gives a graphic account of what she believes happened with Winston that night.
But will The Hunting Ground or the reaction to it have any influence on the team's decision?
As of Friday, the Bucs had not viewed the film. Nor had they attempted to speak with Kinsman or her attorney, which would probably be a bad idea. Kinsman has been through enough without having to provide the Bucs with information to help them choose a quarterback. And such a request could be viewed as trivializing her ordeal. Everything she told investigators is available for review in documents.
The film is not the end of it for Winston. Kinsman filed a federal Title IX lawsuit against FSU, alleging it deliberately hid sexual assault claims against him "to protect the football program." There likely will be a civil suit. Winston has told NFL team officials he plans to fight to the end.
At a news conference Thursday to reintroduce the Campus Accountability and Safety Act, U.S. Sen.Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., was asked what it says about the NFL and our culture that Winston will likely be the first overall pick in the draft.
"I think it's very important that any team that is thinking about drafting Jameis Winston watch this movie before they draft him," McCaskill said.
My guess is the Bucs will watch it. But it's hard to know whether it will impact their decision.