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Time for the Terminator to step forward and answer detailed questions about his past conduct
LA Weekly ^ | 8-29 | Nikki Finke

Posted on 08/29/2003 10:27:25 PM PDT by ambrose

Edited on 08/30/2003 7:06:15 AM PDT by Admin Moderator. [history]


AUG. 29 - SEPT. 4, 2003

Deadline Hollywood


Arnold’s Sexual Recall
Time for the Terminator to step forward and answer detailed questions about his past conduct
by Nikki Finke

Gloria Allred, California’s most high-profile defender of women’s rights, is demanding that Arnold Schwarzenegger answer the “very serious questions” raised by his lurid 1977 boasting that he participated in a gang bang at Gold’s Gym in Venice. In an interview with the L.A. Weekly, the Los Angeles lawyer and feminist who is founder and president of the Women’s Equal Rights Legal Defense and Education Fund added her outrage to what inexplicably has yet to become a real controversy over the candidate’s sexual history and attitudes.

“I am disgusted, appalled, revolted, sickened, disturbed and troubled,” Allred said of Schwarzenegger’s description of one incident in particular: when, with a startling specificity of language, the Pumping Iron star told the magazine, “Bodybuilders party a lot, and once, in Gold’s — the gym in Venice, California, where all the top guys train — there was a black girl who came out naked. Everybody jumped on her and took her upstairs, where we all got together.”

Asked by the interviewer if this had been a “gang bang,” Schwarzenegger said, “Yes, but not everybody, just the guys who can (expletive deleted by FR Admin Moderator) in front of other guys.”

Allred said, “There are a number of unanswered questions here that are very serious questions and shouldn’t be brushed off” by Schwarzenegger or the media. “It sounds as though it was a sexual assault or rape because he says everyone jumped on the woman involved and took her upstairs. It doesn’t sound consensual, though I don’t know for a certainty it wasn’t.

“I would call on Arnold to fully explain the details of what occurred,” Allred said, “including who else was involved, to fully take responsibility for his conduct and his words, to explain whether or not he has engaged in [similar activities with] other women and if so how many. I would also like to know what happened to these women, if there were more than one, because I am concerned about their well-being.”

That sex suddenly surfaced in the California gubernatorial recall election was not shocking, especially given Schwarzenegger’s past as a Hollywood actor who bared his butt and simulated coitus for the camera, as well as our fixation with the subject (witness today’s water-cooler talk about Britney tongue-kissing Madonna at the MTV Video Awards.) But what is remarkable right now is the way that media coverage has been so muffled despite the explosiveness of the Oui interview.

Nonetheless, this new call for Schwarzenegger to account for his behavior may turn the election into a national test that puts to rest once and for all in this post-Clinton era whether the sexual lives of political candidates should be a campaign issue.

By Friday, politicians including recall rival Lieutenant Governor Cruz Bustamante and ex-Minnesota Governor Jesse Ventura, along with Fox News Channel’s Bill O’Reilly and MSNBC’s Chris Matthews, all had put themselves on the record as declaring that Schwarzenegger’s 25-year-old sexual past was not relevant to the recall race.

But Allred expressed dismay at not just what Schwarzenegger said and did back then but also what he said and did about it this week. “My point is he hasn’t retracted the statements or apologized for the statements. So you have to assume this is where he stands today. The fact that people grow or their attitudes change is not really relevant. This is what he said and he appears to stand behind it.”

As to whether all candidates’ sexual history is relevant in any election, Allred said, “The answer is absolutely. Who a person is, their character, their history, their treatment of women, matters because, although a person can change, we have a right to know what their behavior has been in the past. Arnold has not given any indication that he thinks there’s anything wrong with what he did. And if he doesn’t think there’s anything wrong with this, he thinks it would be acceptable to repeat this behavior.”

That sentiment was echoed by Toni Broaddus, program director for Equality California, the statewide gay-rights group, who told the San Francisco Chronicle she was disturbed by Schwarzenegger’s description of the gang bang. “That many men and one woman — it was very troubling, because it did seem close to rape,” she said. “It just didn’t sound like the kind of thing that you want the leader of the world’s sixth largest economy bragging about.”

Several gay-rights advocates criticized Schwarzenegger for his use of the word fag in the Oui magazine interview. Michael Andraychak, president of the Los Angeles Stonewall Democratic Club, which opposes the recall, demanded that the candidate apologize, telling the Chronicle that gays react to the word fag the same way that African-Americans react to “the nigger word.”

Bustamante used the N word much more recently and apologized profusely to the black community, saying he had misspoken. About Schwarzenegger’s statements to Oui magazine, Bustamante declared, “People don’t care about these things. They care about the issues. This is not the time to look back.”

Also Friday, the author of the Oui interview, Peter Manso, told Pacifica Radio’s Democracy Now! sShow he thinks that Schwarzenegger’s attitude toward women back then was “to put it bluntly, woman are hunks of meat, no more, no less.” That attitude also permeated a March 2001 Premiere magazine article which recounted more recent moviemaking allegations of groping and fondling. “Stories of his boorish behavior can no longer be routinely erased,” the article said. “Then again, he’d make a helluva politician.” Schwarzenegger denied the allegations but never sued.

Politicians and pundits, not just neoconservatives avowedly friendly to Schwarzenegger’s campaign but even conservative Republicans who would have been expected to voice indignation, were nearly uniform in their mild responses, with most expressing their belief that it would be a mistake to exploit this seeming bump in Schwarzenegger’s political path for “partisan” reasons.

But the Oui magazine interview wasn’t a she-accuses, he-denies allegation like Juanita Broderick vs. Bill Clinton. This was a he-bragged about what he-did situation. We may never know what really happened until we hear from the woman involved. But recently the Supreme Court seemed to confirm what most Democrats had been saying during the Clinton sex scandals: that people’s sex lives are their own personal business. As a result, sex as a political sniper appears disarmed.

But that’s the case as long as the sex is consensual and all parties are willing participants. Which brings us to this self-described gang bang: In the eye of the beholder, was Schwarzenegger a youthful sexual hijinxer or craven sexual predator?

At issue here is that, even in those sexually liberated days of the movies Animal House and Debbie Does Dallas, the term gang bang had then, still has and will always conjure up an image of an act of sexual aggression. Since details are few, whether that happened in this instance is impossible to discern. But let’s at least be honest: The description of several heavily muscled men at one time having a sexual encounter with a lone woman, where words like jump and took are used to describe it, suggests a certain roughness even if the woman may have found it a pleasurable experience.

There is no reason to believe from the context of the interview that foreign-born Schwarzenegger did not know what his words meant. But even in terms of contemporary morality when attitudes toward women careen from politically correct feminism to Howard Stern’s she’s-asking-to-be-treated-like-a-ho humor, it’s a rare set of circumstances to equate a gang bang to a “party” (to use Schwarzenegger’s 1977 language.)

At first, Schwarzenegger had only this to say about the article: It was not the type of interview he would give today. “I never lived my life to be a politician. I never lived my life to be the governor of California,” he told Sacramento station KFBK Wednesday night. “Obviously, I’ve made statements that were ludicrous and crazy and outrageous and all those things, because that’s the way I always was. I was always that way, because otherwise I wouldn’t have done the things that I did in my career, including the bodybuilding and the show business and all those things.”

However, by Friday, the candidate seemed to have developed overnight, claiming at a public appearance that he had no recollection of even giving the interview or what he said.

The Oui question-and-answer interview, which took place when Schwarzenegger was 29 years old and already a minor celebrity (having appeared in two movies, Stay Hungry and Pumping Iron, the documentary about the 1975 Mr. Olympia contest which Schwarzenegger won), first came to light on the Internet on Wednesday. By that evening, some of California’s TV newscasts made general references to Schwarzenegger’s “graphic” description of his “wild” past without fleshing out the lurid details.

By Thursday, there was an eerie silence about the revelations, especially among those blanket-covering the recall, including talk-radio and television gadflies not exactly known for being shy about shouting their opinions.

On Thursday morning, conservative commentator Bill O’Reilly referred to the Schwarzenegger interview on his radio show only in passing to opine that “People’s personal lives have nothing to do with their political lives.” Yet O’Reilly had been among those many pundits and politicians who consistently maintained that the details of Bill Clinton’s sexual past were appropriate fodder for political attacks and press probes — a position vigorously opposed by both liberals and even moderates.

On MSNBC that evening, former Minnesota Governor Jesse Ventura was openly guffawing when asked if Schwarzenegger’s sexual past mattered. “People need to understand that you’re not the same person at age 19 that you are, in my case, at 51.” Pointing out that in his autobiography he admitted visiting a legal Nevada brothel as a young man, Ventura stated, “It shouldn’t count. We learn. We grow. We mature. You cannot judge people by what you did 20 or 30 years ago.”

By Friday, shock had turned to show. Radio and television commentators and anchors began discussing the content and context of the interview as well as the controversy. Now it could become Topic A. Whether back then reality was simulating a scene out of American Pie or The Accused, voters in the end will have to decide.

Contact Nikki Finke at nikkifinke@deadlinehollywood.com.


TOPICS: News/Current Events; US: California
KEYWORDS: 0000schwarzenrapist; 000gamblinggoons4tom; arnoldthepervert; charactercounts; clintonistas; clintonlegacy; dropoutarnold; dropoutnow; sayno2rinos; schwarzenorgy; schwarzenreefer; schwarzenrino; stopmakingexcuses
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To: Chad Fairbanks
Cool..I noticed you like Maiden as well. Good choice of music.
341 posted on 08/30/2003 2:38:47 PM PDT by Pro-Bush (Awareness is what you know before you know anything else.)
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To: DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet
Why would they need to produce her? He already admitted it. (What am I missing?)

Well, I guess the story could have happened as it was told----but, doesn't it sound just a little like Penthouse Forum crap? It is entirely possible there never was group sex. Where are the other guys that supposedly engaged in the act? Much less the woman.

We'll see if it is ever verified, but I'm not holding my breath.

342 posted on 08/30/2003 3:03:13 PM PDT by cyncooper
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To: cyncooper
Yes, it sounds like "Penthouse Forum crap" to me, too. I know that sort of thing DOES happen (thanks to a guitar player I once worked with, who for some reason thought I'd want to hear about it...and he claimed to be a witness, not a participant, so I believed him), but a guy in his twenties giving an interview to a magazine like that? Quite possible it was embellished, to say the least.
343 posted on 08/30/2003 3:08:34 PM PDT by DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet ("I'm just a caveman. Your modern world frightens and confuses me...")
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To: Chad Fairbanks
That's a 70's haircut? Just looks like you have great hair, to me. (They didn't make the BMW Z-3 "back in the day" - I know that, 'cause I had one up until November.)

I think you look great in that picture, for what it's worth. (Probably nothing, but...)
344 posted on 08/30/2003 3:14:31 PM PDT by DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet ("I'm just a caveman. Your modern world frightens and confuses me...")
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To: mugsy
Look, I saw him deny his documented behavior on television.

How is it documented?

Did it ever occur to you that he created a story to tell the interviewer targeted for the "readers" of said magazine?

Do you think all the exploits recounted in these mags are true-to-life experiences?

I'm willing to hear it supported, but Schwarzenegger said he said ludicrous and crazy things back then because that was the way he was.

345 posted on 08/30/2003 3:17:30 PM PDT by cyncooper
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To: ambrose
there was a black girl who came out naked. Everybody jumped on her and took her upstairs, where we all got together.”

It sounds as though it was a sexual assault or rape

Sure, not like disrobing in front of a bunch of guys is a sexual advance or anything. And the whole connection to this incident is Ahnold bragging about it 30 years ago. Would it make sense that somebody would brag about a sexual incident that was indeed a rape or sexual assualt to a newspaper journalist?

It seems odd that the moralists on here are taking sides with the leftwing hacks trying to tie this incident to rape. Of course they think its a rape, they think all consensual sex is rape.

346 posted on 08/30/2003 3:24:40 PM PDT by chudogg (I)
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To: cyncooper
Did it ever occur to you that he created a story to tell the interviewer targeted for the "readers" of said magazine?

LOL! That's reassuring. Sure, I thought of that, but then I was smart enough to realize that a man who creates such a perverted story for public consumption would very likely have no qualms about doing most of those things.

Here's the article in case you haven't read it. Orgy porgy, Ford and fun, kiss the girls and make them One. Personally, I believe Arnold's account in this magazine. I don't believe him now because he has an incentive to not be truthful.
347 posted on 08/30/2003 3:37:23 PM PDT by mugsy
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To: cyncooper
When the story about then-Governor Bush's DUI came out, the frustrating thing was that people didn't take it in the context of the times. There hadn't yet been a big push to get people to stop driving after they had had a few drinks - it was actually very common for people to drink and drive...and no one was hurt, he was pulled over for driving slowly (correct?) - it wasn't the same thing as being pulled over for drinking and driving as it would have been had it happened last week.

Similarly, people are probably more sexually conservative now than they were when Arnold gave this interview. In the 1960's and 70's, things were fairly wild - a big reaction to the Donna Reed/Ozzie and Harriet/Lucy and Ricky in Separate Beds Decade prior. Then people became afraid of getting AIDS, and things settled down a bit.

Half the people having trouble with the interview now probably had some pretty interesting relationships of their own back then.
348 posted on 08/30/2003 3:48:11 PM PDT by DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet ("I'm just a caveman. Your modern world frightens and confuses me...")
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To: mugsy
I don't want to read that stuff!

I understand why you would not believe him, but---it's not just a supposed girl who could step forward to verify, but all these other guys who were supposed to have participated. I'm certainly open to being disabused of my naivete.

349 posted on 08/30/2003 4:09:54 PM PDT by cyncooper
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To: DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet
That era was very wild, indeed. Pot and hash smoking and coke snorting were so open it may as well have been legal---then society drew the line and it became not acceptable to do that out in the open anymore.

350 posted on 08/30/2003 4:11:50 PM PDT by cyncooper
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To: DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet
Similarly, people are probably more sexually conservative now than they were when Arnold gave this interview. In the 1960's and 70's, things were fairly wild - a big reaction to the Donna Reed/Ozzie and Harriet/Lucy and Ricky in Separate Beds Decade prior. Then people became afraid of getting AIDS, and things settled down a bit.

Either you settled down and are allowing your experiences to cloud your analysis, or you're woefully ignorant. Things haven't settled down at all. Young people are doing drugs and going to sex parties like never before. Raves, twelve-year-olds giving each other blow jobs, ten-year-olds smoking joints. It happens all the time. Quit making excuses for Arnold's lack of judgment. You sound disgusting.
351 posted on 08/30/2003 6:42:12 PM PDT by mugsy
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To: mugsy
LOL - I sound disgusting? Not disgusting enough to get my posts pulled...like you. Hell, I'm a rookie compared to you, "newbie".
352 posted on 08/30/2003 8:12:45 PM PDT by DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet ("I'm just a caveman. Your modern world frightens and confuses me...")
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To: DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet
You're not suggesting, I hope, that someone banned from FR might try to sneak back in?

;-)

353 posted on 08/30/2003 8:53:42 PM PDT by dighton (NLC™)
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To: dighton
Oh, certainly not. : ) (Particularly when they use words like "harpies" on their profile page - I don't find that at all suspicious. Nope. Not a bit.)
354 posted on 08/30/2003 8:55:49 PM PDT by DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet ("I'm just a caveman. Your modern world frightens and confuses me...")
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To: DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet; mugsy
LOL...I saw the profile page I suspect some Texas gal of breaking a heart and leaving a world of hurt behind.
355 posted on 08/30/2003 11:38:29 PM PDT by MEG33
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To: DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet; MEG33
"Napa County Man Struck By Lightning"
356 posted on 08/31/2003 8:12:05 AM PDT by dighton (NLC™)
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To: staytrue
arnold has too much class to do the "she deserved it defense". I as a thinking individual am thinking she wanted a train or she would not be alone and naked.

No rational woman decides to enter a room full of male athletes, naked like that, unless she has the intention of inviting the bunch of them to do her.

357 posted on 08/31/2003 8:25:37 AM PDT by SauronOfMordor (Java/C++/Unix/Web Developer === needs a job at the moment)
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To: dighton; MEG33

358 posted on 08/31/2003 12:42:31 PM PDT by DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet ("I'm just a caveman. Your modern world frightens and confuses me...")
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To: DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet; dighton
Aw,gee,just when we were getting to know him...but then there's always a next time!.....;)
359 posted on 08/31/2003 6:21:43 PM PDT by MEG33
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To: annyokie
What's wrong with St. Monica's? That was St Augustine's mother's name.

Nothing wrong with it at all. I was just recalling a funny conversation I had about a week ago. I mentioned that my sister (who lives in Inglewood) went to St. Monica's, and the guy asked me: "Uh, what town is it in?"

Me: "Santa Monica."

Him: "Oh, really? That's a weird coincidence."

(The town was named for St. Monica, and the church was the first church erected there.)

360 posted on 09/02/2003 4:00:34 AM PDT by Poohbah (Crush your enemies, see them driven before you, and hear the lamentations of their women.)
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