Anoushka Mutanda-Dougherty
👤 SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
But you've just told us about a workplace that has potentially... inappropriate working relationships between interns and people in positions of power. What did Daniel tell you about how women were treated specifically at Bad Boy?
And it wasn't just walking in on people.
And it wasn't just walking in on people.
And it wasn't just walking in on people.
He really was there pretty much since the foundation of the company, right? Because it was, is it 93 it started and he was there 94? Yeah, exactly. We're hearing there about a hookup culture with interns, but not specifically Diddy and interns. It was a general culture.
He really was there pretty much since the foundation of the company, right? Because it was, is it 93 it started and he was there 94? Yeah, exactly. We're hearing there about a hookup culture with interns, but not specifically Diddy and interns. It was a general culture.
He really was there pretty much since the foundation of the company, right? Because it was, is it 93 it started and he was there 94? Yeah, exactly. We're hearing there about a hookup culture with interns, but not specifically Diddy and interns. It was a general culture.
But he does talk to you specifically about Diddy and the changes he may have gone through now his life changed massively during this period how does he say that the money the fame the label success changed him?
But he does talk to you specifically about Diddy and the changes he may have gone through now his life changed massively during this period how does he say that the money the fame the label success changed him?
But he does talk to you specifically about Diddy and the changes he may have gone through now his life changed massively during this period how does he say that the money the fame the label success changed him?
I think that's going to be quite striking to a lot of people because when you think of Bad Boy, the way it was then packaged afterwards was this is the family. I mean, he referred to it as the family. And when Biggie died, that was how a lot of it was marketed. But you've told us women were being compared.
I think that's going to be quite striking to a lot of people because when you think of Bad Boy, the way it was then packaged afterwards was this is the family. I mean, he referred to it as the family. And when Biggie died, that was how a lot of it was marketed. But you've told us women were being compared.
I think that's going to be quite striking to a lot of people because when you think of Bad Boy, the way it was then packaged afterwards was this is the family. I mean, he referred to it as the family. And when Biggie died, that was how a lot of it was marketed. But you've told us women were being compared.
He's compared it to ordering a takeaway, flying women in from around the States and that coming from a corporate budget.
He's compared it to ordering a takeaway, flying women in from around the States and that coming from a corporate budget.
He's compared it to ordering a takeaway, flying women in from around the States and that coming from a corporate budget.
I feel like a lot of people might say, particularly people who were around during that generation of music, you're coming off the back of gangster rap and then you've got kind of hip-hop culture that's luxurious, it's fast cars, nice suits, and they might hear Diddy wandering around in his underpants in the mail room Well, that's what it was. That's how it is. That's the rap star lifestyle.
I feel like a lot of people might say, particularly people who were around during that generation of music, you're coming off the back of gangster rap and then you've got kind of hip-hop culture that's luxurious, it's fast cars, nice suits, and they might hear Diddy wandering around in his underpants in the mail room Well, that's what it was. That's how it is. That's the rap star lifestyle.
I feel like a lot of people might say, particularly people who were around during that generation of music, you're coming off the back of gangster rap and then you've got kind of hip-hop culture that's luxurious, it's fast cars, nice suits, and they might hear Diddy wandering around in his underpants in the mail room Well, that's what it was. That's how it is. That's the rap star lifestyle.
But you've just told us from Daniel, I mean, in Daniel's own words, there were people within the working environment who were 14, 15 years old in the mailroom. They were around. They might not have been in there at that specific time. But in the workplace, there were very, very young people where this was happening.