Danielle
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
She passed away on September 9, 2020, at age 77, after complications with Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease.
Yeah, I think one of the most depressing things about it all is everyone was thinking it. She was just the one saying it for the first time in this way.
Yeah, I think one of the most depressing things about it all is everyone was thinking it. She was just the one saying it for the first time in this way.
Yeah, I think one of the most depressing things about it all is everyone was thinking it. She was just the one saying it for the first time in this way.
and she was absolutely destroyed for it and you know in the documentary it shows a lot of archival footage of her you know from the beginning when she first started compiling data to giving interviews and just going throughout the years you can see the toll you know and the the documentary did such a brilliant job of painting that picture of showing this like
and she was absolutely destroyed for it and you know in the documentary it shows a lot of archival footage of her you know from the beginning when she first started compiling data to giving interviews and just going throughout the years you can see the toll you know and the the documentary did such a brilliant job of painting that picture of showing this like
and she was absolutely destroyed for it and you know in the documentary it shows a lot of archival footage of her you know from the beginning when she first started compiling data to giving interviews and just going throughout the years you can see the toll you know and the the documentary did such a brilliant job of painting that picture of showing this like
young, bright, enthusiastic, intelligent person who's really passionate about this and is really eager to have discussions about it. And then just her having to repeat herself over and over and defend herself over and over and just kind of get worn down over time.
young, bright, enthusiastic, intelligent person who's really passionate about this and is really eager to have discussions about it. And then just her having to repeat herself over and over and defend herself over and over and just kind of get worn down over time.
young, bright, enthusiastic, intelligent person who's really passionate about this and is really eager to have discussions about it. And then just her having to repeat herself over and over and defend herself over and over and just kind of get worn down over time.
And that was just like the hardest thing to watch because there's only so much somebody can take, you know, and you really saw that translated. And she did what she could for as long as she could. And I think that I don't blame her at all for kind of throwing in the towel. I mean, she didn't totally. She still lived her life and lived by her values and spoke.
And that was just like the hardest thing to watch because there's only so much somebody can take, you know, and you really saw that translated. And she did what she could for as long as she could. And I think that I don't blame her at all for kind of throwing in the towel. I mean, she didn't totally. She still lived her life and lived by her values and spoke.
And that was just like the hardest thing to watch because there's only so much somebody can take, you know, and you really saw that translated. And she did what she could for as long as she could. And I think that I don't blame her at all for kind of throwing in the towel. I mean, she didn't totally. She still lived her life and lived by her values and spoke.
Yeah, so I don't know. I just, like, it was just hard to see that kind of play out in the film. But I think what was really poignant, I wrote down two or three things at the very end of that documentary that I think is relevant here, is... At the end, you know, we're hearing from a couple other people. And there is a woman named Clarence Edgar Rosa, who's the founder of the magazine Gaze.
Yeah, so I don't know. I just, like, it was just hard to see that kind of play out in the film. But I think what was really poignant, I wrote down two or three things at the very end of that documentary that I think is relevant here, is... At the end, you know, we're hearing from a couple other people. And there is a woman named Clarence Edgar Rosa, who's the founder of the magazine Gaze.
Yeah, so I don't know. I just, like, it was just hard to see that kind of play out in the film. But I think what was really poignant, I wrote down two or three things at the very end of that documentary that I think is relevant here, is... At the end, you know, we're hearing from a couple other people. And there is a woman named Clarence Edgar Rosa, who's the founder of the magazine Gaze.
And she said, speaking of her early career in journalism, that, quote, I quickly understood that the history of female sexuality was very much a story that repeated itself. It's a story of the successive erasure of knowledge. And then somebody else chimes in and says there is a disappearance of feminist knowledge. Systematically, century after century, decade after decade.
And she said, speaking of her early career in journalism, that, quote, I quickly understood that the history of female sexuality was very much a story that repeated itself. It's a story of the successive erasure of knowledge. And then somebody else chimes in and says there is a disappearance of feminist knowledge. Systematically, century after century, decade after decade.
And she said, speaking of her early career in journalism, that, quote, I quickly understood that the history of female sexuality was very much a story that repeated itself. It's a story of the successive erasure of knowledge. And then somebody else chimes in and says there is a disappearance of feminist knowledge. Systematically, century after century, decade after decade.
And it's this cycle that's totally repeated. And then Cher kind of closes out by saying her voice is Dakota Johnson, which is just so fitting for this documentary. And she concludes... Male ownership of female sexuality is what makes patriarchy possible. As women, we deserve the right to own our own bodies.