Sunday, November 16, 2014

Can I stick that in your Puddin' Pop Baby?

New York Post November 17, 2014
He’s gone from America’s dad — to national disgrace.
The public implosion of Bill Cosby has been nothing short of stunning — a decade-long, slow-motion fusillade of mistresses and no fewer than 16 sex-assault accusers culminating in recent weeks with a series of spectacular, career-threatening p.r. grenade blasts.
Blast 1: Three weeks ago, comedian Hannibal Buress goes viral with a stand-up bit lambasting “The Cosby Show” icon and Jell-O Pudding Pop pusher as a smug hypocrite who preaches family values in public — and rapes women in private.
“Pull your pants up, black people,” Buress, who has written for “30 Rock” and “Saturday Night Live,” says in the bit, doing a mocking imitation of Cosby.
“Yeah, but you raped women, Bill Cosby,” Buress zings.
“So, [that] brings you down a couple notches. ‘I don’t curse on stage.’ But, yeah, you’re a rapist.’”
Blast 2: On Monday, Nov. 10, Cosby invites the public to “Go ahead. Meme me!” over Twitter, leading to the #CosbyMeme hashtag getting inundated with Buress-inspired rape slurs.
“MY TWO FAVORITE THINGS,” read one submission, lettered atop a picture of Cosby looking adorably pleased in a very Huxtable-looking sweater. “JELLO PUDDING & RAPE.”
Blast 3: In response to both the meme-backfire and the biting Buress bit going viral, Arizona artist Barbara Bowman on Thursday recounts for The Washington Post an ordeal she had previously described as one of 13 sex-assault accusers in a 2004 lawsuit against Cosby.
“The women victimized by Bill Cosby have been talking about his crimes for more than a decade,” wrote Bowman, who says the legendary comedian repeatedly raped and drugged her in 1985, including in his New York town house, when she was an 18-year-old aspiring actress.
“Why didn’t our stories go viral?”
Blast 4: On Friday, Cosby spokesman David Brokaw confirms that Cosby would not appear on CBS’s “Late Show with David Letterman” next Wednesday, as previously scheduled.
Either Cosby was refusing to face questions on the sex-assault allegations or he had turned so toxic, so quickly that Letterman wouldn’t go near him.
Blast 5: In an interview broadcast Saturday,Cosby responds with excruciating, literal radio silence after NPR reporter Scott Simon brings up the touchy subject.
SCOTT SIMON: “This question gives me no pleasure Mr. Cosby, but there have been serious allegations raised about you in recent days.”
BILL COSBY: [Silence]
SIMON: “You’re shaking your head no. I’m in the news business. I have to ask the question. Do you have any response to those charges?”
COSBY: [Silence]
SIMON: “Shaking your head no. There are people who love you who might like to hear from you about this. I want to give you the chance.”
COSBY: [Silence]
The barrage of explosively bad publicity couldn’t have come at a worse time for Cosby, who rose to national fame 30 years ago, when “The Cosby Show” debuted on NBC.
Now at age 77, Cosby was clearly angling for a personal Renaissance.
In September, Cosby released an authorized biography, “Cosby: His Life and Times.”
The book — written by ex-Newsweek editor Mark Whitaker — details in worshipful terms the comic’s rise from humble beginnings in Philadelphia as one of four sons of a maid and a Navy sailor.
The book recounts his coast-to-coast success as a young stand-up, which he parlayed into a starring role on the ’60s action show, “I Spy.”
From there came his own sitcom, “The Bill Cosby Show,” followed by contributions to award-winning children’s projects, including “The Electric Company,” on which he was a recurring guest, and “Fat Albert and the Cosby Kids,” which he created as an educational cartoon series.
But his biggest claim to fame remains “The Cosby Show,” which ruled the sitcom universe for eight seasons, from 1984 to 1992.
Yet the book glaringly makes no mention of sex-abuse allegations.
“I didn’t want to print allegations that I couldn’t confirm independently,” Whitaker explained to BuzzFeed.
Not confirmed? Bowman and Cosby’s other alleged victims would quarrel with that characterization.
Allegations stretch back into the Huxtable heyday of the mid-’80s.
The alleged victims tended to be young women in their late teens and early 20s and had been in a mentoring relationship with the star when they say he drugged and attacked them.
The first official allegation surfaced in early 2005, when Andrea Constand — a Temple University basketball star who is now a Toronto-area massage therapist — alleged that Cosby had drugged and molested her.
Cosby, a Temple alum who had remained involved with campus events, insisted that the sex was consensual, according to reports quoting sources close to the soon-aborted criminal investigation.
A whopping 13 additional women would join Constand’s civil lawsuit as witnesses, insisting in court papers that they, too, had been first “mentored,” then drugged and/or abused by the curmudgeonly comic years, even decades prior.
One of those “Jane Does” would reveal herself to be Bowman, and two other accusers would step forward by name.
Tamara Green, now a California lawyer, told the “Today” show’s Matt Lauer in 2005 that Cosby gave her pills to fight a fever and then groped, kissed and disrobed her as she fell into a stupor.
And Beth Ferrier alleged that 20 years prior as a young model she had been slipped a drugged coffee by Cosby, who then attacked her.
Neither Bowman, Green or Ferrier — or any of the other statute-of-limitations-barred Jane Does in the lawsuit — had anything to gain financially by supporting Constand’s lawsuit, which Cosby settled privately within a year.
NBC, his “Cosby Show” home throughout the 1980s, announced in January that the comedian, actor, author, producer and activist would be starring in a new sitcom in 2015.
Cosby would play the patriarch of a multigenerational family, the network boasted.
“I’ve got it all put together, man!” Cosby joked of the project as recently as June.
The network has apparently been less enthused, blandly describing the show as on the “off-season development track.”It was unclear what, if any, impact the latest publicity plague will have on the project.


13 comments:

Michael Haz said...

So over all these years and all those allegations of rape, not one (alleged) victim called the cops? Cosby was never questioned by police, never arrested, never booked, never perp walked?

I don't want to downplay the seriousness of the allegations, but this sounds awfully like people trying to shake Cosby down for money, doesn't it?

Not one of the many women who claim being drugged and raped went to a hospital for a blood test and a rape exam? No DNA material was recovered?

This sounds like a hit job.

Trooper York said...

I think people are piling on and looking for money. But I bet he did a lot of what was alleged.

That is what happens with people in power in entertainment. They abuse people who put out in the hopes of getting cast in a show.

The wheels of karma grind slowly but eventually they catch up with you.

Trooper York said...

Rape is not the proper term. Or at least Rape-rape as that knucklehead Whoopie Goldberg said. But you can be sure that the Cos boned half the kids that played his daughters or their friends on his show.

rcocean said...

Gotta possibly echo what MH said, or IOW, I get skeptical when some chippie waits 5,10,20 years to come forward and say she was "raped".

I guess if they were Raped it wasn't important enough to them to y'know actually file charges or say something.

I'd suppose that Bill Cosby - like most celebrities - has never lacked for female groupies willing to jump in the sack with him. But then who knows? Didn't that millionaire Max factor guy -drug and rape his female guests?

So, none of this means Bill Cosby didn't rape them. I mean its possible. But if someone says you Did X, should we all believe it, or give them the benefit of the doubt?

rcocean said...

And given that Polanski raped a 13 y/o and fled the country after skipping bail and now is lionized by Hollywood, I doubt Bill Cosby will pay any kind of price.

Trooper York said...

Cross posted at TOP!


Ha,ha,ha!

ndspinelli said...

Don't forget, Cosby is one of the few black people calling out the prison culture glorification of his peeps. That plays into this as well.

blake said...

Yeah, Cosby doesn't have the shielding of a Polanski.

rcocean said...

I'm sure LEM will post it, in a day or two.

Ruth Anne Adams said...

Geez, how toxic must one be to be too toxic for Letterman? That man is a surly bag of hair who harasses the help.

Michael Haz said...

Roofie!

Where you bean?

Evi L. Bloggerlady said...

It may be true. It may be not. But I think a lot of this is political.

Evi L. Bloggerlady said...

Oh no, say it aint so Bill, say it aint so...

Crack says Cosby is fucked because white conservatives are supporting him, but isn't it white women who are accusing him of rape?