The Scotsman

Presenter accuses ‘toxic’ TV and film industry of failing to tackle harassment

- By RUSSELL JACKSON

Presenter Anna Richardson has claimed the “toxic” film and TV industry has failed to improve its approach to sexual harassment more than a decade after she alleged she was groped by Hollywood star Arnold Schwarzene­gger.

Speaking as part of a panel discussion organised by the Edinburgh Internatio­nal TV Festival in partnershi­p with Channel 5 News, the Naked Attraction presenter and partner of former Bake Off star Sue Perkins said she ended up on out-of-work benefits after the allegation was made public.

“Nobody’s learnt a thing,” she said following the release of a study investigat­ing the prevalence of harassment and bullying in the TV industry in the wake of the Harvey Weinstein scandal.

“When all the allegation­s came out about Weinstein I sort of sat at home and metaphoric­ally rolled my eyes and went ‘Here we go again’. The industry hasn’t changed.”

In 2005 Schwarzene­gger failed to block a court action brought by Richardson who alleged she was libelled by the then-governor of California and his campaign workers, Sean Walsh and Sheryl Main, in an October 2003 article in The Los Angeles Times.

She had claimed the article implied she “deliberate­ly and dishonestl­y fabricated” the allegation­s that the Terminator star touched her breast when she interviewe­d him at London’s Dorchester Hotel in December 2000 as part of his promotiona­l tour for the film The Sixth Day.

She eventually agreed an outof-court settlement with the actor and his aides.

She also claimed she had been a victim of female-on-female bullying when her former woman boss told her to “look f***able”. “I’m ashamed to say I didn’t take it to the very, very top... i was really worried I would get labelled again as being difficult. So I just let it go,” she said.

Asked if she had considered leaving the industry, Richardson said: “That’s partly why I’ve trained as a hypnothera­pist... because it can be toxic.”

“This industry preys a little bit on people being compliant and I worry about that deeply. I don’t care who you are - it’s not OK,” she added. She urged anyone who had suffered harassment or bullying to go to the “very, very top and make them listen”, before adding: “Take legal action.”

“The one thing I want people to take away from today is that everyone has the power to stand up and say no,” she said.

The EIFT and 5 News study found more than half of the 315 industry TV figures surveyed had experience­d sexual misconduct in the workplace.

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