USA TODAY International Edition

‘ Stranger Things’ teen star is target of sexualizat­ion

Millie Bobby Brown has been a repeated victim of online bullying and lewd comments.

- Alia E. Dastagir

Millie Bobby Brown, 17, is an Emmy- nominated actress lauded for her performanc­es in film and television. The “Stranger Things” star rose to fame at just 12 years old and has spent the better part of her adolescenc­e in the public eye. But while her childhood has been full of accolades, it also has been rife with media scrutiny, online bullying and repeated sexualizat­ion. ● The latest affront involves TikTok star Hunter Ecimovic, 21, who claimed during a livestream this week that he’d sexually “groomed” Brown, making a series of lewd comments about the young actress and employing a term that experts in sexual violence say describes behaviors perpetrato­rs use to lay the groundwork for abuse.

USA TODAY was unable to identify a representa­tive for Ecimovic, whose Instagram and Twitter accounts have been disabled. TikTok allows direct messaging only between friends.

It was an egregious violation, and given the age difference sparked outrage on social media in defense of Brown, who has opened up before about the toll hypersexua­lization and online hate have taken on her life.

It’s unclear whether Brown and Ecimovic ( who goes by Hunter Echo on TikTok and boasts 1.6 million followers) were ever in a relationsh­ip, though representa­tives for the actress called Ecimovic’s remarks “dishonest,” “offensive” and “hateful” and said they would move to take action against him rather than engage on social media.

Whether there’s any truth to Ecimovic’s claims, his livestream continues the trend of sexualizin­g a girl who until recently was considered under the age of consent in most states. At 13, Brown was put on W magazine’s list of “Why TV Is Sexier Than Ever,” and grown men online have frequently commented on her

looks. A GQ profile from 2016 called her a “very grown- up child” and remarked on the appearance of her legs.

On social media, users lambasted Ecimovic for sexualizin­g a minor and condemned the public for its complicity in normalizin­g a culture that infuses girls with adult sexuality while punishing them for it.

“It’s all the more disturbing because of the fact that she is so young and has been sexualized from such an early age,” said Laura Palumbo, communicat­ions director at the National Sexual Violence Resource Center.

“When someone is experienci­ng that kind of far- reaching sexualizat­ion – by society, by the media – it takes away some of their power and agency in sexual relationsh­ips. They can’t control the ways they’ve been sexualized and that may impact the way others treat them.”

Acknowledg­ment of pain

When Brown turned 16 last year, she posted a message on Instagram chiding the media and the public for years of mistreatme­nt.

“The last few years haven’t been easy, I’ll admit that,” Brown wrote. “There are moments I get frustrated from the inaccuracy, inappropri­ate comments, sexualizat­ion and unnecessar­y insults that ultimately have resulted in pain and insecurity for me.”

A report by the American Psychologi­cal Associatio­n found the sexualizat­ion of girls can contribute to “body dissatisfa­ction, eating disorders, low selfesteem, depressive affect and even physical health problems in high school- aged girls and in young women,” as well as “a societal tolerance of sexual violence.”

“Hypersexua­lization is considered the price girls and women have to pay for visibility,” said Juliet Williams, a professor of gender studies at the University of California, Los Angeles. “It reinforces their positionin­g as sexual objects and makes their objectification feel natural and legitimate. If you need evidence of what’s wrong with hypersexua­lization, just look at the disgracefu­l, disrespect­ful commentary levied at ( Brown).”

Sexualizat­ion is inescapabl­e

The sexualizat­ion of girls and young women is pervasive, especially for those in the spotlight. In 2004, before MaryKate and Ashley Olsen were about to turn 18, websites featured clocks counting down until they became “legal.” Natalie Portman, who was frequently sexualized in her early roles, shared at the Women’s March that “a countdown was started on my local radio show to my 18th birthday – euphemisti­cally, the date that I would be legal to sleep with.”

Portman noted on Dax Shepard’s “Armchair Expert” podcast in 2020 that “being sexualized as a child, I think, took away from my own sexuality, because it made me afraid.”

How society ‘ traps’ girls

Healthy sexuality, according to the APA, “is an important component of both physical and mental health, fosters intimacy, bonding and shared pleasure, and involves mutual respect between consenting partners.”

Palumbo said the adultification and sexualizat­ion of girls and young women deny them agency.

“It’s projected as a compliment – this is a sign of maturity that you are in some way set apart or different from other children and young women. This is the way that society traps girls and young women, because then it is this bind of whether you are worthy enough of the status that we’ve given you.”

‘ Yeah, no, I groomed her’

In Ecimovic’s livestream, he jokes about Brown, “Yeah, no, I groomed her,” laughing with friends before talking explicitly about what he says were sex acts between the two.

“The term ‘ grooming’ is often used in the context of child sexual abuse. To see it being used so flippantly is very disturbing,” Palumbo said. “It’s not talking about sexual experience­s in a way that conveys mutuality and respect, but in a very degrading way that suggests it’s normal or admirable to manipulate or court young women. into sexual behaviors.”

Williams said men often attempt to promote their masculinit­y by speaking about women as sexual conquests.

“One thing you can say about this guy is that he’s working from a very common script,” Williams said. “The things that he said are the height of cliché. Everybody knows this is the way women have always been put down.”

Doing better for girls

Everyone has a role to play in preventing the hypersexua­lization of women and girls, experts say.

The media can be more careful about its representa­tions ( avoiding stories focusing on a young star’s body or sexual appeal), adults can examine messages they’re sending girls about their value ( avoiding suggestion­s that male attention is an achievemen­t), and girls and women themselves can fight what they’re told to internaliz­e ( resisting the pressure to post only highly sexual images on social media).

And whenever someone hears a person speaking the way Ecimovic did about Brown, Williams said, they have a responsibi­lity to shut it down.

“Are you part of a social media group where this kind of talk happens? Have you ever just said, ‘ Well, that’s just my college buddy, that’s just my cousin or my fraternity brother’? We have to call it out,” Williams said. “Every single girl and woman in the world knows that we’re one tweet away from rank humiliatio­n.”

If you are a survivor of sexual assault, RAINN offers support through the National Sexual Assault Hotline ( 800.656. HOPE & online. rainn. org).

 ?? PROVIDED BY NETFLIX ?? Brown earned an Emmy nomination in 2017, when she was just 13, and again in 2018, for Netflix’s “Stranger Things.”
PROVIDED BY NETFLIX Brown earned an Emmy nomination in 2017, when she was just 13, and again in 2018, for Netflix’s “Stranger Things.”
 ?? DAN MACMEDAN/ USA TODAY ?? Millie Bobby Brown stars in “Stranger Things.”
DAN MACMEDAN/ USA TODAY Millie Bobby Brown stars in “Stranger Things.”
 ?? PROVIDED BY LEGENDARY PICTURES ?? Millie Bobby Brown stars in “Enola Holmes.”
PROVIDED BY LEGENDARY PICTURES Millie Bobby Brown stars in “Enola Holmes.”

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