Introduced during the third-season premiere of Sesame Street on November 8, 1971, Aloysius Snuffleupagus proved immediately indispensable: Lacking a watering pot, Big Bird was delighted to see the massive, lumbering creature use his trunk to tend to his garden. The two became fast friends.
No one else, however, could be absolutely certain that Mr. Snuffleupagus actually existed.
Time and again, “Snuffy” would shuffle into the frame, just missing the adult residents of Sesame Street. Big Bird would try to convince them his pal was real. They’d humor him, but never really believed it.
So it went for 14 years, until the show’s producers began to hear of a growing concern among viewers: In the wake of news reports about child abuse cases, Big Bird’s implausible eyewitness testimony about his oversized friend might have real-life consequences. If adults were ignoring Sesame Street’s biggest star, would kids feel like they wouldn’t be heard, either?
The solution: get rid of the ambiguity and let Snuffy loose. For the 30th anniversary of his coming-out party, mental_floss spoke with the writers, producers, and performers who had the delicate, important task of restoring Big Bird’s credibility and resolving his droopy-eyed friend’s identity crisis.
Sesame Street via Facebook
I. THE ELEPHANT IN THE ROOM
Sesame Street was just two years old when Jim Henson decided he wanted to incorporate a massive presence on the show: A puppet that required two men to operate. Dubbed Mr. Snuffleupagus, the character debuted in 1971. News media described him as a “large and friendly monster resembling an anteater.” Then-executive producer Dulcy Singer and writer Tony Geiss agreed he would be Big Bird’s not-quite-real friend—a reflection of the wandering imaginations of the show’s preschool-aged audience.
Norman Stiles (Writer/Head Writer, 1971-1995): The character was kind of a collaboration between [executive producer] Jon Stone and Jim Henson. I think the initial idea was really to be ambiguous in the sense that, well, Big Bird says he’s real and the audience sees him and yet he always manages to not be there when the other people were there—so is he real or isn’t he real? The whole idea was to not really answer that, but to leave it as an open question.
Emilio Delgado (“Luis,” 1971-Present): It was going with the whole thing of a child’s imaginary playmate, which a lot of kids have. Big Bird was the only one who could see him. When adults came around, he would be talking about Snuffy this, and Snuffy that. We’d just say, “Yeah, sure, OK.” We didn’t believe him.
Carol-Lynn Parente (Executive Producer, 2005-Present): There was a lot of humor to be mined from the issue. We never explained whether he was imaginary or not. Kids were able to see him, but adults couldn’t. You never really knew—was he imaginary? Playing with that question was a lot of fun; kind of a healthy ambiguity.
Stiles: You really had to believe that it was just terrible coincidences and quirks of Snuffy’s own personality that made it so that he just wasn’t there when Big Bird wanted him to be there to introduce him to his friends.
Delgado: Jerry Nelson originally did the voice and was inside the puppet, in the front. Bryant Young was in the rear. Boy, did we get jokes out of that.
Parente: He’s one of the tougher puppets to operate. Just the massive size of him requires certain [camera] blocking. It’s very physical, and very warm inside his belly. It’s only so long the performers can go through takes before they stop and need to be fanned off before they can start again.
Delgado: Later, Jerry stopped doing it. Maybe his back was bothering him. That’s when Marty took it over.
(c) 2004 Sesame Workshop/Sesame Street via Facebook
II. IDENTITY CRISIS
“Marty” is Martin P. Robinson, a puppeteer who assumed the front end and voice of Mr. Snuffleupagus in 1981. For the past 10 seasons, the character had been a proverbial one-joke pony (or elephant), catching sight of adults and getting so excited he somehow wound up missing them. This would continue for several more years, which eventually began to wear on the nerves of both Robinson and Caroll Spinney, the actor who has portrayed Big Bird since his inception in 1969. Robinson was especially vocal about Snuffy not being a figment of his friend’s imagination.
Martin P. Robinson (via Still Gaming: Lee & Zee Show Podcast, 2009): He was never imaginary. I say that a lot. And I say it with great strength of conviction. He was my character, he was never imaginary; he just had bad timing. He was shy, he had bad timing, and the joke was, he’s big, you can’t miss him, but adults being the way they are—preoccupied, going to work, you know—they miss those little details. And Snuffleupagus just happened to be one of those little details that they kept missing year after year after year. So he was a good, real friend to Bird; it’s just that no one else ever took the time to actually meet him.
Delgado: How long can you play a joke out? As performers, as Muppeteers, as artists, you can only carry a story so far before you have to do something else with it. They probably felt that’s what was happening.
Robinson: Those scripts just got so old. Caroll and I would look at the scripts and say, “Oh, lord, this one again.”
Delgado: The adults would play along, knowing he didn’t exist. At the same time, I liked the idea of Marty saying, “OK, he just happened to be there at the wrong time.” People were barely missing him.
The actors’ desire to play off a new dynamic was soon joined by a more pressing, potentially catastrophic issue. In the early 1980s, news programs like 60 Minutes were reporting on troubling statistics involving child abuse both at home and in daycare centers. If Big Bird—ostensibly the show’s stand-in for the 6-year-old viewing audience—was being brushed aside when trying to convince people Snuffleupagus was real, there was the chance children might not be convinced adults would believe them if they came forward with more troubling claims.
Stiles: We started getting some letters from people who worked with children who had experienced some kind of abuse, and what we were told was that they often don’t think they’ll be believed because the stories are so fantastic in their minds.
Michael Davis (Author, Street Gang: The Complete History of Sesame Street): I remember having my own internal conversations about Snuffy. My kids were in daycare and there were a lot of those stories about what was happening in daycare, a lot of those stories about children being abducted and kids on the back of the milk cartons and all of that. It became kind of a national focus, sometimes bordering on a mania.
Parente: All this was really stemming from a specific set of incidences in the news, claims of sexual abuse going on in some daycare centers, and kids being questioned about what was going on. The fear was that if we represented adults not believing what kids said, they might not be motivated to tell the truth. That caused us to rethink the storyline: Is something we’ve been doing for 14 years—that seemed innocent enough—now something that’s become harmful?
Delgado: It was a very serious consideration. It was something that could happen in their lives, and the [Children’s Television] Workshop was very attuned to things like that.
The CTW—now Sesame Workshop—is the organization comprised of researchers, psychologists, and freelance child experts who generate and evaluate the show’s themes and messages to make sure they’re going to be understood. Revealing Snuffleupagus required a concentrated effort to make certain Sesame Street’s writers and producers were communicating the idea effectively.
Parente: The process has been pretty much the same all these years. We look to experts in childhood development and that helps guide us—what’s the best way to address what we want to address? That’s the model Sesame was founded on, with writers, producers, educators, and researchers all working together.
Davis: I do think that the result from Sesame Street was a smart one because Big Bird, as a character, is a projection of a 6-year-old. So to have a situation where the 6-year-old’s eyewitness reports are being doubted so deeply and ridiculed … They are kind mocking him a little bit and rolling their eyes at him.
Parente: It’s rare a children’s show is grounded in the real world. Much of our competition is in the animated world, where fantastical things happen. This is a real neighborhood. We think of it as kids coming to a play date with real friends, and it requires a real investment in how you tell a story.
Lawrence Rubin, Ph.D. (Child Psychologist): The writers took a real-world concern and asked themselves, “Are we helping or hurting kids by keeping Snuffy in the imaginary closet, and do we have a moral imperative to respond to a real issue by changing something about the show?”
Stiles: We wanted kids to know that grownups will believe them, but we wanted to preserve the fun that we were having, so I proposed that we have some of the grownups believe Big Bird, and that was the first step.
For the show’s 16th season in 1984 to 1985, producers laid the groundwork for the eventual reveal by depicting Big Bird as knowing the difference between fantasy and reality, with a handful of adults taking him at his word even with Snuffy still at large.
Robinson: They devised this two-year scheme, where in the first year they would have some of the cast members learn from Bird that Bird could indeed tell the difference between what was real and what was imaginary, that he knew the difference and was very clear about it. And once they got that from Bird, they said, “Okay, you know the difference. If you say Snuffy is real, then he’s real and we’d love to meet him, whenever the timing is right.” And the other half of the adults said, “What, are you crazy? He’s imaginary! There’s no such thing as a Snuffleupagus.”
Stiles: That changed the dynamic between the grownups … Now, Big Bird wasn’t alone. He had grownups believing him, and we had a new dynamic where the grownups who believed him would now actually try to see Snuffy. That went on, I think, for about a year. I don’t remember the exact combination of conversations, but we finally decided, alright, let’s move. Just creatively, this has run its course.
III. THE REVEAL
The show’s 17th season premiere aired on November 18, 1985. As promised, Big Bird made arrangements to introduce Snuffy to the adults on Sesame Street by telling them he’d yell out a secret word (“Food!”) when they were ready. Unfortunately, Snuffy is too nervous to remain idle, and Big Bird has a few false alarms that make the adults even more dubious.
Rubin: Watching this now, I’m 60 years old, sitting on the edge of my chair, going, “Oh, God, don’t go away! Stay there! Wait!”
Stiles: [Our goal] was to do what we had always done before, which was, “If you stay here, he’ll be here.”
Robinson: They did it in one show … I always thought it would have been nice if they could have revealed him to one person at a time. So that one person would have actually seen him, and then go back screaming to the rest saying, “I saw him!”
In a somewhat bizarre non-sequitur, talk show host Phil Donahue appears to pick up his broken toaster from Luis’s Fix-It Shop and begins to engage characters on the merits of Big Bird’s preferred code word.
Davis: You know, the first thing that comes to mind is that bimodal audience that they always talked about and writing something that would be appealing to adults as much as it would be to kids. Having Phil Donahue being the protagonist kind of making fun of himself and his show was hilarious.
Parente: There are plenty of studies that prove kids get more of the educational value when there’s co-viewing going on, so things like Donahue and other celebrities are by design. When you have a parent viewing with their child, they can ask questions and spawn a conversation.
After some protracted teasing of the audience—Snuffy can’t seem to stay put—the entire cast meets Snuffy and stares at him in awe.
Robinson: He’s starting to peel off and Elmo actually grabs onto his trunk and holds him down. There was a shot when they actually pinned Elmo onto the trunk, and I’m whipping him around in the air like a pinwheel. But it held him up just long enough so that the cast actually showed up, and saw him there. And so, one by one, down the line, it was this line of shocked faces. And they all came up and shook hands with him.
Delgado: We were all amazed that this giant elephant-looking thing was actually real. You get a big reaction from everybody, and everybody was very happy Big Bird had been telling the truth all along. He was very happy people believed him.
Stiles: Big Bird [said] “Well, now what do you have to say?” You know, that was really his moment, and I just loved giving him the opportunity to say that.
Rubin: It was incredibly respectful of a child. The conversation did not diminish Big Bird, it wasn’t dismissive or pandering. It’s how you hope a conversation with someone wishing to be heard would go.
Delgado: It was kind of a big party. And Big Bird has a child’s mind, so he was satisfied. Like, “See, I told you he was real!”
Near the end of the episode, cast member Bob McGrath makes a pointed comment: “From now on, we’ll believe you whenever you tell us something.”
Rubin: It was so honest. Some parents get caught up in authoritarian mode and don’t have the flexibility to retract, recant, or acknowledge a kid’s reality. He was the collective voice of parents—”Sorry, we should’ve listened.”
Parente: [A line like that] is exactly what we look to the child experts for, bringing in or soliciting experts to weigh in on specific dialogue to get it right. Simplicity is key, particularly with kids. It’s not about making it flowery with jokes, not doing it in the form of song. Songs are great, but often lyrical messaging is not necessarily the best takeaway. When it’s simple and straightforward, that’s when you have your best chance.
Sesame Street via Facebook
IV. AFTERMATH
In 1985, Sesame Street was averaging 10 million viewers a week, making any pivotal episode hugely influential with its young audience. Later that year, they depicted the characters of Gordon (Roscoe Orman) and Susan (Loretta Long) adopting a child. Coupled with acknowledging the real-life death of cast member Will Lee (Mr. Hooper) in 1982, Snuffy’s status as a real Sesame citizen was part of the show’s overall evolution from teaching the alphabet to imparting life lessons.
Davis: I think it was a really smart thing for them to eliminate that as a possibility for the viewer and to say that even as outrageous as the claim sounded at first, here was this real-life big woolly mammoth of a friend that they just had not yet met. I give them a lot of credit for changing with the times and I remember some people saying, “Oh, it was politically correct,” but it’s not that at all. It’s more that society changes and the way that we view things changes and Sesame Street has successfully negotiated those waters through the years.
Snuffy got topical again in 1992, when the show decided to depict his parents going through a divorce. Unlike his big reveal, this one didn’t go so well.
Parente: It was the first time in history we ever taped an episode and then didn’t air it.
Stiles: He had kind of this family going and it helped that we had this family. There weren’t any other puppet families that we had, so I think it was a natural choice.
Delgado: He got a little sister later on.
Davis: It is interesting that they choose to have Snuffy’s parents get divorced because that character, he’s a little bit of a downer. He’s got a little Eeyore about him.
Parente: We knew enough to put it through the rigors of testing before it would air. And it was a lovely episode, but we found kids were upset after watching it. They were just not familiar with what divorce was.
Delgado: Kids freaked out.
Stiles: The shows weren’t necessarily for the child who’s watching whose parents are divorced, although that was part of it. It was, I think, more so that children would understand if they meet other children whose parents are divorced … The whole thing is difficult, because you’re opening up this can of worms for children who may not have even thought of the possibility that their parents might get divorced. Now all of a sudden, they walk into the kitchen and see their parents arguing about something and they go, “Uh-oh.”
Parente: Snuffy’s family was going through it in real time, right in the midst of the crisis. We learned if we can see the characters after coming through divorce, it’s a better way of approaching it.
Despite the hiccup, Snuffy has remained a high-profile and viable member of the Sesame gang for well over 40 years. Most recently, he’s been spotted on Twitter, where he follows just one account: Big Bird’s.
Parente: One of my favorite things is to see people meet Snuffy for the first time. He’s bigger than life. He takes your breath away.
Davis: Sesame Street at its finest moments always found a way to include humor and to use it to help smooth things along and to help it go down in a way that was acceptable. You can’t give enough credit to the writers for brilliantly finding a way to make things funny for people who drink from sippy cups and people who drink from martini glasses.
Parente: We want to be helpful and useful for kids as well as parents. I think that’s why we’re here, 46 years later, always paying attention. What is it kids and parents need from us? In 1985, what they needed us to do was to stop that storyline and present a model of adults listening to children.
Delgado: It’s definitely one of the biggest things to happen on the show.
Parente: The appeal of Snuffy is that he’s Big Bird’s best friend. People love Big Bird, so he benefits by association: “If that’s Big Bird’s friend, he’s my friend, too.”
Full article: http://mentalfloss.com/article/71281/oral-history-30-years-ago-mr-snuffleupagus-shocked-sesame-street
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The 15-year-old boy who accuses a South Fallsburg rabbinical student of sexually assaulting him said he sleeps with a small pocket knife beneath his pillow since the alleged assault occurred.
The teen – who was 11 years old when he said the incident occurred – testified in Sullivan County Court on Monday that he keeps the knife there because he’s “paranoid.”
Monday was the first day of testimony in the nonjury trial of 29-year-old Haim Boukris. He is charged with predatory sexual assault against a child and first-degree sexual abuse, both felonies.
The teen told Sullivan County Assistant District Attorney Eamonn Neary that in 2011, Boukris took him to an empty bungalow colony and forced oral and anal sex on him. He said the alleged assault happened after Boukris offered him a ride home. He said he was “scared and confused” about what was happening to him.
In the days after the alleged assault, the boy said he started having trouble sleeping and that he “had more anger than usual.”
Kenneth Gribetz – Boukris’ New City attorney – questioned why the boy accepted a ride home from Boukris when he lived within walking distance of the grocery store.
“I was confused, sir,” the boy told Gribetz. “I was 11.”
The teen’s father also testified on Monday. He told Neary he and his wife knew something was wrong with their son before they learned about the alleged incident – two years after his son said it happened. He lost focus in school, became depressed and started wetting the bed, the father said. The Times Herald-Record is not naming the father to protect the identity of the alleged victim.
In 2013, the teen finally told his father what happened, said the father.
“It took some time, but he started crying, shaking and then screaming,” the father said.
Gribetz then asked the father why he sought out someone other than the police to first report the alleged abuse of his son. It was not clear who the father first told.
The father said he was fearful of being ostracized from the community if he spoke to the police. He said he knew that if he told a therapist about the alleged incident, the therapist was required to tell the authorities.
“I’m sure you’re aware of the pressure in the Jewish community and church when someone opens their mouths to the authorities, and the hell we go through,” the father said. “The ramifications in the Jewish community of how you’re treated for going to the authorities is sickening.”
The trial is being heard by Sullivan County Court Judge Frank LaBuda.
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Foundation to Abolish Child Sex Abuse (FACSA) Statement Regarding the Formation of a National Commission on Child Sex Abuse
BRYN MAWR, PA – John Salveson, President of FACSA (Foundation to Abolish Child Sex Abuse) released the following statement regarding the formation of a National Commission to investigate the sexual abuse of children in the United States in public, private (including the family), secular, and religious institutions.
“Two months ago our nation’s capital rolled out the red carpet for the leader of an institution about which the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child made the following statement last year:
“The committee is gravely concerned that the Holy See has not acknowledged the extent of the crimes committed, has not taken the necessary measures to address cases of child sexual abuse and to protect children, and has adopted policies and practices which have led to the continuation of the abuse by, and the impunity of, the perpetrators.”
Although we live in a society of laws, they often don’t apply when children are sexually abused. In other parts of our society, people and institutions who break the law suffer severe consequences. Ask people from Enron, BP Oil and WorldCom. Ask them if their organizations were given the option of fixing their problems themselves rather than being held accountable by the government and criminal justice systems.
But somehow institutions which have enabled the sexual abuse of children and protected predators for decades operate above the law. We are here today to say with one loud voice that it is time for the federal government to answer this simple question – ‘Why have all of the components of our society which are supposed to protect children – the courts, legislatures, civil and criminal justice systems – failed miserably when it comes to the sexual abuse of children perpetrated by institutions?’
We join our fellow advocates today in calling on the President to create a National Commission to investigate the sexual abuse of children in the United States in public, private (including the family), secular, and religious institutions. The time for action is long overdue.”
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This blog entry is a brief guide to the documents, newspaper articles, and reports that are the basis of the movie Spotlight. If you wonder what Mike Rezendes is reading in the cab, or what’s in Phil Saviano’s box of documents, or what editor Marty Baron means when he says, “You’ve all done some very good reporting here,” read on.
The movie is the story of an article getting written:
Church Allowed Abuse by Priest for Years, by Michael Rezendes, Boston Globe (1/6/02)
It’s also about the fight to unseal some documents, and once those documents are unsealed, after the end of the movie, the Spotlight team will write this remarkable story:
Documents Show Church Long Supported Geoghan, by Walter V. Robinson and Matt Carroll, Boston Globe (1/24/02)
The emotional center of the movie is a cab ride through the neighborhoods, past the characters we’ve gotten to know, while reporter Mike Rezendes reads a letter aloud. The letter was written by Margaret Gallant, the aunt of the children we see at the beginning of the film. It’s one of two she writes, one to Cardinal Medeiros, and one to Cardinal Law, his successor. These are the letters, with their answers:
Margaret Gallant to Cardinal Medeiros about Geoghan and Her Family (8/10/82)
Globe Transcript of Gallant’s Handwritten Letter
Cardinal Medeiros to Margaret Gallant Replying to Her Letter (8/20/82)
Margaret Gallant to Cardinal Law about Geoghan with Boys Again (9/6/84)
Cardinal Law to Margaret Gallant Replying to Her Letter (9/21/84)
When Rezendes arrives at the Globe, he reads this letter by Auxiliary Bishop John D’Arcy, who objects that Law has reassigned Father Geoghan. Law is ignoring Gallant’s letter, and D’Arcy’s “breaking ranks,” says Sacha Pfeiffer.
Auxiliary Bishop John D’Arcy to Cardinal Law, Breaking Ranks (12/7/84)
Phil Saviano at the Globe
Rezendes and his colleagues have been prepared for all of this by a conversation with survivor Phil Saviano, who urges them to read a report by the scholar/therapist Richard Sipe:
Preliminary Expert Report in the Kos Case, by A.W. Richard Sipe, Posted by The Linkup (1996)
The conversation with Saviano also introduces them to the Gauthe case in Louisiana, first reported in a local weekly newspaper:
The Tragedy of Gilbert Gauthe, by Jason Berry, The Times of Acadiana (5/23/85)
and the Porter case in nearby Fall River:
Town Secret: The Case of James Porter, by Linda Matchan, Boston Globe Magazine (8/29/93)
The Matchan article isn’t mentioned in the movie, but in real life, it was the moment after which the Globe turned away from the clergy abuse story for a time, to return in late 2001.
Following up on Saviano’s recommendation, the reporters talk with Sipe, who tells them about Tom Doyle. “The Manual” that Doyle co-wrote after working on the Gauthe case for the papal nuncio, explains Sipe, was encouraged and then disowned by the bishops:
The Problem of Sexual Molestation by Roman Catholic Clergy (The Manual), by Rev. Thomas P. Doyle OP et al. (6/9/85)
Saviano had shown the reporters two books: Richard Sipe’s Sex, Priests and Power: The Anatomy of a Crisis, which provided a theory for the movement, and Jason Berry’s Lead Us Not into Temptation, which told Doyle’s story and offered a model for investigative reporting on the crisis.
Speech After Long Silence
But Spotlight is working on the Geoghan case at all because newly hired editor Marty Baron is impressed by Eileen McNamara’s column on the Geoghan cases. McNamara wrote 21 columns all told on Geoghan, going back to the year after Garabedian filed his first lawsuit:
Attorney Mitchell Garabedian’s First Lawsuit Against Father Geoghan (7/9/96)
The McNamara column that moved Baron was:
A Familiar Pattern, by Eileen McNamara, Boston Globe (7/22/01)
followed by:
Passing the Buck, by Eileen McNamara, Boston Globe (7/29/01)
The Globe did some reporting on Geoghan in 2001, but the reporter who worked aggressively on the story was Kristen Lombardi at the Phoenix, an alternative weekly. Her important article on Geoghan is mentioned by Garabedian when he and Rezendes first meet:
Cardinal Sin, by Kristen Lombardi, Boston Phoenix (3/23/01)
The Globe’s relative silence between Porter and Geoghan meant that the paper ignored two strong leads. The Globe had run a story on Saviano’s own abuse:
Two Accuse Ex-Worcester Priest of Molesting Them, Lawyer Says, by Stephen Kurkjian, Boston Globe (1/8/93)
but had not followed up when Saviano first sent them his box of documents.
Similarly, attorney Eric MacLeish, who represented the Porter victims, had informed the Globe that he knew of 20 Boston priests accused of molesting children. The Globe buried the story in Metro, where reporter Walter Robinson was editor at the time:
Lawyer for Porter Victims Says 20 Other Priests in Area Are Accused, by James L. Franklin, Boston Globe (12/9/93)
Where the Globe could have taken the story in 1993, if it had chosen to do so, may be seen from MacLeish’s letter in that year to archdiocesan attorney Wilson Rogers, who appears in the Sweeney courtroom scene:
Allegations of Sexual Abuse Against Priests in the Archdiocese of Boston, by Eric MacLeish, Eckert Seamans (9/27/93)
The letter is among over 45,000 pages of archdiocesan files made public by MacLeish in 2002-2003. The documents were the basis for the Globe’s reporting, as may be seen from these two major stories:
Shanley’s Record Long Ignored: Files Show Law, Others Backed Priest, by Walter V. Robinson and Thomas Farragher, Boston Globe (4/9/02)
More Clergy Abuse, Secrecy Cases: Records Detail Quiet Shifting of Rogue Priests, by Thomas Farragher and Sacha Pfeiffer, Boston Globe (12/4/02)
The Seal Is Broken
Judge Sweeney ruled in favor of the Globe’s motion:
Judge’s Ruling Frees Documents in Geoghan Case, by Kathleen Burge, Boston Globe (11/30/01)
and the floodgates were opened, both for Spotlight coverage of the Boston story beyond Geoghan:
Priest Says He, Too, Molested Boys, by Sacha Pfeiffer and Steve Kurkjian, Boston Globe (1/26/2002)
Priest Treatment Unfolds in Costly, Secretive World, by Ellen Barry, Boston Globe (4/3/02)
Chronological Links to Nearly 600 Spotlight Articles
and also for the national and global coverage represented by the lists of cities at the end of the movie.
In addition to the reporters featured in the movie, Globe reporters Michael Paulson, Thomas Farragher, and Steve Kurkjian did crucial work:
Heavy Blow to Cardinal’s Credibility, by Michael Paulson, Boston Globe (4/9/02)
Through Kansas Parishes, A Trail of Suicide, by Thomas Farragher, Boston Globe (7/18/02)
Sex Cases May Cost Church $100M, by Stephen Kurkjian and Walter V. Robinson, Boston Globe (3/3/2002)
In some cities, newspapers devoted considerable resources to major series:
Archdiocese for Years Kept Allegations of Abuse from Police, by Glenn F. Bunting, Ralph Frammolino, and Richard Winton, LA Times (8/18/02)
Alleged Victims Say Incidents Altered Lives, by Wolfson, Hall, Smith, and Yetter, Louisville Courier-Journal (9/29/02)
The reporters at the Dallas Morning News did fine reporting before, during, and after 2002. The first story provides documents from the file of Fr. David Holley, who abused Phil Saviano and many other children.
Documents Show Bishops Transferred Known Abuser, by Brooks Egerton and Michael D. Goldhaber, Dallas Morning News (8/31/97)
Two-Thirds of Bishops Let Accused Priests Work, by Brooks Egerton and Reese Dunklin, Dallas Morning News (6/12/02)
Hiding in Plain Sight: Runaway Priests, by Brooks Egerton, Reese Dunklin, and Brendan M. Case, Dallas Morning News (6/12/02)
Excellent reporting continues to be done:
Archdiocese Knew of Priest’s Sexual Misbehavior, Yet Kept Him in Ministry, and Betrayed by Silence, by Madeleine Baran, MPR News (2013-2014)
The Journalism of Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola, Gallup Independent (2003-2015)
Fugitive Fathers, by Will Carless (September 2015)
Courageous Witness
The revelations documented above, and indeed nearly all the accounts we have about the sexual abuse of children by Catholic clergy, come from the courageous witness of survivors. We end with several examples:
Living on a “Fault” Line, by David Coleman (1992)
Impact Statement, by Paula Gonzales Rohrbacher, Speech at the USCCB Meeting in Dallas TX (6/13/02)
What Took You So Long? by Phil Saviano, Speech at the First VOTF National Conference (7/20/02)
Full article: http://hamilton-griffin.com/bishopaccountability-org-spotlight-on-the-archives/
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he movie, which follows the Boston Globe’s Spotlight team as its reporters investigate the story, is an indictment of the church in that city but, crucially, it doesn’t stop there. It’s a democratic operation in which every participant matters, right down to the clerical workers who wheel carts of documents from one Globe department to another. The Globe published its first story on January 6, 2002, with the headline “Church Allowed Abuse by Priest for Years”. The staff at Spotlight was let by Walter “Robby” Robinson (Michael Keaton) and included Mike Rezendes (Mark Ruffalo), Sacha Pfeiffer (Rachel McAdams), and Matt Carroll (Brian d’Arcy James). Thisis simply a great story exceedingly well told, through characters whose fingers are perpetually stained with ink. But maybe this film required more than a sly nod. Reporters frequently don’t come off well in the movies these days. Just like Alan Pakula’s seminal 1976 thriller chronicling the investigation that brought down the Nixon presidency, Spotlight is about exactly what traditional journalism can and should be: finding the truth, even if it threatens entrenched power structures. The story might never have come to light if not for the influence of Marty Baron, who joined the Boston Globe as editor-in-chief in July 2001. But instead of cuts, Baron inspired a year’s worth of reporting that uncovered systemic sexual abuse in the Boston clergy and led the Spotlight team to the 2003 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service. This is how these guys connect the dots. Of the many remarkable things about the new film Spotlight, the most remarkable is that this moving, engrossing, occasionally thrilling movie is mostly about a bunch of people-a team of investigative journalists at the Boston Globe known as “Spotlight”- going to work and doing their jobs. On this, we can all agree, and Baron will be in town next week to elaborate on the Spotlight story and others. It had a story to tell and its story was about the victims and the church’a role in its cover-up of this abuse. “With their cold cups of coffee, rolled-up shirtsleeves, and bustling deadline chaos, they’re glamorously unglamorous settings where overworked, underpaid reporters get to speak truth to power”. Everything from the newsroom, to the people working there, the research and investigation process, the lifestyle, long nights, sources, quotes, etc., felt extremely authentic. “[In the film] we couldn’t spend a lot of time commenting on the state of the industry that is journalism today as opposed to [the early 2000s] and how tragic that is”, he said. Schreiber says his sons are old enough to understand that what their parents do for work is a little bit different from most people. The film often reminds us about the (possibly forgotten) value and importance of honest investigative reporting/journalism. Mitchell Garabedian (Stanley Tucci) is the latter, and through his interactions with the Columbo-esque Rezendes, we learn that the problem isn’t just bad eggs and the Church hiding them in the back of the henhouse. Reportedly, Vatican Radio gave strong praise to the movie as well, describing it as “honest” and “compelling”. The script for the film was listed on the 2013 “Black List”, an annual survey of “most liked” motion picture screenplays not yet produced. In unearthing the story and facing his own failings, Robinson employs a lifetime of experience and tries mightily to exploit a few choice connections like his buddy Jim Sullivan, a lawyer for the archdiocese rendered achingly credible by Jamey Sheridan. This film was shown at the Venice worldwide Film Festival, the Telluride Film Festival, and the Toronto global Film Festival. Since Spotlight-which opens Friday, November 13-takes place with one foot in the analog world and one in the digital, this makes for an intriguing time capsule of our not-so-distant past that still seems ancient. Rated 3 out of 5 stars. It of course touches base on themes concerning religion and sexual predators. Running time is 2 hours and 8 minutes. He is a film, TV, and sports enthusiast, and when he is not reviewing movies, Hayden works in film production. Don’t like what he has to say.
Full article: http://steelerslounge.com/2015/11/clergy-sex-abuse-scandal-takes-spotlight-in-new-film/52235/
http://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpg00SOL Reformhttp://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpgSOL Reform2015-11-17 04:08:402015-11-17 04:08:40Kristen McGee, Clergy Sex Abuse Scandal Takes "Spotlight" In New Film, Steelers Lounge
Those of us who are concerned about the welfare of survivors of childhood sexual abuse have been very interested in reports about the movie “Spotlight”, which is helping encourage a national dialogue about the cover-up of abuse over many years.
Like most of you, I look forward to seeing this film about a moment in time when the veil of secrecy was lifted on the persistent processes that kept victims in the shadows and protected abusive priests.
I thought you would be interested in this Op-Ed essay by Professor Marci Hamilton that appeared last week in the New York Daily News. Thank you Professor Hamilton for bringing the issue home to New York where we are working hard to eliminate the corrosive statute of limitations on child sex abuse crimes.
Sincerely,
Assemblywoman Margaret Markey
November 16, 2015
Opinion
Marci Hamilton: Let victims pursue their abusers
Marci Hamilton NEW YORK DAILY NEWS 11/09/2015 5:00 AM ET
‘Spotlight’ trailer
NY Daily News
The movie “Spotlight” is being welcomed with Oscar buzz. For those of us laboring in the vineyard of child protection, this is music to our ears, because this story — about the Boston Globe journalists who revealed the Catholic bishops’ callous cover-up of prolific pedophile priests — will likely do more to educate the public about child sex abuse than the Boston Globe news stories it is about, or the other child sex abuse scandals in the news, from Penn State and Syracuse to Horace Mann School, Woody Allen and Josh Duggar.
The greatest barrier to child protection is ignorance. The movie shows smart, experienced journalists struggling to comprehend what was right in front of them. “Spotlight” will likely educate millions about the ways in which adults and institutions we trust protect adults and put children at risk every day.
Despite news coverage of one scandal after another, most adults still trust their instincts regarding who is an abuser and who is not. That is dangerous. Until parents, teachers, clergy and all other adults understand the cunning moves of pedophiles and the ease with which we as adults let abusers persist, kids are at serious risk.
HOW MARK RUFFALO BECAME A REPORTER FOR ‘SPOTLIGHT’
“Spotlight” should carry special significance in New York, where, unlike in Boston, so little of the truth about the bishops’ cover-up has surfaced. That is because New York shares the ignominious distinction with Alabama, Michigan and Mississippi of having the worst civil statutes of limitations for child sex abuse in the United States.
True, major sex crimes here have no criminal statute of limitation at this point, but the criminal statutes of limitation that would have been in place for the vast majority of sex-crime victims in New York have expired and cannot be revived. Which means the only recourse left for most victims is in civil court.
In New York City, Timothy Cardinal Dolan sits on a secret archive that likely holds more ugly secrets about hundreds of yet-unnamed priests than any other diocese in the country . Those secrets are being protected by the state Legislature’s refusal to revive the expired civil statutes of limitation. So New York bishops enjoy near-total immunity in the civil courts for their decades of cover up.
Of all Catholic dioceses in the country, New York City is the largest to be so underexamined.
Sitting on secrets
The Catholic bishops are fond of bragging about how they now have the “gold standard” of child protection, but children will never be fully protected so long as the identities of predators are secret from the public. Simple fact: Perpetrators, like Boston’s John Geoghan, abuse into their elderly years.
The 40-year-old who abused children 30 years ago may still be dangerous, and New York parents will not know who all of those priests, rabbis, teachers and family members are until the state’s statute-of-limitations stranglehold is released and victims can come forward in the safety of the court system.
The bishops typically claim that reform bills are not fair to them because they are being “targeted.” Actually, these bills open courthouse doors for victims in every arena. Georgia shared New York’s bottom-of-the-barrel statute-of-limitation status until this year, when it enacted the Hidden Predator Act.
Now, for two years, starting July 2015, victims can sue perpetrators and those who aided and abetted them. The first three lawsuits have been filed against Pak’s Karate; a public school administrator, and a Republican lobbyist. Hardly the stuff of Catholic “targeting.”
“Spotlight” casts such a harsh light on the Catholic bishops’ role in preventing justice for victims of child sex abuse because it is the largest religious institution and one of the largest landholders in the United States . Oh, and don’t forget, because the bishops’ coverup continues today, especially in New York.
Hamilton is a law professor at Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law and author of “Justice Denied: What America Must Do to Protect Its Children.”
http://www.nydailynews.com/opinion/marci-hamilton-victims-pursue-abusers-article-1.2426370
http://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpg00SOL Reformhttp://sol-reform.com/News/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/Hamilton-Logo.jpgSOL Reform2015-11-17 03:58:132015-11-17 03:58:13Echoes of "Spotlight" Movie in NY State
Jake Rossen, Jennifer M. Wood, Oral History: 30 Years Ago, Mr. Snuffleupagus Shocked ‘Sesame Street’, Mental Floss
/in Uncategorized /by SOL ReformIntroduced during the third-season premiere of Sesame Street on November 8, 1971, Aloysius Snuffleupagus proved immediately indispensable: Lacking a watering pot, Big Bird was delighted to see the massive, lumbering creature use his trunk to tend to his garden. The two became fast friends.
No one else, however, could be absolutely certain that Mr. Snuffleupagus actually existed.
Time and again, “Snuffy” would shuffle into the frame, just missing the adult residents of Sesame Street. Big Bird would try to convince them his pal was real. They’d humor him, but never really believed it.
So it went for 14 years, until the show’s producers began to hear of a growing concern among viewers: In the wake of news reports about child abuse cases, Big Bird’s implausible eyewitness testimony about his oversized friend might have real-life consequences. If adults were ignoring Sesame Street’s biggest star, would kids feel like they wouldn’t be heard, either?
The solution: get rid of the ambiguity and let Snuffy loose. For the 30th anniversary of his coming-out party, mental_floss spoke with the writers, producers, and performers who had the delicate, important task of restoring Big Bird’s credibility and resolving his droopy-eyed friend’s identity crisis.
Sesame Street via Facebook
I. THE ELEPHANT IN THE ROOM
Sesame Street was just two years old when Jim Henson decided he wanted to incorporate a massive presence on the show: A puppet that required two men to operate. Dubbed Mr. Snuffleupagus, the character debuted in 1971. News media described him as a “large and friendly monster resembling an anteater.” Then-executive producer Dulcy Singer and writer Tony Geiss agreed he would be Big Bird’s not-quite-real friend—a reflection of the wandering imaginations of the show’s preschool-aged audience.
Norman Stiles (Writer/Head Writer, 1971-1995): The character was kind of a collaboration between [executive producer] Jon Stone and Jim Henson. I think the initial idea was really to be ambiguous in the sense that, well, Big Bird says he’s real and the audience sees him and yet he always manages to not be there when the other people were there—so is he real or isn’t he real? The whole idea was to not really answer that, but to leave it as an open question.
Emilio Delgado (“Luis,” 1971-Present): It was going with the whole thing of a child’s imaginary playmate, which a lot of kids have. Big Bird was the only one who could see him. When adults came around, he would be talking about Snuffy this, and Snuffy that. We’d just say, “Yeah, sure, OK.” We didn’t believe him.
Carol-Lynn Parente (Executive Producer, 2005-Present): There was a lot of humor to be mined from the issue. We never explained whether he was imaginary or not. Kids were able to see him, but adults couldn’t. You never really knew—was he imaginary? Playing with that question was a lot of fun; kind of a healthy ambiguity.
Stiles: You really had to believe that it was just terrible coincidences and quirks of Snuffy’s own personality that made it so that he just wasn’t there when Big Bird wanted him to be there to introduce him to his friends.
Delgado: Jerry Nelson originally did the voice and was inside the puppet, in the front. Bryant Young was in the rear. Boy, did we get jokes out of that.
Parente: He’s one of the tougher puppets to operate. Just the massive size of him requires certain [camera] blocking. It’s very physical, and very warm inside his belly. It’s only so long the performers can go through takes before they stop and need to be fanned off before they can start again.
Delgado: Later, Jerry stopped doing it. Maybe his back was bothering him. That’s when Marty took it over.
(c) 2004 Sesame Workshop/Sesame Street via Facebook
II. IDENTITY CRISIS
“Marty” is Martin P. Robinson, a puppeteer who assumed the front end and voice of Mr. Snuffleupagus in 1981. For the past 10 seasons, the character had been a proverbial one-joke pony (or elephant), catching sight of adults and getting so excited he somehow wound up missing them. This would continue for several more years, which eventually began to wear on the nerves of both Robinson and Caroll Spinney, the actor who has portrayed Big Bird since his inception in 1969. Robinson was especially vocal about Snuffy not being a figment of his friend’s imagination.
Martin P. Robinson (via Still Gaming: Lee & Zee Show Podcast, 2009): He was never imaginary. I say that a lot. And I say it with great strength of conviction. He was my character, he was never imaginary; he just had bad timing. He was shy, he had bad timing, and the joke was, he’s big, you can’t miss him, but adults being the way they are—preoccupied, going to work, you know—they miss those little details. And Snuffleupagus just happened to be one of those little details that they kept missing year after year after year. So he was a good, real friend to Bird; it’s just that no one else ever took the time to actually meet him.
Delgado: How long can you play a joke out? As performers, as Muppeteers, as artists, you can only carry a story so far before you have to do something else with it. They probably felt that’s what was happening.
Robinson: Those scripts just got so old. Caroll and I would look at the scripts and say, “Oh, lord, this one again.”
Delgado: The adults would play along, knowing he didn’t exist. At the same time, I liked the idea of Marty saying, “OK, he just happened to be there at the wrong time.” People were barely missing him.
The actors’ desire to play off a new dynamic was soon joined by a more pressing, potentially catastrophic issue. In the early 1980s, news programs like 60 Minutes were reporting on troubling statistics involving child abuse both at home and in daycare centers. If Big Bird—ostensibly the show’s stand-in for the 6-year-old viewing audience—was being brushed aside when trying to convince people Snuffleupagus was real, there was the chance children might not be convinced adults would believe them if they came forward with more troubling claims.
Stiles: We started getting some letters from people who worked with children who had experienced some kind of abuse, and what we were told was that they often don’t think they’ll be believed because the stories are so fantastic in their minds.
Michael Davis (Author, Street Gang: The Complete History of Sesame Street): I remember having my own internal conversations about Snuffy. My kids were in daycare and there were a lot of those stories about what was happening in daycare, a lot of those stories about children being abducted and kids on the back of the milk cartons and all of that. It became kind of a national focus, sometimes bordering on a mania.
Parente: All this was really stemming from a specific set of incidences in the news, claims of sexual abuse going on in some daycare centers, and kids being questioned about what was going on. The fear was that if we represented adults not believing what kids said, they might not be motivated to tell the truth. That caused us to rethink the storyline: Is something we’ve been doing for 14 years—that seemed innocent enough—now something that’s become harmful?
Delgado: It was a very serious consideration. It was something that could happen in their lives, and the [Children’s Television] Workshop was very attuned to things like that.
The CTW—now Sesame Workshop—is the organization comprised of researchers, psychologists, and freelance child experts who generate and evaluate the show’s themes and messages to make sure they’re going to be understood. Revealing Snuffleupagus required a concentrated effort to make certain Sesame Street’s writers and producers were communicating the idea effectively.
Parente: The process has been pretty much the same all these years. We look to experts in childhood development and that helps guide us—what’s the best way to address what we want to address? That’s the model Sesame was founded on, with writers, producers, educators, and researchers all working together.
Davis: I do think that the result from Sesame Street was a smart one because Big Bird, as a character, is a projection of a 6-year-old. So to have a situation where the 6-year-old’s eyewitness reports are being doubted so deeply and ridiculed … They are kind mocking him a little bit and rolling their eyes at him.
Parente: It’s rare a children’s show is grounded in the real world. Much of our competition is in the animated world, where fantastical things happen. This is a real neighborhood. We think of it as kids coming to a play date with real friends, and it requires a real investment in how you tell a story.
Lawrence Rubin, Ph.D. (Child Psychologist): The writers took a real-world concern and asked themselves, “Are we helping or hurting kids by keeping Snuffy in the imaginary closet, and do we have a moral imperative to respond to a real issue by changing something about the show?”
Stiles: We wanted kids to know that grownups will believe them, but we wanted to preserve the fun that we were having, so I proposed that we have some of the grownups believe Big Bird, and that was the first step.
For the show’s 16th season in 1984 to 1985, producers laid the groundwork for the eventual reveal by depicting Big Bird as knowing the difference between fantasy and reality, with a handful of adults taking him at his word even with Snuffy still at large.
Robinson: They devised this two-year scheme, where in the first year they would have some of the cast members learn from Bird that Bird could indeed tell the difference between what was real and what was imaginary, that he knew the difference and was very clear about it. And once they got that from Bird, they said, “Okay, you know the difference. If you say Snuffy is real, then he’s real and we’d love to meet him, whenever the timing is right.” And the other half of the adults said, “What, are you crazy? He’s imaginary! There’s no such thing as a Snuffleupagus.”
Stiles: That changed the dynamic between the grownups … Now, Big Bird wasn’t alone. He had grownups believing him, and we had a new dynamic where the grownups who believed him would now actually try to see Snuffy. That went on, I think, for about a year. I don’t remember the exact combination of conversations, but we finally decided, alright, let’s move. Just creatively, this has run its course.
III. THE REVEAL
The show’s 17th season premiere aired on November 18, 1985. As promised, Big Bird made arrangements to introduce Snuffy to the adults on Sesame Street by telling them he’d yell out a secret word (“Food!”) when they were ready. Unfortunately, Snuffy is too nervous to remain idle, and Big Bird has a few false alarms that make the adults even more dubious.
Rubin: Watching this now, I’m 60 years old, sitting on the edge of my chair, going, “Oh, God, don’t go away! Stay there! Wait!”
Stiles: [Our goal] was to do what we had always done before, which was, “If you stay here, he’ll be here.”
Robinson: They did it in one show … I always thought it would have been nice if they could have revealed him to one person at a time. So that one person would have actually seen him, and then go back screaming to the rest saying, “I saw him!”
In a somewhat bizarre non-sequitur, talk show host Phil Donahue appears to pick up his broken toaster from Luis’s Fix-It Shop and begins to engage characters on the merits of Big Bird’s preferred code word.
Davis: You know, the first thing that comes to mind is that bimodal audience that they always talked about and writing something that would be appealing to adults as much as it would be to kids. Having Phil Donahue being the protagonist kind of making fun of himself and his show was hilarious.
Parente: There are plenty of studies that prove kids get more of the educational value when there’s co-viewing going on, so things like Donahue and other celebrities are by design. When you have a parent viewing with their child, they can ask questions and spawn a conversation.
After some protracted teasing of the audience—Snuffy can’t seem to stay put—the entire cast meets Snuffy and stares at him in awe.
Robinson: He’s starting to peel off and Elmo actually grabs onto his trunk and holds him down. There was a shot when they actually pinned Elmo onto the trunk, and I’m whipping him around in the air like a pinwheel. But it held him up just long enough so that the cast actually showed up, and saw him there. And so, one by one, down the line, it was this line of shocked faces. And they all came up and shook hands with him.
Delgado: We were all amazed that this giant elephant-looking thing was actually real. You get a big reaction from everybody, and everybody was very happy Big Bird had been telling the truth all along. He was very happy people believed him.
Stiles: Big Bird [said] “Well, now what do you have to say?” You know, that was really his moment, and I just loved giving him the opportunity to say that.
Rubin: It was incredibly respectful of a child. The conversation did not diminish Big Bird, it wasn’t dismissive or pandering. It’s how you hope a conversation with someone wishing to be heard would go.
Delgado: It was kind of a big party. And Big Bird has a child’s mind, so he was satisfied. Like, “See, I told you he was real!”
Near the end of the episode, cast member Bob McGrath makes a pointed comment: “From now on, we’ll believe you whenever you tell us something.”
Rubin: It was so honest. Some parents get caught up in authoritarian mode and don’t have the flexibility to retract, recant, or acknowledge a kid’s reality. He was the collective voice of parents—”Sorry, we should’ve listened.”
Parente: [A line like that] is exactly what we look to the child experts for, bringing in or soliciting experts to weigh in on specific dialogue to get it right. Simplicity is key, particularly with kids. It’s not about making it flowery with jokes, not doing it in the form of song. Songs are great, but often lyrical messaging is not necessarily the best takeaway. When it’s simple and straightforward, that’s when you have your best chance.
Sesame Street via Facebook
IV. AFTERMATH
In 1985, Sesame Street was averaging 10 million viewers a week, making any pivotal episode hugely influential with its young audience. Later that year, they depicted the characters of Gordon (Roscoe Orman) and Susan (Loretta Long) adopting a child. Coupled with acknowledging the real-life death of cast member Will Lee (Mr. Hooper) in 1982, Snuffy’s status as a real Sesame citizen was part of the show’s overall evolution from teaching the alphabet to imparting life lessons.
Davis: I think it was a really smart thing for them to eliminate that as a possibility for the viewer and to say that even as outrageous as the claim sounded at first, here was this real-life big woolly mammoth of a friend that they just had not yet met. I give them a lot of credit for changing with the times and I remember some people saying, “Oh, it was politically correct,” but it’s not that at all. It’s more that society changes and the way that we view things changes and Sesame Street has successfully negotiated those waters through the years.
Snuffy got topical again in 1992, when the show decided to depict his parents going through a divorce. Unlike his big reveal, this one didn’t go so well.
Parente: It was the first time in history we ever taped an episode and then didn’t air it.
Stiles: He had kind of this family going and it helped that we had this family. There weren’t any other puppet families that we had, so I think it was a natural choice.
Delgado: He got a little sister later on.
Davis: It is interesting that they choose to have Snuffy’s parents get divorced because that character, he’s a little bit of a downer. He’s got a little Eeyore about him.
Parente: We knew enough to put it through the rigors of testing before it would air. And it was a lovely episode, but we found kids were upset after watching it. They were just not familiar with what divorce was.
Delgado: Kids freaked out.
Stiles: The shows weren’t necessarily for the child who’s watching whose parents are divorced, although that was part of it. It was, I think, more so that children would understand if they meet other children whose parents are divorced … The whole thing is difficult, because you’re opening up this can of worms for children who may not have even thought of the possibility that their parents might get divorced. Now all of a sudden, they walk into the kitchen and see their parents arguing about something and they go, “Uh-oh.”
Parente: Snuffy’s family was going through it in real time, right in the midst of the crisis. We learned if we can see the characters after coming through divorce, it’s a better way of approaching it.
Despite the hiccup, Snuffy has remained a high-profile and viable member of the Sesame gang for well over 40 years. Most recently, he’s been spotted on Twitter, where he follows just one account: Big Bird’s.
Parente: One of my favorite things is to see people meet Snuffy for the first time. He’s bigger than life. He takes your breath away.
Davis: Sesame Street at its finest moments always found a way to include humor and to use it to help smooth things along and to help it go down in a way that was acceptable. You can’t give enough credit to the writers for brilliantly finding a way to make things funny for people who drink from sippy cups and people who drink from martini glasses.
Parente: We want to be helpful and useful for kids as well as parents. I think that’s why we’re here, 46 years later, always paying attention. What is it kids and parents need from us? In 1985, what they needed us to do was to stop that storyline and present a model of adults listening to children.
Delgado: It’s definitely one of the biggest things to happen on the show.
Parente: The appeal of Snuffy is that he’s Big Bird’s best friend. People love Big Bird, so he benefits by association: “If that’s Big Bird’s friend, he’s my friend, too.”
Full article: http://mentalfloss.com/article/71281/oral-history-30-years-ago-mr-snuffleupagus-shocked-sesame-street
Andrew Beam, Teen testifies in sexual assault case involving rabbinical student, Times-Herald Record
/in New York /by SOL ReformThe 15-year-old boy who accuses a South Fallsburg rabbinical student of sexually assaulting him said he sleeps with a small pocket knife beneath his pillow since the alleged assault occurred.
The teen – who was 11 years old when he said the incident occurred – testified in Sullivan County Court on Monday that he keeps the knife there because he’s “paranoid.”
Monday was the first day of testimony in the nonjury trial of 29-year-old Haim Boukris. He is charged with predatory sexual assault against a child and first-degree sexual abuse, both felonies.
The teen told Sullivan County Assistant District Attorney Eamonn Neary that in 2011, Boukris took him to an empty bungalow colony and forced oral and anal sex on him. He said the alleged assault happened after Boukris offered him a ride home. He said he was “scared and confused” about what was happening to him.
In the days after the alleged assault, the boy said he started having trouble sleeping and that he “had more anger than usual.”
Kenneth Gribetz – Boukris’ New City attorney – questioned why the boy accepted a ride home from Boukris when he lived within walking distance of the grocery store.
“I was confused, sir,” the boy told Gribetz. “I was 11.”
The teen’s father also testified on Monday. He told Neary he and his wife knew something was wrong with their son before they learned about the alleged incident – two years after his son said it happened. He lost focus in school, became depressed and started wetting the bed, the father said. The Times Herald-Record is not naming the father to protect the identity of the alleged victim.
In 2013, the teen finally told his father what happened, said the father.
“It took some time, but he started crying, shaking and then screaming,” the father said.
Gribetz then asked the father why he sought out someone other than the police to first report the alleged abuse of his son. It was not clear who the father first told.
The father said he was fearful of being ostracized from the community if he spoke to the police. He said he knew that if he told a therapist about the alleged incident, the therapist was required to tell the authorities.
“I’m sure you’re aware of the pressure in the Jewish community and church when someone opens their mouths to the authorities, and the hell we go through,” the father said. “The ramifications in the Jewish community of how you’re treated for going to the authorities is sickening.”
The trial is being heard by Sullivan County Court Judge Frank LaBuda.
Foundation to Abolish Child Sex Abuse (FACSA) Statement Regarding the Formation of a National Commission on Child Sex Abuse
/in Uncategorized /by SOL ReformFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
November 16, 2015
Contact: John Salveson at 215-870-0680 salveson@abolishsexabuse.org
Foundation to Abolish Child Sex Abuse (FACSA) Statement Regarding the Formation of a National Commission on Child Sex Abuse
BRYN MAWR, PA – John Salveson, President of FACSA (Foundation to Abolish Child Sex Abuse) released the following statement regarding the formation of a National Commission to investigate the sexual abuse of children in the United States in public, private (including the family), secular, and religious institutions.
“Two months ago our nation’s capital rolled out the red carpet for the leader of an institution about which the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child made the following statement last year:
“The committee is gravely concerned that the Holy See has not acknowledged the extent of the crimes committed, has not taken the necessary measures to address cases of child sexual abuse and to protect children, and has adopted policies and practices which have led to the continuation of the abuse by, and the impunity of, the perpetrators.”
Although we live in a society of laws, they often don’t apply when children are sexually abused. In other parts of our society, people and institutions who break the law suffer severe consequences. Ask people from Enron, BP Oil and WorldCom. Ask them if their organizations were given the option of fixing their problems themselves rather than being held accountable by the government and criminal justice systems.
But somehow institutions which have enabled the sexual abuse of children and protected predators for decades operate above the law. We are here today to say with one loud voice that it is time for the federal government to answer this simple question – ‘Why have all of the components of our society which are supposed to protect children – the courts, legislatures, civil and criminal justice systems – failed miserably when it comes to the sexual abuse of children perpetrated by institutions?’
We join our fellow advocates today in calling on the President to create a National Commission to investigate the sexual abuse of children in the United States in public, private (including the family), secular, and religious institutions. The time for action is long overdue.”
Terry McKiernan, Spotlight on the Archives, Hamilton and Griffin on Rights
/in Uncategorized /by SOL ReformThis blog entry is a brief guide to the documents, newspaper articles, and reports that are the basis of the movie Spotlight. If you wonder what Mike Rezendes is reading in the cab, or what’s in Phil Saviano’s box of documents, or what editor Marty Baron means when he says, “You’ve all done some very good reporting here,” read on.
The movie is the story of an article getting written:
Church Allowed Abuse by Priest for Years, by Michael Rezendes, Boston Globe (1/6/02)
It’s also about the fight to unseal some documents, and once those documents are unsealed, after the end of the movie, the Spotlight team will write this remarkable story:
Documents Show Church Long Supported Geoghan, by Walter V. Robinson and Matt Carroll, Boston Globe (1/24/02)
The emotional center of the movie is a cab ride through the neighborhoods, past the characters we’ve gotten to know, while reporter Mike Rezendes reads a letter aloud. The letter was written by Margaret Gallant, the aunt of the children we see at the beginning of the film. It’s one of two she writes, one to Cardinal Medeiros, and one to Cardinal Law, his successor. These are the letters, with their answers:
Margaret Gallant to Cardinal Medeiros about Geoghan and Her Family (8/10/82)
Globe Transcript of Gallant’s Handwritten Letter
Cardinal Medeiros to Margaret Gallant Replying to Her Letter (8/20/82)
Margaret Gallant to Cardinal Law about Geoghan with Boys Again (9/6/84)
Cardinal Law to Margaret Gallant Replying to Her Letter (9/21/84)
When Rezendes arrives at the Globe, he reads this letter by Auxiliary Bishop John D’Arcy, who objects that Law has reassigned Father Geoghan. Law is ignoring Gallant’s letter, and D’Arcy’s “breaking ranks,” says Sacha Pfeiffer.
Auxiliary Bishop John D’Arcy to Cardinal Law, Breaking Ranks (12/7/84)
Phil Saviano at the Globe
Rezendes and his colleagues have been prepared for all of this by a conversation with survivor Phil Saviano, who urges them to read a report by the scholar/therapist Richard Sipe:
Preliminary Expert Report in the Kos Case, by A.W. Richard Sipe, Posted by The Linkup (1996)
The conversation with Saviano also introduces them to the Gauthe case in Louisiana, first reported in a local weekly newspaper:
The Tragedy of Gilbert Gauthe, by Jason Berry, The Times of Acadiana (5/23/85)
and the Porter case in nearby Fall River:
Town Secret: The Case of James Porter, by Linda Matchan, Boston Globe Magazine (8/29/93)
The Matchan article isn’t mentioned in the movie, but in real life, it was the moment after which the Globe turned away from the clergy abuse story for a time, to return in late 2001.
Following up on Saviano’s recommendation, the reporters talk with Sipe, who tells them about Tom Doyle. “The Manual” that Doyle co-wrote after working on the Gauthe case for the papal nuncio, explains Sipe, was encouraged and then disowned by the bishops:
The Problem of Sexual Molestation by Roman Catholic Clergy (The Manual), by Rev. Thomas P. Doyle OP et al. (6/9/85)
Saviano had shown the reporters two books: Richard Sipe’s Sex, Priests and Power: The Anatomy of a Crisis, which provided a theory for the movement, and Jason Berry’s Lead Us Not into Temptation, which told Doyle’s story and offered a model for investigative reporting on the crisis.
Speech After Long Silence
But Spotlight is working on the Geoghan case at all because newly hired editor Marty Baron is impressed by Eileen McNamara’s column on the Geoghan cases. McNamara wrote 21 columns all told on Geoghan, going back to the year after Garabedian filed his first lawsuit:
Attorney Mitchell Garabedian’s First Lawsuit Against Father Geoghan (7/9/96)
The McNamara column that moved Baron was:
A Familiar Pattern, by Eileen McNamara, Boston Globe (7/22/01)
followed by:
Passing the Buck, by Eileen McNamara, Boston Globe (7/29/01)
The Globe did some reporting on Geoghan in 2001, but the reporter who worked aggressively on the story was Kristen Lombardi at the Phoenix, an alternative weekly. Her important article on Geoghan is mentioned by Garabedian when he and Rezendes first meet:
Cardinal Sin, by Kristen Lombardi, Boston Phoenix (3/23/01)
The Globe’s relative silence between Porter and Geoghan meant that the paper ignored two strong leads. The Globe had run a story on Saviano’s own abuse:
Two Accuse Ex-Worcester Priest of Molesting Them, Lawyer Says, by Stephen Kurkjian, Boston Globe (1/8/93)
but had not followed up when Saviano first sent them his box of documents.
Similarly, attorney Eric MacLeish, who represented the Porter victims, had informed the Globe that he knew of 20 Boston priests accused of molesting children. The Globe buried the story in Metro, where reporter Walter Robinson was editor at the time:
Lawyer for Porter Victims Says 20 Other Priests in Area Are Accused, by James L. Franklin, Boston Globe (12/9/93)
Where the Globe could have taken the story in 1993, if it had chosen to do so, may be seen from MacLeish’s letter in that year to archdiocesan attorney Wilson Rogers, who appears in the Sweeney courtroom scene:
Allegations of Sexual Abuse Against Priests in the Archdiocese of Boston, by Eric MacLeish, Eckert Seamans (9/27/93)
The letter is among over 45,000 pages of archdiocesan files made public by MacLeish in 2002-2003. The documents were the basis for the Globe’s reporting, as may be seen from these two major stories:
Shanley’s Record Long Ignored: Files Show Law, Others Backed Priest, by Walter V. Robinson and Thomas Farragher, Boston Globe (4/9/02)
More Clergy Abuse, Secrecy Cases: Records Detail Quiet Shifting of Rogue Priests, by Thomas Farragher and Sacha Pfeiffer, Boston Globe (12/4/02)
The Seal Is Broken
Judge Sweeney ruled in favor of the Globe’s motion:
Judge’s Ruling Frees Documents in Geoghan Case, by Kathleen Burge, Boston Globe (11/30/01)
and the floodgates were opened, both for Spotlight coverage of the Boston story beyond Geoghan:
Priest Says He, Too, Molested Boys, by Sacha Pfeiffer and Steve Kurkjian, Boston Globe (1/26/2002)
Priest Treatment Unfolds in Costly, Secretive World, by Ellen Barry, Boston Globe (4/3/02)
Chronological Links to Nearly 600 Spotlight Articles
and also for the national and global coverage represented by the lists of cities at the end of the movie.
In addition to the reporters featured in the movie, Globe reporters Michael Paulson, Thomas Farragher, and Steve Kurkjian did crucial work:
Heavy Blow to Cardinal’s Credibility, by Michael Paulson, Boston Globe (4/9/02)
Through Kansas Parishes, A Trail of Suicide, by Thomas Farragher, Boston Globe (7/18/02)
Sex Cases May Cost Church $100M, by Stephen Kurkjian and Walter V. Robinson, Boston Globe (3/3/2002)
In some cities, newspapers devoted considerable resources to major series:
Archdiocese for Years Kept Allegations of Abuse from Police, by Glenn F. Bunting, Ralph Frammolino, and Richard Winton, LA Times (8/18/02)
Alleged Victims Say Incidents Altered Lives, by Wolfson, Hall, Smith, and Yetter, Louisville Courier-Journal (9/29/02)
The reporters at the Dallas Morning News did fine reporting before, during, and after 2002. The first story provides documents from the file of Fr. David Holley, who abused Phil Saviano and many other children.
Documents Show Bishops Transferred Known Abuser, by Brooks Egerton and Michael D. Goldhaber, Dallas Morning News (8/31/97)
Two-Thirds of Bishops Let Accused Priests Work, by Brooks Egerton and Reese Dunklin, Dallas Morning News (6/12/02)
Hiding in Plain Sight: Runaway Priests, by Brooks Egerton, Reese Dunklin, and Brendan M. Case, Dallas Morning News (6/12/02)
Excellent reporting continues to be done:
Archdiocese Knew of Priest’s Sexual Misbehavior, Yet Kept Him in Ministry, and Betrayed by Silence, by Madeleine Baran, MPR News (2013-2014)
The Journalism of Elizabeth Hardin-Burrola, Gallup Independent (2003-2015)
Fugitive Fathers, by Will Carless (September 2015)
Courageous Witness
The revelations documented above, and indeed nearly all the accounts we have about the sexual abuse of children by Catholic clergy, come from the courageous witness of survivors. We end with several examples:
Living on a “Fault” Line, by David Coleman (1992)
Impact Statement, by Paula Gonzales Rohrbacher, Speech at the USCCB Meeting in Dallas TX (6/13/02)
What Took You So Long? by Phil Saviano, Speech at the First VOTF National Conference (7/20/02)
Full article: http://hamilton-griffin.com/bishopaccountability-org-spotlight-on-the-archives/
Kristen McGee, Clergy Sex Abuse Scandal Takes “Spotlight” In New Film, Steelers Lounge
/in Uncategorized /by SOL Reformhe movie, which follows the Boston Globe’s Spotlight team as its reporters investigate the story, is an indictment of the church in that city but, crucially, it doesn’t stop there. It’s a democratic operation in which every participant matters, right down to the clerical workers who wheel carts of documents from one Globe department to another. The Globe published its first story on January 6, 2002, with the headline “Church Allowed Abuse by Priest for Years”. The staff at Spotlight was let by Walter “Robby” Robinson (Michael Keaton) and included Mike Rezendes (Mark Ruffalo), Sacha Pfeiffer (Rachel McAdams), and Matt Carroll (Brian d’Arcy James). Thisis simply a great story exceedingly well told, through characters whose fingers are perpetually stained with ink. But maybe this film required more than a sly nod. Reporters frequently don’t come off well in the movies these days. Just like Alan Pakula’s seminal 1976 thriller chronicling the investigation that brought down the Nixon presidency, Spotlight is about exactly what traditional journalism can and should be: finding the truth, even if it threatens entrenched power structures. The story might never have come to light if not for the influence of Marty Baron, who joined the Boston Globe as editor-in-chief in July 2001. But instead of cuts, Baron inspired a year’s worth of reporting that uncovered systemic sexual abuse in the Boston clergy and led the Spotlight team to the 2003 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service. This is how these guys connect the dots. Of the many remarkable things about the new film Spotlight, the most remarkable is that this moving, engrossing, occasionally thrilling movie is mostly about a bunch of people-a team of investigative journalists at the Boston Globe known as “Spotlight”- going to work and doing their jobs. On this, we can all agree, and Baron will be in town next week to elaborate on the Spotlight story and others. It had a story to tell and its story was about the victims and the church’a role in its cover-up of this abuse. “With their cold cups of coffee, rolled-up shirtsleeves, and bustling deadline chaos, they’re glamorously unglamorous settings where overworked, underpaid reporters get to speak truth to power”. Everything from the newsroom, to the people working there, the research and investigation process, the lifestyle, long nights, sources, quotes, etc., felt extremely authentic. “[In the film] we couldn’t spend a lot of time commenting on the state of the industry that is journalism today as opposed to [the early 2000s] and how tragic that is”, he said. Schreiber says his sons are old enough to understand that what their parents do for work is a little bit different from most people. The film often reminds us about the (possibly forgotten) value and importance of honest investigative reporting/journalism. Mitchell Garabedian (Stanley Tucci) is the latter, and through his interactions with the Columbo-esque Rezendes, we learn that the problem isn’t just bad eggs and the Church hiding them in the back of the henhouse. Reportedly, Vatican Radio gave strong praise to the movie as well, describing it as “honest” and “compelling”. The script for the film was listed on the 2013 “Black List”, an annual survey of “most liked” motion picture screenplays not yet produced. In unearthing the story and facing his own failings, Robinson employs a lifetime of experience and tries mightily to exploit a few choice connections like his buddy Jim Sullivan, a lawyer for the archdiocese rendered achingly credible by Jamey Sheridan. This film was shown at the Venice worldwide Film Festival, the Telluride Film Festival, and the Toronto global Film Festival. Since Spotlight-which opens Friday, November 13-takes place with one foot in the analog world and one in the digital, this makes for an intriguing time capsule of our not-so-distant past that still seems ancient. Rated 3 out of 5 stars. It of course touches base on themes concerning religion and sexual predators. Running time is 2 hours and 8 minutes. He is a film, TV, and sports enthusiast, and when he is not reviewing movies, Hayden works in film production. Don’t like what he has to say.
Full article: http://steelerslounge.com/2015/11/clergy-sex-abuse-scandal-takes-spotlight-in-new-film/52235/
Echoes of “Spotlight” Movie in NY State
/in New York /by SOL ReformDear Friends:
Those of us who are concerned about the welfare of survivors of childhood sexual abuse have been very interested in reports about the movie “Spotlight”, which is helping encourage a national dialogue about the cover-up of abuse over many years.
Like most of you, I look forward to seeing this film about a moment in time when the veil of secrecy was lifted on the persistent processes that kept victims in the shadows and protected abusive priests.
I thought you would be interested in this Op-Ed essay by Professor Marci Hamilton that appeared last week in the New York Daily News. Thank you Professor Hamilton for bringing the issue home to New York where we are working hard to eliminate the corrosive statute of limitations on child sex abuse crimes.
Sincerely,
Assemblywoman Margaret Markey
November 16, 2015
Opinion
Marci Hamilton: Let victims pursue their abusers
Marci Hamilton NEW YORK DAILY NEWS 11/09/2015 5:00 AM ET
‘Spotlight’ trailer
NY Daily News
The movie “Spotlight” is being welcomed with Oscar buzz. For those of us laboring in the vineyard of child protection, this is music to our ears, because this story — about the Boston Globe journalists who revealed the Catholic bishops’ callous cover-up of prolific pedophile priests — will likely do more to educate the public about child sex abuse than the Boston Globe news stories it is about, or the other child sex abuse scandals in the news, from Penn State and Syracuse to Horace Mann School, Woody Allen and Josh Duggar.
The greatest barrier to child protection is ignorance. The movie shows smart, experienced journalists struggling to comprehend what was right in front of them. “Spotlight” will likely educate millions about the ways in which adults and institutions we trust protect adults and put children at risk every day.
Despite news coverage of one scandal after another, most adults still trust their instincts regarding who is an abuser and who is not. That is dangerous. Until parents, teachers, clergy and all other adults understand the cunning moves of pedophiles and the ease with which we as adults let abusers persist, kids are at serious risk.
HOW MARK RUFFALO BECAME A REPORTER FOR ‘SPOTLIGHT’
“Spotlight” should carry special significance in New York, where, unlike in Boston, so little of the truth about the bishops’ cover-up has surfaced. That is because New York shares the ignominious distinction with Alabama, Michigan and Mississippi of having the worst civil statutes of limitations for child sex abuse in the United States.
True, major sex crimes here have no criminal statute of limitation at this point, but the criminal statutes of limitation that would have been in place for the vast majority of sex-crime victims in New York have expired and cannot be revived. Which means the only recourse left for most victims is in civil court.
In New York City, Timothy Cardinal Dolan sits on a secret archive that likely holds more ugly secrets about hundreds of yet-unnamed priests than any other diocese in the country . Those secrets are being protected by the state Legislature’s refusal to revive the expired civil statutes of limitation. So New York bishops enjoy near-total immunity in the civil courts for their decades of cover up.
Of all Catholic dioceses in the country, New York City is the largest to be so underexamined.
Sitting on secrets
The Catholic bishops are fond of bragging about how they now have the “gold standard” of child protection, but children will never be fully protected so long as the identities of predators are secret from the public. Simple fact: Perpetrators, like Boston’s John Geoghan, abuse into their elderly years.
The 40-year-old who abused children 30 years ago may still be dangerous, and New York parents will not know who all of those priests, rabbis, teachers and family members are until the state’s statute-of-limitations stranglehold is released and victims can come forward in the safety of the court system.
The bishops typically claim that reform bills are not fair to them because they are being “targeted.” Actually, these bills open courthouse doors for victims in every arena. Georgia shared New York’s bottom-of-the-barrel statute-of-limitation status until this year, when it enacted the Hidden Predator Act.
Now, for two years, starting July 2015, victims can sue perpetrators and those who aided and abetted them. The first three lawsuits have been filed against Pak’s Karate; a public school administrator, and a Republican lobbyist. Hardly the stuff of Catholic “targeting.”
“Spotlight” casts such a harsh light on the Catholic bishops’ role in preventing justice for victims of child sex abuse because it is the largest religious institution and one of the largest landholders in the United States . Oh, and don’t forget, because the bishops’ coverup continues today, especially in New York.
Hamilton is a law professor at Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law and author of “Justice Denied: What America Must Do to Protect Its Children.”
http://www.nydailynews.com/opinion/marci-hamilton-victims-pursue-abusers-article-1.2426370
Hamilton Let the victims pursue their abusers