Actress,Dead Again activist, and author Rose McGowan stopped by Good Morning America on Tuesday to discuss everything from "The Monster" Harvey Weinstein and her love of Twitter, to her memoir, Brave, which was released today.
The actress, who reached a settlement with Weinstein in the late '90s, is one of dozens of women to accuse the producer of sexual misconduct.
Since that damning New York Timesreport was published in October, McGowan has been very vocal on Twitter — both in criticizing the entertainment industry for a lack of action over the years and in empowering women to speak out about their own experiences.
SEE ALSO: A Rose McGowan documentary series about her life as an activist is coming to TV"It's nice being able to speak for myself," McGowan saidabout the social media platform."Pre-Twitter there was no way to speak for myself."
McGowan went on to reveal that she tweeted about Weinstein's abuse prior to the New York Timespiece without naming him in hopes of starting a conversation.
"I put that out there as a clarion call," she said. "'Come on, journalists, let's go.' I said everything but the name, so draw your conclusions."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The 44-year-old was temporarily suspended from Twitter shortly after the New York Times report for including a private phone number in one of her tweets, which is prohibited in the site's Privacy Policy. The suspension sparked serious backlash for allegedly silencing McGowan's voice, and her account was quickly restored.
McGowan has since used Twitter to partake in the #MeToo campaign, started by Tarana Burke in 2006, and share her candid feelings on Weinstein.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
"For me he's a sick person, he's a sick mind, but what about all the others? And there were so many," McGowan told GMAbefore describing a troubling on-camera encounter she had with Weinstein at the 1997 Sundance Film Festival.
"A lot of victims and survivors will say they detach and you really do," she said. "You float up above your body because you’re trying to figure out ... Literally when he grabbed me I was thinking, 'Oh I hope I still have lipstick on for the camera.'"
"Everybody knew. I know that, I was there."
"Your brain is in another place and all of a sudden your body is like, ‘What, what, what,'" she went on. "This is not what I expected at 10 in the morning."
Though many of the allegations took years to make it into the spotlight, McGowan said everyone in the industry knew.
"Everybody knew. I know that, I was there," she said. "Truth isn't revolutionary, it's just the truth."
McGowan is also set to star in a five-part documentary series called Citizen Rose, which premieres Jan. 30 on E!.
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Alienware M16 Gaming Laptop deal: Save $560
The next iPhone could have slower data than other flagships
How Airbnb plans to help refugees find shelter
iOS 11 will finally bring native GIF support to your iPhone
Best headphone deal: Take 22% off the Sonos Ace at Amazon
Chinese school isolating its HIV
Baseball fan's footrace with a superhero really couldn't have gone worse
We ran 'Game of Thrones' characters through Amazon's facial recognition software
Every MCU movie villain ranked, from "Iron Man" to "Thunderbolts*"
Amazon product pages went down, but cute dogs made everything better
President Trump says semiconductor tariffs are next
Cheese plate in a cone is perfect for people who need their fix, and need it now
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。