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Weekly Round Up: September 19, 2010

September 19, 2010 By HKearl

Story Submissions Recap:

I accept street harassment submissions from anywhere in the world. Share your story!

  • Stop Street Harassment Blog: 6 new stories from people in South Wales, UK; Minneapolis, MN; Jakarta, Indonesia; London, UK; Quebec, Canada; and no location indicated.
  • HollaBack DC!: 3 new stories
  • HollaBack NYC: 6 new stories
  • HollaBackLDN: 6 new stories

In the News, On the Blogs:

  • BBC Radio 4, Woman’s Hour did a segment about street harassment
  • El Diario, “El acoso callejero” (English: “The Uncomfortable Walk Home“)
  • Guardian, “Sexual harassment is not just a problem for Ines Sainz“
  • Guardian, “Women in Egypt get hi-tech aid to beat sexual harassment“
  • New German periodical focused on street harassment, “Street Harassment – Machtprozesse und Raumproduktion“
  • The Intersection of Madness and Reality, “Street Meet: Black Women, Black Men, & Everyday Sexual Harassment“
  • My Retail Heaven, “Oi Sexy! Nice Rack“
  • Women’s Views on News, “Oi darlin’! Not many of them to the pound! Street harassment: the right of men to tell women what they think of them.”
  • The Post, “Fema-what?: Three Things Women Wish Men Knew About Street Harassment”
  • A Black Girl’s Guide to Weight Loss, “Sexual Assault, Sexual Harassment, & Weight Gain: Facing Facts“
  • HollaBack DC!, “Literacy and street harassment“

Announcements:

  • Welcome HollaBack PGH, a site for folks living in Pittsburgh, PA, to share their street harassment stories
  • If you live in London, take a survey about street harassment on the London Anti-Street Harassment Campaign’s website and help influence mayoral policy
  • The book Stop Street Harassment is available online!
  • HollaBack NYC is looking for interns
  • RightRides is looking for interns & volunteers in NYC

10 Tweets from the Week:

  • PiperYAnderson Wearing tights for the first time in over 10yrs. Stopped wearing shorts or tights after a traumatic experience. #streetharassment
  • lillyheart: Decided: I would rather tithe to @iHollaback than the church until it recognizes my humanity.
  • accostherwilde A new taste of street harassment: dudes holla-ing @ me from their cars as I sit on my porch. Now they know where I live
  • MissNabokov Men probably don’t realise what a big issue street harassment actually is (unless they’re the ones doing it). It really needs addressing.
  • gyraff Why tweet abt st. harassment? Was told all my life to feel “grateful” and “appreciated” for getting catcalls . Actually, it feels yucky.
  • mgeils One of the many things I don’t miss about public transit/busing/walking is street harassment and catcalling #fuckyou #shutup
  • Mdotwrites DC streets be quiet on Redskin Sundays. Mean less street harassment for me. Ain’t THAT some shit.
  • CTrouper Had my eyeballs on a copy of glamour mag. Q&a on street harassment article on summer of mainstream misogyny. Heart.
  • smanamana I also hate this RT @karennattiah: Street harassment is one thing I hate about New York
  • clembastow Here’s a hint, guys: street harassment does not make women want to “spend some time” with you.

Resource of the Week:

Check out these new button, stickers, and magnets you can use to declare your dislike of street harassment and to brand/shame street harassers!!

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Filed Under: hollaback, News stories, Resources, Stories, street harassment, weekly round up Tagged With: HarassMap, hollaback pittsburgh, Ines Sainz, london anti-street harassment campaign, sexual harassment

Jets players catcall female reporter

September 13, 2010 By HKearl

Image via NPR

This past Saturday, Ines Sainz, a reporter for a Mexican television network, attended a Jets football team practice and interviewed players with two of her male coworkers in the locker room. During the practice, the assistant coach seemed to purposefully throw the ball in her direction. Then when she was in the locker room, several players “catcalled” at her, making her feel “very uncomfortable.”

Via NPR:

“Of course you feel it when you are being stared at and when you are being spoken of in a certain way,” Sainz told The Associated Press. “I opted to ignore it … I tried to not even pay attention.” She tweeted in Spanish on Saturday night that she tried “not to look anywhere!!”

While this is not exactly street harassment, a lot of the factors are the same.

  1. The men who catcalled her treated her disrespectfully and made her feel uncomfortable, just as street harassers do to the women they harass.
  2. Many men only harass women on the streets when they are in groups and I bet had only one guy been in the locker room, he wouldn’t have harassed Sainz. Often the harassment isn’t for the benefit of the women, it’s to impress or to get a rise out of one’s male peers.
  3. Sainz’s reaction is like so many women’s after they’ve experienced street harassment: pretend to ignore it, suffer through it, and then move on. That’s what we’re told to do and when it happens all the time, sometimes that’s all we have the energy to do.
  4. Just as women are sharing their street harassment stories on blogs, via twitter, and Facebook, Sainz tweeted her experiences afterward. It raised awareness and the Jets owner apologized to her. Afterward Sainz said, “I don’t want to make it a bigger deal. I have confidence in the NFL and the Jets’ management and I know that this will serve as a precedent so that this does not happen to another women.”And that’s how I think a lot of women feel about street harassment. They don’t want to dwell on it or make a big deal as long as it stops so that no woman ever has to deal with it again.

Ladies, let’s take a cue from Sainz and keep speaking out about the harassment we face. And men, don’t take a cue from the Jets players – don’t harass women and don’t ignore it or keep silent when you see your buddies doing it. That makes you complicit.

[9.14.10 update: Amanda Hess at TBD addresses the rampant victim-blaming that seems to be growing as more people hear about what happened to Sainz]

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Filed Under: News stories Tagged With: harassment of Sainz, Ines Sainz, jets player harassment, reporter Sainz, sexual harassment, street harassment, workplace harassment

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