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Q&A: How Jodi Kantor Started a Revolution

"What have women in the United States truly endured in the workplace? We're only beginning to learn the truth."
Jodi Kantor, investigative reporter for The New York Times, speaks onstage at IGNITION: Future of Media at Time Warner Center on November 29 in New York City. Kantor was one of the journalists who broke the story of Harvey Weinstein's decades of sexual misconduct allegations.
Jodi Kantor

When Jodi Kantor started investigating Harvey Weinstein's behavior toward women, she didn't know what she would get. Sources told the New York Times reporter that the story wouldn't matter. "Everybody knows about Weinstein," she remembers people saying. "This is the way Hollywood has always been."

What she got was a months-long, nationwide reckoning. The #MeToo movement began with a single Times article about Weinstein's settlements on October 5. The story was based on the reporting of Kantor, 42, and her reporting partner, Megan Twohey. (Ronan Farrow's blockbuster New Yorker piece followed several days later.) Since then, women have found courage—and abusive men have found consequences.

Kantor, who has since broken stories about Louis C.K.'s misconduct, as well as Weinstein's "machine" of complicit bystanders, is now chronicling the recent wave of sexual abuse scandals. The two reporters continue to receive daily notes and phone calls from victims around the world. "Sometimes they hope we write about them, but sometimes they just want to be heard,” says Kantor. The reporter is humbled by the response to

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