Vice Suspends 2 Execs After NYT Report Detailing Sexual Misconduct Allegations

Rogers Communications President and CEO Guy Laurence speaks at a joint venture announcement in Toronto on Thursday Oct. 30, 2014. A $100 million joint venture with Vice Media will create a new TV channel and open a production studio in Toronto. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Nathan Denette)
FILE - In this Oct. 30, 2014, file photo, the Vice logo is seen at a joint venture announcement between Vice Media and Roger Communications in Toronto. For all the words flowing since last weekend in Charlottesville,... FILE - In this Oct. 30, 2014, file photo, the Vice logo is seen at a joint venture announcement between Vice Media and Roger Communications in Toronto. For all the words flowing since last weekend in Charlottesville, Va., the most striking television reporting has been Vice Media’s insider account of the white nationalist movement and the aftermath of their demonstration. Correspondent Elle Reeve’s story was first shown on HBO’s “Vice News Tonight” on Monday, Aug. 14, 2017, and has been seen more than 36 million times on television and streaming platforms. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press via AP, File) MORE LESS
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NEW YORK (AP) — Vice has suspended two top executives after a New York Times report on sexual misconduct at the digital media company.

Vice Media put its president, Andrew Creighton, and chief digital officer Mike Germano on leave as it investigates allegations against them, according to a company memo sent to employees Tuesday. A Vice spokesman declined to comment.

The Times had reported in late December that it found four settlements involving allegations of sexual harassment or defamation against Vice employees, including Creighton. The newspaper talked with more than two dozen women who say they experienced or witnessed sexual misconduct, including groping and forced kisses.

Vice Media co-founders Shane Smith and Suroosh Alvi have apologized for the “boy’s club” culture .

Vice has grown from a Canadian magazine to a dominant online video company, expanding into TV around the world.

The memo, from Vice’s chief operating officer and CFO Sarah Broderick, said that Creighton and Germano were the only two people named in the Times story with allegations against them who were still employed at Vice.

The Times reported that Vice paid a former female employee a $135,000 settlement in 2016 after she said she was fired when she rejected Creighton’s advances. The Vice memo says her claims were found to lack merit at the time after a review by law firm, but a special committee of its board is looking at the matter now. It will make a recommendation on what to do before a Jan. 11 board meeting.

As for Germano, the memo says Vice’s human-resources department and an external investigator are looking into the allegations. One woman told the Times that he had told her he didn’t want to hire her because he wanted to have sex with her. Another woman said he pulled her on to his lap at a work event at a bar.

The Associated Press was not immediately able to reach Germano and Creighton for comment.

Vice’s memo also laid out how the company is trying to change its culture. It said the company will require mandatory sexual harassment training for all employees starting later this month and that the company was “committed” to having half of employees be female “at every level across the organization” by 2020. Broderick said “pay parity” would come by the end of this year.

The reports of sexual misconduct at Vice are part of a wave of allegations of bad behavior in media, entertainment and other industries, as well as politics, that have come in the aftermath of articles detailing Harvey Weinstein’s decades of alleged rape and harassment this fall.

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Notable Replies

  1. This is just exhausting.

    I had no idea I lived in such a bubble. In nearly 30 years working in offices I’'ve never witnessed anything like what we’ve been reading about the last several months.

  2. The men who do this do it where you can’t see it. They know who wouldn’t approve.

    I worked in the corporate world for 25 years, and saw it happen at all but one workplace (and experienced it personally at half of them) - but that one was amazingly racist.

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