Marcus wrote: ↑Tue Oct 25, 2022 3:24 pm
A different take on the previous situation is that an inappropriate sexual relationship with a person in a position of authority over the employee culminated in the loss of the employee's job.
I do agree the victim behaved very badly, but that doesn't excuse or override the actions of the employers, which, in my opinion and relying on the facts of the case, constituted sexual harassment in the workplace.
I'm not interested in re-discussing this, i just wanted to point out a different conclusion.
The problem I see with all of these accusations is that they're fundamentally ridiculous. They're non-specific in terms of the complaint and they're asking for vague amends. Like, grow up people. John isn't abusing anyone - he's trying to build a brand built on collective pain, trauma, love and morality. It's going to be messy on camera and behind the scenes. Grow up or don't play. It's showbusiness.
Yes, John and Rosebud had some kind of brief "scrape" with affair. Who knows the details? Who cares, honestly. Open Stories Foundation investigated, tried to settle for money, and Rosebud would never stop. It seems she will never stop until John draws a Samurai sword on air and commits Seppuku.
Now Jenn does this 5 minute Youtube testimony meeting cry-fest about how hard it's been. She titles it "non-transparency" report or something click-baity, but the whole monologue is nonsensical. The script complains generically, in an ironically non-transparent way, about how she felt the work environment was too hard and then was fired after complaining.
Give me a break! If you can't hear the feedback from listeners, or from John, or from the Open Stories Foundation board, then I'm sorry but you're the problem. You are simply not cut out for showbusiness. Complaining about your work discomfort only shows your lack of self awareness about the fact that you are dilutive to the show and dilutive to the brand. You might be excellent at a lot of things, but this path isn't for you. The Open Stories Foundation board and John have done you a favor. You should thank them for it -- firing people who are a bad fit for the job is never easy. Here's some free advice: don't sue them. Learn from the experience, lick your wounds, and move on. By the way, I predict Jenn's podcast will be a dud. Podcasting about Mormonism is pointless if you don't have something uniquely informative and useful. Unfortunately, Jenn did not bring that to MoSto. Maybe she'll figure it out on her own, but I doubt it. Seems like this new solo podcast is a revenge endeavor. At most, it'll help her self-therapize, but I don't think it will go any further than that.
By the way, as re Rosebud, I know the text messages show John was idiotic and probably crossed some kind of power line, such as it is. John should have been smart enough to draw a hard red line about emotional lines with any hired help.
But in John's defense, the timeline suggests that both were still navigating their individual faith crises at the time they worked together. I imagine just about every work session - day after day, week after week - would have been emotionally intense, filled with raw painful sharing. Back when there wasn't much community around such experiences - indeed Open Stories Foundation was working to build up such a community. But anyway, the work environment... question: what could John have done to make it "healthy?" In some ways, this reminds me of the time I toured through Yahoo!'s content moderation center, about 17 years ago when Yahoo! was still a big deal. The look on people's faces - wow. Ever since, I have wondered how any company can possibly create a "healthy work environment" online content moderators. Truly, I still wonder. It's got to be one of the most emotionally traumatizing jobs in the world.
Back to Rosebud, the documentary trail also shows that Rosebud was an absolute dud at the people and mobilization side of Open Stories Foundation. Her stuff wasn't working. Her events lost money and had waning interest. She believed she was doing better work than the the facts showed. That's really hard in a startup. I think John tried for a long time to give her rope, but she ultimately didn't deliver. It wasn't just John, women on the Open Stories Foundation board drew the same conclusion. (As they did with Jenn)
The difficult thing is that while Rosebud is a very intelligent person, who presents a strong first impression, she is also unstable. She does not connect with people. She is toxic. I speak from rather long experience here, having been in the same stake with her and her family, including her kids and now ex-husband, some 15-20 years ago. She is a social disaster and her approach drives everyone around her away. She is constantly navigating internal conspiracy thinking, imagining the worst about people and acting as if it's real. She literally sat with her kids in primary every week, and told other women she just wanted to make sure they wouldn't be raped or abused in sharing time. She trusted no one, not even her husband (who is one of the kindest, gentlest people I've ever met, and who coincidentally, is an HR professional). You can hear some of the background on her solo podcast, where Rosebud makes clear she carries memory of childhood trauma. I don't question it. But she imposed evil and traumatic intent on everyone around her and it made every mother, and father, in church around her feel uneasy. Like, in her efforts to protect from the evil in others, she
became the wildcard that everyone else worried about. Eventually they moved and then divorced. I could share many first-hand stories, but that would be inappropriate and unsafe.
Bottom line: I think John was hoodwinked by her intelligence when he hired her, foolishly (if not understandably) fell into emotional and physical attraction while they worked together, and ultimately he (and the Open Stories Foundation board) realized how disastrous and toxic she was. They were right to dissolve in order to rid themselves of her. And, to the extent John wanted to continue podcasting, and that the Open Stories Foundation board members wanted to remain counselors in his endeavor, they were right to reform around John afterward. He would have succeeded on his own, I am convinced, but he didn't have to. He has no unmet obligation to Rosebud, in any case.