by Furry Girl

06.29.11

It's vanishingly rare for a large media outlet to cut through the knee-jerk emotional hysteria surrounding sexual trafficking, but The Village Voice knocks it out of the park this week.  Make sure to read Real Men Get Their Facts Straight: Ashton and Demi and Sex Trafficking.  This is probably going to end up being of my my top favorite articles of the year.  After completely destroying the bogus "there are 100,000-300,000 child sex slaves in America" myth, it goes on to look at the celebrity philanthropy industry behind the hype:

The actors were watching TV in bed when they saw a horrifying documentary about sex slavery in some faraway foreign land and decided they needed to get involved.

But how to help?

Sex trafficking is a grim problem, and not one actors know a lot about—even if Moore played a stripper in a movie and has alluded to how she was "manipulated and taken advantage of" by a 28-year-old boyfriend when she was 15 years old.

So Kutcher and Moore did what any savvy Hollywood couple would do, which is call Trevor Neilson. Neilson isn't a household name, but he's quickly establishing his Santa Monica, California-based Global Philanthropy Group as the premier charity consultant to the entertainment industry's biggest and brightest. Neilson is a former Hillary Clinton staffer and Gates Foundation director who has been the subject of glowing profiles in Details and the New York Times.

"The king of Hollywood philanthropy" and his wife and business partner, Maggie, can charge up to $200,000 a year for their services because they're the best in a new and growing industry. The concept of a celebrity charity consultant is relatively new, but it makes sense, as Hollywood grows ever more concerned about image management. Neilson is the guy Madonna called to help her save face in the debacle surrounding her failed Malawi schools.

The Neilsons cooked up a 140-point "secret sauce" plan of attack for the Demi and Ashton Foundation (known as DNA).

[...]

Getting data about sex slavery was not easy, she says: "Versus most social issues I've worked on, there is actually a dearth of data—so it was absolutely cobbled together."

Accuracy is not a major concern for Maggie Neilson.

"All of the core data we use gets attacked all the time," she says. "The challenge is, it's that or nothing, right? And I don't frankly care if the number is 200,000, 500,000, or a million, or 100,000—it needs to be addressed. While I absolutely agree there's a need for better data, the people who want to spend all day bitching about the methodologies used I'm not very interested in."

Really, go read the whole thing.  I promise you'll love it.





3 Comments »

  1. Don't read the comments though, they're just a mass of people sent by the almighty Aston Kutcher...

    Comment by Richard — June 30, 2011 @ 4:15 am

  2. Good article, thanks for link. As you say, seeing this information in the mainstream matters.

    There are some earlier articles that also addresses the '100,000 to 300,000' exaggeration and the shaming of men by misleading mass media and celebrities [May 2010] [January 2011].

    The Village Voice article is about the USA, and (thankfully) there is not much trafficking going on in the USA. A hate fact about trafficking in the rest of the world is that be it a culture, a nation or a religion, there is no group that engages in human trafficking more than Muslims. I like all your writing, but any time you want to drop more atheism in feminisnt is a-ok with me.

    Comment by Anonymous — June 30, 2011 @ 1:29 pm

  3. Anon: Yeah, this is not the first time anyone has debunked massive trafficking numbers, but it's the first time it's been done by such a large media outlet. That's why it's so exciting to see.

    Comment by Furry Girl — July 7, 2011 @ 1:51 pm

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