Rose McGowan helped launch the #MeToo movement against sexual assault and harassment after being one of the first women to accuse movie mogul Harvey Weinstein of rape. But now that the movement is swiftly revolutionizing the way we talk about these issues, the activist and author has a few concerns.
McGowan recently told Know Your Value founder Mika Brzezinski that she is worried people might expect results from the #MeToo movement overnight. The way to combat that, she said, is to encourage patience and keep urging more women to share their stories.
“This is the first time since the dawn of the caveman era that women are actually being believed, and it might take hundreds of us before we’re believed,” she said.
McGowan added that she hopes that everyone remembers that it has only been four months since #MeToo burst into the national conversation and that we have so much farther to go. She compared the campaign to the civil rights movement, which had roots that went back to the 19th century, peaked in the 1950s and ’60s, and still remains influential today in public discussions of the Black Lives Matter movement.
The 44-year-old, who starred in the television show “Charmed” in addition to a number of movies like “Scream” and “Jawbreaker,” decided to speak out against Weinstein after 20 years of silence and despite a non-disclosure agreement she had once signed.
In her new memoir “Brave,” McGowan details her encounter with Weinstein. She also speaks out against the Hollywood establishment, arguing that there was a machinery in place that allowed men in powerful positions, like Weinstein, to get away with sexual assault.
So why did she decide to break her silence?
Because of women like the young millennial McGowan passed on her way to NBC’s studios who screamed “I’m a #MeToo. Go Rose, go!” McGowan continues to fight for such young women, and all women. “I do it for them,” she said. “I do it for us.”









