ATLANTA (AP) — Declaring "I am part of the
problem," documentarian Morgan Spurlock confessed in an online post to
sexual harassment and infidelity, and said a woman accused him of rape in
college.
In the post, which he linked to from his verified Twitter
account, Spurlock wrote that as he watches other influential men brought down
by allegations of sexual misconduct, "I don't sit by and wonder 'who will
be next?' I wonder, 'when will they come for me?'"
Spurlock recounted a sexual encounter in college which he
said he thought was consensual, but said the woman believed it was rape.
"I tried to comfort her. To make her feel
better," Spurlock wrote. "I thought I was doing ok, I believed she
was feeling better. She believed she was raped. That's why I'm part of the
problem."
Spurlock also said he paid a settlement to a female
assistant who worked at his office and whom he called "hot pants" or
"sex pants." In the post, Spurlock says he thought the nickname was
funny but later realized he was demeaning her.
"So, when she decided to quit, she came to me and said
if I didn't pay her a settlement, she would tell everyone," he wrote.
"Being who I was, it was the last thing I wanted, so of course, I
paid."
Spurlock also wrote that he has "been unfaithful to
every wife and girlfriend I have ever had."
"Over the years, I would look each of them in the eye
and proclaim my love and then have sex with other people behind their
backs," Spurlock wrote.
Spurlock wrote that he will do better and will be more
honest with others and with himself. He ends the post by saying: "I've
talked enough in my life. ... I'm finally ready to listen."
Spurlock is best known for his Oscar-nominated 2004
documentary "Super Size Me" on the fast-food industry, in which he
ate nothing but McDonald's food to show the health effects of the industry. He
has produced dozens of other documentaries and TV shows and completed a sequel
to "Super Size Me" this year.
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