Episode Transcript
This episode includes mentions of sex trafficking, sex crimes against minors, and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
There Are No Girls on the Internet as a production of iHeartRadio and Unbossed Creative.
I'm Bridget Todd and this is There Are No Girls on the Internet.
Speaker 2Right now.
Speaker 1One of the biggest questions making the rounds is what exactly is Donald Trump's connection to Jeffrey Epstein.
We recently broke down why those questions still linger and what they might mean in a recent episode of the show, which will put in the show notes.
But Trump is not the only powerful figure with ties to Epstein.
In fact, one of the very first episodes we ever did on There Are No Girls on the Internet was a conversation with Kenyan technologist Autowa Umboya.
Back then, Audiba was a grad student at MIT's influential Media Lab and became one of the first people to publicly call out her own university's connections to Epstein, ultimately calling for the resignation of the lab's director over it.
It was one of the stories that initially inspired me to start this podcast in the first place.
You know, here was this brave student speaking up about what she knew to be wrong in her own tech community, and instead of support, she faced a tax for it.
And I guess that's tale as old as time, the cost of being right.
So today we're revisiting that important conversation you've probably heard about American financier Jeffrey Epstein.
Epstein pled guilty and was convicted in two thousand and eight of procuring an underage girl for sex.
In July of last year, he was arrested on charges of sex trafficking and conspiracy to engage in sex trafficking.
He was found dead in prison in August.
In addition to his connection to powerful political figures like Bill Clinton, Queen Elizabeth's son Prince Andrew, and incredibly accused rapist President Donald Trump, Epstein also had deep connections to the tech world despite being a convicted sex offender.
On September seventh, Ronan Faroh published an expos in The New Yorker that found that the Massachusetts Institute of Technology or MIT, had a deeper fundraising relationship with Epstein that it had previously acknowledged, even as officials knew he was a convicted sex offender, and that the university went to great lengths to cover it up.
Now, here's just some of what Pharaoh found.
Even though Epstein was disqualified a MIT's official donor database, the Media Lab continued to accept money from him, consulted him about the use of funds, and, by marking his contributions as anonymous, avoided disclosing their full extent, both publicly and within the university.
Epstein appeared to act as a go between for wealthy donors like Bill Gates to pump money into MIT.
According to Pharaoh, MIT's efforts to conceal Epstein's connections to the university went so far that staff referred to Epstein as Voldemort or he who must not be named.
Whistleblower Sidney Swinson, a former MIT development associate, told Pharaoh that the lab's leadership made it explicit even in her earliest days with them, that Epstein's donations had to be kept secret.
Staffers knew about MIT's relationship with Epstein.
Prominent faculty adviser Ethan Zuckerman resigned in protest after Pharaoh's piece was published.
Joy Eto, the director of the MIT Media Lab, resigned in.
Speaker 3The latest fallout connected to Jeffrey Epstein.
MIT is opening an investigation into its ties to the financier and convicted sex offender.
The announcement came just one day after The New Yorker revealed that MIT's Media Lab was attempting to conceal donations from Epstein.
Speaker 1Now there's a lot to say about Jeffrey Epstein, but this story isn't really about him.
It's about courage, community, and power.
We hear a lot about Epstein's horrific crimes, and most people credit Ronan Faroh with bringing their full scope to light.
But even before Ronan Pharaoh's piece was published, women in the MIT community spoke up, and we should honor their voices too.
Speaker 4To the Future, MIT's Media Lab a place that follows crazy ideas, where they may le.
Speaker 2We get to think about the future.
What does the world look like ten years, twenty years, thirty is what should.
Speaker 1It look like?
The MIT Media Lab is an important place.
CBS even dubbed it the future Factory, and it's where technologists.
Speaker 2Ottawa Mboya knew she had to be.
Speaker 4Yeah, I came here because it is sort of a place for misfits.
Speaker 2The Media Lab.
Speaker 4It is intodisciplinary and has sort of the intersection of tech and art and design and that was what I was looking for.
When I graduated from undergrad I worked for a couple of years back in Airobi, where I'm from, and became a VR developer.
Speaker 2On the side on top of my job and needed.
Speaker 4To I was sort of like looking for somewhere to find myself and had heard about the Media Lab and how sort of civic minded.
One of the groups was called Civic Media and our motto is a tech for social change, and I was like, well, that sounds like exactly what I want to do.
Speaker 2Yeah, so I applied and then it worked out.
Speaker 1Ottawa was raised and shaped by a community of strong, resilient women, and that upbringing has been a big part of how she shows up to the world today.
Speaker 2Yeah, for sure.
Speaker 4I mean my work is always about women, and it's always about It's always about.
Speaker 2Women in Africa.
Sometimes it's a bit more general than that.
Speaker 4But I have worked in Nairobi my whole life.
I've studied away from Nairobi, but always try to bring back my research and the questions that I'm asking to home and the woman that I've worked with in informal sentiments in Kenya.
But you know, that's just my research.
But how I approach studying and how I approach being in big institutions is definitely sort of inspired by how I was raised.
Speaker 2By my mom and my grandma, and I have like.
Speaker 4A thousand aunts.
Grew up in something of a matriarchy, I would say so.
Yeah, for sure.
Speaker 1You were raised in like a community of strong, badass women.
Speaker 4Yeah, and like really scary ones too, so like you look at them with a lot of love and admiration but also a lot of fear.
Speaker 1Audible works with virtual reality, so that means she has to be able to imagine worlds that haven't even been seen yet.
It's a spirit that drives her both personally and professionally.
Do you think that that sort of work has helped you kind of imagine a future where things can be better than they are?
Speaker 4Yeah, I think so, I would say so.
I think I've always sort of had that in me before I started playing on VR and AI, and I think those projects are sort of things that are already within me as opposed to things that have made me think a certain way.
And I don't know, I grew up just reading and listening to a lot of amazing women and men.
Actually, my grand both my grandpas are fantastic men and have been so influential in shaping Kenya and imagining Kenya differently.
Speaker 2Yeah, I would say it's totally in me.
Speaker 4And you know, when I wrote that, it wasn't even so much that I was so when I was sort of talking against my director.
It wasn't even so much that I was imagining a different future.
It was more like this current present is something is off, something is not right.
And everything I've been taught since growing up is if something's not right, you fix it or you say something about it, but you don't sit around and do nothing.
Speaker 1As a grad student in the Media Lab, Ottawa published a piece in the Tech MIT Student publication about the university's connection to Jeffrey Epstein.
In it, she called for the resignation of Joy Eto, the head of the MIT Media Lab.
Her piece ran weeks before Ronan Pharaoh would go on to echo her points in his New Yorker expose on September seventh.
The only difference is Ottawa called for Eto to resign, and after Pharaoh's piece was published, he actually did did you ever feel like people have an easier time taking this situation seriously when it's reported by a white man, I mean.
Speaker 2Yeah, for sure.
Speaker 4And I appreciate Ronan Pharaoh's work a lot, and we actually got to meet him and we kind of talked about this.
But you know, Senior Swenson, she was the real hero of the story.
I mean, she was the actual whistle blower.
And sometimes people treat me like I was a whistle blower when I didn't whistle blow anything.
I just have the same information that everybody else had and sort of said my opinion about it.
And for sure, I mean, even on the comments on my article, like there were so many comments I had to do with my race and ethnicity and where I'm from, as opposed to you know, not agreeing with me and my ideas.
It was very much like, well, you're not from America, you don't know what we're talking about.
And then Ronan Pharaoh writes this article, and of course everyone just jumped ship.
And you know, I totally understood my director resigning after that.
I was just more shocked of how many people said, oh, we were wrong after the article, because to me, it's kind of like we are.
Speaker 2He had that.
Speaker 4Information beforehand, and people had made up those decisions, their decisions to support him at that point, and it's only when a powerful and not just white man, they're a powerful white man writes about it that it's enough to sort of swaye people's opinions or feelings, or at least their vocal ones.
Speaker 1So I heard an NPR interview where you described your meeting with Edo, where he basically said, I agree with all the things that you're saying, all the things that you say.
Speaker 2I did.
Speaker 5I totally did.
Speaker 1You're completely right, except I don't think I should lose my job over it.
Speaker 4Yeah, And there were a lot of people who felt that way, and a lot of people still feel that way because he kind of was the heart of the Media Lab and a lot of people dependent on him for their projects, for funding, for you know, other people were coming into the Media Lab for the first time under his leadership.
So it makes sense that some people feel that way.
I think the Ronan Pharaoh thing was interesting because we had that conversation one afternoon, and then it was that same afternoon that Ronan Farrah's article dropped, So he between our meeting and him resigning was maybe four to five hours, like really not much.
Yeah, so you know, it was overall like really shocking, but to me that's again a power thing.
It's totally different situation if one first year massive student who you know has no power whatsoever, says you should resign, and it's a totally different thing.
If Ronan Pharaoh comes after you and he has a lot of mistake.
It's not just his job at the media leve.
He has a lot of venture capital and a lot of other endeavors that I think must have been in his head to protect.
But yeah, I mean, I don't know what it was that made him cave in at that moment.
Speaker 1It's easy to think about marginalized people who speak up in these situations as being fearless, but Ottawa actually remembers being pretty scared and doing it anyway.
She drew strength from the courage of other women and girls on the continent.
Speaker 4The fear I was feeling was actually from my mom because she didn't want me to write the article and I don't like disagreeing with my mom that we just did on this particular issue.
And she was coming from a perspective of fear or trying to take care of her baby that she was sent to America to study, like you know that she was scared that something might happen to my degree, or that I might lose my visa or something and not be able to finish.
Speaker 2But I don't know.
I didn't have that fear so much.
Speaker 4And I had just happened to be reading a really amazing book called Beneath the tamer And Tree, which is by Isshus to say of CNN about the Baccoharan bring Back our Girls story in Nigeria, and then amount of courage there was so wild that it just so happened that this is all happening at the same time, and I'm seeing myself as such a small player and seeing the thing that I want to do is not that big compared to some of the things that these girls went through and some of the things that they fought for against literal terrorists.
Speaker 2And I was like, Okay, if they have this.
Speaker 4Kind of courage to stand with a gun to their face and not change their religion because it's what they believe in, then if I believe in this thing, you know, the least I can do is say it with my chest, you know.
So that was how I was feeling.
So I was actually feeling like kind of empowered and inspired while I was writing it.
I sometimes describe myself as a radical feminist, but there's nothing.
Speaker 2Radical about it.
Speaker 4It's just that the word feminists sometimes seems radical to people.
But I just am a product of so many amazing women that it's not shocking that I search for even more inspiration from other women on the continent or on the world.
Speaker 1After her letter calling for Eto to resign was published, things got rough for Ottawa.
So what was the climate like for you at MIT?
Do you publish your piece.
Speaker 2Whom it sucked?
Speaker 4I mean, the very next day or the day after I published this article, like a website comes out saying resupport to retail and it's signed by like, you know, pretty much like every professor at the Media Lab, and it's signed by all, you know, my colleagues and all these people, and it's a direct response to my one article.
And so you know, it wasn't nice.
I was getting, you know, some not nice comments, but I was able to ignore most of them and feel okay.
But it really highlighted to me how fearful people can get when you speak the truth or when you say your own truth.
Because for me, a whole website springing up was like it's signed with all these hundreds of names just because one student wrote an article is shocking to me, and that student has no power.
Like I don't know why there was so much fear, so much anger, so much defense because nobody else.
There was lots of articles about it.
There was lots of articles that were very non partisan and saying what happened, but nobody asked for him to be resigned, to resign except me.
And it's almost as if like that one statement or that one article, like it was like away through the media lab and everyone was like pushing back, as if what I said might sort of break the whole media lab or make it fall apart, and some people till today, I think it's my fault, like for sure, and you know, there's nothing I can do about that, and I'm not going.
Speaker 2To sort of try to pander to those people.
But I don't know.
It just showed me.
It really taught me the power of words.
Speaker 1We'll be right back after this quick break, and we're back by establishing financial relationships with respected organizations like mit Epstein got powerful people, mostly men, to provide cover, protection and most importantly, reputational redemption.
Once you've got the protection of that kind of power, it can be hard to penetrate power.
Powerful friends, powerful names, powerful money.
All of it makes it harder for people who exist outside of that power to speak out about bad behavior.
Why do you think the media lab overlooked Epstein's crimes?
Do you think it was just the money and they didn't care where it came from, or do you think it was something else.
Speaker 4I know that some people knew and some people didn't know, so I can really only speak for the person that I know for sure knew, which is Joey, and the rest I don't know.
And you know, he wielded a lot of power in this lab.
We do know for a fact that there were people who who including my advisor Ethan Zuckermann, who spoke out and said that this was not a good idea and said that we shouldn't take money from Epstein, and they were ignored.
The hardcore truth is that money is power, and there is a massive incentive to ignore certain problems or ethics if you're going to get power by ignoring them.
I think the other thing to remember with the Epstein situation is that he wasn't giving the media that much money anyway.
I think a lot of the money that was an MIT report just came out on the funding issue, and we found out that Joey was actually trying to secure much bigger part of funding for his own venture capital funds, so huge incentive to ignore what was sort of on the surface.
And then the other thing is just I don't think men get it all the time, like I don't think I sometimes I really think that some people thought that it's just not that big a deal because they have no understanding on what that relationship even in and off itself, but without money means for the victims of Epstein's we have no idea how this consolidation of power represses the victims and silences them.
Speaker 1It only sounds like Epstein was trying to use his money to kind of create this cover so that if anybody ever tried to call him out on his actions, he could just be like, oh, well, look at all these powerful influential men I surround myself with.
Speaker 4In some ways was really smart because he didn't actually have that much money.
He wasn't a Bill Gates, but had enough to sort of know the right people and actually build a social circle around himself that included politicians, scientists, artists, businessmen, and it was so strong that everybody wanted to be a part of it, and it was Epstein's name that you had to know to get sort of in that circle.
Speaker 1Ottawa still thinks highly of MIT, but the backlash she faced for speaking out against joy Eto showed her that things are not always as shiny as they look from the outside.
Speaker 4And I think the media of you know, it's hard because I love this place, like I've had a fantastic two years.
I've learned so much, I've grown so much, and I wouldn't change it for anything, But I think this experience has just been such an example of that.
Because it's so shiny on the outside, like it's so glamorous, everyone wants to be here.
But that doesn't that doesn't mean that we don't have issues, institutional issues of power and race and class and all these other things that might make the place sound not so amazing.
Speaker 1Do you think that there should be more scrutiny on other powerful men who had like financial entanglements with Epstein.
I feel like a lot of them have sort of been able to skirt public scrutiny and like public question asking about what exactly their dealings with this person were.
Speaker 2Oh, yeah, for sure.
Yeah, I think.
Speaker 4You know from the out I mean, because I can't speak for much more than MIT, but I know, you know, even Harvard had relations with took a lot of money from Epstein, but they just declined to even talk about it, and so it just they sort of took the mom path and everyone forgot about it, whereas at amit it was so widely talked about.
And Epstein's network is so extensive that going through every single man who interacted with him, or a woman for that matter, actually who interacted with him and took money from him, and what they knew and how they knew it is extremely difficult.
So I don't know how to do that.
But there should be a way larger conversation around these networks of power, whether we isolate individuals within them or not.
And I think that also has a lot to do with who's willing to speak, who's willing to come forward with information, because the last way, you know, when we don't know anything, all we can do is speculate, and they have power, and that doesn't really work.
So yeah, I don't know.
I feel like everyone should be all accountable, for sure, but it's I don't even know where you start with Epstein.
Speaker 1You know, I almost wonder if this is part of the deliberate strategy of Epstein's getting his money in so many powerful places and hands and institutions that untangling it almost seems kind of impossible.
Speaker 4Yeah, And I'm a firm belief of nothing as impossible.
But you know, there's such a close link.
And I'm not saying that anyone who took his money did anything more than that, but there is, you know, especially with the people who are closer with him, there is a link with those people and victims, you know.
And I think right now what needs to happen is that the victims' narratives need to be centered, you know, and the people who have been hurt by Epstein need to have space to say, you know, this is how it was hurt, this is a feeling, this is what I need to recover and sort of if they feel up for it, these are the people who hurt me.
Speaker 1Beyond Epstein, it's hard to admit that people and institute that mean a lot to us are actually fostering abusive behavior.
Joey was a beloved figure at MIT, and that made it that much harder for the community to reckon with the fact that he enabled, benefited from, and covered up for an abuser.
Speaker 4Joey himself was a figure of so much awe and inspiration and resource to the media, lab, students, and faculty that people didn't want to believe that, you know, he had done this thing that they didn't agree with, And it was much easier if we just said, okay, Asha, let's sweep it under the rug and move on and pretend like this never happened.
And so I understand that to some degree.
But you know, the world is like constantly changing, and I think if you're sort of always that person on the bottom of the ladder in certain societies, like it's always it always comes from the bottom up, like it's always that change and institution is never going to happen by the people who for who the institution is working, and the media was working for me, it wasn't you know, I was having a great time, but I didn't have the same feelings about the director that most of my naysay has had.
You know, I wasn't actually giving up I don't know, funding for a specific project by calling him out, So in other ways it was easier for me than I you know, I get why it was easier for me than other people.
But for a place that calls itself the future factory, for a place that prides itself in imagining and creating the future literally, like, the standard has got to be higher, and it's got to be higher, not from a tech perspective, but from a human perspective too.
Speaker 6And so this is where it starts to look like the Academy Awards.
So first I want to invite up the winners of the two hundred and fifty thousand dollars Disobedience Award, the second largest cast prize at MIT, I would say, after the Levelson Award for Innovation.
So Tyranna Burg and Sherry Marts and Beth M mclough and purs come up with this award, we are recognizing their leadership and dedication in amplifying the voices of survivors of sexual violence and harassment, fom manning positive change towards gender equality, and demonstrating defiance in the face of oppression and apathy.
Thank you very much.
Speaker 1In twenty seventeen, MIT started the Disobedience Award, a yearly award given to people in tech who speak truth to power.
The award came with a two hundred and fifty thousand dollars No Strings Attached prize.
In twenty eighteen, it was awarded to me Too creator Toronto Burke, Beth Ann McLaughlin and Shara mart as representatives of me Too and the METO and STEM movement that highlighted people speaking up against sexual harassment in technology.
The physical award is a glass orb and in a particularly disgusting piece of irony because of his financial contributions to MIT, convicted sex offender and serial predator Epstein received a replica of that very award that same year.
Speaker 2Two.
Speaker 1I know you're in fere now, but this is where the story gets a little bit brighter.
My friend Sabrina hersy Lisa, is the kind of person I hope that you all have in your lives.
Mentor doesn't really cover just how impactful she's been in my own life.
She's a human rights technologist and the founder of b Bold Media, and Sabrina has never stopped uplifting other women or speaking truth to power, even when she gets shipped for it.
Sabrina had never spoken to Ottawa, but she did read her story.
Speaker 7A friend of mine sent me a link to Ottawa's off ed in the MIT student newspaper, and when I read it, I thought it was so At first, I thought this was so beautifully written, and it was written from a place of love and in leadership, and from clearly this was a voice of someone who cares deeply not just for women and children, but also for a community.
Speaker 5Then I saw the arc of how her off.
Speaker 7Ed was being received in MIT community and in the broader technology community, and that is when things started to not sit well with me in our in bridget our share of women in technology community.
I saw Ottawa's ap ed being received as like, this is a great call for a student, but it also I saw a lot of echoing of helplessness from very powerful women in technology, and a lot of ringing of hands and a lot of oh what do we do now?
Speaker 5Or I feel hopeless?
Speaker 7And when I read Ottawa's op ed, I felt the opposite of hopeless.
Speaker 5I felt hope.
Speaker 7I felt Oh, if this is what someone could say with so much to lose and so much on the line, then anything as possible.
And then I saw it absorbed in the broader public conversation around Epstein and MIT, and I saw Ottawa's being demonized and being framed at her I saw Ottawa's public leadership being framed as a problem instead of a blessing.
Speaker 5And I was not okay watching that.
Speaker 7I saw you know, Reddit forums where people were like, if she doesn't like it, she can go back to Africa.
I saw a lot of hate being seen on Twitter.
I saw so like the further the rings of influence went out, the more I saw this woman's brave call of public leadership being received, how most black women who are moral, who practice moral courage in public spaces being received.
Speaker 5And I was not okay with that.
Speaker 7And you know me, and you know I walked through fires in the past where that was the arc that played out, and I knew I could not in good conscious say that, do nothing and be okay with that, or say nothing and do it and be okay with that.
Speaker 1More, there are no girls on the internet after this quick break, and we're back, even though they had never met.
Sabrina was inspired by Ottawa's actions at MIT.
She remembered all the times in her own career that she's got against sexism and racism and got vitriol for it.
Speaking out takes guts and leadership, and Sabrina couldn't be watched the pattern of a woman without institutional power behind her being criticized for daring to speak up for what's right, even as Ronan Pharaoh was praised for doing the exact same thing.
And while his reporting was a big part of why do stepped down, it wasn't Pharaoh who was risking his personal safety by speaking up.
Speaker 2It was Ottawa.
Speaker 7The thing about this that really struck me was not just the vulnerability of her visibility, like when she did speak that step up and speak out and say something, she was met with not even no no support, but with a lot of hatred and anger, but the visibility of her leadership.
Speaker 5Win a white guy says the.
Speaker 7Same thing that she said, and he's not even a part of the MIT community.
His safety grown and girls, his safety was never going in question.
And I wasn't okay with watching yet another pattern of someone outside of a community and institution with prestige being validated as a legitimate voice.
I didn't want to be a I didn't want my silence to be complicit in continuing that pattern.
Speaker 1Sabrina thought that Ottawa should get some kind of recognition per action to MIT.
That's when Sabrina got the idea for the Bold Prize.
Speaker 7MIT has this thing called the Disobedience Prize.
It is a two hundred and fifty thousand dollars cash award, no strings attached, given to social change leaders who speak truth and power and practice moral leadership and ethics.
Speaker 5And I thought, MIT has.
Speaker 7No right to say what ethical leadership looks like if they are letting this man stay in this role, if they're letting this happen to young black women in their community.
So I was like, Hey, I have a voice, and I have power, and I can do something and I can say something.
I wanted this young woman to know that I see her.
So and then I was like.
Speaker 5You know what, why don't I give you an award?
Speaker 7So I said, would it be okay if I crowdfunded a leadership prize for you?
Speaker 5And she was like, that would be a really sweet, thank you so much.
Speaker 7I wrote a letter that you see on gooldprice dot com where I said that you know, I do not know her, but I admire her courage, and that I wasn't okay watching a young black woman speak up and leave with courage and not only not be seen, but also be harmed for it.
I think if we need to there's the world as it is and the world as it should be, and if we want to build the world as it should be, then we need to reframe what leadership looks like so that when these events happen, people like Ottawa are not seen as the bad actors.
They're seen as the future, and they're seen as world builders.
So I wanted to use my voice and my power and my relationships and resources to shift the conversation from blame to leadership, from the world as it is to the world that it should be, and that it is not just her right to speak out protect women in her community, but also it's within all of our abilities to speak out and do the same thing.
The other piece that I was that did not sit well with me was watching really powerful people that we both know not recognize their own power and agency.
So I want, I believe and the power of invitation.
And then I don't believe that they weren't doing anything out of malice or ignorance, but the fact that an opportunity for them to participate in something different and transformative wasn't there, so I decided to create it.
We are going to refashion the Disobedience Prize and we're going to make it the Bold Prize.
And I called it the Bold Prize for three specific reasons.
One, when Ethan Zuckerman first announced it and his thing.
That's when I was like, someone should give him an award.
The second thing.
In Ottawa's piece, she uses the phrase I stand by my advisor is Ethan Zuckerman's her advisor.
She wrote, I stand by my advisor and his bold decision to step down, and I was like, oh, that word bold.
And then three, when I was in a situation where I was speaking out against sexual misconduct and racial injustice, one of the people who were complicted and covering it up had the audacity to call me bold, And I thought to myself, Yeah, you know, I am bold, and maybe this wouldn't be so hard if more people were.
Speaker 1MIT's media lab is called the future Factory.
But to we even want a future designed by powerful people that would look the other way when it comes to abuse.
What kind of future would that leave us?
Speaker 7With?
The choices that m I T made to enable Epstein and be complicit and covering for sexual predator, those were deliberate decisions and choices that were made outside of a moral compass and so to somehow envelope that into like they get to be leaders on what ethics look like, and not only just what ethics looks like, but what the future can be.
Speaker 2It can be in a hold.
Speaker 7I don't want a future imagined by people who participate in.
Speaker 5Systems like so.
Speaker 7I want to build a future with leaders life Ottawa, who kid who not only made choices to do the heart see something hard, to do it anyway, but are willing to absorb the blowpack that comes with it because it's the right thing to do.
Speaker 1Through crowdfunding, Sabrina raised over forty thousand dollars for Ottawa as the inaugural recipient of the Bold Prize.
The average donation was seventy five dollars.
Speaker 2I was just so in awe.
I was like, oh my god, thank you so much.
Speaker 4But not just because I mean this was a stranger and not just any shoes, was a black woman as well, and had just somehow like seen my pain from far away or seen the struggle and was like I need to do something for this woman.
Speaker 2And so that was the true prize for me.
Speaker 4It was like how many people came together to support my voice when I had felt for a long time that I was on the outside of things.
Speaker 1I feel, just for journalistic integrity purposes, I should say I'm one of the fund I'm one of the donators of that.
Speaker 2Yeh.
And you know, I agree.
Speaker 1I thought the idea that Sabrina, who is this has been a really powerful force in my own life is personally would reach.
Speaker 2Out to you like that.
Speaker 1I thought that was so beautiful and it really goes back to what you were saying at the beginning of our interview about sort of being lifted up by this community of black women and lifting them.
Speaker 5Up as well.
Speaker 1Like it's just it is really special, and I think it was important for me, even though you know, you and I had never met, it was important for me to let you know that people out there had your back, We were rooting for you, like watching what you were doing, like what your your bravery and your courage reverberates.
You know, you never know who is you never know who is going to be seeing what you did, and that's going to be the reason why they speak up.
Speaker 2Thank you.
Yeah.
Speaker 4I think that's also been another like big thing that I've gained is you just never know who's life if you're going to touch, or who's who like way your words will reach.
And there's been so many like random people who were, you know, saying what you're saying, like oh, you gave me the courage to do this, or you gave me the courage to write this and to say this and whatever.
And I've been like, okay, like this can be a movement, like the Bold Prize can be a movement, Like it can be something that people aspired to get.
I didn't have a vendetta against Joey like personally either, so it wasn't like I won him fired or to resign and would only be happy once that happened, because clearly this issue was deeply structural within MIT as well.
So I felt vindicated after like maybe you know, time after when you know, with the Bold Prize and with the letters of support and you know, by people encouraging me to keep speaking my mind.
But we still have so much work to do, Like as an institution here.
Speaker 1What's your advice for other women about speaking truth to power even when it's tough.
Speaker 4The first is, I really think it is a lonely process and it isn't easy I you know, I learned that firsthand, and I think at this light sound like kind of mythical, But I think drawing power from others before you do what you need to do is so important because you're going to need so much energy to keep going and to like not backtracking what you said because people don't agree with you, and so like, if that's reading, or if that's talking to actual people, or if that's listening to Lizzo, like literally drawing power from other women in history and time, because there's so many who have done the thing that you want to do is so important, gives you stamina.
Speaker 1Institutions like MIT are powerful, but so are women.
So is community.
Women being in community with each other and lifting each other up and inspiring each other to speak our truths.
Well, that's powerful enough to create new systems, and women can envision bolder futures and brighter realities when we come together.
Got a story about an interesting thing in tech, or just want to say hi, You can reach us at Hello at tangody dot com.
You can also find transcripts for today's episode at tengodi dot com.
There Are No Girls on the Internet was created by me bridget Todd it's a production of iHeartRadio and Unbossed creative Jonathan Stricklet is our executive producer.
Tari Harrison is our producer and sound engineer.
Michael Almado is our contributing producer.
I'm your host, Bridget Todd.
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