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It’s been 133 days since Harvey Weinstein was outed as a serial abuser and harasser of women. Nearly every day since that story broke, more men in more professions have been accused of, admitted to, or denied shocking acts of aggression, exploitation, harassment, and prejudice toward women in the workplace.

No company is immune — including VICE. It has affected our workplace too.

Here and everywhere, people are doing what they always do to make sense of things: talking. To capture the kinds of conversations happening in America’s workplaces, we gathered lawyers, actors, technologists, construction workers, and hospitality workers, and asked them about the new reality of #MeToo: Women, Men, and Work.

VICE News spoke to teenage women actors to discuss the future of the industry where #MeToo began. They said they didn’t expect things to change quickly on set — or in the wider world.

”It’s sort of interesting when I've talked to other male actors who are my age about how shocked they are,” said 16 yearold Rowan Blanchard, who feels she is “immune” at this point. Blanchard, known for her starring role on the TV series Girl Meets World, has acted since she was five years old. “I fantasize about being shocked," she said.

“I had an instance where I witnessed somebody I worked with inappropriately touched someone else that I worked with who was a minor. I reported it privately to our showrunner,” Blanchard recounted, adding that she asked for her complaint to be anonymous. “The next day, nobody talked to me, and said that I was trying to ruin this person's career.”

The women also said that the #MeToo movement has put pressure on people to divulge private — and sometimes traumatic — experiences.

“I don’t shame any women who don’t say anything about it. It’s not their fault at all,” said Chloe Bailey, 19 years old, who along with her sister Halle, 17 years old, produces music under the name CHLOE X HALLE.

The Bailey sisters, who recently began acting, each participated in the panel. Neither said they had experienced or witnessed harassment, but they said the movement had instilled a deep sense of connection with other women in the industry.

Emma Kenney, the 18 yearold star of the TV series Shameless, opened up about difficulty in her private life, telling the panel she had been sexually assaulted twice during the past year and a half. Kenney said each instance occurred not on set, and outside of work. But Kenney said she felt compelled to share her story because she doesn’t want other women to feel alone.

“That's something I also want to say,” Kenney said. “That it's not always going to be a work environment.”

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