
Weinstein's office kept a list of women ‘friends of Harvey,' an ex-aide testifies
Harvey Weinstein appears in state court in Manhattan in New York, Thursday, May 15, 2025. (Steven Hirsch/New York Post via AP, Pool)
NEW YORK — Harvey Weinstein 's assistants kept a list of female 'friends of Harvey' to invite to events and sometimes considered them a special category for guest lists, an ex-aide testified Thursday at the former movie mogul's sex crimes retrial.
'A 'friend of Harvey' was a woman that he'd meet at events or parties or festivals or — somewhere,' said Elizabeth Perz, one of his executive assistants from 2011 to 2013.
The then-married Weinstein asked his assistants to invite these women to events, Perz said. It was such common practice that Weinstein's subordinates had a shorthand: 'Might as well add a FOH column,' Perz advised colleagues by email as they discussed the attendee list for some 2013 awards-season events.
Jurors were shown a roster of well over a dozen names, which Perz said was kept in the office at Weinstein's now-defunct production company. The names were broken down by geography, such as 'LA Friends' or 'Cannes/Etc/all invites.'
One 'LA Friends' entry was Jessica Mann, one of the three women whose allegations are at the heart of the retrial.
Weinstein has pleaded not guilty. The once-powerful studio boss, who became a prime target of the #MeToo movement's campaign against sexual misconduct, maintains that he's never had sexual encounters that weren't consensual.
During the last five years, he was convicted of various sex crimes in both New York and California. But he's on trial again because an appeals court found that his New York trial was tainted by prejudicial testimony and overturned that conviction. He's charged with raping Mann in 2013 and forcing oral sex on two other women, separately, in 2006.
Mann, who was a hairstylist and aspiring actor when she met Weinstein in the early 2010s, is expected to testify in the coming days or week. The other accusers, Miriam Haley and Kaja Sokola, already have taken the stand.
At Weinstein's 2020 trial, Mann painted a complex and emotional picture of a yearslong relationship that began consensually but became 'degrading' and volatile and eventually exploded into rape. Still, she kept seeing him and sending warm messages because she wanted him to believe she 'wasn't a threat,' she testified.
Weinstein's lawyers at the time argued that Mann willingly had a sexual liaison with him to serve her acting ambitions. At one point during his defense's questioning in 2020, she began sobbing so forcefully that court ended early that day.
At the retrial on Thursday, jurors saw messages that Perz had sent to Mann about some Oscars-related parties in 2013.
'Harvey would like to extend an invitation to you' and a friend, Perz wrote.
The Associated Press generally does not identify people who alleged they have been sexually assaulted unless they agree to be identified, which Sokola, Haley and Mann have done.
Jennifer Peltz, The Associated Press
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CTV News
19 minutes ago
- CTV News
L.A. police swiftly enforce downtown curfew as protests against Trump's immigration crackdown continue
Protesters gather to denounce ICE, U.S Immigration and Customs Enforcement, operations Tuesday, June 10, 2025, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo / Damian Dovarganes) LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles police swiftly enforced a downtown curfew Tuesday night, making arrests moments after it took effect, while deploying officers on horseback and using crowd control projectiles to break up a group of hundreds demonstrating against U.S. President Donald Trump's immigration crackdown. Members of the National Guard stood watch behind plastic shields, but did not appear to participate in the arrests. Hours later, many of the protesters had dispersed, although sporadic confrontations continued that were much smaller than in previous nights. Officials said the curfew was necessary to stop vandalism and theft by agitators looking to cause trouble. Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom earlier accused Trump of drawing a 'military dragnet' across the nation's second-largest city with his escalating use of the National Guard. He also deployed Marines, though none were seen on the streets Tuesday. Newsom asked a court to put an emergency stop to the military helping federal immigration agents, with some guardsmen now standing in protection around agents as they carried out arrests. He said it would only heighten tensions and promote civil unrest. The judge set a hearing for Thursday, giving the administration several days to continue those activities. The change moves troops closer to engaging in law enforcement actions like deportations as Trump has promised as part of his administration's immigration crackdown. The Guard has the authority to temporarily detain people who attack officers but any arrests ultimately would be made by law enforcement. Trump has activated more than 4,000 National Guard members and 700 Marines over the objections of city and state leaders. They were originally deployed to protect federal buildings. Demonstrations have spread to other cities nationwide, including Dallas and Austin, Texas, Chicago and New York, where a thousand people rallied and multiple arrests were made. In Texas, where police in Austin used chemical irritants to disperse several hundred demonstrators Monday, Republican Gov. Greg Abbott's office said Texas National Guard troops were 'on standby' in areas where demonstrations are planned, Abbott spokesperson Andrew Mahaleris said Tuesday evening. Guard members were deployed to San Antonio, according to assistant police chief Jesse Salame. He said he did not know how many were sent or details on the deployment. L.A. mayor puts curfew in place Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass declared a local emergency on the fifth day of protests and said the curfew will run from 8 p.m. Tuesday until 6 a.m. Wednesday. She said it was expected to last for several days. 'We reached a tipping point' after 23 businesses were looted, Bass said during a news conference Tuesday. The curfew covers a 1 square mile (2.5 square kilometres) section of downtown that includes the area where protests have occurred since Friday. The city of Los Angeles encompasses roughly 500 square miles (1,295 square kilometres). The curfew doesn't apply to residents who live in the designated area, people who are homeless, credentialed media or public safety and emergency officials, according to Los Angeles Police Chief Jim McDonnell. McDonnell said 'unlawful and dangerous behavior' had been escalating since Saturday. 'The curfew is a necessary measure to protect lives and safeguard property following several consecutive days of growing unrest throughout the city,' McDonnell said. Trump says he's open to using Insurrection Act Trump left open the possibility of invoking the Insurrection Act, which authorizes the president to deploy military forces inside the U.S. to suppress rebellion or domestic violence or to enforce the law in certain situations. It's one of the most extreme emergency powers available to a U.S. president. 'If there's an insurrection, I would certainly invoke it. We'll see,' he said from the Oval Office. Later the president called protesters 'animals' and 'a foreign enemy' in a speech at Fort Bragg ostensibly to recognize the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Army. Trump has described Los Angeles in dire terms that Bass and Newsom say are nowhere close to the truth. In a public address Tuesday evening, Newsom called Trump's actions the start of an 'assault' on democracy. 'California may be first, but it clearly will not end here. Other states are next,' he said. Newsom warned people against inciting violence, but urged them to stand up to the president's actions. 'What Donald Trump wants most is your fealty, your silence. To be complicit in this moment,' he said. 'Do not give it to him.' The protests began Friday after federal immigration raids arrested dozens of workers in Los Angeles. Protesters blocked a major freeway and set cars on fire over the weekend, and police responded with tear gas, rubber bullets and flash-bang grenades. The demonstrations have been mostly concentrated downtown in the city of 4 million. Thousands of people have peacefully rallied outside City Hall and hundreds more protested outside a federal complex that includes a detention center where some immigrants are being held following workplace raids. Despite the protests, immigration enforcement activity has continued throughout the county, with city leaders and community groups reporting ICE present at libraries, car washes and Home Depots. School graduations in Los Angeles have increased security over fears of ICE action and some have offered parents the option to watch on Zoom. McDonnell said that police had made 197 arrests on Tuesday, including 67 who were taken into custody for unlawfully occupying part of the 101 freeway. Several businesses were broken into Monday, though authorities didn't say if the looting was tied to the protests. The vast majority of arrests have been for failing to disperse, while a few others were for assault with a deadly weapon, looting, vandalism and attempted murder for tossing a Molotov cocktail. Seven police officers were reportedly injured, and at least two were taken to a hospital and released. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth suggested Tuesday that the use of troops inside the U.S. will continue to expand. The Pentagon said deploying the National Guard and Marines costs $134 million. ___ Jake Offenhartz, Jaimie Ding, Lolita C. Baldor And Tara Copp, The Associated Press Baldor and Copp reported from Washington, D.C. Associated Press writers Dorany Pineda and Christopher Weber in Los Angeles, Amy Taxin in Orange County, California, John Seewer in Toledo, Ohio, Jim Vertuno in Austin, Texas, Hallie Golden in Seattle, and Greg Bull in Seal Beach, California, contributed to this report.


CBC
22 minutes ago
- CBC
How to Train Your Dragon: We can get one good live-action adaptation. As a treat
There are legitimate reasons to remake a movie. There are the remakes of old, unnoticed hidden gems — like 1999's Scarface or 2021's West Side Story — reinterpreted for modern audiences. There are the re-imaginings of non-English-language fare that, as in Martin Scorsese's The Departed, still find something new to say. And then, there are remakes like O Brother Where Art Thou: wild retellings so cavalier and intentionally uninformed, they can hardly be counted as remakes at all. The results, whether good or bad, typically wear that originality on their sleeves. But this week's big new release — How to Train Your Dragon — initially seems more like typical nostalgia bait than something remade for any legitimate reason. At least, that is, before you watch it. WATCH | How to Train Your Dragon trailer: Granted, the Dreamworks revisit of the 2010 animated classic hews particularly close to the original: It still follows a Viking teen, Hiccup, uncovering the secretly kind heart of the mythical beasts his brethren have been slaughtering for centuries. It even features some of the same cast (Gerard Butler returns as Hiccup's father, Stoick) and crew (composer John Powell and Canadian writer-director Dean DeBlois). But, one would wonder, doesn't it still have the same cold beating heart of all remakes of its type? And wouldn't it be doomed to the same fate? Soulless and average at best — plainly boring at worst — many remakes simultaneously insult the medium of animation, while also exposing the often horrifying realities of rendering cartoonish gags photo-realistically. Any yet, this time, one is left wondering something else: How did the new How to Train Your Dragon end up sort of … actually good? WATCH | DeBlois on live-action adaptations: Why director Dean DeBlois is 'not a fan' of live-action remakes 15 hours ago Duration 0:45 Avoiding the missing soul This is an uncomfortable admission for someone who can't stop complaining about the destructive neo-tradition of remaking cartoons as live action. But the first reason this movie works may be that its director felt the same: In an interview with CBC News, DeBlois was quick to point out his own antipathy toward live-action remakes of animated movies — how "they often miss the soul." To avoid that, his strategy was to deliver what's nearly a shot-for-shot remake. We are treated to a revisit so slavishly faithful that moments as small as Stoick brushing a burning ember from his cloak are recreated. Hiccup, this time played by The Black Phone 's Mason Thames, channels Jay Baruchel's Chandler-esque patter to an almost uncanny degree, while cannily seeding in virtually all the same jokes. And even Toothless — the catlike "Night Fury" dragon that Hiccup befriends and eventually chaotically defends against ignorant humans, Free Willy -style — looks virtually ported over from the 2010 version. And aside from mildly reduced expressive capabilities, that makes sense. The original's already digitally rendered, video-game-like dragons are more or less indistinguishable when CGI-ed into our live-action Viking paradise, while DeBlois years ago told the New York Times he aimed to ape real-world cinematography with these films. Thumpy realism That vision lends itself to the limited benefits 2025's version have over 2010's: The action-first set pieces hit harder when they're flying through the hauntingly beautiful rock spires of the Faroe Islands. And both chases and fiery fights pack an extra oomph when given the thumpy realism of, well, reality. It all culminates in a final boss battle that effectively makes a case for the rest of the movie. Those with megalophobia, look out: Our mommy dragon here looks and feels miles more gargantuan than the original's comparatively puny queen. But outside that hyper-specific improvement, it's also true this update does nothing better than the original. The few additions and changes are either too small to care about or too small to justify. WATCH | DeBlois on finding their perfect Hiccup: Director Dean DeBlois on casting Mason Thames as Hiccup 15 hours ago Duration 0:45 In an interview with CBC News, Canadian director Dean DeBlois shares how Mason Thames landed the role of Hiccup in the live-action remake of How to Train Your Dragon. DeBlois said Thames grew up with the character, even dressing as him for Halloween, which helped the actor understand and embody the role. While some side characters are given slightly more backstory, it's spread far too widely — and thinly — to do anything other than show how a less faithful reproduction could have actually found more opportunities to improve itself. There's the now-ethnically diverse Viking tribe — proudly highlighted in Stoick's opening monologue, then unceremoniously shunted off into the background, never to be reintroduced or talked about again. Or the shrunken romantic subplot between Hiccup and Astrid (Nico Parker) — ostensibly changed to give room for her character to grow, only for it to get clumsily reintroduced right at the end. Or how Snotlout (Gabriel Howell) now has a reason for his bullying: He's trying to earn his father's affection and pride. You'd assume this would lead to a climactic, character-driven moment where he earns his father's adulation, instead of essentially stumbling into a largely off-screen happy ending. Unfortunately, you'd be wrong. Less magic to miss Admittedly, these are minor complaints for a children's movie that already operates leagues above its low-effort (are you paying attention, A Minecraft Movie?) contemporary fare. But it doesn't quite answer the question: Why does a movie that's already in English — and whose most recent sequel came out just over five years ago — need a remake that does virtually nothing to reinterpret the original? There are various possible excuses. DeBlois's passion for the story is clearly evident. There's the improved action in an already action-oriented film, and we can forgive the relatively minor missteps in between. But maybe, it's also something a tad more pessimistic. Because as Pixar's 3D style has come to dominate so successfully over dust-binned 2D, we have now reached the point where our animated remakes have exhausted timeless IP like The Jungle Book and Snow White, and must now draw from a decade where animated films were virtually indistinguishable from high-budget video-game cut scenes. So, as adequate and exciting as How to Train Your Dragon is, maybe its passing grade doesn't come from anything extra it offers. Maybe, there's just less magic to lose.


National Post
an hour ago
- National Post
Daily Horoscope - Wednesday, June 11, 2025
Moon Alert Avoid shopping or major decisions from 3:30 PM to 10:30 PM EDT today (12:30 PM to 7 PM PDT). After that, the Moon moves from Sagittarius into Capricorn. Note, the Full Moon in Sagittarius peaks at 3:44 AM EDT (0:44 4 AM PDT). Article content The Stars Rate Your Day 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive; 3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult Article content Aries (March 21-April 19) **** You feel restless today. You want to get outta Dodge. Obviously, if you can travel, or take off somewhere that would be ideal. However, you can also do other things to change things up a bit. Vary your daily routine. Go someplace you've never been before. Do something. Article content Article content Taurus (April 20-May 20) *** Negotiations about shared property, finances, taxes, debt and banking will go well today, because you have fair Venus in your sign, which makes you diplomatic and charming with everyone. Be patient with increased stress and activity on the home front. You've got this. Article content Gemini (May 21-June 20) *** Today you have to go more than halfway when dealing with others, which means you have to compromise. You have to be easy going and perhaps bite your tongue. Hey, you can do this because with the Sun in your sign, you're empowered! Article content Cancer (June 21-July 22) *** Today you might find yourself in a position where you have to help someone, or put the interests of someone else before your own. (It's just what it is.) Be accommodating. Fortunately, relations with friends and organizations are excellent today. Article content Leo (July 23-Aug. 22) **** Thank goodness it's the end of the week because you're ready to play! Competitive sports will appeal because fiery Mars is in your sign. Plus, bosses and parents look kindly upon you. You're in the zone! Article content Article content Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) *** Home, family and your private life are your focus today. It's the end of the week, and you want to kick back and relax among familiar surroundings. Nevertheless, you look good in the eyes of bosses and VIPs. Time spent with younger people will be stimulating. Article content Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) **** Today you want to express yourself to someone because you want to be very clear about something. Fortunately, discussions with parents, bosses and VIPs will go well. Meanwhile, gifts and goodies might come your way. (Looking good!) Article content Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21) *** Your exchanges with partners, spouses and close friends will be pleasant and mutually supportive today. That's nice. You might make travel plans or explore avenues for further schooling or training, because your ambition is aroused. Factoid. Organize your money and belongings. Article content Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) **** Today the Moon is in your sign, which will make you a bit more emotional than usual. However, when this happens (and it occurs for about two days every month) it slightly enhances your good fortune. Therefore, go after what you want. Why not ask the universe for a favour?