
On the Media Influencers Usher In A New Era For #MeToo
33 snips
Apr 18, 2026 Ivan Nagy, Hungarian political journalist and Delacorte Fellow, on reporting under Orban, surveillance of reporters, and Hungary’s surprise political shift. Melanie Mason, POLITICO’s California bureau chief, on how influencers and a whisper network surfaced allegations against Rep. Eric Swalwell and what that moment means for MeToo’s next phase.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Influencers Fast‑Track MeToo Reporting
- Influencers can accelerate accountability by acting as intermediaries between survivors and reporters.
- Melanie Mason described Ariel Fodor and Cheyenne Hunt gathering tips and funneling survivors to CNN within days, compressing trust-building.
Operative's Viral Post Sparked Private Vetting
- Mike Trujillo's viral December post kept alleging Swalwell slept with interns and harassed women, forcing conversations among power brokers.
- The post got 140,000 views, was pulled after a cease-and-desist, yet pushed endorsers to privately vet Swalwell.
Forceful Denials Can Temporarily Protect Politicians
- Direct, emphatic denials from a politician can persuade endorsers and staff to believe them in the absence of corroboration.
- Mason noted Swalwell denied allegations so emphatically his senior (mostly female) staff initially felt satisfied until news reports appeared.




