Sonam Kapoor Feels The MeToo Movement Is Being Trivialized
Sonam Kapoor is one celeb who does not shy away from giving her honest opinions. Recently, when Sonam was asked for her take on the MeToo Movement, she gave a brutally honest opinion again.
Sonam
Kapoor
is
one
celeb
who
does
not
shy
away
from
giving
her
honest
opinions.
She
is
often
appreciated
for
her
brutally
honest
opinions
even
if
they
may
sound
politically
incorrect
or
is
perceived
to
be
unpopular.
Sonam
recently
gave
her
two
cents
on
the
MeToo
Movement
which
has
taken
the
industry
by
storm.
It
has
led
the
film
fraternity
to
reflect
on
the
inside
reality
of
the
entertainment
industry,
things
that
used
to
be
brushed
under
the
carpet
until
now.
Read
what
Sonam
thinks
of
the
MeToo
Movement
now.
In
an
interview
with
Zoom,
Sonam
Kapoor
was
asked
what
she
thought
about
the
MeToo
Movement,
to
which
she
said,
"We
are
definitely
trivializing
it
(MeToo
Movement).
If
you
have
to,
you
have
to
do
it
with
a
lot
of
thought.
And
you
have
to
do
it...because
it's
become
watered
down
now.
It's
all
gone
and
unfortunately,
it
is
the
way
it
is.
We
need
to
be
a
little
more
careful
about
the
accusation
and
articles.
The
media
doesn't
realize
how
powerful
it
can
be."
The
MeToo
Movement
brought
to
surface
allegations
that
deemed
many
names
from
the
film
industry
to
be
sexual
predators.
Tanushree
Dutta's
allegations
against
Nana
Patekar
for
sexually
harassing
her
on
the
sets
of
Horn
Ok
Pleassss,
braved
many
women
to
come
forward
with
their
stories
of
victimization.
Alok
Nath,
Vikas
Bahl,
Sajid
Khan
and
others
were
named
by
many
women.
Even
a
respected
filmmaker
such
as
Rajkumar
Hirani
was
accused
by
a
woman
who
worked
on
the
crew
of
his
biopic
'Sanju'.
The
allegation
against
Raju
Hirani
led
the
filmmakers
of
Ek
Ladki
Ko
Dekha
Toh
Aisa
Laga
to
drop
his
name
from
the
film's
credits
as
a
producer.
Sonam,
who
is
part
of
the
cast
of
Ek
Ladko
Ko
Dekha
Toh
Aisa
Laga,
had
earlier
spoken
about
the
allegations
against
Hirani.
She
was
a
little
cautious
about
making
a
judgment
against
Hirani
in
this
case
as
she
knew
him
personally,
and
didn't
think
it
was
likely
that
he
would
have
done
that
from
what
she
knew
of
him.
"In
the
Me
Too
movement,
I
always
believe
a
woman.
But
in
this
case,
we
need
to
reserve
our
judgment.
Two
things
here
-
one
the
film
is
as
important
as
the
movement
and
second,
I
have
known
Hirani
for
many
years
and
I
respect
him
as
a
filmmaker
and
a
man," she
said.