• Today in Trump news. Two stories about Donald Trump's behavior towards women bubbled to the top yesterday. The first was about the billionaire's alleged habit of "waltzing" into pageant dressing rooms while contestants were changing. The second directly contradicts the candidate's insistence that the actions he described in the Access Hollywood tapes—kissing and groping women without consent—were just "locker room talk." Two women have come forward saying Trump touched them inappropriately. • What genius came up with this? Gender clouds even our judgment of great ideas. A new study found that when a scientific discovery is described as being developed "like a lightbulb," it is seen as exceptional—but only if credited to a man. Women's ideas were only exceptional if "nurtured like seeds." As Cornell researcher and lead author on the study Kristen Elmore explains: "We associate the lightbulb metaphor with genius and we commonly think of genius as male." Fortune • When Hillary became "Hillary." This provocative feature posits that the span between Bill Clinton's 1980 defeat in the Arkansas gubernatorial race and his victory in 1982 was the time when Hillary Clinton took on the public persona we know today. Author Robert Draper calls her evolution a "collaborative creation by herself and her political enemies, both a reflection and a source of the uncertainty and mistrust with which the public has so often regarded her." New York Times Magazine • Rainmakers—or credit takers? According to a new survey, female partners at big American law firms still earn 44% less than their male counterparts. The data suggests that men make more because they bring in more big-ticket legal cases—or are better at getting credit for doing so. New York Times • She's on the case. Civil rights lawyer (and two-time delegate for Hillary Clinton) Gloria Allred has joined the lobbying effort aimed at persuading The Apprentice creator Burnett to release more unaired footage of Donald Trump. So far Burnett maintains that he "does not have ability nor the right to release footage." Fortune • Running Tinseltown. The Hollywood Reporter's new list of the 50 most powerful TV showrunners includes Rachel Bloom and Aline Brosh McKenna (Crazy Ex-Girlfriend), Tina Fey (Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt), Nahnatchka Khan (Fresh Off the Boat), and Shonda Rhimes (Scandal et al)—to name just a few. The Hollywood Reporter MOVERS AND SHAKERS: Facebook has hired Electronic Arts VP Rachel Rubin Franklin as the new head of Facebook Social VR. |