X

Ambush: A&E’s ‘8 Minutes’ Completely Misunderstands the Reality of Sex Workers

Another look at the revolting television program we first examined last December from  at New Republic

In the new A&E program 8 Minutes, premiering April 2, sex workers are lured to a location under false pretenses by an unscrupulous man with an agenda.

Instead of finding a client, though, the women find Kevin Brown, a cop/pastor who is enjoying a second career in “rescuing” sex workers after spending 20 years in law enforcement. When Brown confronts them, a hidden camera crew flanks him, along with former sex workers whom he has “rescued,” and law enforcement officers, who are standing by in case things escalate.

The show’s title refers to the eight minutes that Brown claims it takes him to talk a woman out of doing sex work. It is an ambush that eerily mirrors the vulgar fantasies that play out in so many hypothetical scenarios that anti-trafficking advocates recount as if they were fact. “He doesn’t pull any punches in his shock therapy,” producer Tom Forman told Entertainment Weekly, apparently unaware of the irony of subjecting sex workers to rhetorical shock therapy when purporting to remove them from coercive situations.

The belief that a strange man in a hotel room can make a more convincing case for quitting sex work than the endless social messages and legal statutes condemning workers is the height of arrogance. The mistake that so many people make—and, in turn, the mistake that 8 Minutes makes—when they implore sex workers to quit: they emphasize leaving sex work while ignoring the very real economic consequences.

Continue reading…

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Spread the love
Mikey South:

View Comments (3)

  • I got a call from this guy obviously before they shot the show. They actually asked me if I would take people who called our hotline for help and send them over to their hotel room where they would be "staging" this "intervention". I was completely speechless. First of all, I've been training people since 1987 - and I don't remember any trainings I ever gave this guy. Then they're telling me how this guy felt "bad over the way he treated prostitutes as a cop" and how once he retired he "found God" and that this was how he wanted to "make amends". I said simply - if he wanted to "make amends" then how about him finding out how we're helping prostitutes leave the industry and find recovery effectively? Nope - wants to do things "his" way. So I asked him questions like where would these women be taken to exactly? A house he owns out of state. What type of security does this house have? Security? What security? I asked what type of training his therapists had to be working with these women and it was like "training? what training?" I asked if I could see a background check on this guy - and of course they balked. I asked if I could see the property that he's taking them to and meet with the therapists that are supposedly going to work with them - and oh boy did that one not meet with a warm reception. Considering the amount of women I've talked to over three decades now that report to me being sexually assaulted in drug treatment programs, shelters, programs that supposedly help prostitutes, and now I'm getting reports that three so called "rescues" are actually fronts for trafficking rings - you betcha I want to check this guy out. They couldn't get off the phone fast enough. Texas happens to be a "two party" consent state - meaning that they have to obtain permission from the people they're taping BEFORE they start recording. I think I need to go see about typing up an injunction against this show. I got stuck cleaning up the mess from A&E's show they did with Annie Lobert and I'll be damned if I'm going to get stuck cleaning up the mess from this guy while he dances off with another movie and book deal!

Related Post
Leave a Comment