Here’s What Catt Sadler Told Us About the Rumored E! Boycott at the SAG Awards – golinmena.com

Here’s What Catt Sadler Told Us About the Rumored E! Boycott at the SAG Awards

While thousands of people hit the streets on the East Coast this afternoon to protest President Trump’s administration and come together for social and political change for the second year in a row, celebrities three hours behind on the West Coast were just getting started.

In Los Angeles, we hit the city’s Women’s March and caught up with former E! News co-anchor Catt Sadler, who was joined by other celebrity speakers like Natalie Portman, Allison Janney, Viola Davis, and more on stage.

Wearing a Rebecca Minkoff “Grl Pwr” sweater, Sadler, who recently walked away to much fanfare from her E! News job after finding out her male co-host was making double her salary, tells Glamour that this year’s march has particular meaning.

“It’s weird being on the other side,” she says. “I am humbled and I am honored to be on the stage with some of my heroes today…I don’t have it all figured out, but I now know that I have to use my voice like I did. And that’s what so much of this is about: women refusing to remain silent. Hear our voice.”

For Sadler, that means using her platform to help other women fight and achieve equal pay in the workplace. “I’m hearing from women saying I am going to walk away tomorrow or I’m going to go into my bosses office. I am going to ask what my male counterpart is making,” she says.

And though the mom of two wants to correspond with every single woman who’s reached out, she’s well aware of the time constraint. “That is why I want to stay out here and continue to shine a light,” she says. “It is not my story. It is one of millions. It just so happens that I have somewhat of a platform so I am using my voice for those that can’t.”

If you find yourself in Sadler’s former position and are inspired by her bravery, here’s what you should do. “If you’re stuck, it’s about engineering a really nice exit strategy,” she says. “You keep your head down, you do what you’ve got to do, but there are really good companies and places that you can call home where it will be different. I think, with every day that goes by, and the more we expose what is happening, I think change will happen.”

Sadler, unsurprisingly, isn’t interested in going back to her old gig, even if they offered her equal pay the second go-around. “I’m not looking in the rearview mirror anymore. I’m only moving forward,” she says.

As for the rumors surrounding an E! News boycott on the red carpet? She’s pleading the fifth. “I can’t confirm or deny that, but I hear rumblings,” she says. But that doesn’t mean she’s not totally on board. “I have very bittersweet feelings about somewhere I was for 12 years, you know what I mean? But if I thought that could make lasting change and make a much bigger impact on other women and their workplace experiences by them doing that? Then yes, I suppose I would.”

Reporting by Jessica Radloff.

Related Stories:

  • A Year Later, the Women’s March Is More Powerful—and Pertinent—Than Ever

  • The Most Powerful, Inspiring, and Savage Images From the 2018 Women’s March

  • Donald Trump Trolls Women’s March With a Predictably Selfish Tweet

Add a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *