Boing Boing Staging

Ex-Babes in Toyland bassist says her rape essay in Boing Boing was "catalyst" for getting kicked out of the band

Image: Ana Viotti/Flickr

Today, the City Pages newspaper of Minneapolis published an article by Jay Boller looking into why Maureen Herman had been fired from Babes in Toyland, the iconic punk band she’d been a member of since 1992. Maureen, a close friend of mine, told me a couple of months ago she’d been kicked out because of an essay she wrote in July for Boing Boing, titled “The Jackie Fox rape disclosure shows we still have a lot to learn.”

In the essay, Maureen wrote about Runaways bassist Jackie Fox’s revelation that she’d been drugged and raped by the band’s manager, Kim Fowley in 1975. Maureen wrote that Fox’s “rape happened in front a roomful of people, including two of her bandmates, Cherie Currie and Joan Jett. In the course of the article’s investigation and Fox’s disclosure, many bystanders have come forward, affirming what they saw and who was present that night in 1975.” (Disclosure: I’m also friendly with Jackie. She’s been to my house, we play in the same trivia league, and we communicate via email frequently.)

Update: Jason Cherkis of Huffington Post interviewed Fox about the rape:

“I remember opening my eyes, Kim Fowley was raping me, and there were people watching me,” Jackie says. She looked out from the bed and noticed Currie and Jett staring at her. She says this was her last memory of the night. Jett, through a representative, denied witnessing the event as it has been described here. Her representative referred all further questions to Jackie “as it’s a matter involving her and she can speak for herself.”

Maureen wrote in her essay, “With one nudge of denial from an iconic Joan Jett, we witness the beginnings of the public collapse of Fox’s credibility.” A short while after her essay ran on Boing Boing, Maureen was fired by Babe’s in Toyland drummer Lori Barbero and lead singer Kat Bjelland.

Maureen did not speak publicly about the reasons why she was fired, until December 21, when she posted a note of Facebook that said, “Despite the severe fallout from my own bandmates about writing the article, and it being the catalyst for me getting kicked out of my band, I regret nothing. I will never be silenced, by ANYONE.”

From City Pages:

In the comment thread of her Facebook post, Herman suggests that Barbero was uncomfortable with the essay in part due to her production work for Fea, a band signed to the label owned by former Runaways singer Joan Jett. Barbero says Herman taking issue with that arrangement “caused a little problem,” but ultimately was not the reason Herman was fired.

Drummer Barbero was quoted by City Pages as saying, “She’s so toxic, I could give a fuck what she says, to be quite honest. It just pushes my buttons, I guess. Over all these years I’ve realized the only thing I can do when anything is negative and toxic, you have to let it go. And that’s the reason we have to have a new bass player. It has nothing to do with rape. The relationship didn’t work out and we moved on, and that’s really the bottom line.”

The original version of the City Pages article did not include a statement by Maureen, because Boller had tried to contact Maureen through Facebook’s instant messaging service, and Maureen’s preferences were set to direct people not on her friends list to a page she doesn’t check frequently. However, Boller and Maureen connected later today and Maureen sent him a statement, which was added to the article:

“[At the first show back in L.A. in August] Kat gave me a list of seven grievances that Lori had for why I should be kicked out of the band,” Herman says. “The catalyst, Kat told me, was writing the article about Jackie Fox, because [Lori] felt that me being critical of Joan Jett threatened Lori’s business relationship, which I had no idea even existed.”

Among the other grievances, according to Herman: Use of psychiatric medication (“the height of ignorance,” says Herman, who has been sober for 12 years).

“With Kat’s help, I wrote a response to her grievances, trying to acknowledge my part in any of these things, and a willingness to try and work it out,” Herman says. “What I did not apologize for was the article, because there’s nothing to apologize for. Kat never wanted me out of the band. Kat tried vehemently to keep me in.”

Herman says she eventually reached Barbero by phone, and says she was met with the response, “Kat was supposed to fire you.” About a half an hour later, Herman says, she received a text from Bjelland reading, “Sorry, you’re done.”

(Image: Ana Viotti/Flickr)

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