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Heroes alum Leonard Roberts blames racism and tension with co-star Ali Larter for his firing from the show


https://variety.com/2020/tv/features/heroes-leonard-roberts-ali-larter-1234854439/

In an essay Roberts wrote for Variety, Roberts says he and his on-screen wife played by Larter, had a "volatile relationship" on-screen that devolved so much that "it wasn’t long before art was imitating life, with me on the receiving end of pushback from my co-star regarding the playing of a particularly tense scene." Roberts also alleges that he and other minority actors were treated differently, including not having a meeting with the writers that was extended to the rest of the cast had and the relegating of Black adult series regulars to the back and sides of promotional photoshoots. Roberts says he was supposed to appear in the pilot, but his debut was pushed back to the sixth episode. Roberts says Larter "took umbrage with the level of intimacy being suggested between our characters." When he talked to co-star Adrian Pasdar, who also shared an intimate scene with Larter, Roberts found that she was more willing to collaborate with Pasdar. The whole situation made Roberts question why Larter "had exuberantly played a different scene with (Pasdar's) character involving overt sexuality while wearing lingerie, but found aspects of one involving love and intimacy expressed through dialogue with my character, her husband, disrespectful to her core. I couldn't help wondering whether race was a factor." Roberts was ultimately fired before Season 2. When Roberts met with creator Tim Kring and executive producer Dennis Hammer, he says Kring told him that "because of my co-star, he just couldn't make my remaining on the show work story-wise." Variety says it "corroborated Roberts’ account with 10 people who either worked on Heroes at the time or were contemporaneously familiar with his experience on the show. When reached for comment with a detailed summary of what Roberts wrote, Larter did not provide any comment, while Kring and executive producer Dennis Hammer both praised Roberts, and did not dispute his account." Variety said it "independently obtained a copy of an early draft of the Heroes pilot in which Roberts’ character is referred to as 'a white man’s nightmare.' The people Variety spoke with also confirmed that other series leads had conversations with the Heroes writers about their characters; that there were no Black writers on the Heroes staff in its first season; that Black actors were sidelined in cast photos; that Larter did not like working with Roberts; and that Larter was a divisive presence on set overall." In a statement, Kring said no cast member was written off based on their race, adding: "Looking back now, 14 years later, given the very different lens that I view the world through today, I acknowledge that a lack of diversity at the upper levels of the staff may have contributed to Leonard experiencing the lack of sensitivity that he describes. I have been committed to improving upon this issue with every project I pursue. I remember Leonard fondly and wish him well." Roberts said of his experience on Heroes: "In the years after my time on Heroes, the burden of carrying the secret of my experience had a profoundly negative effect on how I interacted with the world. Professionally, I struggled with an internalization of anger and defeat unlike any I had ever experienced in my career. Realizing I had no agency to demand anything from a work environment in which I was expected to perform left me incensed. Knowing that every other future work endeavor could potentially turn out the same way left me exhausted. Personally, carrying the burden led me to withdraw from colleagues, friends and loved ones, due to my belief that I was a failure for not being able to somehow just be 'better' and rise above it all. My voice felt muted and my light dimmed. Fighting against the isolation brought on by both was at times all consuming. I was ashamed and the shame I felt wasn’t the result of suffering the indignity, but, for a fleeting moment, actually being surprised by it. It would be 10 years before I would become a series regular again."

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What a dope.

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For all this guy knows, she and Adrian Pasdar were hooking up behind the scenes so it wasn't a big deal to do sex scenes with him. Or maybe she didn't like him personally. Maybe he was always looking at her or hitting on her on set. Or maybe she actually is racist. The fact of the matter is we're only hearing his side.

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http://www.agcwebpages.com/BLINDITEMS/2020/DECEMBER.html

181. ENTERTAINMENT LAWYER 12/17 **4**
https://www.crazydaysandnights.net/2020/12/blind-item-4_17.html
The producers of this back in the day network hit ("Heroes") who blew it in the second season, are going to regret throwing this B+ list actress (Ali Larter) under the bus in a recent article. She has so much dirt on things that happened to her and her now, very damaged A-/B+ list co-star (Hayden Panettiere) and other women on set. The producers will be lucky to ever work again. "Heroes"/Ali Larter/Hayden Panettiere (Ali Larter Responds to Leonard Roberts’ Accusations: ‘I Am Truly Sorry’)
https://variety.com/2020/biz/news/ali-larter-leonard-roberts-heroes-1234864677/

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Man, this is getting juicy now.

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She refused to comment on the original story and her new statement is a typical PR non-comment.

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I know. But that doesn't mean she's guilty of anything.

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I wish I could blame racism for all my problems and failures.

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That's the sort of rant that makes me assume the narrator was disliked because he was a jerk.

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Sounds like black fragility to me

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So now its about getting offended because hot women aren't attracted to you.. that's new. I must remember to use that for myself and make official complaint to the HR at a prior workplace as the office hottie wasn't into me or even acknowledge my email invite to a concert, instead hooking up with another guy in the office who was taller, better looking, better hair, had a better job, and most likely owned his own place (and went on to get married)

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At the risk of seeming like a clueless white man, this strikes me as an example of what happens when #MeToo and BLM clash.

Yes, there is a lot of white female racism that often gets overlooked, but in this instance, I honestly don't know what the accusation being levelled at Larter is. From Roberts' anecdote regarding the filming of an intimate scene between him and Larter on his first day on set, it appears to me that Larter's objection to the scene concerned how much skin she'd potentially be showing on-camera, rather than any issues with Roberts, her co-star, per se. Is it Roberts' place, as a man, to take offence when his female co-star has qualms, which she shares with the (presumably white) director, regarding potential exploitation? Sorry, but Roberts seems to be showing a lot of male entitlement here, and I'm shocked that Variety would validate this.

Maybe there is something more to the story than we're seeing in this article, but apart from unsubstantiated sources that Variety spoke with, there is NOTHING in this article, certainly nothing Roberts has said, which categorically demonstrates that Larter had any particular issues with Roberts, and that if she did, it was anything to do with his race.

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