Crime Neil Gaiman Accused of Sexual Assault, Author Denies Allegations

Acclaimed author Neil Gaiman is facing multiple allegations of sexual assault, making him the subject of a police complaint in New Zealand. Gaiman has offered a response as well, refuting the accusations.

Per Tortoise Media, two women have accused Gaiman of sexual assault while in consensual relationships with the author. The allegations go back two decades, but they were first reported on in Tortoise's podcast Master: the allegations against Neil Gaiman, which was released on Wednesday. The women describe allegations of "rough and degrading sex," alleging that these instances were not always consensual.

One of the two accusers, a 23-year-old woman named Scarlett, claims she was sexually assaulted in February 2022 just hours after first meeting Gaiman. According to Scarlett, the assault happened in a bath at Gaiman's New Zealand home where she was hired to work as a nanny for his child. Gaiman says that the two merely "cuddled" and "made out" that day, adding that a three-week sexual relationship ensued, but was entirely consensual. Scarlett insists that Gaiman was "rough and degrading," and reportedly, messages, notes, and accounts from friends support her allegations.

Another accuser, identifying herself as K, says she was an 18-year-old fan when she first met Gaiman at a book signing in Sarasota, Florida, in 2003. K claims that she began a romantic relationship with Gaiman after she turned 20, resulting in engaging in rough sex that she "neither wanted nor enjoyed." It's alleged that one particular incident saw Gaimain forcefully penetrating K despite her objections.

Gaiman has denied this claim as well. The Sandman author maintains that his relationship with K was never unlawful and that he's "disturbed" to be accused of such behavior. According to Gaiman, K's allegations stem from "regret" over the relationship she had when it was over. He also attributed Scarlett's allegations to a condition she has that's associated with false memories, but the Tortoise report noted that this isn't supported by the accuser's medical records.

Additionally, Gaiman has strongly denied all allegations of non-consensual sex at any time with the women accusing him of sexual assault. He also claimed that New Zealand police ignored his offer for assistance with one woman's complaint in 2022, suggesting that shows a lack of substance in the investigation. New Zealand officers have responded by saying they made a "number of attempts to speak to key people as part of this investigation and those efforts remain ongoing." It was added that there are "a number of factors to take into consideration with this case, including location of all parties.”

Gaiman has long been one of pop culture's most revered authors, bringing to life acclaimed stories like The Sandman, Good Omens, and American Gods. Just recently, Netflix has been promoting the upcoming second season of The Sandman, which is based on Gaiman's source material; he also executive produces the series.

Source/Archive

________________________________________________________________________

Honestly while Gaiman was not on the top of my "insufferable and terminally overhyped geek culture retards I cant wait to get outed as sex predators for my own amusement" list (currently being topped by Wil Wheaton followed by Alan Moore) I cannot deny feeling that little bit jollier with the thought I may never have to hear him mentioned again
 
He also bankrupted Todd McFarlane over not getting consistent enough royalty payments over some stupid musclewoman character he made up when he was guest-writing Spawn.

Angela ( now Angela Queen of Hel), it had a reboot around 2016 and it's where Odin says [unsolicited opinions on Israel]...

1720169194767.png
 
I'll accept the correction. I was perhaps trying to balance my criticisms out of rhetorical habit. Thinking back to works of his I read (Good Omens, because I liked Terry Pratchett as a child, Sandman because I fell for a goth girl as a teenager, Coraline for reasons unknown...) and thinking them over none of them have exceptional structure and the best is Good Omens which Pratchett co-wrote. Fair enough - I'll concede it.
In my humble opinion, Gaiman strong point as writer is a very British one, which I call "elegance". It's this witty, humoristic and amicable thing I only ever saw in English literature. Jones books are filled with it, Tolkien writings had it like butter in croissant, and Gaiman has a teeny tiny sparkle of it. He is also an experienced mature writer, a king among peasants in comparison to modern writers.
Diana Wynne Jones (RIP) is my favourite children's author and her books were very important to me as a child. The Ogre Downstairs or Wilkin's Tooth were much needed sources of happiness for me as a child. Some people might know her work via the adaptation Howl's Moving Castle. Fond memories of her stories.
I read almost everything Diana wrote, and I love gifting her books to people. RIP
 
Last edited:
Finally found / (https://archive.is/ZtYac) what I was looking for...
1720177880581.png
It was bugging me that I couldn't find any direct evidence of him hoisting himself on his own petard. I was starting to think he had baleeted this sort of thing. (I do know he was a big defender of Amber Heard, but I can't be bothered to go down that rathole to any great degree.)
 
He also bankrupted Todd McFarlane over not getting consistent enough royalty payments over some stupid musclewoman character he made up when he was guest-writing Spawn.
Actually he was getting pretty consistent royalty payments. His complaint was that Todd was all 'Oh, Creator Owned. Everything split 50/50' at first, but when at least two (Angela and Cogliostro) of the characters Gaiman co-created started to become relatively popular and essential to the Spawn mythos, Todd was all of sudden like 'Oh, Work-For-Hire. I own them. You won't be doing Angela meets the Justice League'
 
Finally found / (https://archive.is/ZtYac) what I was looking for...
View attachment 6157195
It was bugging me that I couldn't find any direct evidence of him hoisting himself on his own petard. I was starting to think he had baleeted this sort of thing. (I do know he was a big defender of Amber Heard, but I can't be bothered to go down that rathole to any great degree.)

A guy that believes all women/victims/survivors of sexual assault is accused of sexual assault so if he were to practice what he preaches, he must believe his victims.

You just love to see it.

Twitter people should tweet his tweet at him.
 
I really liked the Watchmen movie though. Moore hated it, I think.
Moore never saw it. To be fair, I didn't care for it, think Zack Snyder's a hack and don't think he was the right person to handle that material
I actually think Zack Snyder was the perfect person to handle Watchmen. I read the original comic beforehand, and then watched the Ultimate Cut, and I don't know what the fuck is up Moore's ass, the movie is actually pretty damn faithful. Although that could change with the animated adaptation coming out, which is admittedly how it should've been done in the first place.
 
American Gods is still amazing although the sequel was bad. I do a yearly reread because the story and the world are so compelling.
It’s okay at best. I’d probably have a better opinion of it if I read it when I was twelve (i.e. in the context of the turn of the millennium), but even a decade out the way it portrays the new gods was already dated. That’s not getting into the issue that the way it’s structured have all the trappings of Gaiman being a comic book writer, which works when you have visual elements to aid in identifying characters but falls flat in a purely prose medium. It also has the same issue a lot of modern era writing has, wherein it draws attention to the flaws in its writing in a self-serving bid to make meta commentary rather than making the effort to iron out said flaws.

I actually think Zack Snyder was the perfect person to handle Watchmen. I read the original comic beforehand, and then watched the Ultimate Cut, and I don't know what the fuck is up Moore's ass, the movie is actually pretty damn faithful. Although that could change with the animated adaptation coming out, which is admittedly how it should've been done in the first place.

The only good adaptation of Watchmen, including the original comic:
 
"Jesus has lots of different versions, aren't I clever?!?!" No Gaiman you fucking hack, because no one else has different versions despite being as equally spread out over various cultures. You just have this twitter libshit faggot need to bash christianity and it's BOOOOORRRIIIIINNNGGG!
Shadow visits Iceland in the epilogue and Icelandic Odin is there. Hasidic God is also alluded to and there's a Muslim Jinn that's gay. It's American Gods, the main religion of America is Christianity so it makes sense that there's different versions of Jesus.
 
No wonder the television adaptation of American Gods was so different from the book...

Exactly what I thought this was, as annoying as I find latter-day Gaiman: hoes want rough sex with a famous rich guy, then decide later the "power imbalance" that turned them on meant it was ACKSHUALLY rape. She enjoys the contact high of sex with a famous guy going, and enjoy the contact high of accusing the famous guy of rape as she's leaving. Many such cases. Sad!

LMAO @ "he waited until she was 20" or whatever the line was. 18 year olds are legal adults. Deal with it.

Do not stick your dick in crazy, even if you're an idiot with an "open marriage."
I bet these bitches we’re telling these stories as boasts over the years until a therapist kept telling them they were raped.
 
I bet these bitches we’re telling these stories as boasts over the years until a therapist kept telling them they were raped.
Reminds me of the story Max Landis tells about a girl talking about how Max Landis tried it on with her whilst not actually realising that the man standing there in the group she was telling was, in fact, Max Landis.

Max Landis is a pretty talented guy - he did the Netflix Dirk Gently series and, though it wasn't really my sort of thing, the Bright movie with Will Smith. He got cancelled at the peak of Me Too era largely because of the actress Anna Akana.

Who here interviewed by her increasingly uncomfortable boyfriend expounds on how she fantasizes about raping someone if only she could get away with it:
 
I actually think Zack Snyder was the perfect person to handle Watchmen
I disagree strongly. He's a glorified music video director. 300 is about his speed (and even that he turned into an over-acted, unintentional comedy). Anything more complex, he demonstrates his illiteracy and inability to grapple with complex themes
I read the original comic beforehand, and then watched the Ultimate Cut, and I don't know what the fuck is up Moore's ass, the movie is actually pretty damn faithful.
Yeah any idiot can take what's in the comic and just film it. Moore's point is that a lot of the elements do not work for film. Stuff like Under the Hood and the Tales of the Black Freighter, they do not work for film, they work because it's a comic. Because you the reader control the pace of the narrative and because you the reader are able to get that depth from seeing Moore experiment with different genres and different types of storytelling all in this one comic.

Yeah, you can include them in a film. But it's not really the same thing. Most viewers would be wondering why the fuck they're seeing stuff like the Under the Hood or Tales of the Black Freighter segments in the film. Also, the Tales of the Black Freighter is supposed to be an allegory of Adrien Veidt's journey and it's supposed to reflect the ending (I think it's said elsewhere in the comic that the Space Squid idea came from a pirate comic). These are all things that are blunted because Zack Snyder in his infinite wisdom said 'Space Squid is stuuuupid'

It's clear from the Watchmen movie that, rather than being a mature meditation on power, Watchmen to Zack Snyder is just another superhero comic, except more violent. And they swear. And sometimes they fuck
 
Reminds me of the story Max Landis tells about a girl talking about how Max Landis tried it on with her whilst not actually realising that the man standing there in the group she was telling was, in fact, Max Landis.

Max Landis is a pretty talented guy - he did the Netflix Dirk Gently series and, though it wasn't really my sort of thing, the Bright movie with Will Smith. He got cancelled at the peak of Me Too era largely because of the actress Anna Akana.

Who here interviewed by her increasingly uncomfortable boyfriend expounds on how she fantasizes about raping someone if only she could get away with it:
I wondered how these clearly crazy bitches get away with this whilst being clearly toxic and crazy, then I googled pictures of her and though, “I can fix her.”
 
Back