On Monday night, as soon as HBO finished airing "Leaving Neverland" — the two-part documentary in which two men detailed allegations of childhood sexual abuse by Michael Jackson — the network continued its Jackson coverage. This time, it was anchored by Oprah Winfrey.
Winfrey, in conjunction with her network OWN, hosted the hourlong special "Oprah Winfrey Presents: After Neverland," in which she interviewed the two men, Wade Robson and James Safechuck, and director Dan Reed.
The studio audience was made up of sexual abuse survivors, as well as their supporters and family members. Winfrey, who revealed on her talk show decades ago that she was sexually abused when she was young, said Reed's documentary did an excellent job of illustrating what she had always tried to explain — child sexual abuse is also about seduction.
"I know people all over the world are going to be in an uproar and debating whether or not Michael Jackson did these things and whether these two men are lying or not lying. But for me, this moment transcends Michael Jackson," Winfrey said. "It is much bigger than any one person. This is a moment in time that allows us to see this societal corruption, it's like a scourge on humanity. … If it gets you, our audience, to see how it happens, then some good would have come of it."
Winfrey also said that Jackson's estate has vehemently denied the accusations and called Robson and Safechuck liars. Jackson fans have also been vicious, as Winfrey also received backlash before the interview.
Here were three of the main takeaways from the hour:
1. A child's understanding of "abuse"
Winfrey started by discussing how the word "abuse" lacks accuracy, and that children often can't articulate abuse to their parents because they literally don't have the language to explain what happened, as they have been "seduced and entrapped."
"As young boys, these two men did not feel abuse until much later on in life," Winfrey explained, and turned to Robson, who denied abuse during testimony in a 1993 child sexual abuse case against Jackson that was later settled. "Were you thinking about it as abuse then? Did you know you were being abused and you were just defending Michael?"