I tend to agree here. First, it's not really a #MeToo thing. It's a domestic squabble, not a workplace thing. Second, it sounds to me like two nutjobs who found each other and, three years later, one left. It could also be simple revenge; Hardwick's career is skyrocketing and Dykstra's is foundering. He may have been either cheating on her or getting ready to dump her so she attacked first. Either way, it's a screwed up situation. It wouldn't surprise me that Hardwick just happened to have bad timing in switching girlfriends.
Ever watch "The Walking Dead"? He hosts (hosted) the show that AMC spends 50% of the commercial break promoting, "Talking Dead", which comes on after The Walking Dead. Hes not all that interesting or funny but he says hes innocent and that means he is until his accuser can prove otherwise ...which she cant or hasn't yet.
Isn't it all too unsurprising that the "pound me too" thing has grown to include anything that makes women upset? Its like how racism used to mean wanting to string Black guys from lampposts and now it means asking them to buy something or give up the table. Pretty soon California is probably going to pass some sort of legislation that makes not "liking" a girl's facebook post a hate crime. And you know whats funny about all of this? If we follow the well-established leftist train of logic on matters such as these... ...males are eventually going to need "safe spaces" in the workplace (aka segregating male and female workers) in order to protect them from the consequences of unproven accusations, heh.
I've never heard of either of these people, but I read her little manifesto. If a guy tells (or implies to) his girlfriend that she better put out or he will break up with her then he's an *******. But if she agrees to it to maintain the relationship, then she is not the victim of sexual assault.