Basically, the project mounted secured boxes in university bathrooms alongside resource brochures and reporting forms. When I was still at school, after my assault, I created an anonymous system called The Box Project that allowed women to report rape and assault without being blamed. Glock: Give us a little background on how you two met and became friends.Ĭlark: When I was a senior at UNC, Andrea was a first-year. This is not the path I thought my life would take, and it is certainly not for everyone. It started when I was a junior in college. Pino: We've been working with the film for two years. We've been on the road more than a month.Īnnie Clark: We haven't paid our Internet because we haven't used it.Ĭlark: Yes. Where: In Los Angeles, between flights, on their multistate speaking tour in support of the film and their nonprofit, End Rape on Campus (EROC).Īllison Glock: How has your life has been since the release of the film in January?Īndrea Pino: We've been traveling nonstop across the country, helping survivors, speaking at campuses.
Both attended the University of North Carolina. Who: Activists and heroes of the powerful campus rape documentary "The Hunting Ground," Andrea Pino, 23, and Annie Clark, 25.
The aim is to cover topics high and low, deep and less so, to present a fresh look at folks we think we know and meet some others we wish we'd known all along.
In this signature espnW column, Allison Glock sits down for a candid Q&A with a remarkable person or, in this case, remarkable people.