Assholes: A Theory
certainly catches your attention, eh?

A special thank you to Aaron James for writing the book and John Walker for directing the documentary.
Have you experienced dealing with, working with, living with, having a boss or co-worker who is an asshole? How often do we make excuses for terrible behavior? Too often. This documentary is a powerful message of what happens when we fail to hold people accountable for their sense of entitlement attitude. If no one says anything then nothing changes.

It was a wonderful experience to be part of this documentary
and in keeping the conversation going on assholes/bullying. From my experience with 20 years of dealing with this is the same type of toxic person. Using humor we can make fun of what is happening and yet in reality it can lead to more serious and devastating consequences for victims, their families, co-workers and business reputation . Speaking from my own experiences with the RCMP over the years and a few ‘assholes’ it was in some cases life threatening.
Speaking up and keeping the conversation going is something I feel most passionate. To help others by encouraging them speak up, educate on what happens to victims and empower them to find their voice.
It is the ripple effect
of being willing to speak up for yourself and others than can change indifference to hope and end asshole behaviours.
Interviewed and sharing the airwaves with author/Professor Aaron James and Director John Walker on the show by James Borsa, Producer/host of CJUM 101.5fm/UMFM Campus Radio Winnipeg. Producer Nichole Huck with Opinions/Engagement and blue Sky CBC Regina-Saskatchewan 102.5fm/94.1 FM Saskatoon 540 across the Province.
Winnipeg Cinematheque showing Assholes: A Theory
Q & A with moderator Dave Barber.
In the words of Italian LGBTQ activist Vladimir Luxuria who is in the documentary, be the person who stands up for others and resist the river of indifference. This is the hope from the documentary to end assholery.