
The California Department of Fair Employment and Housing alleged that Blizzard Entertainment (a subsidiary of Activision Blizzard) fostered a “pervasive frat boy workplace culture” where managers led employees on drunken “cube crawls” to harass and grope female employees, where pay discrimination was rampant, and where those who spoke up against the behavior were punished.
And the Wall Street Journal last November reported that Bobby Kotick, the longtime Activision Blizzard CEO, knew for years about sexual-misconduct complaints, including alleged rapes, but he chose not to inform the board of directors about everything he knew, even after regulators began investigating the incidents in 2018. In September 2021 he was subpoenaed in a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation into how the company handled reports of misconduct and disclosed them to the public. One day after the WSJ reported the subpoeana, Activision issued a press release titled "Update on workplace initiatives" that states "we continue to work in good faith with regulators to address and resolve past workplace issues, we also continue to move ahead with our own initiatives to ensure that we are the very best place to work. We remain committed to addressing all workplace issues in a forthright and prompt manner."
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Blizzard employee Christine made public in an Instagram video the sexual harassment she has put up with over four years, but her career started out as a "dream job." Bloom demands from Blizzard an “expanded victim compensation fund in excess of $100M,” a real apology to Christine and the many other victims, and a neutral, third-party review “of the career damage employees like Christine have endured.”