Ashton Kutcher and Mila Kunis Address Backlash to Danny Masterson Letters

Ashton Kutcher and Mila Kunis found themselves in a situation that those who followed Teflon's career did not expect: they had to apologize.

The couple's letters to Judge Charlaine Olmedo before she sentenced Kutcher and That '70s Show co-star Danny Masterson to 30 years in prison, arrested with two-count rape went viral after being shared with independent journalist Tony Ortega. And in both the letters and the apology video, there is an uncomfortable tone of overwhelming self-confidence.

Ashton Kutcher and Mila Kunis Share Apology After Writing Letters in  Support of Danny Masterson

“We support the victims. “We have done this through our work in the past and will continue to do so in the future,” explains Kunis with great confidence. While a couple providing mitigating information about a friend in order to potentially reduce their sentence is not an unprecedented step in the justice system, it does not create a feeling of “victim support.” Likewise, Kunis's assertion that "the letters were not written to question the legitimacy or validity of the jury's decision" conflicts unpleasantly with the repeated and aggressive emphasis in both letters on opposition of Masterson to drug use. Kutcher and Kunis apparently went so far as to say in writing that the claim that Masterson had used date-rape drugs in the two cases for which he was convicted was impossible. Damage control is one thing; A new legal dispute is something completely different.

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The video itself is a strange document of contemporary fame; Both stars were wearing rumpled T-shirts when they woke up, and Kutcher was unshaven and disheveled. If the goal was to give us a real dose of Ashton and Mila by immersing us in their world, then he was missing the point. The result seems to contain the conscious drama of two people who feel compelled to make their own hostage-taking video. (Or recall the 2020 “Imagine” video, in which disheveled celebrities tried to create their own reality, although Kutcher and Kunis were smart enough to participate in a parody of that video episode from the final season of “The Boys.”) in front to the same wall).

Both seem uncomfortable simply reading a script and moving from paragraph to paragraph, although, surprisingly, it is Kutcher who emerges as the more talented artist; Maybe it's because the couple gave him the easier parts, where he doesn't need to directly contradict the letter reader's conclusions. Kunis plays the role of a devoted documentary filmmaker, explaining how she and Kutcher respect the system and its judgment; Kutcher adopts a slightly more conversational tone, as if he's just trying to explain how things work to one of his children. The couple didn't eliminate Kunis by bending over to turn off the camera, and why would they? From your point of view, hanging up could mean the end of the conversation.

It is clear that none of them expected these letters to be read, and now they find themselves in an even more difficult position than during the entire process, especially at work. found retroactively. So far, the pair have made a graceful transition from teen idols to adult stars; Reunited years after starring in "That '70s Show" and after other corresponding romantic liaisons for both, the nature of their relationship tends to be described and greeted with a kind of soporific sentimentality. Obstacles, like when Kutcher's ex-wife Demi Moore wrote sarcastically about his treatment of her in his 2019 memoir, tend to resolve themselves as Kutcher continues to move forward. (At the time, Kutcher sarcastically tweeted, "I was about to push the button on a really sarcastic tweet. Then I saw my son, my daughter and my wife and I deleted it." Kutcher, an early adopter of Twitter, has always been an expert: this time he managed to defeat Moore and also become the tallest man.)

But the last few years have been a long season . consolidated tradition. The celebrity mentality has been re-evaluated and Kutcher and Kunis appear to have opened up. There are many early interviews from The '70s Show's heyday being examined for evidence to suggest an uncomfortable climate of sexualization on the set, where Kunis began working as a minor. While this can sometimes be exaggerated (a 2002 video of the two now-married actors joking about Masterson making a bet to get Kutcher to kiss Kunis has a light tone), it seems to be the counterbalance to that, which is what it seems like. try to do Kutcher and Kunis. SLOPE. Discover the most unpleasant fact for contemporary stars: even a movie star no longer has the power to create his own reality.