Monica Lewinsky was never supposed to survive this. At 22, she was dragged into a global scandal, mocked, shamed, and turned into a punchline by people twice her age. Now, at 51, she’s rewriting the story that nearly destroyed her. In a raw confession, she admits love, power, abuse—and the brutal cost of public sham… Continues…
Three decades later, Monica Lewinsky is no longer the silent center of someone else’s scandal; she is the narrator of her own life. On Elizabeth Day’s How To Fail podcast, she speaks with a clarity she never had the chance to show at 22, describing what she felt then as a young woman’s love tangled with a devastating abuse of power. The age gap, the Oval Office, the imbalance between a global leader and an intern—none of it is abstract to her anymore. It is the architecture of a trauma she had to painstakingly dismantle.
She also confronts the cruelty that followed: late-night jokes, headlines that spat her name, a culture eager to punish the young woman and protect the powerful man. Yet her voice today is steady, even generous, as she talks about shame, survival, and the right to evolve beyond a single, weaponized mistake. In reclaiming her story, she exposes not just what happened to her, but what it says about all of us.
