Monica Lewinsky, a former White House intern in the mid-1990s, said she may have taken more blame for former President Bill Clinton's affair with her, calling the whole thing "crazy," according to The Hill.
"I'm not saying I shouldn't have taken the blame, but not all of the blame," Lewinsky, 48, told Trevor Noah during an interview on The Daily on Comedy Central. "I definitely tried to take responsibility for these things."
"But the idea that I had more responsibility, more consequences, was much worse for me than it was for the most powerful man in the world, and some of the other people in the scandal are all 20 years older than me."
Lewinsky, who promoted her documentary 15 Minutes of Shame, added that the goal of the project, along with her production role in "American Crime Story: Impeachment," is to "get rid of what happened to me, so it can't happen to someone else."
It is reported that Monska Lewinsky had an affair with former President Clinton when she was 22 years old, and Clinton initially denied having an affair with her before he apologized for it, and the House of Representatives accused him of perjury and the withdrawal of confidence from him, but he was acquitted by the Senate.
Lewinsky had previously indicated that if her scandal with Clinton had occurred in the current era, where social networking sites and the "Me Too" movement, which calls on individuals to admit that they have been sexually harassed, would have been different, things would have been different, but she pointed out that the situation might not be better for her.
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