Kantor's 2006 story, "On the Job, Nursing Mothers Find a 2-Class System", on the class gap in
breastfeeding inspired the creation of the first free-standing lactation stations, now installed in hundreds of airports, stadiums and other workplaces around the United States. She has reported on the treatment of women on
Wall Street and in
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church). Her story on
Harvard Business School's attempts to improve its treatment of women led to a discussion of gender at business schools (as well as class and money issues.) After it was published, the dean of Harvard Business School,
Nitin Nohria, apologized to all female alumnae for the negative experiences many of them had at Harvard and pledged to boost the number of case studies with female protagonists. Kantor has explored how technology is changing the workplace. In August 2014, Kantor's article "Working Anything but 9 to 5," about a Starbucks barista and single mother struggling to keep up with a work schedule set by automated software, spurred the coffee chain to revise scheduling policies for 130,000 workers across the United States. In the summer of 2015, Kantor and
David Streitfeld published "Inside Amazon", a 6,000 word article about the company's methods of managing white-collar employees. The article drew a response from
Jeff Bezos, broke the newspaper's all-time record for reader comments, prompted veterans of the secretive company to come forward about their experiences online, and sparked a national debate about fairness and productivity in the technological workplace. In 2016, Kantor co-authored "Refugees Welcome", spending 15 months chronicling how everyday Canadian citizens adopted tens of thousands of Syrian refugees. The series won praise from Canadian Prime Minister
Justin Trudeau, who called it "remarkable & very human." On October 5, 2017, Kantor and
Megan Twohey broke the story of three decades of allegations of
sexual harassment and abuse by the film producer
Harvey Weinstein. Their investigation documented numerous accusations, including from the actress
Ashley Judd, internal records and memos showing that Weinstein had harassed generations of his own employees, and settlements (including
non-disclosure agreements) dating back to 1990 that covered up Weinstein's trail of abuse. Weinstein was subsequently fired by the board of his production company,
The Weinstein Company, and his membership of the
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences was revoked in October 2017. Women around the world began coming forward with
accusations of sexual harassment and assault by Weinstein, sending shock waves through the entertainment industry. The discussion soon turned into a worldwide reckoning,
spread beyond the entertainment world, with women using the social media hashtag
#metoo (initially started by the American activist
Tarana Burke) to describe their common experiences, powerful men brought to account in a wide range of fields, and shifting attitudes and policies around the globe. Speaking on
Meet the Press,
Rich Lowry, the editor of the
National Review, called Kantor and Twohey's Weinstein investigation "the single most influential piece of journalism I can remember. It instantly changed this country." ==
She Said==