Kathy Griffin has come back with a vengeance — literally — since her bloody-Trump-head picture and its aftermath almost cost her her career in 2017. Since attempts to silence her were made by the president and even people in entertainment (mostly men), Kathy Griffin 2.0 has come out swinging, defending not only her right to free speech but defending the women in entertainment who still have to cede control to men in power.

Case in point is the Twitter thread she unleashed last night, shortly after it was announced that Les Moonves was leaving CBS after another New Yorker story from Ronan Farrow detailed more stories of sexual misconduct by the network’s CEO. The entire thread can be found at this link, but here are a couple of highlights:

In one eyebrow-raising part of the thread, Griffin talks about how she wanted to be considered as one of the candidates to replace Craig Ferguson on The Late Late Show, a job that eventually went to James Corden. According to her agent, Moonves had no intention of hiring a woman for that spot; even though he may have interviewed one or two for the job, it was all for show.

Earlier in thread, she mentioned that she reached out to Julie Chen, Moonves’ wife and the host of The Talk to talk about her comeback and not even mention Moonves or CBS. She never got a response, but Yashar Ali’s HuffPost piece about Moonves’ desire to ruin Janet Jackson’s career after the infamous 2004 Super Bowl halftime “wardrobe malfunction,” and a clip from The Talk where Chen talks about Jackson knowing what her husband was doing, led Griffin to screenshot this text to Chen:

Finally, she again reprinted the letter from a CBS board member that begged her to apologize to President Trump, even going so far as compose the letter she should send, ending the e-mail with the all-caps warning, “IF YOU DON”T DO EXACTLY WHAT I HAVE WRITTEN, YOUR CAREER IS OVER.”

The reason why Griffin’s comeback has been so successful is because she’s been willing to throw those firebombs, figuring her career couldn’t get damaged more than being questioned by the secret service and having supporters of Trump send her death threats. Despite the efforts she and many others have made to bring to light the issue of men in entertainment wielding control over women, she feels that things won’t change anytime soon:

Joel Keller (@joelkeller) writes about food, entertainment, parenting and tech, but he doesn’t kid himself: he’s a TV junkie. His writing has appeared in the New York Times, Slate, Salon, VanityFair.com, Playboy.com, Fast Company’s Co.Create and elsewhere.