As the inevitable backlash to the #MeToo movement continues to gather momentum, Samantha Bee and the Full Frontal team decided to address what Bee called the #YouTooLoud movement on Wednesday night. In particular, Bee focused on two lightning rods that have spurred heated debates over the past two weeks: the Shitty Media Men list, and Aziz Ansari, who has been accused of sexual misconduct by an anonymous woman.

“You know, all women have done throughout the four months of the #MeToo movement is try to protect other women. But, you know what?” Bee wondered. “Who’s gonna protect the men?”

For weeks now, publications and airwaves have been filled with hand-wringing pieces that ask if the movement has gone too far—if it has expanded from helpful to harmful, as new accusations allege conduct that is not cartoonishly monstrous, but more recognizable to wide swaths of the population. The problem with those arguments? As Bee puts it, “Here’s the number of people who are putting rape and harassment and bad dates in one bucket: literally nobody is saying they’re the same!”

“What many fail to understand is that it doesn’t have to be rape to ruin your life, and it doesn’t have to ruin your life to be worth speaking out about,” Bee added. “Any kind of sexual harassment or coercion is unacceptable. So what the fuck are women supposed to do to protect ourselves? If we go public with a story, we’re petty crybabies hell-bent on destroying men’s careers. If we write a secret list to protect each other, we’re gossipy shrews telling lies in the shadows. What men literally cannot understand is, this isn’t about them!”

And then there’s Aziz Ansari, who has largely escaped discussion on other late-night programs so far. In an account told to the online publication Babe, an anonymous accuser called “Grace” said that while on a date, Ansari pursued sexual activity with her despite multiple attempts on her part—verbal and physical—to convey disinterest. Ansari only stopped, the accuser said, when she emphatically said “no” after he bent her over in front of a mirror.

As many have noted when discussing the Ansari allegations, feminism has long been a part of the comedian’s brand—both in his stand-up and on his Netflix series, Master of None. That has only made the conversation surrounding the allegation more fraught. The comedian himself issued a statement through his publicist in response to the allegations, writing, “In September of last year, I met a woman at a party. We exchanged numbers. We texted back and forth and eventually went on a date. We went out to dinner, and afterwards we ended up engaging in sexual activity, which by all indications was completely consensual. The next day, I got a text from her saying that although ‘it may have seemed okay,’ upon further reflection, she felt uncomfortable. It was true that everything did seem okay to me, so when I heard that it was not the case for her, I was surprised and concerned. I took her words to heart and responded privately after taking the time to process what she had said. I continue to support the movement that is happening in our culture. It is necessary and long overdue.”