It’s official. #MeToo has jumped the shark.

It happened with Saturday’s brutal, public character assassination of actor Aziz Ansari — a dude who’s laid claim to being one of Hollywood’s good guys. Now, his reputation is in tatters and his career threatened because of a lady who took her time saying “No.”

Men — even decent, sensitive, feminist men — be afraid. This could happen to you.

The hit on Ansari, 34, was posted on Babe.net with someone who identified herself as a now-23-year-old photographer from Brooklyn using the name “Grace.” In a long and anatomically detailed piece, Grace described flirting with the actor, comedian and filmmaker at a Los Angeles Emmys afterparty in September, when she was 22, even though she came with another date and Ansari initially tried to blow her off.

But she persisted.

They finally bonded over the fact that they both were shooting with old-fashioned film cameras. When she returned to New York City the next day, he’d already texted her. After exchanging flirtatious messages, they arranged to go on a dinner date.

She didn’t mask her excitement at going out with the “successful comedian and major celebrity,” meeting him at his apartment “at an exclusive address on Tribeca’s Franklin Street, where Taylor Swift has a place too,” Babe dutifully reported.

Now, it’s an article of faith that sexual misconduct can and does occur even between adults engaged in social pursuits. But this case is off the rails. Because, from the way Grace told the story, it seems her encounter with Ansari went south for her — but she failed to tell him about it.

It’s also unclear if Ansari, the zhlub, even noticed at the time that his date was weirding out on him. Yet she painted herself as a victim. Not exactly of sexual assault, but of some vague kind of manly misconduct.

Grace said that after Ansari rushed them through dinner, the pair went back to his place, where they proceeded to take off their clothes.

Then, in a description worthy of Penthouse, she said he gave her oral sex as she sat atop a marble kitchen countertop. She returned the favor.

If I could pinpoint the moment Grace mentally withdrew her consent, it has to be after Ansari performed what Grace termed “the claw,” sticking two fingers down her throat, then rubbing them on her genitals — a move I could have lived a long and happy life without knowing about.

And this is the point where it gets tricky. Because Grace apparently believes that Ansari should have been able to read her mind, when a simple “Stop!” would have promptly ended the activities.

“Throughout the course of her short time in the apartment, she says she used verbal and non-verbal cues to indicate how uncomfortable and distressed she was,” Babe reported.

Grace said, “Most of my discomfort was expressed in me pulling away and mumbling. I know that my hand stopped moving at some points.

“I stopped moving my lips and turned cold.”

But Grace couldn’t say if Ansari didn’t notice her reticence or if he ignored it. Only, after she said an unequivocal “No,” he stopped trying to have sexual intercourse with her. He called her an Uber to take her home to Brooklyn.

Grace said she cried in the car. But her displeasure was evidently lost on Ansari, who texted her the next day to say, “It was fun meeting you last night.”

She blasted him back, “Last night might’ve been fun for you, but it wasn’t for me.”

He responded, “I’m so sad to hear this. Clearly, I misread things in the moment and I’m truly sorry.”

After catching Ansari at the Golden Globes, where he accepted the award for Best Actor in a TV Series, Musical or Comedy for his work in the Netflix show “Master of None,” Grace got upset that he wore a Time’s Up lapel pin pledging his support for the fight against sexual misconduct. She decided to go public.

The reaction from the feminocracy was fiercely pro-Grace.

“A lot of men will read that post about Aziz Ansari and see an everyday, reasonable sexual interaction. But part of what women are saying right now is that what the culture considers ‘normal’ sexual encounters are not working for us, and oftentimes harmful,” feminist writer and speaker Jessica Valenti tweeted.

“If you’re having to convince someone to do it, she doesn’t want to,” added Twitter user Jenjen. “Coercion is not consent.”

But writing in The Atlantic, Caitlin Flanagan called the Babe post “revenge porn.”

“Allegations against the comedian are proof that women are angry, temporarily powerful — and very, very dangerous,” a subheadline above the piece reads. Good points.

And this is how a blameless man was swept up in a witch hunt. And it scares me.

In a statement released Sunday responding to Grace’s account, Ansari seemed stunned.

“We went out to dinner, and afterwards we ended up engaging in sexual activity, which by all indications was completely consensual,” he wrote.

And learning she wasn’t OK with it, “I took her words to heart and responded privately after taking the time to process what she had said.”

These are not the words of a predator, but of a man trapped in an Orwellian nightmare. #MeToo has ensnared an innocent man.