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Leaked Sony e-mails reveal a secret Ben Affleck didn't want the world to know

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Ben Affleck presents the the Darryl F. Zanuck award for outstanding producer of a theatrical motion picture at the 25th annual Producers Guild of America (PGA) Awards at the Beverly Hilton Hotel. (John Shearer, AP)
Ben Affleck presents the the Darryl F. Zanuck award for outstanding producer of a theatrical motion picture at the 25th annual Producers Guild of America (PGA) Awards at the Beverly Hilton Hotel. (John Shearer, AP)

Boston — Ben Affleck requested that the PBS documentary series Finding Your Roots not reveal he had a slave-owning ancestor, according to emails published online by whistleblower site WikiLeaks, and the information never appeared on the programme.

PBS and Harvard scholar Henry Louis Gates, host of the show that traces the ancestry of well-known guests, said in separate statements that they didn't censor the slave-owner details. Instead, more interesting ancestors of the actor emerged and Gates chose to highlight them in October's segment featuring Affleck, they said in the statements posted on the PBS website.

"For any guest, we always find far more stories about ancestors on their family trees than we ever possibly could use," Gates said in an emailed statement to The Associated Press. He said finding slave-owning ancestors was very common in the series, and noted Ken Burns and Anderson Cooper were two guests with slave-owner relatives.

In Affleck's case, "we decided to go with the story we used about his fascinating ancestor who became on occultist following the Civil War. This guy's story was totally unusual: we had never discovered someone like him before," he said.

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