RexHamilton
Gumshoe for hire
- Joined
- Feb 13, 2012
- Messages
- 4,551
Most stories about real life serial killers don't attempt to have this kind of intimacy and depth - they might be seen as a porn of sort, focusing on the killer and his 'count' whilst making the victims almost faceless; forgettable unless really "out there" in line with other victims. It's not right, sickening, even, but it's "better" that than personalisation which brings these victims/families right into the spotlight without their consent especially so when Netflix are profiting from it.
Yeah, I don't disagree with you. Morally, the making of this show, is very questionable. But, my point is, where do you draw the line. There will be things that many people find morally questionable. The Making a Murderer series sought to suggest heavily that Steven Avery was wrongfully convicted. This can't have been easy for Teresa Halbach's family.
And there are many more shows that could be similarly upsetting for the families of other crimes and atrocities.
But the fact is, these shows are huge hits for the companies that make them, which means there is a market for them. So, we, the viewers are surely as much to blame?