Compassionate Reader
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Oct 27, 2010
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I'm really at a loss as to what you're trying to prove. I think Bruce or Joe, whoever was on the stand, made it clear that the money was offered as a humanitarian gesture, not as a payoff of any kind. West Memphis is a very poor area. What's wrong with lending a helping hand? IMO, if anything, the HBO crew probably made Burnett even more intent on a guilty verdict.
If you're trying to show that the documentary was biased, all documentaries are biased, no matter how hard the filmmaker tries not to be biased. There's nothing wrong with that, either, IMO. However, remember that a lot of the original film was trial footage.
There's a recent interview with Bruce and Joe in which they state that they initially went to film a "Kids Gone Wrong" piece about these terrible murders. During the process, they came to believe in the innocence of the WM3. However, whatever their bias or motive, and no matter how much money changed hands or to whose hand it went, there still is no evidence that the WM3 committed these horrible crimes.
The State, in the person of Ellington, recently admitted that they would not be found guilty if tried again. Oh, he gave some excuses, but the bottom line is that he knew he didn't have a case. So, an injustice has recently been corrected, thanks to the HBO film.
Here's an interesting question: Why are all the televised documentaries and true crime pieces about this case pro-defense? I've seen people complain that, if more filmmakers, etc. did pieces that said they were guilty, then people would believe they're guilty. But all the films, etc. come down on the side of innocence. Could it be that the WM3 are innocent and that 48 Hours and the Paradise Lost films were telling the truth?
If you're trying to show that the documentary was biased, all documentaries are biased, no matter how hard the filmmaker tries not to be biased. There's nothing wrong with that, either, IMO. However, remember that a lot of the original film was trial footage.
There's a recent interview with Bruce and Joe in which they state that they initially went to film a "Kids Gone Wrong" piece about these terrible murders. During the process, they came to believe in the innocence of the WM3. However, whatever their bias or motive, and no matter how much money changed hands or to whose hand it went, there still is no evidence that the WM3 committed these horrible crimes.
The State, in the person of Ellington, recently admitted that they would not be found guilty if tried again. Oh, he gave some excuses, but the bottom line is that he knew he didn't have a case. So, an injustice has recently been corrected, thanks to the HBO film.
Here's an interesting question: Why are all the televised documentaries and true crime pieces about this case pro-defense? I've seen people complain that, if more filmmakers, etc. did pieces that said they were guilty, then people would believe they're guilty. But all the films, etc. come down on the side of innocence. Could it be that the WM3 are innocent and that 48 Hours and the Paradise Lost films were telling the truth?