
1 minute read
Media’s idolism of murderers worrying
The consistent media attention given to murderers and their crimes is harmful in many ways.
With the release of Netflix’s “Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story,” the ethics of true crime stories, specifically those centered on horrific murders, has once more been called into question.
The show was released within a wave of controversy due to some of the victim’s families speaking out about the series. Specifically Rita Isbell, sister of one of Dahmer’s victims Errol Lindsey. According to an interview with Insider, Netflix did not contact Isbell about the show, yet still used an emotionally vulnerable moment recreation of her victim statement for their own benefit.
Another reason why this sparked outrage online was that Netflix initially labeled the show as LGBTQ in their categories. The show depicts young men of color being stalked and killed by a horrible man, yet it was labeled as LGBTQ content.
Netflix has since removed the label, but all of these factors lead back to the discussion of whether or not the genre of true crime has gone too far.
It seems that the obsession with these sorts of gruesome stories has reached worrying levels, even with the case of Gabby Petito’s death in August, 2021. With the oversaturation of the murder media market, it’s as if we’re desensitized to the fact that people were brutally murdered. These are actual people whose families are now having to relive the trauma of having their loved one taken from them because it’s what’s
VIEWPOINTS popular right now. What is worse is that there are some people who, due to the sympathetic way the murderers are portrayed, have revived the “fan clubs” they had. These cases should be a oneand-done discussion to inform the public, as long as it’s with the victim’s family’s permission. But instead, the murderer is the headliner and the details of the victims are washed away in a wave of fan girl posts about how hot Zac Efron looked as Ted Bundy. The constant retelling and making of documentaries about these