Avery coverage by NBC Dateline 1/29 (& others)

Started by neutral, January 27, 2016, 08:56:39 AM

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"Dateline NBC" joins media frenzy with own take on the Steven Avery case
by Jon Kjarsgaard January 26, 2016
 
The Making a Murderer phenomenon marches on.

"Right now murder is hot," said an unnamed Dateline NBC producer midway through the 10-episode Netflix documentary series about convicted Wisconsin murderer Steven Avery (at the 27:04 mark of episode four, if you want to queue it up). "That's what everyone wants. That's what the competition wants. And we're trying to beat out the other networks to get that perfect murder story."

Dateline NBC aired its report on April 1, 2006, a few months after the murder of Teresa Halbach and roughly a year before Avery and his nephew Brandon Dassey were convicted of the crime in separate trials. The producer excitedly called it "the perfect Dateline story" and now the newsmagazine says it's preparing to air a new segment about the case on Jan. 29 at 9 p.m.

The program teased its plans Monday night on Twitter:

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But it won't be the only Making a Murderer-inspired television show this weekend.

The Investigation Discovery cable network will premiere a one-hour special, Steven Avery: Innocent or Guilty?, on Jan. 30 at 8 p.m.

Hosted by longtime Dateline correspondent Keith Morrison, trade magazine Variety reports that it will include new interviews with such "key players" as Avery defense attorney Jerry Buting, former Calumet County district attorney Ken Kratz and current Manitowoc County assistant district attorney Michael Griesbach (who spoke to Isthmus earlier this month).

Kratz, the special prosecutor in the murder trials of Avery and Dassey, has plans to write a book to promote his views on the case.

"Finally grateful to tell the whole story," Kratz told Action 2 News in Green Bay. "The one voice forgotten to this point is Teresa Halbach." Kratz declined to participate in Making a Murderer, and earlier this month he told The New York Times that the Netflix series left out crucial facts and "really presents misinformation."

Avery's new lawyer, Kathleen Zellner, is not pleased. The Chicago-based attorney, who specializes in wrongful conviction cases, recently tweeted a letter she says Kratz sent to Avery.

"This bloodsucking gives vampires a bad name," she wrote.

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Meanwhile, Avery's murder trial attorneys Dean Strang and Jerry Buting will participate in a moderated discussion at the Riverside Theater in Milwaukee on March 18, the venue announced Tuesday morning.

Reserved seating tickets are $45.50 and go on sale at noon on Jan. 29.

(Really? ... $50+(with taxes & fees) ... this one makes me wonder about people (both those with too much money ... and those grabbing for it)


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- See more at: http://isthmus.com/screens/tv-video/dateline-nbc-joins-making-a-murderer-steven-avery-media-frenzy/#sthash.0xZcAiH5.dpuf
(reporter) ... "Rocky ... do you think you've got brain damage?"
(Rocky) ....... "I don't see any."

SuperDuck

Quote from: neutral on January 27, 2016, 08:56:39 AM
"Dateline NBC" joins media frenzy with own take on the Steven Avery case
by Jon Kjarsgaard January 26, 2016
 
The Making a Murderer phenomenon marches on.

"Right now murder is hot," said an unnamed Dateline NBC producer midway through the 10-episode Netflix documentary series about convicted Wisconsin murderer Steven Avery (at the 27:04 mark of episode four, if you want to queue it up). "That's what everyone wants. That's what the competition wants. And we're trying to beat out the other networks to get that perfect murder story."

Dateline NBC aired its report on April 1, 2006, a few months after the murder of Teresa Halbach and roughly a year before Avery and his nephew Brandon Dassey were convicted of the crime in separate trials. The producer excitedly called it "the perfect Dateline story" and now the newsmagazine says it's preparing to air a new segment about the case on Jan. 29 at 9 p.m.

The program teased its plans Monday night on Twitter:

------------------------------------------------------------

But it won't be the only Making a Murderer-inspired television show this weekend.

The Investigation Discovery cable network will premiere a one-hour special, Steven Avery: Innocent or Guilty?, on Jan. 30 at 8 p.m.

Hosted by longtime Dateline correspondent Keith Morrison, trade magazine Variety reports that it will include new interviews with such "key players" as Avery defense attorney Jerry Buting, former Calumet County district attorney Ken Kratz and current Manitowoc County assistant district attorney Michael Griesbach (who spoke to Isthmus earlier this month).

Kratz, the special prosecutor in the murder trials of Avery and Dassey, has plans to write a book to promote his views on the case.

"Finally grateful to tell the whole story," Kratz told Action 2 News in Green Bay. "The one voice forgotten to this point is Teresa Halbach." Kratz declined to participate in Making a Murderer, and earlier this month he told The New York Times that the Netflix series left out crucial facts and "really presents misinformation."

Avery's new lawyer, Kathleen Zellner, is not pleased. The Chicago-based attorney, who specializes in wrongful conviction cases, recently tweeted a letter she says Kratz sent to Avery.

"This bloodsucking gives vampires a bad name," she wrote.

------------------------------------------------------------------

Meanwhile, Avery's murder trial attorneys Dean Strang and Jerry Buting will participate in a moderated discussion at the Riverside Theater in Milwaukee on March 18, the venue announced Tuesday morning.

Reserved seating tickets are $45.50 and go on sale at noon on Jan. 29.

(Really? ... $50+(with taxes & fees) ... this one makes me wonder about people (both those with too much money ... and those grabbing for it)


-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

- See more at: http://isthmus.com/screens/tv-video/dateline-nbc-joins-making-a-murderer-steven-avery-media-frenzy/#sthash.0xZcAiH5.dpuf


With regard to the money, I don't really care how much they charge, but I would hope the people putting events like these on are contributing at least a decent portion to the family of the happy, loving 25 year old who was murdered. 

There are a lot of ways that money could be spent so that people might not always be so quick to think of his name rather than hers.  She was a very conscientious women by all accounts.  The Teresa Halbach Auditorium....(just a random thought).  If so, charge them a few hundred. 

And maybe just hand the family a stack of cash.  There's be nothing wrong with that either.  This threw their life in chaos.  Who's to say what they may need it for. 
But the laywers and the press will keep the majority of it.