Ironically I think the podcast reinforces the idea that he did it for some because of how much is focuses on only a couple of people. It makes it seem as if you don't believe it was Don (or Jay), that Adnan was the only other possible suspect.
Yep. People just wholeheartedly trusting the justice system despite a hundred holes in the case is completely aggravating. Same in the case of Steven Avery and Brendan Dassey.I love all the armchair quarterbacks in here stating he did it like it's fact. You don't know shit. I don't know shit. The case was super weak and we don't know whether he did it or not. Stop pretending you do.
Holy shit, this. At some point, a few episodes in, I realized both that I hadn't been paying attention for the last fifteen minutes, and that I didn't care enough to go back, and eventually, didn't care enough to keep going. It was just so... boring.No, it wasn't. It was about Beau Burgdahl, and I stopped listening halfway through, cause I stopped caring.
Yeah, not sure what some of the haters in this topic are on about.People retro-actively bashing Serial S1? lmao, cmon now.
Like a sane person, I still cant figure if he really is guilty or not. However, to say that the case was strong enough to judge him guilty is a joke. Fiancee has been listening to Undisclosed and I'm super excited for the HBO Doc.
lol yeah it was pretty obvious. It seemed like journalist was in love him with or something during the podcast
Yeah, she convinced me of his guilt despite seemingly wanting the opposite to occur.Yeah, not sure what some of the haters in this topic are on about.
Like I'm pretty sure I came to the conclusion that Adnan was guilty from season 1.
nope. everyone just wants to run in to make sure people know they knew all along.
The best follow-up to serial, I run through the season whenever I need a little cheering up (plus the whole thing is ~1 hour)Relevant: The Onion's OPR Podcast A Very Fatal Murder
OPR Presents: A Very Fatal Murder - Episode 1: A Perfect Murder
Yep. People just wholeheartedly trusting the justice system despite a hundred holes in the case is completely aggravating. Same in the case of Steven Avery and Brendan Dassey.
Yep, and the answer to both is a resounding no. People really forget it shouldn't and doesn't matter what you feel, it matters what the evidence shows and the case presented.Serial was never about "is he guilty?" it was about "was he given a fair trial?"
Same with Making a Murderer.