Candace Owens Praised As Brilliant For ‘Convicting A Murderer’

Convicting A Murderer-YouTube

Candace Owens has been praised as brilliant for her special, Convicting a Murderer. She is blowing the lid off of “shady” filmmaking and wrongful documentaries. Yet, what exactly did she do and how did Owens do it? Read on for more details on what she did to right an incredible wrong.

Candace Owens Praised As Brilliant For Convicting a Murderer

Before the world was captivated by Joe Exotic and Tiger King, Netflix had Making a Murderer. Viewers flocked to the docuseries and became invested in the story of killer Steven Avery. It went on to win multiple Emmy awards as Avery had been released back in 2003 after being incarcerated for nearly two decades. According to the New York Post, Avery had been accused of murdering Teresa Halbach. However, just two years after he was released, Teresa’s body was found in his family’s auto salvage yard. This made sense as she was a freelance photographer and was sent there for a job.

A decade after he was convicted, Netflix began their documentary on Steven Avery as well as his nephew, who was sentenced, as well. Unfortunately, it looked like the streamer was creating their own spin. Director Shawn Rech worked with Candace Owens on Convicting a Murderer and had this to say: “We have recordings of them telling Steven [Avery] that this is his movie – and that they hope it gets him out.” When he says “them,” Rech is referring to the directors Laura Ricciardi and Moira Demos. He also says were told to make “ethically shady” choices by Netflix.

This was to create a better story that would make people want to watch and empathize with Steven Avery. More so, Candace Owens feels that honesty would have been the best policy for Ricciardi and Demos. She believes they should have told the media that they shared with Avery they felt he was innocent. Furthermore, they could have said the narrative they wanted to tell. Yet, they did not and that was their detriment.

More Lies

Per Candace Owens and Shawn Rech, a lot of Steven Avery’s backstory was not put in the forefront. They did not share that his family had a “history of pedophilia” or “outwardly racist” mentality. Rather, it seemed like they made him to be someone who suffered from a corrupt police system. Finally, the brilliant and brave Owens added this: “There’s no question that Netflix tried to make it seem as if it was plausible that all of this was a setup against Steven Avery conducted by the state – with willing participants being the police officers.”

There were items left out by Netflix that would’ve shown Steven’s poor character and how cruel he really was. In the end, she is setting the record straight and it is up to viewers to decide which narrative to believe. Lastly, Convicting a Murderer can now be streamed on DailyWire+.

Amanda Lauren

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