Exclusive: A docuseries about one woman’s crusade against the self-styled ‘King of Revenge Porn’ is set to launch on Netflix.
The streamer has ordered three-part series The Most Hated Man on the Internet from Raw TV, the All3Media-backed production company behind vaunted true-crime docs including Don’t F**k with Cats and The Tinder Swindler.
The series will tell the story of a woman who went against Hunter Moore, a self-proclaimed “professional life ruiner” after after nude photos of her daughter were posted online.
Moore found fame in the early 2010s by founding IsAnyoneUp.com, a notorious ‘revenge porn’ hub. The site posted explicit photos of women and men, often without their permission and with devastating results. He built a cult following of those who hung on his every move.
The series, which launches on July 27, features exclusive interviews with multiple women and men who fought to have their images taken down,...
The streamer has ordered three-part series The Most Hated Man on the Internet from Raw TV, the All3Media-backed production company behind vaunted true-crime docs including Don’t F**k with Cats and The Tinder Swindler.
The series will tell the story of a woman who went against Hunter Moore, a self-proclaimed “professional life ruiner” after after nude photos of her daughter were posted online.
Moore found fame in the early 2010s by founding IsAnyoneUp.com, a notorious ‘revenge porn’ hub. The site posted explicit photos of women and men, often without their permission and with devastating results. He built a cult following of those who hung on his every move.
The series, which launches on July 27, features exclusive interviews with multiple women and men who fought to have their images taken down,...
- 6/21/2022
- by Peter White
- Deadline Film + TV
On Easter Sunday in 1993, inmates at a maximum-security correctional facility in Lucasville, Ohio, grabbed control for 11 days, making it the longest prison siege in U.S. history. Rioters took eight prison guards hostage, one of whom was killed – along with nine inmates.
Netflix’s new documentary series “Captive,” from filmmakers Simon and Jonathan Chinn and Doug Liman, kicks off its eight-episode first season by recounting the harrowing events behind that riot, interviewing both inmates and guards involved with the hostage stand-off. But unlike Netflix’s “Making a Murderer,” which premiered during the holiday season in 2014, “Captive” follows a new story every episode. Later hours include the story of a kidnapped Brazilian-American woman who ran her family’s Coca-Cola bottling plant.
Read More: ‘Captive’ Trailer: Netflix True-Crime Documentary Series Examines Hostage Situations Around The World
“There probably wasn’t a hostage story from the past 20 years or so that we didn’t look at,...
Netflix’s new documentary series “Captive,” from filmmakers Simon and Jonathan Chinn and Doug Liman, kicks off its eight-episode first season by recounting the harrowing events behind that riot, interviewing both inmates and guards involved with the hostage stand-off. But unlike Netflix’s “Making a Murderer,” which premiered during the holiday season in 2014, “Captive” follows a new story every episode. Later hours include the story of a kidnapped Brazilian-American woman who ran her family’s Coca-Cola bottling plant.
Read More: ‘Captive’ Trailer: Netflix True-Crime Documentary Series Examines Hostage Situations Around The World
“There probably wasn’t a hostage story from the past 20 years or so that we didn’t look at,...
- 12/9/2016
- by Michael Schneider
- Indiewire
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