New York Daily News

A ‘Crime’ time hit for MTV

- BY JAMI GANZ

I want my, I want my, I want my true-life crime.

Shows on real legal cases are everywhere these days, even on a most unlikely outlet, MTV.

The host of “True Life Crime” on the network that began as a home for music videos says that channel’s entry into the fray is not just a broken record in the crowded crime competitio­n.

“The main thing that this show brings that I don’t see in other crime shows as often is a focus on elevating the voices of marginaliz­ed [people],” host Dometi Pongo, 30, told the Daily News earlier this month. “People that society has forgotten about, or that society, for whatever reason, hasn’t covered their stories with the same level of attention and detail and care that we do for stories that appeal to the general market. … In fact, you know, you wouldn’t think that stories this heavy on a network like ours would even be as successful as this.”

A spinoff of the network’s “True Life” docuseries — which originally ran from 1998 to 2017 and followed people dealing with everything from addiction, debt, life as a sugar baby or having parents in the porn industry — this incarnatio­n premiered last month and explores crimes against predominan­tly marginaliz­ed teens and 20-somethings.

This niche has always attracted Pongo (photo), a firstgener­ation American born in Chicago to Ghanaian parents, who kicked off his career at WVON, an African-Americanow­ned radio station formerly utilized by Martin Luther King Jr.

“That’s how steeped that station is in history,” said Pongo, who worked his way up from intern to news director and would find himself thinking, “Does the rest of the world care about the stories that I care so deeply about?”

Pongo’s personal connection to certain cases helps him determine, along with MTV’s production team, which stories the series will cover.

For instance, both Pongo and Kenneka Jenkins, the teen at the center of the series’ premiere, hailed from Chicago.

It wasn’t the Ghanaian roots shared with Mujey Dumbuya that “really tormented” Pongo when covering the teen’s case for the fifth episode, but the multiple rapes she endured.

“I learned a lot about how sexual assault may impact the psyche of the victim, and the feeling of hopelessne­ss,” he explained to The News. “And I thought it was even more harrowing because the … family was so conservati­ve … that they don’t even use the word ‘rape.’

“They would say, ‘This thing was done to her;’ ‘This thing happened;’ ‘This incident…’” Pongo recalled, noting the vague language left authoritie­s uncertain of the gravity. “That story really messed me up. But all of them messed me up deeply in different ways. … Every single case hits differentl­y.”

The eighth and final episode of the first season aired Wednesday and focuses on the 2013 disappeara­nce of mother and indigenous woman, Hanna Harris, a 21-year-old member of the Northern Cheyenne Tribe.

Like many of the featured cases, Harris’ has already been solved.

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