New York Post

NOW, PART 2

‘Sur viving R. Kelly: The Reckoning’ coming to Lifetime

- By LAUREN SARNER

L

IFETIME’S crime docuseries

“Surviving R. Kelly” made a splash upon its premiere last January — leading to the R&B star’s arrest on sexabuse charges and spurring a three-part followup series, “Surviving R. Kelly Part 2: The Reckoning.”

“We never knew how big it was going to become,” says “Surviving” executive producer Brie Miranda Bryant. “But what was so fantastic was that the actual conversati­on that it generated transcende­d the documentar­y and became a global conversati­on about sexual violence. I was sent articles that were completely in Mandarin from people over in China where the documentar­y, and the conversati­on around it, was being covered.”

“Surviving R. Kelly” broke a record when it premiered to 2 million viewers, who watched interviews with survivors of the 52year-old singer’s alleged abuse as well as his former friends like Sparkle.

In the months that followed, Kelly — who has denied all allegation­s — was dropped by his record label and formally charged with 10 counts of aggravated criminal sexual abuse. He’s currently in a federal jail in Chicago awaiting his May 2020 trial.

Premiering Jan. 2 at 9 p.m.,“Surviving R. Kelly Part 2: The Reckoning” features interviews with a whopping 70 subjects who, in some cases, speak about the backlash they experience­d for speaking up in the original.

Executive producer Jesse Daniels, who worked on “Surviving,” says a sequel was never intended. “We sat back for a while [after Part 1 aired],” he says. “There were news outlets all around the world reporting on this story. And so we knew that if we were going to do a follow up, we’d have to go deeper and do something people aren’t already seeing on the news now.

“Sadly after the documentar­y, we got messages from other survivors. We were weighing all these big decisions knowing we had more story to tell.”

Bryant says that what tipped the scale to doing a followup was informatio­n they learned about Kelly’s 2003 arrest in Florida on child pornograph­y charges. “After the first documentar­y aired, it was a topic of conversati­on about whether we’d do a Part 2,” she says. “And the answer was ‘absolutely not.’ “We were worried that if we did a Part 2, and it wasn’t as strong of a platform as Part 1, that we would be doing a disservice to our survivors. “But one story ended up bubbling up ... what happened during [Kelly’s 2003] arrest in Florida for the Chicago warrant,” she says.

“There were allegedly more tapes and videos of disturbing images that were found, and Florida had pressed charges. They ultimately ended up dropping those charges. A reporter said, ‘Could you not have found a way?’ and the answer they got was, ‘Well, we could have, but they’re not our girls.’

“That just triggered everything for everyone in production — this idea of ‘whose girls are they?,’ ” she says. “That’s thematical­ly how we tried to put together Part 2.”

And while the series did lead to Kelly’s arrest, the producers maintain that their original goal was simply to make the survivor’s voices heard.

“You’ll hear more from the survivors in Part 2 in terms of how they think and feel about [Kelly getting arrested and formally charged],” says Bryant. “I think justice looks like different things for different people.”

 ??  ?? Ebony Wilkins (left) and Dominique Gardner are interviewe­d in “Surviving R. Kelly Part 2: The Reckoning,” airing Jan. 2 on Lifetime. Below: R. Kelly during a hearing in September.
Ebony Wilkins (left) and Dominique Gardner are interviewe­d in “Surviving R. Kelly Part 2: The Reckoning,” airing Jan. 2 on Lifetime. Below: R. Kelly during a hearing in September.
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