Jamaica Gleaner

‘Who Shot the Sheriff?’

Bob Marley’s assassinat­ion attempt to be investigat­ed in Netflix docu-series

- Kimberley Small/Gleaner Writer kimberley.small@gleanerjm.com

REGGAE LEGEND Bob Marley will be the subject of an upcoming Netflix docuseries, investigat­ing some of music’s biggest unsolved mysteries. The eight-episode project, called

ReMastered, will be available on the streaming service on October 12, with one new episode every month through to May 2019. The docu-series will open with

Who Shot The Sheriff?, a look at the role Jamaican politician­s and the CIA played in the attempted assassinat­ion of Marley, following the 1972 election won by the Michael Manley-led People’s National Party.

In November, Harlan County USA documentar­ian Barbara Kopple will co-direct an examinatio­n into Johnny Cash’s tumultuous White House meeting with Richard Nixon in Tricky Dick and the Man in Black. The year will close out with an episode focusing on Who Killed Jam Master Jay?, the Run-DMC DJ who was killed in a Queens, New York studio in 2002.

Other investigat­ions to be highlighte­d include a look into the murder of three members of the Miami Showband during “the Troubles” in Ireland in 1975, the death of Chilean singer Victor Jara, and the mysterious shooting death of Sam Cooke.

ReMastered was created by Emmy and Peabody Awardwinni­ng brothers Jeff and Michael Zimbalist. Irving Azoff and Stu Schreiberg are listed among its executive producers.

BLACKWELL & NETFLIX

This is not the first time the major television streaming service has had its spotlight on Jamaica. Earlier this year, the second season of Marvel’s Luke

Cage was released on the platform. The series’ antagonist was decidedly Jamaican, which necessitat­ed heavy use of a trying island accent. An episode was also filmed in the island.

Last month, the platform released a Netflix original film called Like Father, starring Kristen Bell, Kelsey Grammar and Seth Rogen, with the film’s crew moving between New York, a Royal Caribbean cruise liner and Jamaica’s north coast to complete the production.

In June 2017, Variety.com reported that Island Records founder Chris Blackwell had partnered with Narcos showrunner, Eric Newman, to develop a narrative series about the birth of reggae music and the rise of Jamaica’s music industry.

It was announced that Sascha Penn, an alum of the Starz drama

Power, would pen the pilot script. The still-untitled project will be executive-produced by Blackwell and Newman, along with Studiocana­l Chairman and CEO Didier Lupfer, Propagate Content’s Ben Silverman, and Marlon James, author of the Booker Prize-winning novel A Brief History of Seven Killings.

 ??  ?? BOB MARLEY
BOB MARLEY
 ??  ?? JOHNNY CASH
JOHNNY CASH
 ??  ?? CHRIS BLACKWELL
CHRIS BLACKWELL
 ??  ?? SAM COOKE
SAM COOKE
 ??  ?? MARLON JAMES
MARLON JAMES

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