The Weekend Witness

Car chase kickstarte­d reality TV

OJ Simpson’s infamous car chase on the Los Angeles freeway in 1994 was watched live by almost a 100 million Americans.

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The death of former disgraced American football star OJ Simpson on Wednesday, from prostate cancer, set the internet ablaze with searches for THAT white Bronco Los Angeles freeway chase which kept the American nation glued to their television screens on June 17, 1994.

Almost 30 years later, the 90-minute-long chase remains an iconic TV moment when the NFL megastar went on the run following the double murder of his exwife Nicole Brown and her friend, waiter Ronald Goldman.

The death of Simpson at the age of 76 reignited memories of the “slow-speed chase” watched by 95 million Americans, and the sensationa­l “Trial of the Century” that followed.

Simpson’s murder trial — during which he was represente­d by a so-called “dream team” of attorneys — was the first court trial followed by a mass internatio­nal audience in real time.

OJ Simpson: The day of the Bronco car chase…

The day of the slow-speed chase and arrest started with police announcing that the former champion football running back-turnedacto­r was the chief suspect in the murder of his ex-wife and Goldman.

This followed the grim discovery of their bloodied bodies four days earlier outside her Brentwood condo.

Hours later, Simpson was located driving along the freeway outside Los Angeles with his football friend Al Cowlings. The star was armed with a gun which authoritie­s feared he would use to kill himself.

The unfolding real-life drama was transmitte­d by several TV stations and unsurprisi­ngly it was also the busiest day Domino’s Pizza ever had, according to The State Journal-Register.

“There are some watershed moments in American culture that kind of transform the way we view the world, and I think that chase was certainly one of those moments,” legal expert Marcellus McRae told AFP.

‘It was a reality show’

“It was a surreal spectacle. It was almost Shakespear­ian. It was a reality show,” he added.

According to McRae, TV viewers were hypnotised by the story because “it’s not Hollywood, it’s real life and it’s someone that you actually know”.

Real-time, round-the-clock TV coverage was in its infancy three decades ago, according to journalist Jim Newton, who covered the Bronco chase from a helicopter for The Los Angeles Times

“It was a precursor of the reality show,” journalist Jim Newton, who covered the Bronco chase from a news helicopter for The Los Angeles Times, told AFP.

Television news helicopter­s followed the pursuit all the way to the gates of Simpson’s house, where he gave himself up after hours of negotiatio­ns with police.

The high-profile trial, which began in January 1995, lasted for nine months and left the world with some iconic moments, including when the former sports star tried on a bloodied glove found at the scene of the crime.

A whopping 145 million people tuned in on October 3, 1995, to see him declared not guilty on all charges.

Variety reported that although Simpson was not found guilty of the deaths, three years after his criminal trial he was found liable in a civil suit brought by the victims’ families.

Hype around true-life crime mysteries is born

Simpson’s televised murder trial led to a growing obsession with true-life crime mysteries with the showing of Ryan Murphy-Brad Falchuck’s 10-part The People v OJ Simpson: American Crime Story on FX in 2016.

The series provided a dramatised behind-the-scenes look at the period between the heinous crime and Simpson’s exoneratio­n.

Overlappin­g that, OJ: Made in America by producer–director Ezra Edelman shows Simpson’s decline into debauchery in Florida, using cocaine.

“Whatever one thinks of the murder, I found myself feeling sorry for the guy as he slid further and further off his greatness,” Newton told Vulture.

In 2007, the former NFL football player was arrested for alleged armed robbery and kidnapping in Las Vegas.

Simpson was found guilty and sentenced to between nine and 33 years behind bars. He eventually served nine years of his sentence.

— AFP.

 ?? PHOTO: AFP ?? Motorists wave as police cars pursue the Ford Bronco (white, right) carrying fugitive and murder suspect OJ Simpson on a 90 minute chase on a Los Angeles freeway on June 17, 1994. The car driven by Simpson’s friend Al Cowling eventually drove to Simpson home in Brentwood, where he surrendere­d after a stand-off with police.
PHOTO: AFP Motorists wave as police cars pursue the Ford Bronco (white, right) carrying fugitive and murder suspect OJ Simpson on a 90 minute chase on a Los Angeles freeway on June 17, 1994. The car driven by Simpson’s friend Al Cowling eventually drove to Simpson home in Brentwood, where he surrendere­d after a stand-off with police.

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