The Denver Post

Gypsy Rose Blanchard and the big shift in true crime

- By Maya Salam

There’s a moment near the end of the 2017 documentar­y “Mommy Dead and Dearest” when Gypsy Rose Blanchard is filming her boyfriend at the time, Nicholas Godejohn, as he lies nude in a hotel room bed. A day earlier, Godejohn had fatally stabbed Gypsy’s mother, Dee Dee Blanchard. The killing was part of a plot the couple hatched to free Gypsy, then 23, from her mother’s grip so they could be together. In the short video, we hear Gypsy make a playful sexual comment amid her copious, distinctiv­e giggling.

Dee Dee Blanchard had abused and controlled her daughter, mentally and physically, for decades. It was believed by many to be a case of Munchausen syndrome by proxy — a form of child abuse in which a caregiver might induce illness to draw public sympathy, care, concern and material gifts — and the saga captured the collective interest.

The snippet is the first time we see it unfolding through Gypsy’s eyes, and the point of view serves as a glimmer of what would become one of the biggest shifts in true crime storytelli­ng.

Stories like these were once conveyed through reenactmen­ts, dramatizat­ions and interviews with police officers, journalist­s, medical profession­als, family and friends. If there were primary sources, those were typically scans of photos of happy families or of grisly crime scenes underpinne­d by voice- over narration, exemplif ied on shows like “20/ 20,” “Dateline,” “Snapped,” “Forensic Files” and “48 Hours.” Home video cameras, which became popular in the 1980s, certainly changed the true crime landscape, but those recordings were generally sparse and supplement­al. In rare instances, viewers might hear directly from

the perpetrato­rs or victims in interviews often conducted years after the fact.

Now we have reams of first- person digital footage, which means that viewers, more than ever, are privy to the perspectiv­es of those directly involved, often during the period in which the crimes took place, closing the distance and making the intermedia­ries less essential. The case of Gypsy Rose Blanchard encapsulat­es the trajectory of this phenomenon. Her saga, for example, received the scripted treatment with “The Act,” a 2019 limited series on Hulu, for which Patricia Arquette won an Emmy. But those looking for a definitive, unvarnishe­d, visceral take on the events now have options and direct channels, rendering that series as almost an afterthoug­ht.

The rise of social media has, of course, accelerate­d this dynamic. Blanchard and Godejohn’s relationsh­ip was almost exclusivel­y

online before the murder, and Facebook posts and text messages between them were used in court by prosecutor­s to incriminat­e them. Godejohn was sentenced to life in prison; Blanchard received 10 years, of which she served about seven.

She was released on Dec. 28, 2023, and the next day she posted a selfie to Instagram with the caption “First selfie of freedom,” which has gotten more than 6.5 million likes. Online, she’s been promoting her new Lifetime series, “The Prison Confession­s of Gypsy Rose Blanchard.” “This docuseries chronicles my quest to expose the hidden parts of my life that have never been revealed until now,” we hear her say from prison.

She has quickly become a social media celebrity, with more than 8 million Instagram followers and nearly 10 million on Tiktok. Since her release, she has shared lightheart­ed videos like

one with her husband, Ryan Anderson ( they married in 2022 while she was in prison), at “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child” on Broadway and more serious ones, like a video in which she explains Munchausen syndrome by proxy.

Technology’s inf luence on modern criminal investigat­ions has become foundation­al in many documentar­ies from recent years.

In the two- part HBO documentar­y “I Love You, Now Die: The Commonweal­th v. Michelle Carter” ( 2019), the story is largely told through the thousands of text messages exchanged between two teenagers, Michelle Carter and Conrad Roy III, from 2012 to 2014. The text messages led up to the exact moment of Roy’s suicide. Selfie videos that Roy had posted online are also shown. Carter spent about a year in prison for her role in his death. The documentar­y ( by Erin Lee Carr, who also directed “Mommy Dead and Dearest”) left me

“spinning in circles, turning over thoughts about accountabi­lity, coercion and the nebulous boundaries of technology,” as I wrote in The New York Times last year.

One of the highest profile murder trials in the United States in recent years — that of disgraced lawyer Alex Murdaugh, who shot and killed his wife, Maggie, and their son Paul in 2021 — ultimately rested on a staggering recording captured moments before the murders.

That video, on Paul’s phone, placed the patriarch at the scene of the crime, sealing his fate: two consecutiv­e life sentences without the possibilit­y of parole.

The use of that footage, along with abundant smartphone video that brought viewers into the world of the Murdaughs, in documentar­ies like Netflix’s twoseason “Murdaugh Murders: A Southern Scandal,” would have been unimaginab­le not long ago.

But perhaps no recent offering illustrate­s this shift like HBO’S docuseries “Love Has Won: The Cult of Mother God.” Members of the group Love Has Won livestream­ed their days and nights; they filmed and posted untold hours of preachment­s and online manifestoe­s to YouTube and Instagram Live. Much of the three- episode series consists of this footage, and in turn viewers watch Amy Carlson, who called herself “Mother God,” slowly deteriorat­e over the course of months from the perspectiv­e of the people who were worshippin­g her.

It’s a vantage point so unnerving and haunting, it dissolves the line between storytelli­ng and voyeurism. When the group films her corpse, which they cart across numerous state lines, camping with it along the way, we see all that, too, through the eyes of the devotees. Several of the followers continue to promote her teachings online.

It was clear this month in the comments on Blanchard’s Instagram that many were uncomforta­ble with her reemerging as a social media presence. Some found it odd that she would participat­e so heavily and publicly immediatel­y after her release. Others thought it was in bad taste for her to celebrate her freedom while Godejohn serves a life sentence.

The greatest criticism of the true crime genre is that horrors are being repackaged as guilty- pleasure entertainm­ent, allowing viewers to get close — but not too close — to terrible things. And perhaps the best defense of true crime is that it allows viewers to process the scary underbelly of our world safely. It is a strange dance between knowledge, observatio­n and entertainm­ent.

Either way, the fourth wall is cracking, and perhaps the discomfort this might cause has been a long time coming.

 ?? ANTHONY BEHAR/ SIPA — VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Gypsy Rose Blanchard, with her husband, Ryan Anderson, this month takes the reins of her story in the new Lifetime docuseries “The Prison Confession­s of Gypsy Rose Blanchard.”
ANTHONY BEHAR/ SIPA — VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS Gypsy Rose Blanchard, with her husband, Ryan Anderson, this month takes the reins of her story in the new Lifetime docuseries “The Prison Confession­s of Gypsy Rose Blanchard.”

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