Zachary Treitz & Christian Hansen, "American Conspiracy: The Octopus Murders"
2024 ж. 20 Сәу.
3 140 Рет қаралды
Filmmakers Zachary Treitz and Christian Hansen discuss their 4-part Netflix docuseries "American Conspiracy: The Octopus Murders," about the events surrounding the death of freelance journalist Danny Casolaro (cas-uh-LARE-oh) in 1991. At the time of his death, officially ruled a suicide, Mr. Casolaro was working on a story about a series of crimes - including drug running, money laundering, and murder - that he argued were connected to a cabal of ex-government officials associated with the Reagan administration and the CIA. He referred to this group as "the Octopus."
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Thank you so much for the stream.
OK😅
Pretty obvious these two don't believe it but they can't just come out and say that.
on the contrary - they do several other interviews - including with Cheri Seymour on Trineday. So you can't make stuff up like you're claiming.
@@voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 IMHO
Reaganomics was fatal biznass with the biggest gang outta Langley
Lol
CSPAN is PBS with video access to congressional hearings. Both should be considered state propaganda mills.
So why would they air this..
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 conspiracy theorists are beyond the pale 😡😡😡😡😡😡
That's not an argument r3tard
PBS has always been primarily funded by citizens like myself. My friends started our own local public radio and TV so we could speak for and to our community. This was a grassroots movement all across the nation at the time. Each station is overseen by local citizens on their boards and are supported by thousands of volunteers.
@@melissamiller2696 On its website, the TV broadcaster says it gets 15 percent of its revenue from the federal government, 13 percent from state governments, 3 percent from local governments, and 8 percent from universities. That’s a total of 39 percent. PBS seems to lean to one side of the political spectrum where it should be just providing news and letting the public decide how they want to filter it.