One of the greatest unsolved mysteries of our time may have had a different ending if it had happened today.
That’s according to Emmy-winner Anthony Hemingway, director and executive producer of the new true crime series “Unsolved”, which tells the story of Biggie and Tupac.
He points out that the killings, which took place over two decades ago, occurred at a time when hip hop and rap weren’t as mainstream as they are today. There was also no social media back then.
Today, those two factors would probably have culminated in a different outcome, says Hemingway, who also produced “The People v. OJ Simpson.”
“Unsolved” attempts to answer the questions behind the shootings of the two rival rap superstars, examining not just what happened but the context surrounding the events.
“This was a period of time that was on the heels of the O.J. trial, the Rampart scandal, even [the] L.A. riots,” Hemingway explains. “L.A. at the time was volatile."
Add to that tinderbox the notorious reputations of both Tupac Shakur and The Notorious B.I.G.
“We’ve only really been given the negative of their story,” he says.
In an attempt to change that, Hemingway’s series tries to “humanize” the two rappers and put forth an idea of “who they could’ve been today.”
“[The] theme that really drove us through the story is perception and how perception challenges your best judgements, how perception dictates treatment,” he says.
Hemingway hopes the series will “shine a light on what we continue to struggle with -- the injustices that are happening, that have just been systemic for a very long time.”
“Unsolved: The Murder Of Tupac and Notorious B.I.G.” premieres on February 27 on USA Network.
It was an extraordinary year for the video game industry which culminated in, of course, the big launches of the anticipated next-generation consoles, the PlayStation 5 and the Xbox Series X/S.
The Northeast will see more snow today than it got all last winter as a major winter storm approaches. The latest forecast, plus promising vaccine and stimulus developments and Tom Cruise has HAD IT with COVID rule-breakers.
CEO Isaac Larian joined Cheddar to discuss MGA Entertainment's push for recyclable toy products and packaging.
A decade after publishing his memoir “Decoded,” Jay-Z is forming a more lasting partnership with the book industry. Roc Nation, the entertainment company founded by Jay-Z, is starting an imprint with Random House called Roc Lit 101.
Jill and Carlo talk vaccine rollout, election results, the IPO market and more.
Dr. Fauci's predictions for herd immunity in the U.S. as the first vaccines roll out and the country crosses 300,000 deaths. Plus: Google pioneers a new office policy, Mariah back at #1 and more.
Thousands of people gathered in the Chilean region of La Araucanía on Monday to witness a solar eclipse, rejoicing in the rare experience even though visibility was limited because of cloudy skies.
Disney is gearing up to roll out a number of movies and show on its streaming service Disneyplus. The news comes as the streaming wars ramp up following HBOMax and Warner's movie deal. Cheddar's Michelle Castillo reports.
Impressive gifts for everyone on your list, at a fraction of the price.
From Wall Street to Silicon Valley, these are the top stories that moved markets and had investors, business leaders, and entrepreneurs talking this week on Cheddar.
Load More