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jun 2024 se unió
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Where did all these overwhelmingly "glowing" positive reviews for LaDonna Humphrey's work come from??! If you look at the reviews for her books, podcasts & this documentary- you'll notice all the "10/10" reviewers repeating the same phrases- it "was the best thing they've ever seen/read/heard", "her work is life changing", it's "Incredibly insightful","Highly Professional", &/or "intelligently written", blah blah blah, give me a break!
There is no way an intelligent human could come away from watching this 48 min. "film" & say it was "best true crime documentary" they'd ever seen.
The bulk of the "information" presented in this film is from the author's (Ladonna's) speculation. The video is a mish-mash of short video clips of random Appalachian scenery & random interviews.
This case is yet unresolved. Ladonna is an opportunistic predator- cashing in on this family's loss & pain.
There is no new information presented in this film. In fact, the lack of information, combined w/ the poor quality of both the sound & video editing makes this film a total waste of time for anyone actually interested in well-researched/accurate True Crime Documentaries...
This film isn't worth watching. I've seen far better video and sound editing done by high-school children for class projects than this "professionally" produced film!
Throughout the "documentary", the sound quality is uneven & very poor quality - while the narrator's voice is fine, whenever it cuts to one of the dozens of unnecessary/uninformative "interviews" from "friends"/police/etc- the sound is barely audible!
The sound quality issue is especially poor whenever Jay C Rider, the former Captain of the Major Crimes Unit at Fort Smith Police Dept. Is speaking. He gives most of the "interviews" throughout the "documentary"- so you'd think the sound editor would make it a priority that his portions of the film were audible & his wording be clear & well-articulated. Instead, he comes across as an unintelligible mumbling mess at times!
There are better quality, better-researched & actually insightful true crime documentaries on YouTube FOR FREE.
Don't make the same mistake I did- this was an absolute waste of 48 minutes...
There is no way an intelligent human could come away from watching this 48 min. "film" & say it was "best true crime documentary" they'd ever seen.
The bulk of the "information" presented in this film is from the author's (Ladonna's) speculation. The video is a mish-mash of short video clips of random Appalachian scenery & random interviews.
This case is yet unresolved. Ladonna is an opportunistic predator- cashing in on this family's loss & pain.
There is no new information presented in this film. In fact, the lack of information, combined w/ the poor quality of both the sound & video editing makes this film a total waste of time for anyone actually interested in well-researched/accurate True Crime Documentaries...
This film isn't worth watching. I've seen far better video and sound editing done by high-school children for class projects than this "professionally" produced film!
Throughout the "documentary", the sound quality is uneven & very poor quality - while the narrator's voice is fine, whenever it cuts to one of the dozens of unnecessary/uninformative "interviews" from "friends"/police/etc- the sound is barely audible!
The sound quality issue is especially poor whenever Jay C Rider, the former Captain of the Major Crimes Unit at Fort Smith Police Dept. Is speaking. He gives most of the "interviews" throughout the "documentary"- so you'd think the sound editor would make it a priority that his portions of the film were audible & his wording be clear & well-articulated. Instead, he comes across as an unintelligible mumbling mess at times!
There are better quality, better-researched & actually insightful true crime documentaries on YouTube FOR FREE.
Don't make the same mistake I did- this was an absolute waste of 48 minutes...