“Even evil has fans.” Read that again — slowly. Because once you do, it’s impossible to unsee. This new true crime series on Paramount+ isn’t unsettling for the reasons you expect. It’s not about shock value. It’s not about gore. It’s about something far more disturbing: how fast horror turns into entertainment when the internet gets involved. A violent crime shakes Florida. A mugshot appears online. A tattooed face. A blank stare. And then something chilling happens. The crime doesn’t just spread — it mutates. Memes. Viral threads. Fan edits. Jokes. Obsession. The trial stops being about justice and starts looking like content. Likes climb. Attention grows. And somehow, against all logic and decency, a crowd forms around the person who committed the violence. This series forces a question most people avoid asking: Why were so many people fascinated instead of horrified? Using real police bodycam footage and firsthand interviews, the documentary strips away the viral noise and centers what got lost while everyone was watching, scrolling, sharing, and reacting. It doesn’t point fingers — it holds up a mirror. And that’s why it’s so uncomfortable. Because at some point, you realize this isn’t just a story about a crime. It’s a story about us. About attention. About how cruelty becomes content. About how hard it is to look away once it does. This isn’t an easy watch — not because of what you see, but because of what you recognize

“EVEN EVIL HAS FANS. AND THAT’S F*ED UP.”It’s not a slogan meant to shock — it’s a mirror. And it’s hard to look away from what it reflects. This week,… Read more