Based in part on the 2019 Tom O’Neill book of the same name, Errol Morris’ new Netflix doc merely scratches the surface on ...
Dan Stevens co-stars as a conspiracy theory-promoting personality in the limited series “Zero Day.” (Jojo Whilden/Netflix) Those flourishes include, but aren’t limited to, a very Alex Jones ...
Tom O’Neill’s 2019 book ‘Chaos’ introduced the theory that the CIA may have been studying the Manson Family long before the murders. Netflix ... and conspiracy when reality is often ...
Did the CIA help Charles Manson control his family's minds? Errol Morris' “CHAOS: The Manson Murders" attempts to find out.
As someone who watches an unhealthy amount of true crime shows with my Netflix subscription and on some of the best streaming ...
“Frankly, I still don’t know what happened,” author Tom O’Neill says early on in Netflix’s new documentary ... rather than dig deeper into the conspiracy theories that made O’Neill ...
Errol Morris' film is built around the theory that Charles Manson learned mind-control techniques from the CIA. But guess ...
Master director Errol Morris puts together new interviews and creative storytelling devices to examine (but hardly prove) journalist's conspiracy theory.
Alas, there’s no confirmation that Manson had any real contact with the CIA or FBI, and that tenuousness also typifies O’Neill’s primary conjecture: that Manson was trained to control minds by Dr.
Was Charles Manson involved with the CIA's MKUltra program or any vast government conspiracy? Don't look here for answers.
The Manson Murders' explores alternative theories to the 'Helter Skelter' narrative, including possible government ties to ...