And if you gaze long enough into an abyss, the abyss will gaze back into you.” Meaning that, “Hey, be careful that you don’t get so involved that you become me.” The quote was, “Whoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he does not become a monster. So one day he sends me a Nietzsche quote that really rattled me and was very prolific. Do you want to explain?ĭeanna: A lot of the time when he communicated with us, he would tag us online. Mark: There was a message (Deanna) got from Luka. Was there anything filmed that didn’t make it into the documentary? What’s been so special for me is to see young women who’ve been inspired to go out and do their own investigative work, that’s been very cool…But then there’s the one reaction that’s like, “you’re responsible for the murder.” How the f–k am I responsible? (Pauses) It’s very uncomfortable. I’ve been paying attention to the responses but really, at a higher level…There are 10,000 reactions and 9,999 of them are wonderful. What has the Internet reaction been like for you personally, Deanna?ĭeanna: It’s been really weird, man. Not only was it an unbelievable story, it had something incredibly important to say about internet culture and the difficulty of prosecuting these crimes. What you saw (in “Cats”) is a real-time evolution of what happened on the Internet. The story that proceeded the murder of this extraordinary crime – these internet sleuths that operated, the story with what they had done – it was all so amazing. As I began to look at it more and more, I was absolutely flabbergasted. Mark: I vaguely remember the story making international news years ago. Variety recently caught up with director Mark Lewis as well as one of the series’ primary gumshoes, Deanna Thompson, who, using the alias Baudi Moovan, moonlights as an online investigator when she’s not crunching data for a Las Vegas casino.
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