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What to Watch: The Yogurt Shop Murders, The Twelve, Chief Of War, The Logies and Wednesday


The Yogurt Shop Murders

Monday, streaming on Max

Another day, another grisly true-crime documentary. They’re a dime a dozen on TV, to the extent it’s become easy to feel immune to the horrors these shows often explore as you sit on your couch eating snacks.

On the surface, this four-part documentary could feel like just another in a long line of voyeuristic true-crime deep dives, but it’s so much more than that.

It’s an exploration into the murders of four teenage girls, killed at a frozen yoghurt shop in Austin, Texas, in 1991. It takes a more nuanced approach, looking not so much at the awful unsolved crime that was committed — though that is discussed in horrifying detail — but at the effect it’s had on people in the years since.

Director Margaret Brown (Descendant) paints a haunting picture of lives upended by an unspeakably brutal crime, made all the worse by the fact that justice appears never to have been truly served. Through interviews with the investigators, families, victims’ siblings and the two men who served time for the crime, the series raises some important questions about the criminal process, how crimes are reported, and the power of suggestion. At certain points, my jaw was on the floor.

This is by no means an easy watch — like all true-crime series the subject matter is often difficult to stare down — but I found myself utterly hooked. I was also incredibly moved, especially by one of the victim’s sisters, Sonora Thomas, who now works as a therapist advocating for storytelling as a means to help people heal from trauma.

This is a fascinating documentary, and not to be missed.


The Yogurt Shop Murders

Monday, streaming on Max

Another day, another grisly true-crime documentary. They’re a dime a dozen on TV, to the extent it’s become easy to feel immune to the horrors these shows often explore as you sit on your couch eating snacks.

On the surface, this four-part documentary could feel like just another in a long line of voyeuristic true-crime deep dives, but it’s so much more than that.

It’s an exploration into the murders of four teenage girls, killed at a frozen yoghurt shop in Austin, Texas, in 1991. It takes a more nuanced approach, looking not so much at the awful unsolved crime that was committed — though that is discussed in horrifying detail — but at the effect it’s had on people in the years since.

Director Margaret Brown (Descendant) paints a haunting picture of lives upended by an unspeakably brutal crime, made all the worse by the fact that justice appears never to have been truly served. Through interviews with the investigators, families, victims’ siblings and the two men who served time for the crime, the series raises some important questions about the criminal process, how crimes are reported, and the power of suggestion. At certain points, my jaw was on the floor.

This is by no means an easy watch — like all true-crime series the subject matter is often difficult to stare down — but I found myself utterly hooked. I was also incredibly moved, especially by one of the victim’s sisters, Sonora Thomas, who now works as a therapist advocating for storytelling as a means to help people heal from trauma.

This is a fascinating documentary, and not to be missed.

Reporter US

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