Agree with this. Felt that same anger too.
I finished watching this two days ago and am just getting to a point of being able to type about it. But what I've felt is not anger (though I felt it starting to brim in episode three) but overwhelming sadness. I watch a ridiculous number of documentaries, but don't remember a story where
every character is a near-tragic or tragic figure. And aside from the named persons, just being reminded of the divisiveness that existed is depressing.
In my senior year I wrote a final paper on the Watts riots for a 20th century American history class, and I remember ending it by saying that conditions were ripe for a similar outbreak at the time. Shortly thereafter, Rodney King riots happened...it's hard to explain to anyone not alive at that time (or too young to remember) how clear it was - even to the sheltered East Coast liberal arts person I was - how bad things were between police and minority groups at the time.
I can't think of any person in this doc about whom I don't have mixed feelings. The closest is Ron Shipp, who is nearest to a "hero" as we have but ends up as a sad story. Even Mark Fuhrman and OJ, the opposite ends of an ####### spectrum, had some characteristics that made them partly sympathetic. I realize that seems like a stretch if you're a "black and white" (no pun intended) sort, but I find it hard to think of people as "all bad" or "all good" and see some positive, and therefore sad, parts to both of them
I particularly felt for Darden - wish he'd been interviewed but understand why he wouldn't want to be reminded of any of this. And I was particularly disappointed in remembering Barry Scheck's part in this - he is (was?) one of the people I admire most due to his work with the Innocence Project.
Like many mentioned in this thread, I found the first and last episodes most compelling as I had seen so little of the early footage and also had little understanding of the Vegas stuff. That's one thing that continues to bother me, too - as broken and ####ed as I know our legal system is, and as much schadenfreude as I experienced in seeing OJ get his comeuppance, I'm profoundly disturbed to see the "make-up" sentence given in that situation. I know most would disagree with me, but I still believe in equity and fairness in sentencing.
Have to thank those who contributed to this thread as I never intended to watch this - thinking I knew all the OJ stuff - until I read some posts and saw how much more there was to this.
I don't know. I am impossibly sad in thinking about this doc and can't get it out of my head.
ETA: Irrelevant but weird to me tidbit - I briefly dated Kim Goldman's ex-husband after they were divorced. Heard from him basically that that family was just ####ed after this happened. He didn't have a lot of good things to say about Fred Goldman, but it was admittedly due to his heartbreak and inability to let go of what had happened. That family was just devastated beyond repair.