Creator of 'Dahmer' series unloads on Netflix for caving to outrage, removing 'LGBTQ' tag: 'I didn't like it'



Ryan Murphy, the Hollywood director who co-created the recent series on serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer, recently condemned Netflix for bowing to woke critics.

What is the background?

In late September, Netflix removed its "LGBTQ" tag from "Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story," the dramatized biographical film of the infamous serial killer.

The streaming platform presumably attached the "LGBTQ" tag to the show because Dahmer was a gay man who primarily preyed upon other gay men, as well as racial minorities and underage boys.

What did Murphy say?

Speaking in an extensive interview with the New York Times, Murphy criticized Netflix for removing the LGBTQ tag from his show.

In fact, Murphy claimed that Netflix officials told him specifically that they removed the tag because of the backlash they had received for attaching it in the first place.

"The rule of my career has been: The more specific you are, the more universal you can become," he told the Times.

"I also don’t think that all gay stories have to be happy stories," he explained. "There was a moment on Netflix where they removed the LGBTQ tag from ‘Dahmer,’ and I didn’t like it and I asked why they did that, and they said because people were upset because it was an upsetting story. I was, like, ‘Well, yeah.’

"But it was a story of a gay man and, more importantly, his gay victims," Murphy said.

Moreover, Murphy said he believes the way that he told Dahmer's story highlighted how white privilege allowed Dahmer to get away with victimizing gay people and racial minorities.

From the Times:

Mr. Murphy said he did the story to shed light on the racism and homophobia that pervaded the case, at the victims’ expense, and because “it was the biggest thing I’ve ever seen that really sort of examines how easy it is to get away with things with the white privilege aspects.”

Anything else?

"Dahmer" is the second-most popular English show ever on Netflix. Only "Stranger Things 4" received more viewers in its initial release.

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US swimmer openly questions whether Russian gold medalist is a doper: 'I'm swimming in a race that's probably not clean'



A Team USA swimmer on Friday openly aired concerns that his Russian gold medalist opponent had gained a competitive advantage through doping.

"I've got about 15 thoughts; 13 of them would get me into a lot of trouble," Ryan Murphy, a captain on the U.S. Olympic swimming team, said during a post-race press conference Friday morning after being asked about concerns he had that opponents were doping.

"It is a huge mental drain on me ... that I'm swimming in a race that's probably not clean," he added.

Sitting just feet away from Murphy was the Russian Olympic Committee's Evgeny Rylov, who moments before had edged the American to win the gold in the men's 200-meter backstroke. Rylov had also bested Murphy in the 100-meter backstroke earlier this week. In 2016, Murphy won gold in both events.

The allegations are the latest in a controversy surrounding the International Olympic Committee's decision to allow roughly 330 Russian athletes to compete at the Tokyo Games despite banning Russia over its state-sponsored doping program. Russian athletes not found to be involved in the doping scheme are competing under a neutral workaround banner known as the Russian Olympic Confederation.

I asked 🇺🇸 Ryan Murphy, who just took silver in the 200 back behind Russia’s Evgeny Rylov, about any concerns he ha… https://t.co/Xoiqe3mXoO

— Laine Higgins (@lainehiggins17) 1627611442.0

"It frustrates me, but I have to swim the field that's next to me," Murphy continued. "I don't have the bandwidth to train for the Olympics at a very high level and try to lobby the people who are making the decisions that they're making the wrong decisions."

Murphy wasn't alone in airing his concerns about potential Russian doping. The U.K.'s Luke Greenbank, who finished third in the 200-meter race, also made his thoughts known.

"It's frustrating knowing there's a state-sponsored doping program going on and not more being done to tackle that," Greenbank said. "It's obviously a very difficult situation not knowing whether the race is clean ... It's a strange situation but I've got to keep my mind on my own situation and focus on what I can control."

Neither Murphy nor Greenbank explicitly accused Rylov, though their implicit accusations were plain.

According to USA Today, in response to a reporter's question on the matter, Rylov replied, "I have always been for clean competition ... From the bottom of my heart, I am for clean sport ... Ryan didn't accuse me of anything, so I'd rather not comment."

The ROC also replied to the controversy, saying in a translated tweet: "English-language propaganda, oozing verbal sweat in the Tokyo heat. Through the mouths of athletes offended by defeats. We will not console you. Forgive those who are weaker. God is their judge. And for us – an assistant."

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