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Culture > Entertainment

There’s Going To Be A Follow-Up Series To ‘Making a Murderer’ & I Can’t Wait

If you were one of the many people who loved the 2015 docu-series Making a Murderer, here’s some good news: the show officially has a follow-up series, Convicting a Murderer, and it’s started production!

For a refresher, Making a Murderer follows Wisconsin man Steven Avery and his nephew Brendan Dassey, who were convicted of murdering a woman named Teresa Halbach in 2005. It gained both critical acclaim and general public popularity, and even some celebrities praised the series on Twitter. Others weren’t so happy with it, claiming that it presented a bias against law enforcement that skewed viewers’ perceptions of the case.

In place of Making a Murderer’s writers and directors Laura Ricciardi and Moira Demos, documentary filmmaker Shawn Rech and attorney Andrew Hale will take the helm for Convicting a Murderer, which is being differentiated from a sequel as a “follow-up series.”

Convicting a Murderer is going to have eight episodes (compared to Making a Murderer’s 10), and will center on the same people, with a slightly different focus on law enforcement’s case against Avery and Dassey. Rech has noted that they plan to address the claims of bias, with more appearances from people like Tom Fassbender, the lead investigator on the case, who wasn’t a part of the first series.

Rech said of the first series that “many on the law enforcement side of the story could not, or would not, participate in the series, which resulted in a one-sided analysis of the case,” which is a fair argument for why it may have come across as biased. But looking to the future, Rech mentioned the use of a “broader perspective” that might make the series a bit less controversial.

So if you need me in the meantime, I’ll be re-watching Making a Murderer in preparation!

Erica Kam is the Life Editor at Her Campus. She oversees the life, career, and news verticals on the site, including academics, experience, high school, money, work, and Her20s coverage. Over her six years at Her Campus, Erica has served in various editorial roles on the national team, including as the previous Culture Editor and as an editorial intern. She has also interned at Bustle Digital Group, where she covered entertainment news for Bustle and Elite Daily. She graduated in 2021 with a bachelor’s degree in English and creative writing from Barnard College, where she was the senior editor of Columbia and Barnard’s Her Campus chapter and a deputy copy editor for The Columbia Spectator. When she's not writing or editing, you can find her dissecting K-pop music videos for easter eggs and rereading Jane Austen novels. She also loves exploring her home, the best city in the world — and if you think that's not NYC, she's willing to fight you on it.