惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

S
Secure Thoughts
雷峰网
雷峰网
罗磊的独立博客
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
量子位
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
GbyAI
GbyAI
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
A
About on SuperTechFans
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
The Cloudflare Blog
Know Your Adversary
Know Your Adversary
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
D
DataBreaches.Net
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
K
Kaspersky official blog
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
爱范儿
爱范儿
U
Unit 42
Security Latest
Security Latest
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence
月光博客
月光博客
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
G
Google Developers Blog
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
T
Tor Project blog
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
Y
Y Combinator Blog
博客园 - Franky
H
Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
V
V2EX
B
Blog
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
S
Securelist
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
Blog — PlanetScale
Blog — PlanetScale
TaoSecurity Blog
TaoSecurity Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
P
Proofpoint News Feed
腾讯CDC
D
Docker
Google Online Security Blog
Google Online Security Blog

The Hollywood Reporter

Netflix In Final Talks to Buy Radford Studio Lot at Around $330 Million Price Tag How Scriptation Broke Hollywood’s Addiction to Paper The Conservative Climate Activists Hollywood Ignores Diamonds Are Forever. But Are They Sustainable? Dave Mason, Traffic Co-Founder and “We Just Disagree” Singer, Dies at 79 ‘Secret Lives of Mormon Wives’ Will Resume Production Following Filming Pause Amid Taylor Frankie Paul Investigation ‘Michael’: What Critics Are Saying About the King of Pop’s Biopic ‘Texas Chainsaw Massacre’: ‘Obsession’ Filmmaker Curry Barker in Talks to Write, Direct T-Mobile Deepens Its Promise of Fastest 5G Internet With Same-Day Delivery, Powered by DoorDash Dwayne Johnson and Stephen Merchant Adapting ‘Fighting With My Family’ Into Stage Musical Inside ‘Blue Heron,’ the Most Acclaimed Film of 2026 So Far Broadway Box Office: Grosses Fall Amid Spring Openings, Daniel Radcliffe Cracks Top Five How Peaches Gives Dan Levy’s ‘Big Mistakes’ a Queer Thrill ITV’s ‘Believe Me’: Daniel Mays on the Toll of Playing the “Black Cab Rapist” and Writer Jeff Pope on Focusing on Victims Rather Than the Predator K-pop Icons BigBang Announce World Tour, Tease Group’s “Reset” During Final Coachella Set John Oliver Mocks Trump for Calling Pope “Weak on Crime”: “OK, But Who Gives a Sh**?” Taylor Frankie Paul Posts About “Ugly Parts” of “Healing” After Learning She Won’t Face Additional Domestic Violence Charges ‘Euphoria’ Defecating Pig Starts a Drug War, With Rue Stuck in the Middle Frank Marshall Says ESPN Pulled His Doc ‘Rachel, Breathe’ “An Hour Before Broadcast” Over Rights Disagreement Barack Obama Says His and Michelle’s Production Company Higher Ground Will Go Independent After Netflix Deal Ends Asobi System Artists, Executives on Global Aspirations and Asobi Expo Hawaii 2026 ‘Facts of Life’ Star Mindy Cohn Reveals Cancer Diagnosis How a Gold House Dinner Helped ‘Beef’ Creator Lee Sung Jin Land Season 2 Star Charles Melton Dave Chappelle Pitches Eddie Murphy on Joining Potential ‘Chappelle’s Show’ Reboot at AFI Gala Noah Wyle on the Origins of and Real-Life Connection to His Dark ‘Pitt’ Season 2 Journey Billie Eilish and SZA Join Justin Bieber for Coachella Weekend Two Headlining Set PinkPantheress Throws Star-Studded Birthday Bash During Coachella Set With Slew of Celeb Guests Former U.S. Presidents, Entertainment, Sports and Media Leaders Convene in Rare Gathering to Celebrate Country’s 250th Anniversary Olivia Rodrigo Debuts “Drop Dead” Live During Surprise Appearance at Addison Rae’s Coachella Set Nadia Farès, ‘The Crimson Rivers’ Actress, Dies at 57 Charlize Theron Jabs at Timothée Chalamet’s Ballet, Opera Remarks: “AI Is Going to Be Able to Do His Job in 10 Years” Andrew Lloyd Webber Says He’s a Recovering Alcoholic Nathalie Baye, French Actress Known for ‘Downton Abbey’ and ‘Catch Me If You Can,’ Dies at 77 She Broke Barriers as a Production CEO in the Middle East. Then She Had to Evacuate the Region L.A. Production Crisis Now Mayoral Race Flashpoint Horror Highlights from the 2026 Overlook Film Festival Why Sundance Winner ‘Ricky’ Is Self-Distributing: “We Refuse for You Not to See It” Meet a Hollywood Advocate for Animal Welfare Brandi Rhodes, Wife of WWE Champion Cody Rhodes, Is Getting a New Reality Show (Exclusive) Hollywood Winners & Losers: CinemaCon Edition — Marvel Soars, DC Slips Jill Biden Tried to Win a Role on ‘Heated Rivalry’ — But She Was Outbid Online Personalities and Comedians Overtake TV and Newspapers as Primary News Sources Tyrese Haliburton Launches Production Company, Signs Multiyear Development Deal With Wheelhouse (Exclusive) Why the New ‘American Gladiators’ Doubled Down on Pro Wrestlers Hulu Nabs Four More Video Podcasts As Licensing Heats Up (Exclusive) ‘Humboldt USA’ Explores How Our Relationship With Nature Has Changed Through the Prism of a German Proto-Environmentalist ‘Heat’ Is a Doc That Asks Who We Become When Being in Our Own Skin Is Unbearable (Exclusive VdR Trailer and Chat) ‘Perfect Crown’ Scores Disney+’s Biggest K-Drama Debut to Date Ben Stiller Reveals He Didn’t Love All the ‘Meet the Parents’ Sequels ‘American Pie’ Star Shannon Elizabeth Says She Joined OnlyFans After Hollywood “Controlled the Narrative” of Her Career How ‘Hacks’ Finally Killed Its Central Feud Pam Abdy and Sandra Bullock Talk Paramount-Warners Deal and ‘Practical Magic 2’ ‘The Pitt’ Boss Says Noah Wyle’s Season 2 Storyline “Shows What Can Happen if You Don’t Take the Time to Resolve Mental Health Issues” Lynette Howell Taylor, Sara Murphy and Nastasya Popov to Discuss Power at Archer Film Festival The Best HBO Max Deals and Free Trial Hacks to Watch ‘Euphoria,’ ‘The Pitt’ and More Singer D4vd Arrested for Murder of Teen in Los Angeles, Police Say ‘Street Fighter’ Movie Trailer Brings the Pain — and the Camp Why CBS Remains Bullish on First-Run Syndicated Shows Pete Hegseth Reads Tarantino’s Fake Bible Quote From ‘Pulp Fiction’ at Prayer Service Tribeca Festival 2026 Lineup: Katie Holmes-Joshua Jackson Reunion Movie ‘Happy Hours,’ Films With Susan Sarandon, Dustin Hoffman, Quentin Tarantino Brian Williams Returns: Former NBC News and MSNBC Anchor Launching Netflix Podcast USC Has Just Launched an AI “Institute” for Actors For ‘The Roots of Madness,’ a Filmmaker Traveled to Conflict Zones to Explore Why So Many People Become Refugees ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy’ Review: Jack Reynor and Laia Costa Grapple With Ancient Evil and Grand Guignol Gore in Visceral Family Nightmare Juilliard Names Interim Drama School Leadership Team, Including Laura Linney Jamie Dornan Gets Puffy for Moncler by Eating Popsicle and Blowing Piece of Bubble Gum Carey Mulligan on Going Ballistic in ‘Beef’ Kit Connor, Taika Waititi to Voice Animated ‘Charlie vs. the Chocolate Factory,’ Netflix Drops First Look Roku Hits 100 Million Streaming Households Worldwide Behind the Hacker Leak of ‘Legend of Aang: The Last Airbender’ Nicholas Hoult Leads a Crew of Criminal YouTubers in First ‘How to Rob a Bank’ Footage Anne Hathaway and Dakota Johnson Face Off in First ‘Verity’ Trailer ‘Four Minus Three,’ Film About Family, Tears, Clowns and Hope That Won a Berlin Award, Sells to France, Canada, Australia Mel Brooks Unveils Title to ‘Spaceballs’ Sequel James Bond Casting Process Teased by Amazon MGM: “A Responsibility We Don’t Take Lightly” Jason Statham Unleashes ‘The Beekeeper 2’ Footage on CinemaCon “All Hail the Queen”: Donna Langley’s Power on Full Display as Snoop Dogg, Christopher Nolan, Steven Spielberg Bet on Universal ‘Masters of the Universe’: Camila Mendes Saves Nicholas Galitzine’s Life in New Footage Michael B. Jordan, Adria Arjona Get Flirty in Action-Packed ‘Thomas Crown Affair’ Trailer ‘The Fear of 13’ Theater Review: Adrien Brody Brings Unquestionable Commitment to a Death Row Drama Dulled by Pedestrian Writing Survival Horror Video Game ’99 Nights in the Forest’ Movie in the Works at 20th Century Studios Alec Baldwin on Career Ups and Downs, ‘Rust’ Prosecution’s Toll on His Health and Future Plans: “I Want to Retire” ‘Rooster’ Star Danielle Deadwyler Has Always Been the Goofball ‘The Audacity’ Creator Looks for Humanity in Silicon Valley: “It’s the Only Way Forward” Katy Perry Denies Ruby Rose’s Graphic Sexual Assault Claim: “Dangerous Reckless Lies” Lena Dunham Talks Adam Driver’s Temper and Being a “Lamb to the Slaughter” Making ‘Girls’ in New Memoir Mario Adorf, German-Italian Star of ‘The Tin Drum’ and ‘Winnetou,’ Dies at 95 Trump’s $10 Billion Lawsuit Over Epstein Story in Wall Street Journal Dismissed — but Not for Good Valerie Lee, One of the Young Munchkins in ‘The Wizard of Oz,’ Dies at 94 Netflix’s ‘Big Mistakes’ Took Dan Levy Out of His Comfort Zone. He Wants Hollywood to Know Why That’s OK Israeli Artist Noga Erez Gets Emotional During Coachella Set: “I’m Just Heartbroken and Sad” Justin Bieber’s Low-Key Coachella Performance Fuels Sexism Debate Prince Harry and Meghan Markle Attend Ted Sarandos’ ‘Beef’ Season 2 Event Following Netflix Drama Coachella Hot Shots: All the Highlights From Weekend One in the Desert Scarlett Johansson Says It “Was Tough” in the Early 2000s Because Actresses Were “Pulled Apart for How They Looked” Lila Raicek Broke Up With Roy Price Amid Scandal. Her Debut Novel is Definitely Not About It. When Wonder Woman Gave Primetime a Lift Justin Bieber Goes Heavy On ‘Swag’ In Much-Anticipated Coachella Headlining Set Trump Calls Tiger Woods From Rehab as Melania Addresses Her Epstein Statement on ‘SNL’ Box Office Milestone: ‘Super Mario Galaxy’ Soars Past $300M in U.S. and $600M Globally
Netflix’s ‘Instadocs’ Producer on Why His New Docuseries Is Not Just a Newsmagazine Show
Tony Maglio · 2026-05-30 · via The Hollywood Reporter

Logo text

Love documentaries but bristle at their long lead time? Well, first of all, it’s kind of weird how granular you are with your entertainment content, but second, Netflix has the series for you.

Instadocs is a new, appropriately titled “expedited documentary series” from executive producers Josh Tyrangiel (Vice News Tonight), Connor Schell (30 for 30) and showrunner Steve Yaccino (Giuliani: What Happened to America’s Mayor?). The whole idea here is to deliver high-quality documentary programming, but to do so at a pace that guarantees the subject matter still matters to consumers. To some degree, the Instadocs concept already exists as what previous generations referred to as “the news.” But Tyrangiel, whose entire career has been news media, says that is not really the right comparison.

Instadocs premieres on Saturday, May 30, with Alex Murdaugh, Unconvicted. Three years ago, former lawyer Alex Murdaugh was found guilty of murdering his wife, Maggie, and son, Paul. But that was all covered in Netflix’s other Murdaugh docuseries, Murdaugh Murders: A Southern Scandal (2023). (It was also the subject of Hulu’s scripted series Murdaugh: Death in the Family.

Murdaugh’s team — the not-disbarred attorneys at the defendant’s table — appealed, claiming that Colleton County Clerk Becky Hill had interfered with the jury. Weeks ago, the bad guys won, and Murdaugh has been granted a new trial. Alex Murdaugh, Unconvicted features interviews with South Carolina attorney general Alan Wilson, the creators of Trial Watchers, and jurors, including Myra Crosby, whose dismissal from the box contributed to questions about Hill’s misconduct.

Read The Hollywood Reporter‘s Q&A with Tyrangiel below.

I kind of already know the answer to this question — or at least some of it — because it’s literally in the series title, but what differentiates Instadocs from other documentary programming?

I think that there’s a lot of stuff out there in the marketplace that people move very quickly and get something up as quickly as they possibly can, and a lot of times it’s not terribly artful, and it doesn’t move the story forward, but it is a response to a need, right? Netflix has a bar for quality that we’re just not going to go under, right? So, that has sometimes inhibited our ability to respond to [news]. In this instance, what we’ve really created is a unit that’s very dedicated — and the series is very dedicated — to hitting the intersection between urgency and finesse. We don’t want to compromise on quality, beauty, facts, and getting to the center of a story. At the same time, we want to be able to deliver it to members at the peak of their interest in the story, and so that requires constructing a very specific kind of team with a very particular set of skills who know how to move swiftly, deploy the techniques of documentary, but not take the time that most documentaries take to make.

Do you see Instadocs as not just a new documentary series, but also a new kind of documentary series? A repeatable subset of the genre of documentary programming, so to speak.

It’s hard for me to speak to how to categorize it. What’d I’d say is, I know what we’re out there to do, which is to actually get people to the center of the story. And that means doing lots and lots of original shooting with the people at the center of these important events. Our appetite is pretty wide, so it can be current events, cultural moments, or crises. We just need to move at the speed of the story and really try and arrive at our timing so that we’re at this sort of apex of the conversation. We know that we can deliver this kind of storytelling across a wide variety of subjects, and it’s really now about sticking to our guts, and that means we are going to be in these places. We are not structuring everything from clips. We’re not relying on other people’s footage. We believe people cherish taste and a beautiful kind of documentary sensibility that can go along with these stories.

Using less archival footage will save digging time, but what other practical shortcuts do you plan to use for the sake of speed?

One thing is that you hire people for whom speed is a skill, right? Part of what we talked about from the beginning with Netflix and with (producer) Words + Pictures is, like, the greatest efficiency in making a film is decisiveness. If you set out what you’re here to do, and then you execute on that in the edit, and you put in lots and lots of time, you have people who are inexhaustible, you can get there. Part of what we did in hiring our team, is these are all people who have worked under very challenging conditions, who know how to execute at speed. This is not a gig for everybody. This is a kind of Navy SEAL doc gig. And so we hired very well, knowing full well that the temperament of the team is incredibly important. We’re not here to ruminate on tiny shot choices. If we’ve got the goods, we’ve got them. And again, if you put yourself at that intersection of urgency and finesse, that’s what we’re trying to nail.

Are there actual production sacrifices you have to make?

It’s a great question. When you’re trying to turn things out this fast, really, there’s only two choices: One is that you keep your regular working hours and sacrifice some steps — we are sacrificing no steps. We’re not sacrificing fact-checking, color or a mix. We have original composed music. And so the only way to do it is to sacrifice sleep. It is working as many of the 24 hours in a day as possible to get this done. But there are no corners being cut. We don’t want to sacrifice quality at all, because we think audiences really want to see the very best when they want to see it, and that’s what we’re going to do.

What is your turnaround time?

So on [Murdaugh], we kicked off production on May 18, and the first installment of the series hits the service on May 30.

We’re speaking on May 27 — I don’t yet have a screener. Is the episode done?

I can tell you it is pretty much done because I can be on this phone call.

One thing that has been so great about the project is that everybody understands we’re going to move at the speed of the story responsibly, right? Some may take less time, some may take a little bit more time, but what we really want to do is make sure that we get all of the things that are most important, which is nailing the story, nailing the accuracy and the context, and still hitting that window when people are like, “Wait, what happened?” And then delivering something that’s really good.

Why should one not think of Instadocs as a weekly newsmagazine show, like a 60 Minutes or a Dateline, which have been around forever?

So, one thing we don’t have: correspondents. We don’t have anchors. We reserve the right to drop voiceover down the road if we want, but right now we don’t. And some of that is because we don’t think we need it. With much respect to news divisions, they are larger and they have an obligation to cover pretty much everything, right? That’s not us. There’s certain stories that are just not going to work for Instadocs, and there are others where we will absolutely be all over it. But I think news is the wrong comparison.

Will Instadocs continue to report on a developing topic like the Murdaugh case?

We reserve the right to do whatever is necessary to satisfy the audience. What I would say is, it’s not a true crime series, and as soon as everybody gets a couple of days’ sleep and gets properly hydrated, we will be waiting for the next current event that is so urgent and so interesting that we have to deploy. It could be across a wide variety of things — our antennas are up. We’re going to learn from each episode and installment that we do, like, “OK, what do we like and what are we good at? What is this format really, really strong on?” So yeah, could we go back? Maybe. But we’re just scanning.

What is the rollout plan? Weekly? Every other?

Installments are TBD.

What about the episode order size?

We’ll stay ever-ready, ever-vigilant — but the number…all that stuff is TBD. We don’t want to be in people’s faces when it’s not required. You can exhaust audiences. Our goal is to really be there when the need is there.

If it’s an all-hands mad dash when you have a topic, but you won’t always have one or a deadline, what is production like in a slow news cycle?

I would say that, like a good firehouse, there’ll be some times when we’re working on fire prevention, and we’re looking ahead and seeing, “Well, is this thing brewing? What would we need to do to plan for it?” A lot of this is preparation. At the same time, when the bell rings, everybody moves. We were up and running when we got the call, and everybody responded, everybody pitched in. It was great to see.

Do you have a second episode subject yet?

I don’t. We’re monitoring lots of stuff, and then we will sit back and determine when the right time to go is, and then we’ll go. But I’m very comfortable with both having too many stories and not enough, because this world always provides.