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O.J. Simpson Murder Trial - Two Americas Watching: Race, Policing, and the Verdict

O.J. Simpson Murder Trial - Two Americas Watching: Race, Policing, and the Verdict

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In this compelling episode, host Ava Grey examines why 95 million Americans watched the same O.J. Simpson verdict in October 1995 yet perceived entirely different realities—exploring how the Rodney King beating, the LA uprising, and decades of documented LAPD racism created the psychological context that made Black and white America's split-screen reactions not irrational, but logical conclusions drawn from fundamentally different lived experiences. Through careful analysis of the Fuhrman tapes, the Christopher Commission findings, and the psychology of motivated reasoning, Grey reveals how the trial became less about one man's guilt and more about whether America's justice system could ever be trusted.

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