O.J. Simpson has died at 76. He became a a football star, but a 1995 murder trial made him infamous. Simpson was eventually acquitted of the murder of his ex-wife and her friend – a verdict that split the public. How will he be remembered?
Read more:
Simpson grew up in a poor neighborhood in San Francisco, and eventually rose to NFL stardom playing for the Buffalo Bills and later the San Francisco 49ers. He was one of the most well- known and well-liked personalities off the field, too, and was a sports commentator and appeared in more than 20 movies.
But his private life was much darker. During his marriage to Nicole Brown Simpson, his wife repeatedly called 911 asking for protection. In one incident, police found her with bruises, a cut lip and a black eye, saying, “He’s going to kill me, he’s going to kill me.”
In the mid-1990s, the country watched as Simpson stood trial for the murder of his then ex-wife and a friend. He was ultimately acquitted. Simpson died of cancer on Wednesday.
Today on “Post Reports,” we talk to Robin Givhan, The Post’s senior critic-at-large, about why the trial had legal and cultural repercussions for years.
Today’s show was produced and mixed by Ted Muldoon with help from Emma Talkoff, Rennie Svirnovskiy, Elana Gordon and Maggie Penman. It was edited by Monica Campbell and Lucy Perkins. Additional thanks to Krissah Thompson.
Subscribe to The Washington Post here.
The unprecedented health-care hack that may affect you
The precarious power of Speaker Mike Johnson
India's secret assassination plot on U.S. soil
What to know about the new bird flu outbreak
The Campaign Moment: The GOP's Marjorie Taylor Greene problem
One woman’s failed abortions led another to motherhood
The mounting antiwar protests on college campuses
TikTok might get banned. For real this time.
Can cities fine unhoused people for sleeping outside?
Deep Reads: Riding the baddest bulls made him a legend. Then one broke his neck.
The Campaign Moment: Trump jurors and Biden on Israel
America’s toxic tap water problem
How a narco revolt pushed a peaceful nation to the brink
Will Israel “take the win”?
Day 1 of Trump's first criminal trial
The Campaign Moment: It’s 1864 in Arizona
The mounting allegations against Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs
Help! I haven’t filed my taxes yet!
How Trump narrowly escaped a cash crunch
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The Campaign Moment
The Daily
Consider This from NPR
The NPR Politics Podcast
The 7