There are all kinds of tricks used to get publicity. Some good; some bad.
A common tactic today is to show the media that people are “signing” a petition for one issue or another. The news media then uses the information to prove there is interest in a cause or story.
The latest petition hype is surrounding a Netflix “documentary” called “Making a Murderer” that focuses on the case of Steven Avery, who is currently serving life in prison for brutally killing and burning a woman in 2005 in Wisconsin. The 10-part series focused on shortcomings of the case and heavily relied on information from Avery’s defense team.
CBS issued a story titled “Making a Murder Fans Demand Release of Steven Avery.” Really? People watch a TV series and “demand” the release of a convicted murderer?
“More than 200,000 people have signed petitions on change.org and whitehouse.gov, demanding Avery be pardoned,” said CBS. “He also gained celebrity support from Mia Farrow who said she was “outraged,” and Ricky Gervais who said the series deserved a “Nobel Prize.'”
If Farrow is outraged and Gervais is upset then Avery surely should be released. Ignore the trial. The 70-year-old Farrow, the ex-wife of Frank Sinatra and longtime controversial love interest of Woody Allen, who ditched her for their adopted daughter, is “outraged!”
The prosecutor in the case, Ken Kratz, recently pointed out that “80 to 90 percent of the evidence that tied Avery to the murder was never shown in the documentary (LINK). He accused filmmakers of not wanting to “muddy up a perfectly good conspiracy movie with what actually happened.”
The latest tactic to continue the hype are stories about a number of petitions being signed by people demanding Avery get a new trial or be released from prison based on the documentary “evidence.”
A number of legitimate media outlets are breathlessly reporting the groundswell of support across the country for Avery.
“Online petitions calling for a presidential pardon of Making a Murderer subjects Steven Avery and Brendan Dassey are more than just a flash in the pan: they have now accumulated over 176,000 signatures on change.org and the White House’s website,” noted Entertainment Weekly.
What these media outlets fail to note that getting signatures today involves nothing more than a keystroke. In the past, petitioners actually had to go out and try and get people to sign a petition. Today, it is simply an on-line 10-second, mindless effort.
As an example, on change.org more than a million people have signed a petition to bring a refugee-Aya-to America. One would be hard-pressed to have even heard of Aya or why she should come to America.
The news media seems to not realize anyone can start an on-line petition for any reason. Such vital topics as “Ask Trident to Remove Controversial Ingredient from Chewing Gum” has amassed nearly 100,000 signatures. Another, calling for stricter hit-and-run laws in Missouri has eclipsed the 120,000 mark.
Nearly 150,000 people are demanding to boycott the Winter Olympics in South Korean because it is a “dog eating nation!” A current one is “To have the Steelers disqualified from the playoffs an (sic) the Bengals in.” A lot of thought went into that one!!
This silly petition trick has worked to generate publicity in the past and Avery’s supporters are counting on it to work for them. And hoping journalists fall for the trick again.
Read this story in the New Yorker and see if you believe Avery is innocent (link).








