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Mega Edition: How The Legacy Media Failed The Jeffrey Epstein Survivors (7/4/25)
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Manage episode 492541288 series 2987886
Content provided by Bobby Capucci. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Bobby Capucci or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.
The media failed the Jeffrey Epstein survivors not just through omission, but through active complicity, sensationalism, and cowardice. For over a decade, major outlets tiptoed around Epstein’s connections to powerful elites—billionaires, royals, politicians—not because they lacked evidence, but because they feared legal retaliation and loss of access. The 2008 sweetheart deal Epstein received in Florida wasn’t just a failure of the justice system—it was aided and abetted by a media class that chose silence over scrutiny. ABC News infamously shelved Amy Robach’s 2015 interview with Virginia Giuffre, which contained explosive allegations implicating Prince Andrew and others. The reasoning wasn’t editorial—it was political and reputational preservation for those at the top. In that silence, Epstein’s victims were robbed of their voices, left to scream into a void while their abuser waltzed through high society.
Even after Epstein’s 2019 arrest and suspicious death, coverage often pivoted to the lurid rather than the systemic: the island, the plane logs, the high-profile names were discussed in tabloid tones, stripped of the gravity that survivors' stories demanded. Few journalists interrogated the intelligence connections, the role of institutions like the FBI in ignoring leads, or the complicity of the financial and philanthropic worlds that kept Epstein viable. Survivors weren’t centered—they were background noise to a freakshow narrative. The media's reluctance to fully pursue the truth didn’t just protect Epstein’s enablers—it prolonged the suffering of his victims by signaling that their pain was less important than the reputations of the rich and powerful.
to contact me:
[email protected]
source:
https://www.npr.org/2019/08/22/753390385/a-dead-cat-a-lawyers-call-and-a-5-figure-donation-how-media-fell-short-on-epstei
…
continue reading
Even after Epstein’s 2019 arrest and suspicious death, coverage often pivoted to the lurid rather than the systemic: the island, the plane logs, the high-profile names were discussed in tabloid tones, stripped of the gravity that survivors' stories demanded. Few journalists interrogated the intelligence connections, the role of institutions like the FBI in ignoring leads, or the complicity of the financial and philanthropic worlds that kept Epstein viable. Survivors weren’t centered—they were background noise to a freakshow narrative. The media's reluctance to fully pursue the truth didn’t just protect Epstein’s enablers—it prolonged the suffering of his victims by signaling that their pain was less important than the reputations of the rich and powerful.
to contact me:
[email protected]
source:
https://www.npr.org/2019/08/22/753390385/a-dead-cat-a-lawyers-call-and-a-5-figure-donation-how-media-fell-short-on-epstei
1100 episodes
MP3•Episode home
Manage episode 492541288 series 2987886
Content provided by Bobby Capucci. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Bobby Capucci or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://ppacc.player.fm/legal.
The media failed the Jeffrey Epstein survivors not just through omission, but through active complicity, sensationalism, and cowardice. For over a decade, major outlets tiptoed around Epstein’s connections to powerful elites—billionaires, royals, politicians—not because they lacked evidence, but because they feared legal retaliation and loss of access. The 2008 sweetheart deal Epstein received in Florida wasn’t just a failure of the justice system—it was aided and abetted by a media class that chose silence over scrutiny. ABC News infamously shelved Amy Robach’s 2015 interview with Virginia Giuffre, which contained explosive allegations implicating Prince Andrew and others. The reasoning wasn’t editorial—it was political and reputational preservation for those at the top. In that silence, Epstein’s victims were robbed of their voices, left to scream into a void while their abuser waltzed through high society.
Even after Epstein’s 2019 arrest and suspicious death, coverage often pivoted to the lurid rather than the systemic: the island, the plane logs, the high-profile names were discussed in tabloid tones, stripped of the gravity that survivors' stories demanded. Few journalists interrogated the intelligence connections, the role of institutions like the FBI in ignoring leads, or the complicity of the financial and philanthropic worlds that kept Epstein viable. Survivors weren’t centered—they were background noise to a freakshow narrative. The media's reluctance to fully pursue the truth didn’t just protect Epstein’s enablers—it prolonged the suffering of his victims by signaling that their pain was less important than the reputations of the rich and powerful.
to contact me:
[email protected]
source:
https://www.npr.org/2019/08/22/753390385/a-dead-cat-a-lawyers-call-and-a-5-figure-donation-how-media-fell-short-on-epstei
…
continue reading
Even after Epstein’s 2019 arrest and suspicious death, coverage often pivoted to the lurid rather than the systemic: the island, the plane logs, the high-profile names were discussed in tabloid tones, stripped of the gravity that survivors' stories demanded. Few journalists interrogated the intelligence connections, the role of institutions like the FBI in ignoring leads, or the complicity of the financial and philanthropic worlds that kept Epstein viable. Survivors weren’t centered—they were background noise to a freakshow narrative. The media's reluctance to fully pursue the truth didn’t just protect Epstein’s enablers—it prolonged the suffering of his victims by signaling that their pain was less important than the reputations of the rich and powerful.
to contact me:
[email protected]
source:
https://www.npr.org/2019/08/22/753390385/a-dead-cat-a-lawyers-call-and-a-5-figure-donation-how-media-fell-short-on-epstei
1100 episodes
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