Sean Combs: The Reckoning to It Was Just an Accident: the week in rave reviews
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Sean Combs: The Reckoning to It Was Just an Accident: the week in rave reviews
"Netflix Sean Combs. Photograph: Paras Griffin/Getty Images Summed up in a sentence An utterly damning docuseries about the musician which has so rattled his lawyers they are demanding that Netflix remove it. What our reviewer said It does such a thorough job of laying out and backing up so many horrific allegations that his way back to stardom is surely blocked for ever. Stuart Heritage Read the full review Further reading A lot of bad things happened': the most shocking moments from the Diddy docuseries Pick of the rest"
"Summed up in a sentence The lockdown star gets political, shining a light on the horrific unhealthiness of snack bars by creating one that's as harmful as possible. What our reviewer said Licensed to Kill, with its unabashed anger at rampant commercialism and its belief that the problem has gone far enough to demand radical, even reckless political action, feels like it might be part of something wider than an argument about snack food."
The Netflix documentary presents widespread, corroborated allegations against Sean Combs and has prompted his lawyers to demand its removal, jeopardizing any return to mainstream stardom. A BBC programme, What's the Monarchy For?, features David Dimbleby delivering pointed criticism of the royal family. The Marvellous Miniature Workshop showcases model makers recreating deeply meaningful places at tiny scales. Joe Wicks' Licensed to Kill uses sharp political satire to expose the unhealthiness of snack bars by constructing an intentionally harmful example and advocating radical action. The film It Was Just an Accident is recommended as the standout cinematic pick.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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