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For years now, I’ve had advocates who work with survivors of domestic violence tell me that two events in 1994 changed entirely the landscape for victims’ services in their field: the passage of the Violence Against Women Act and the murder of Nicole Brown Simpson. In fact, many advocates cite her death in June of that year as instrumental in Congress’s prioritizing the passage of the Violence Against Women Act that September, which in turn authorized the creation of the National Domestic Violence Hotline. Simpson trial. It was the first time many Americans were even made aware of the domestic violence services offered in their own backyards. Yet it’s worth taking a moment to remember the ways his case, even in light of the outcome, had profound and lasting consequences for domestic violence victims, for their advocates and for court systems.
Persons: I’ve, Nicole Brown Simpson, hotlines, Simpson, Brown, Ron Goldman’s —
Simpson not guilty of murder, the comedian Norm Macdonald opened Weekend Update on “Saturday Night Live” at his desk next to a photo of the defendant. “Murder is legal in the state of California.”The 1995 trial of Simpson, who died Wednesday at 76, didn’t just dominate and revolutionize the media. The details of the killings of Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald L. Goldman were daily fodder for punchlines on talk shows, sitcoms and stand-up stages. In his 1996 breakthrough special, “Bring the Pain,” Chris Rock’s button-pushing analysis of the dynamics of the O.J. joke was so pervasive in the 1990s that not telling one could make you stand out.
Persons: O.J, Simpson, Norm Macdonald, , didn’t, Nicole Brown Simpson, Ronald L, Goldman, Macdonald, Chris Rock’s, , Howard Stern, David Letterman ”, ” Letterman Locations: California
Frank A. Olson, who as a top executive of Hertz cast the running back O.J. Simpson as the star of the company’s commercials — a corporate marriage that shined up both parties and that lasted two decades, until Mr. Simpson was charged in a double homicide in 1994 — died at his home in Palm Beach, Fla., on Wednesday, the same day Mr. Simpson died. Mr. Olson was 91. More than business partners, Mr. Olson and Mr. Simpson, both San Francisco natives, forged an alliance, beginning in the 1970s, that spoke of that mutually beneficial zone where corporate and social life intertwine. Mr. Olson, an avid golfer, sponsored Mr. Simpson for membership in the private Arcola Country Club in Paramus, N.J., where in 1992 Mr. Simpson, a former Heisman Trophy winner and Pro Football Hall of Famer, became the first Black member.
Persons: Frank A, Olson, Simpson, , Covid, Christopher, Blake, . Olson, Hertz, pitchman, intertwine, Nicole Brown Simpson, Ronald L, Goldman, ” Mr Organizations: Hertz, Arcola Country Club, Heisman, Pro Football Hall of Famer Locations: Palm Beach, Fla, Francisco, Arcola, Paramus, N.J, Los Angeles
But the impression that Simpson’s all-consuming trial had on shaping the modern media environment cannot be overstated. Simpson’s trial gave way to a media landscape dominated by salacious reality television and talking head-driven cable news. It’s difficult to imagine Trump being elected to the White House without the three-legged stool that Simpson’s trial played a crucial role in building. Reality TV had started earlier, but after Simpson there was a massive profusion of ‘Reality TV,’” Socolow said in an email. “That’s how ‘The Apprentice’ gave Donald Trump a comeback in American culture, and he rode his reality TV stardom to the White House.”
Persons: New York CNN — O.J, Simpson, Donald Trump, Nicole Brown Simpson, Ronald Goldman, Simpson’s, Jeffrey Toobin, Nancy Grace, Greta Van Susteren, Dan Abrams, Harvey Levin, Gregg Jarrett, Al Cowlings, Allen J, Lance Ito’s, Robert Kardashian, Kardashian, Peter Jennings, Tom Brokaw, Andy Lack, , Michael Socolow, Rupert Murdoch, Socolow, , Ted Turner, Murdoch, Trump, “ Simpson, ” Socolow Organizations: New York CNN, National Football League, Patrol, Bronco, Los Angeles Times, CNN, Court TV, The New York Times, NBC, University of Maine Communications, Fox, Fox News, TV Locations: New York, Los Angeles, California, Brentwood, The, Australian
The New York Times News Quiz, April 12, 2024
  + stars: | 2024-04-12 | by ( ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
Simpson, the football star who was tried and acquitted over the murder of his former wife and her friend, died this week at 76. Years after his high-profile trial, Simpson served several years in jail for what?
Persons: O.J, Simpson
"The Terminator" writer Gale Anne Hurd addressed a rumor about O.J. Arnold Schwarzenegger said last year that Simpson was once in line to play the Terminator. AdvertisementGale Anne Hurd, the producer and co-writer of "The Terminator," debunked a claim about O.J. Hurd knocked down the assertion by Arnold Schwarzenegger that Simpson was at one point in line to play the Terminator, rather than him. Hurd disputed that, saying Simpson was "never even considered" for the movie, which premiered in 1984 and made Schwarzenegger's career.
Persons: Gale Anne Hurd, Simpson, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Hurd, Organizations: Service, Business
O.J. Simpson helped create the America we live in today
  + stars: | 2024-04-12 | by ( John Blake | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +9 min
Many Black Americans cheered, pumped their fists and exchanged high-fives, while many White Americans gasped in disbelief and anger. Some say America is a nation of immigrants who bolster the economy and reinvigorate the country. Kent Nishimura/Getty ImagesPoliticians have adopted the Simpson trial playbookThere was a surreal moment during the Simpson trial that could have been easily missed. Critics say Simpson spent years running away from his Blackness with as much vigor as he eluded NFL defenders. Simpson may have died this week, but he helped give birth to the America we now live in.
Persons: O.J, Simpson, Nicole Brown Simpson, Ronald Goldman, Ford Bronco, Elise Amendola, what’s, Kellyanne Conway, Donald Trump, Conway, Sean Spicer, Kent Nishimura, “ I’m, Johnnie Cochran, Simpson’s, Al Sharpton, Brother Simpson, Johnnie, ” Sharpton, , ” ­, White, Trump, Paul Blumenthal, “ Donald Trump, ” Blumenthal, Jabin, Barack Obama, Ben Rhodes, “ Trump, , ” Obama, John Blake, Organizations: CNN, White Americans, of Fame NFL, America —, O.J, NBC, Getty, NFL, White, Trump, Fulton County Sheriff's, Republican, Trump National Doral, Washington Post Locations: America, Los Angeles, Washington , DC, , Fulton County , Georgia, Fulton County, U.S, Doral , Florida
When our Great Americans go, we know how to mourn them. But there’s a Great American subset — where the adventure rocks the infrastructure and the life leaves a gash. In some other realm, the football career and its showbiz afterlife, pitching rental cars and enlivening spoofery, would have warranted the plain-old Great American treatment. Are we still in Great American territory? In a place some call “La La Land,” no less.
Persons: Simpson, What’d, spoofery, O.J, Folks, LeVar Burton, Nicole Brown Simpson, Ronald Goldman, beckoning, Organizations: Great Locations: O.J, Africa, La
Tyler Starrett was on vacation with his family in Pigeon Forge, about 35 miles from Knoxville in eastern Tennessee, when they learned on Thursday that O.J. Simpson had died. They had heard that one of the key artifacts of the Simpson case happened to be on display nearby at the Alcatraz East Crime Museum: the 1993 white Ford Bronco that Simpson fled from the police in, just days after the murders of Nicole Brown Simpson, his former wife, and Ronald L. Goldman. “If the Bronco is here in Pigeon Forge, why don’t we go see it?” Starrett, 23, said. Pigeon Forge, best known for Dollywood, Dolly Parton’s theme park, is at first glance not an obvious home for such a relic.
Persons: Tyler Starrett, O.J, Simpson, Ford Bronco, Nicole Brown Simpson, Ronald L, Goldman, ” Starrett, Starrett, Dolly Organizations: Alcatraz East Crime, Ford, Bronco, Alcatraz East Crime Museum Locations: Pigeon Forge, Knoxville, Tennessee, Alcatraz, Pigeon, Southern California, Nashville, San Francisco Bay
Simpson trial lives on infamy more than 30 years later. Here are some of the biggest moments from "the trial of the century." NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. The trial still remains a cultural touchstone, with the Emmy-winning 2016 FX series "The People v. O.J. Here's a look back at some of the most iconic photos from the trial.
Persons: Simpson, , Rodney King, Rupert Murdoch, O.J, Cuba Gooding, Sarah Paulson, John Travolta, David Schwimmer, Sterling K, Brown Organizations: Bronco, Service, NFL, Los Angeles Police Department, Fox, CNN
Simpson, center, appears in court on charges which include kidnapping, armed robbery and assault, in Las Vegas, Nevada, in September 2007. Simpson was released from prison in 2017 after serving about nine years of a 33-year sentence for a kidnapping and armed robbery in Las Vegas. In the 2007 robbery, Simpson was part of a group that raided a hotel and casino to steal sports memorabilia from two dealers at gunpoint. Simpson was convicted on charges including kidnapping, armed robbery and assault with a deadly weapon. Simpson was granted an early parole discharge in 2021, according to the Nevada Department of Public Safety.
Persons: O.J, Simpson, Clint Karlsen, pitchman, Nicole Brown Simpson, Ron Goldman Organizations: Nevada Department of Public Safety, NFL Locations: Las Vegas , Nevada, Las Vegas
The cause was cancer, his family announced on social media. The infamous case, which held up a cracked mirror to Black and white America, cleared Mr. Simpson but ruined his world. He paid little of the debt, moved to Florida and struggled to remake his life, raise his children and stay out of trouble. In 2006, he sold a book, “If I Did It,” and a prospective TV interview, giving a “hypothetical” account of murders he had always denied committing. A public outcry ended both projects, but Mr. Goldman’s family secured the book rights, added material imputing guilt to Mr. Simpson and had it published.
Persons: O.J, Simpson, Nicole Brown Simpson, Ronald L, Goldman, Goldman’s Locations: Los Angeles, America, Florida
O. J. Simpson, que saltó a la fama en los campos de fútbol americano, hizo fortuna en el cine, publicidad y televisión con un personaje de típico estadounidense negro, y fue absuelto de los cargos de asesinato de su exesposa y un amigo en un juicio celebrado en 1995 en Los Ángeles que cautivó al país, murió el miércoles. Un jurado en el juicio por asesinato, que mostró un espejo agrietado de un Estados Unidos blanco y negro, absolvió a Simpson, pero el caso arruinó su mundo. Pagó poco de la deuda, se mudó a Florida y luchó por rehacer su vida, criar a sus hijos y mantenerse alejado de los problemas. En 2006, vendió el manuscrito de un libro, If I Did It, y una posible entrevista televisiva, en la que relataría “hipotéticamente” los asesinatos que siempre había negado haber cometido. Una protesta pública puso fin a ambos proyectos, pero la familia de Goldman obtuvo los derechos del libro, añadió material en el que imputaba la culpa a Simpson y lo publicó.
Simpson, the ex-football star who was acquitted of murder at his highly publicized trial in 1995, died on Wednesday, his family announced. AdvertisementSimpson had been diagnosed with cancer, his family said. "He was surrounded by his children and grandchildren," they wrote in a post on X.Simpson was 76. This story is developing. Please check back for updates.
Persons: O.J, Simpson
O.J. Simpson dies of cancer at age 76
  + stars: | 2024-04-11 | by ( Doha Madani | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
Simpson, the former NFL star who was acquitted of murdering his ex-wife in a televised trial that gripped the nation, has died of cancer at age 76, according to a statement from his family. Reports circulated in February that Simpson had been diagnosed with prostate cancer and was in hospice care as he underwent chemotherapy. Simpson denied that he was in hospice in a video posted to X, but did not address whether he or not he'd been diagnosed with cancer. When Los Angeles Police officers went to Simpson's home to speak to him about the murders, Simpson did not answer the door but officers noticed blood on the door of his vehicle. Once a revered athlete, Simpson went from a Hall of Fame icon to a murder suspect.
Persons: O.J, Simpson, Ozzie Fumo, David Cook, doesn't, Orenthal James Simpson, Nicole Brown Simpson, Ronald Goldman, Simpson's Organizations: NFL, National Football League, Los Angeles Police, Fame, Ford Locations: Clark County, Las Vegas , Nevada, Los Angeles, Southern
O.J. Simpson dies at age 76
  + stars: | 2024-04-11 | by ( Dakin Andone | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: 1 min
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O.J. Simpson Died at 76
  + stars: | 2024-04-11 | by ( Matthew Cullen | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Simpson lived a life that made him one of the most famous people in America. Then, in 1994, he was charged in the double murder of his former wife, Nicole Brown Simpson, and her friend, Ronald Goldman. Simpson, who was 76, died yesterday at his home in Las Vegas. Simpson’s 1995 murder trial held up a cracked mirror to Black and white America and mesmerized the nation, which followed along on daily national television broadcasts. He sold a book manuscript giving a “hypothetical” account of the murders, but after a public outcry, Ronald Goldman’s family secured the book rights.
Persons: O.J, Simpson, Nicole Brown Simpson, Ronald Goldman, Ronald Goldman’s Organizations: Buffalo Bills Locations: America, Las Vegas
But also a true thing: In 1994, when Simpson fled police in his white Bronco, 95 million people watched the slow-motion chase on TV, in real time. In 1994, AOL, the service that popularized the "World Wide Web," had a little more than a million subscribers. AdvertisementAnd the notion that we're never getting a TV event like the Simpson affair is not a new one, either. Digital media can certainly focus a lot of people's attention on one thing, but it can't compel everyone to watch one thing. Now I'm going to go stream June 17th, 1994 — ESPN's documentary about the Simpson chase.
Persons: , OJ Simpson, Simpson, We're, Rupert Murdoch's Fox, Kato Kalein, Lance Ito, Rick Maiman, Here's, Joanna Robinson, Robinson, Addison Rae, They're, It's, I've Organizations: Service, Bronco, Business, AOL, Getty Locations: America
Executives at the rental car company Hertz knew what they wanted to project to potential business travelers in the 1970s: speed, reliability and efficiency. They quickly realized that one man radiated all of those qualities. So they made the football player O.J. Simpson, who died on Wednesday at the age of 76, the first Black star of a national television advertising campaign. “They had a slogan — the Superstar in Rent‐a‐Car — and I was the current reigning superstar as far as the competition was concerned,” Simpson told The New York Times in 1976.
Persons: Hertz, O.J, Simpson, , ” Simpson Organizations: New York Times
It would become an indelible memory for those who could not help but watch and watch and watch: a white Ford Bronco steadily traveling along the cleared freeways of Southern California, a trail of police cars not far behind. Simpson, and the two-hour chase on June 17, 1994, that interrupted regular programming transfixed a nation. I wasn’t getting off the TV. Who was getting off the TV on a chase like that?” said Richard Smith, 67, who gathered that day with his family to see it all unfold on television in their South Los Angeles apartment. The saga of Mr. Simpson, from the chase to the criminal trial to the aftermath, would be followed, debated and dissected closely by millions, etching itself into Los Angeles history and thrusting the city into what seemed the center of the universe.
Persons: Simpson, , wasn’t, , Richard Smith, Mr Organizations: Ford Bronco Locations: Southern California, South Los Angeles, Los Angeles
CNN —Lifetime is set to air a documentary centered around Nicole Brown Simpson later this year, according to a source close to the production. Brown Simpson’s family and friends are participating in the project, the individual said. Simpson’s death on Thursday at the age of 76. The project is not yet complete, according to the production source, and conversations are now ongoing on whether to incorporate Simpson’s death. Brown Simpson, who was married to Simpson from 1985 to 1992, was killed on June 12, 1994 outside her Los Angeles home.
Persons: Nicole Brown Simpson, Brown, Brown Simpson, Simpson, Ron Goldman, Goldman’s, Wendy Williams, Gypsy Rose Blanchard Organizations: CNN, Lifetime Locations: Los Angeles
The Life of O.J. Simpson: A Timeline
  + stars: | 2024-04-11 | by ( Victor Mather | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: 1 min
Simpson, who died on Wednesday at 76, lived a life that made him one of the most famous people in America, as well as, at various times, the most celebrated and most reviled. A Heisman Trophy winner when he played football at the University of Southern California, he reached superstar status as a running back with the Buffalo Bills. As a commercial pitchman and a Hollywood actor, he became a household name across much of America. But fame turned to infamy when he was charged in the 1994 double murder of his former wife and her friend. He was acquitted after a trial that riveted the nation.
Persons: O.J, Simpson Organizations: University of Southern, Buffalo Bills Locations: America, University of Southern California
Simpson died on April 10, according to a statement from his family. He was found not guilty of murdering his ex-wife, Nicole Brown, in a highly publicized 1995 trial. He had two children with Brown and three with his first wife, Marguerite Whitley. Simpson's family confirmed on Thursday that the former football player had died on April 10 after being diagnosed with cancer. This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers.
Persons: O.J, Simpson, Nicole Brown, Brown, Marguerite Whitley, , Simpson's Organizations: Service, Business
Walter Iooss Jr./Sports Illustrated via Getty Images Simpson competes during a track event at the University of Southern California in 1967. Focus On Sport via Getty Images Simpson gets ice applied to his bandaged right foot from his wife Marguerite in 1967. Bettmann Archive/Getty Images Simpson poses with the Heisman Memorial Trophy after receiving the award in 1968. Bettmann Archive/Getty Images Simpson is brought down by another football player during the Hula Bowl in 1969. ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images Simpson acts in a scene from the 1978 film "Capricorn One."
Persons: Gene Seymour, Orenthal James Simpson, Gene Seymour Jeremy Freeman, we’ve, We’ll, Simpson, Jim Brown, Muhammad Ali, Bill Russell, “ I’m, acclimate, Simpson’s, Nicole Brown Simpson, Ronald Goldman, O.J, Bundy, Vince Bucci, Malcolm W, Emmons, Walter Iooss Jr, Marguerite, Arnelle, Tony Tomsic, Jason, Michael Ochs, Lola Falana, Richard Burton, Everett, George Gojkovich, Bruce Bennett, Jim Ringo, LeVar Burton, Gilda Radner, Jane Curtin, Joe Namath, Frank Gifford, Mickey Pfleger, Nicole, Adam, PhotoQuest, Vinnie Zuffante, Leslie Nielsen, George Kennedy, Al Cowlings, Ford Bronco, Simpson's, Ronald Lyle Goldman, Allen J, Simpon, Cowling, Ron Galella, Chris O'Meara, Robert Kardashian, Alvin Michelson, Kardashian, Barbara Alper, Johnnie Cochran , Jr, Myung J, Chun, Reuters Simpson, Wilfredo Lee, Colin Braley, Christy Prody, Frazer Harrison, Jason Bean, Brooke Keast, AP Simpson, Jeffrey T, Barnes, Brown, O.J . Simpson, Mark Fuhrman Organizations: The New York Times, Newsday, Entertainment, The Washington, CNN, University of Southern, LA Coliseum, Fame, Getty, Sporting, USC, Bettmann, UCLA, Buffalo Bills, USA, Michael Ochs Archives, New York Jets, NFL, ABC, Disney, Warner Bros, San Francisco 49ers, AP, United, Paramount, Everett, Ford, Los Angeles Times, Los Angeles Police, New York Daily News, Los Angeles Daily, AP Simpson, Reuters, Lovelock Correctional, Nevada Department of Corrections, Goldman, Los Angeles Police Department Locations: University of Southern California, San Francisco, O.J, Los Angeles, Simpson, AFP, Hollywood, California, Cowlings, Simpson's Brentwood , California, Tampa , Florida, Los, Surrey, England, Miami, Dade County, Lovelock , Nevada, Las Vegas, Lovelock, Nevada
O.J., Made in America, Made by TV
  + stars: | 2024-04-11 | by ( James Poniewozik | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
One of the strangest quotes I can remember associated with O.J. Simpson came from the broadcaster Al Michaels during the notorious freeway chase in 1994. Michaels, a sports commentator now covering the flight from the law of one of America’s biggest celebrities, said that he had spoken with his friend Simpson on the phone earlier. Simpson, during and after his pro football career, was a creature of the media business. With the freeway chase, and the acrimonious trial on live TV, he would essentially become the media business.
Persons: O.J, Simpson, Al Michaels, Michaels, “ Al, ” Michaels, , Nicole Brown Simpson, Ron Goldman
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