logo
Hulu's Natalia Grace series 'Good American Family' is pure exploitation: Review

Hulu's Natalia Grace series 'Good American Family' is pure exploitation: Review

USA Today21-03-2025

Hulu's Natalia Grace series 'Good American Family' is pure exploitation: Review
Show Caption
Hide Caption
The most anticipated TV shows of 2025
USA TODAY TV critic Kelly Lawler shares her top 5 TV shows she is most excited for this year
There has rarely been a child whose life has been so publicly examined as Natalia Grace's.
The Ukrainian adoptee with a rare form of dwarfism generated international headlines over the past decade after her adoptive parents, Indiana couple Kristine and Mark Barnett, convinced a court to change her legal age from 8 to 22, and then abandoned her in an apartment. Years later, Kristine and Mark were criminally charged with neglect, although Mark was acquitted and charges against Kristine were later dropped. In 2023, Natalia legally restored her birthdate to 2003 after extensive DNA testing.
It is a sensational story, and grimly fascinating. How did the Barnetts come to suggest that Natalia was an adult posing as a child? What went on in their Indiana home? Where is Natalia now?
All these questions have been asked and answered ‒ and allegations made and denied ‒ in countless news reports and Investigation Discovery's three-part 2023 docuseries, "The Curious Case of Natalia Grace." The young woman, now 21, has told her story many times. But now a fictionalized Hulu drama is going to speak for her, and it does no better job representing this sad tale than a decade's worth of exploitative tabloid headlines and the rather crass docuseries did. We're right back at sensationalism and exploitation, and the resulting TV show isn't even that good.
"Good American Family" (streaming Wednesdays, ★½ out of four) stars Ellen Pompeo and Mark Duplass as the Barnetts and British actress Imogen Faith Reid as Natalia. Over eight episodes it chronicles their stranger-than-fiction story, first from the Barnetts' point of view, then Natalia's. In the first four episodes, the couple are portrayed as selfless parents to a nightmarish sociopath who planned to kill them and their biological sons. In the last four, Natalia is a victim of neglect and violent abuse by the Barnetts and later, a terrible miscarriage of justice by the courts. But this hamfisted and half-hearted approach to a rippped-from-the-headlines series has nothing new to say.
It's a "having cake and eating it too" approach to the conflicting allegations between the three principal players, but the "multiple perspectives," as helpfully pointed out by the legal disclaimers at the top of each episode, don't offer insight so much as incoherence and dissonance. The first half of the series is fundamentally opposed to the second. Was Natalia a violent threat? Were the Barnetts neglectful and abusive? The answer, according to Hulu and creator Katie Robbins ("The Affair"), is seemingly yes to both. So in the first four episodes, we watch a knockoff of the 2009 horror film "Orphan," and in the last four a parade of horrifying child abuse.
The messiness of the structure, and the lack of care with which the scripts tell this sensitive story, make "Family" an unpleasant and bleak watch with no narrative sense. The actors are all working tirelessly with the material they're given; they are not at fault. Reid is a multifaceted discovery (although she's 27, which seems a questionable choice). It may be odd to see Pompeo, the doctor of America's emotional wounds for two decades on ABC's "Grey's Anatomy," without scrubs or a doctor's coat, but she wasn't resting on her acting laurels for all those years. Her Kristine is as repugnant as she is delusional, and Pompeo can play a villain as well as a hero. Duplass slides easily into his role as an ineffectual loser (no offense). Christina Hendricks shows up, nearly unrecognizable, in the second half of the series as Natalia's unofficial new mother, with a slight drawl and a warm hug. You can almost forget the awful reality of what you're watching in the face of such talented performers.
This hand-wringing and bothsidesing is an illogical and terrible way to structure a TV show, but it is an especially infuriating way to depict this young woman's life, which has already been the subject of so much distasteful public scrutiny and debate. It is an immutable fact that she was a child while in the care of the Barnetts and after they abandoned her, yet online commentary continues to wink and nod to the idea that she was an adult con artist living out a horror movie. In the end, it doesn't matter whether the Barnetts' allegations about her behavior are true: She was still a child when they left her alone in an apartment. Children all over the world have violent behavioral problems, yet we don't suddenly decide they're old enough to live alone.
"Family" is a series that really should not have been made. In our cultural thirst for true-crime content, we can sometimes cross a line. Not every awful thing we read in the news needs to be an Emmy-hopeful limited series with a famous cast. Sometimes tragedies are just that.
Our curiosity over Natalia Grace should be well-sated by now.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Reasonable Doubt Duo Talk Morris Chestnut's Season 3 Return, Hype Joseph Sikora and Other Additions
Reasonable Doubt Duo Talk Morris Chestnut's Season 3 Return, Hype Joseph Sikora and Other Additions

Yahoo

time28 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Reasonable Doubt Duo Talk Morris Chestnut's Season 3 Return, Hype Joseph Sikora and Other Additions

Faces familiar and new will rock Jax's world when Season 3 of Reasonable Doubt hits Hulu. Created by Raamla Mohamed and the first scripted drama from Onyx Collective (an initiative to create 'culturally specific, wildly entertaining content'), Reasonable Doubt stars Emayatzy Corinealdi (Ballers, Hand of God) as Jax Stewart, a high-powered criminal defense attorney from Los Angeles who 'fiercely bucks the justice system through wild interpretations of the law and sometimes questionable ethics, all while trying to deal with a failing marriage and the pitfalls of motherhood.' More from TVLine Tom Ellis Previews Latest FBI Offshoot, His CIA Agent's 'Large Dose of Moral Ambiguity' - Watch Video Tony Awards 2025: How to Watch Broadway's Biggest Night Online Criminal Minds Video: As JJ Seeks Help, Aimee Garcia Previews 'Intimate' Scenes With a 'Magical' A.J. Cook The series also stars McKinley Freeman (Queen Sugar) as Jax's husband Lewis, Tim Jo (This Is Us) as Daniel, Angela Grovey (Joyful Noise) as Krystal, Thaddeus J. Mixson (Candy Cane Lane) as Spenser and Aderinsola Olabode as Naima. Morris Chestnut joined the cast in Season 2 as defense lawyer Corey Cash, but his character moved on from Jax's firm after they closed a key case in the finale. Chestnut, however, will return/recur in Season 3, despite now headlining CBS' already-renewed freshman hit Watson. Chestnut's encore is 'one of the things that makes this season interesting,' Corinealdi shares with TVLine in the video above, from Disney's 2025 Upfront. 'We know he's coming back, but in what capcity, we're going to see.' As Freeman notes, 'a talent like Morris Chestnut only improves the production, so we're fortunate to have him. 'But the cast we have added for Season 3 is phenomenal,' he raves. In Season 3 (premiere date TBA), 'After a tumultuous season of fighting to save her best friend from a life sentence while healing from her own deadly affair, Jax Stewart has finally earned some peace in her life … even if she sees it all as a little boring,' the synopsis tells us. 'So, when a former child star finds himself in a heap of trouble, Jax seizes the opportunity to spice up her daily routine. But when her client's personal life turns out to have all the drama and danger of a Hollywood movie — and Jax's own professional future comes under threat from a charismatic associate at her firm — can Jax clear her client's name without losing the personal and professional successes she's worked so hard for?' New recurring players on tap for Season 3 include Kyle Bary (Ginny & Georgia) as Ozzie, the former star of a long-running sitcom; Rumer Willis (Empire) as Ozzie's stylist and girlfriend; Brandee Evans (P-Valley) as Ozzie's agent; April Parker Jones (If Loving You Is Wrong) as Ozzie's imperious 'momager' and Keith Arthur Bolden (Cobra Kai) as his father; and Richard Brooks (Being Mary Jane) as a ghost from Jax's past who threatens to unravel everything she's worked so hard to build. Perhaps most significantly, though, Joseph Sikora — who plays Tommy Egan in Starz's Power universe — will fill the series regular role of Bill Sterling, a coworker at Jax's firm who started his law career later in life after serving as a Coast Guard for 10 years. Now he is looking to make partner, and his proximity to Jax becomes imperative to his success. Teasing the introduction of Sikora's character, Corinealdi says, 'Just know this: Jax does not suffer fools, and Jax is very protective of what she's built. So we'll get to see what happens between her and [Bill Sterling.' Want scoop on , or for any other TV show? Shoot an email to InsideLine@ and your question may be answered via Matt's Inside Line! Best of TVLine Yellowjackets' Tawny Cypress Talks Episode 4's Tai/Van Reunion: 'We're All Worried About Taissa' Vampire Diaries Turns 10: How Real-Life Plot Twists Shaped Everything From the Love Triangle to the Final Death Vampire Diaries' Biggest Twists Revisited (and Explained)

Frederick Forsyth dies aged 86
Frederick Forsyth dies aged 86

Yahoo

time34 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Frederick Forsyth dies aged 86

Frederick Forsyth has died at the age of 86. A statement released by his literary agent, Curtis Brown, said that he died at home after a brief illness surrounded by his family. The British author, who was one of the youngest ever RAF pilots and a former journalist, published more than 25 books. His novels, which include The Day of the Jackal, have sold over 75 million copies. Mr Forsyth's agent, Jonathan Lloyd, said: 'We mourn the passing of one of the world's greatest thriller writers. 'Only a few weeks ago I sat with him as we watched a new and moving documentary of his life - In My Own Words, to be released later this year on BBC1 – and was reminded of an extraordinary life, well lived.' Mr Lloyd described how the author had used 'his gift for languages in German, French and Russian' to become a foreign correspondent in Biafra. 'Appalled at what he saw and using his experience during a stint as a Secret Service agent, he wrote his first and perhaps most famous novel,' Mr Forsyth's agent continued. The novel, The Day of The Jackal, was published in 1972 and propelled Forsyth to the status of a global bestselling author. It has since been adapted into a film and more recently, a TV series starring Eddie Redmayne. Mr Lloyd said: 'He will be greatly missed by his family, his friends, all of us at Curtis Brown and of course his millions of fans around the world - though his books will of course live on forever.' The acclaimed writer was only 17-years-old when he got into the Royal Air Force and later, when he was a journalist, worked in Paris and East Berlin at the height of the Cold War. He has previously told The Telegraph that he had 'good luck to be able to turn lots of that [experience] into books' but that he had 'no lust to be 90'. He wrote in the newspaper six years ago, when he was aged 80: 'So, unless I go completely crazy, which I don't intend to do, the rest of my days should be comfortable. 'As for the future, I may survive the next decade but I've no lust to be 90. I don't know what I'd do, beyond what I'm doing nowadays, which is getting up in the morning, reading the Telegraph and the Mail and having all my prejudices reconfirmed, brewing up a cup of char and then going down the pub for lunch.' His publisher, Bill Scott-Kerr, wrote: 'Transworld's long relationship with Frederick Forsyth began in 1972 with the Corgi paperback publication of The Day of the Jackal. 'With its never-before-read ice-cool writing, iconic jacket and a protagonist for the ages, The Day of the Jackal was an instant bestseller across the world and immediately propelled Freddie into a globally successful career which would span the next fifty years across books, films and most recently television.' The popular novel remains the first and most enduring of his 16 thrillers and follows a hired assassin who targets the French president Charles de Gaulle. The TV adaptation marked the third to reach the screen, following one fronted by Edward Fox in 1973, and another that Forsyth disowns, with Bruce Willis in 1997. Mr Scott-Kerr continued: 'Having long held The Day of the Jackal as the blueprint of the modern thriller, I was honoured to become his editor for Avenger in 2002 and have remained so ever since. 'Working with Freddie has been one of the great pleasures of my professional life, perhaps never more so when he pulled back the curtain on his eventful life in his autobiography, The Outsider, one of the most entertaining and fascinating nonfiction books you could hope to read.' He added that Forsyth's journalistic background 'brought a rigour and a metronomic efficiency to his working practice and his nose for and understanding of a great story kept his novels both thrillingly contemporary and fresh'. 'It was a joy and an education to watch him at work,' he continued. 'Still read by millions across the world, Freddie's thrillers define the genre and are still the benchmark to which contemporary writers aspire. 'He leaves behind a peerless legacy which will continue to excite and entertain for years to come.' Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more.

'Largest Princess Diana auction' features frocks, hats and bags
'Largest Princess Diana auction' features frocks, hats and bags

Yahoo

time34 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

'Largest Princess Diana auction' features frocks, hats and bags

NEWBRIDGE, Ireland (Reuters) - From colourful frocks and hats to handbags and shoes, items belonging to the late Princess Diana go under the hammer this month in what Julien's Auctions says is the largest collection of her fashion to go to auction. The live and online "Princess Diana's Style & A Royal Collection" sale will take place on June 26 at The Peninsula Beverly Hills, offering an array of fashion items Diana wore. "This is the largest Princess Diana auction because we have over 100 items from her amazing life and in mind Diana over 70 of her in 1997 to raise money for her charity," Martin Nolan, executive director and co-founder of Julien's Auctions, told Reuters on Monday. He was speaking at the Museum of Style Icons in Newbridge in Ireland during a pre-sale exhibition. Among the highlights is a 1988 silk floral dress by Bellville Sassoon, dubbed the "caring dress" because Diana wore it several times on hospital visits, with a price estimate of $200,000-$300,000. A cream silk embroidered evening gown Catherine Walker designed for Diana's 1986 Gulf tour has a similar price tag, while a Bruce Oldfield two-piece yellow floral ensemble she wore for Royal Ascot in 1987 is estimated at $100,000-$200,000. Other sale items include a Dior handbag gifted to her by former French first lady Bernadette Chirac in 1995, a sketch of Diana's 1981 wedding dress with tulle fabric cut-offs from when she married then Prince Charles in 1981 and a peach hat she wore for her honeymoon send-off. The auction also includes pieces belonging to other British royals including the late Queen Elizabeth II and the queen mother. Nolan said Julien's Auctions had previously sold a dress belonging to Diana for $1.14 million. "People do consider these items as an asset class now, because if people own these items today, chances are in years to come they will sell them for more than what they pay for (at) auction," he said. Part of the proceeds from the sale of Diana's items will go to charity Muscular Dystrophy UK. The pre-sale exhibition in Newbridge will run until June 17.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store