Murdaugh Murders Podcast - FEED DROP - Murdaugh: Death In The Family Official Podcast
Episode Date: October 15, 2025Follow The Murdaugh: Death in the Family Official Podcast and Rate 5 Stars On Apple: hulumurdaughpod.com. Or watch the Video Podcasts on Hulu: murdaughpodonhulu.com Showrunner, Co-Creator and Exe...cutive Producer, Michael D. Fuller joins journalist Mandy Matney to discuss Murdaugh: Death in the Family. Explore that haunting 911 call, the human complexities and the emotional truths from South Carolina’s darkest story. From Jason Clarke's radical transformation to the boat crash that ignited a nation’s intrigue, listeners dive deeper into the creation and overarching themes of Hulu’s original series. Visit murdaughpodonhulu.com to watch the video version of this interview on Hulu or Hulu on Disney+ or discover all the emotional truths from Hulu’s original series: Murdaugh Death in the Family. This podcast was produced by LUNASHARK™ and USG Audio. As CEO of LUNASHARK™, Mandy Matney leads a growing team dedicated to independent journalism that produces the acclaimed podcasts Murdaugh Murders, True Sunlight, Cup of Justice. Mandy is also author of Blood on Their Hands, a memoir about her journey of reporting on the Murdaugh family, finding her own voice, and striking out on her own to do meaningful in-depth reporting that gives voice to the victims and gets the story straight. START YOUR FREE TRIAL http://hulu.com/start FOLLOW ON SOCIAL Hulu on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/murdaughonhulu/ Hulu on X: https://x.com/hulu Hulu on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/hulu Hulu is the leading all-in-one premium streaming service that offers an expansive slate of live and on-demand entertainment, both in and outside the home. Hulu is the only on-demand platform that provides access to a library of both hit TV Series/Films and award-winning Hulu Originals like Only Murders In The Building, The Handmaid’s Tale, The Kardashians, and more! Visit https://Hulu.com to subscribe now. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, True Sunlight listeners, it's Mandy Matney here.
You've followed this story with me from the very beginning, from the first days of our Murdoch
murders podcast, through every twist, every courtroom revelation, and every truth uncovered
while basking in the glory of true sunlight.
Now, I am so proud to share something really special with you.
I have teamed up with Hulu and the creative minds behind Murdoch, Death in the Family,
the new original series inspired by our reporting to bring you the official companion podcast.
Each week, I'll sit down with the cast crew and creators, including Michael D. Fowler,
Brittany Snow, who plays me, the Queen Patricia Arquette who portrays Maggie,
and the amazing Jason Clark, who plays Elyke Murdoch.
To explore how this series captures the emotional truth behind one of America's most shocking true crimes.
We'll talk about the real people behind these characters, how these stories came to life on screen,
and why telling the truth in every form still matters.
Click the link in the description, follow the official companion podcast wherever you get your pods.
And please give us a five-star review on Apple or Spotify.
It truly helps our mission.
So here is episode one of the Murdoch Death in the Family official podcast,
featuring showrunner and South Carolina native Michael D.
D. Fuller.
Plus, you can watch and listen to episode two with Britney Snow and three with Johnny
Birchstold on the companion pod feed.
Let's dive in.
Let's dive in.
police and an ambulance immediately. It's my wife and my child. They've been shot badly.
Yes, sir. Hello, and welcome to the Murdoch, Death in the Family Official Podcast.
My name is Mandy Matney, and I am an executive producer on the Hulu original series, Murdoch,
Death in the Family. I'm also the creator of the Murdoch Murder's podcast.
which is now known as True Sunlight.
The Murdoch Murder's Podcast,
made at my parents' kitchen table
in Hilton Head, South Carolina,
was instrumental in exposing the Murdoch's story
and serves as inspiration to this series.
And now, together with journalist Liz Farrell,
I am delighted to be making this companion podcast
to the Hulu original series.
You'll hear from Liz later in this episode
and throughout this companion podcast.
Over the next eight episodes,
were going behind the scenes with the creators of the show, the talented actors, and hardworking
crew, diving into how and why they brought this series to life.
As a journalist who covered this case and investigated this family for more than six years,
and who also was an executive producer on the original series, I am immensely proud of every
person who worked to turn a tragedy of crime and corruption in small-town South Carolina into
Do fascinating art that explores powerful themes, like the importance of speaking truth to power
and the dangers of generational privilege that are increasingly relevant, now more than ever.
I want the audience to understand the why and the how behind this series and meet the amazing
humans who brought it all to life. I want you, the audience, to hear what the real 911 call
sounded like from June 7, 2021.
Here's the real Elyke Murdoch.
I'm sounding 9-1-1-1 with your emergency.
This is Alec Murdoch, 47 Motel Road.
I need to police this happens immediately.
My wife and John got badly.
Okay, you said 41-47 mobile road and Nilezen?
Yes, sir.
41-47-Moselle Road.
See on the line with me, okay?
Yes, sir.
Stay on the line with me, okay?
It's uncanny, isn't it?
Full body chills.
Initially, when I heard about the murders in June of 2021,
I had a gut feeling that Ellick was involved in some way.
Based on all of the shady dealings
I had discovered about him
while reporting on his son's boat crash
that killed 19-year-old Mallory Beach.
But reporters can't write stories
based on gut feelings. We need sources and evidence and facts to back up our hunches,
especially when your target is one of the most powerful men in the state. I spent the entire summer
of 2021 studying Alec Murdoch in answering every phone call I could about who this man was,
how he treated people, and what people thought of him. I just wanted to know, is this a man who
is capable of killing his wife and son?
Back in 2021, especially in the weeks after the murders, people got angry at me for even asking
that question. Ellick was a man of duplicity and deception. To this day, he still has a decent
number of people convinced he deserves a new trial, despite the mountain of evidence proving
otherwise. He shook hands with and did favors for some while he cheated, lied, and hurt others.
He masked his messes and taught his family to look the other way.
until he could no longer keep up the charade.
To kick off this podcast, I need y'all to meet the co-creator and showrunner of Murdoch,
Death and the Family, South Carolina native Michael D. Fuller.
I had a million questions to ask Michael about the creative decisions of the show,
like how the creators managed to condense this massive, complicated, real-life story
into a compelling eight-episode drama.
How do they pick and choose what events,
themes and characters to focus on and where do you even start with a story this widely
consumed and this wild so i asked michael why the 9-1-1 call as the debut scene to kick off the
series we knew when we cast when we were fortunate enough to get jason in the role it's not a
easy role to cast or play and we knew we were fortunate enough to get him that we were going to have
you know someone who had the tremendous amount of talent to bring to the part but then when we had we had our
table read
which is, you know, what you do when the studio network all come in, and everybody's there,
and it sort of kicks off right before production.
And it's the first time you're hearing the actors say, you know, and it's not, we're not
filming anything. It's not, you know, there's no cameras or anything, but it's, you know,
we were doing the table read, and it's, the first dialogue is that 911 call because it's
what opens the show. And Jason did that 911 call, and everybody in the, you could feel it
over Zoom, the people who were zooming in the executives, you could feel it in the room.
Everybody sat up and leaned in because there was such a.
electricity and, you know, a reality to what he was doing. And he clearly was embodying something
kind of primal about this guy and this moment. And we always had intended to start to show that
way, but then, you know, been hearing and seeing him and feeling that area. And then not to mention
what he did, you know, when we were on the day, when we were filming it, was just a completely
surreal experience and just, you know, just, and very powerful that he, the space he was getting
himself into to do that. I've listened to that 9-1-1 call of how.
thousand times probably at this point.
You could recite it.
Right, but it was so weird.
He was doing the exact same thing.
Like the, I think it's a, you had audio tracks at both of them.
I would like to see it because Jason's voice goes up when Alex's voice goes up, you know, like.
He was, yeah, it was.
A science.
Uncanny.
And he was dogged in getting those moments because, again, so much of this has been documented
and so much of this is available in that way was, okay, when we have those things like
the 911, we'll call that.
are so known and, for lack of a better term, iconic in this story, like, he's like, let's nail
those. I want to nail those. And he was, I mean, you know, he was just constantly, he would be in
hair and makeup, which was a process for him, but just listening to those calls, listening to the
testimony, listening to questioning that there was recordings of. And he just, you know, he would
listen to it over and over and over and over again. And obviously, like, the work paid off because
it's really powerful all across the board, and especially in those moments like that, you know,
and to open the series with that
to really grab you in that way, you know.
So the Murdoch saga is often reduced to headlines.
How did you and your team use episode one
to really humanize the people involved
while still honoring the gravity of what happened?
You know, I think it was about finding
so many of those moments that are just the details
of that we would discover
or that we would, you know,
from either your reporting or interviews that we did
based on connections you had, that just finding those, that texture and those little things
that made these people, you know, our versions of these people feel relatable, whether it was
music that the characters are listening to, or the sense of humor that they have, or the small
details of how do brothers interact with one another that is both competitive and affectionate,
you know, and how does that, you know, that's something I think we've, so many people
have siblings we can relate to, we can relate to that, or just family in general, like, how
is a family interact with one another and start with that, really, you know, and what are the
pressures within a family, regardless of what the headlines they eventually lead to or, yeah,
it was really just as much as we can, like, let's invest in who these people are in private,
who they are in private to one another. Like, for me, it's as simple as like what music did the
characters listen to. Yeah. You know, like, what are the things that they, and some of that was
based on research. Some of that was based on my own, you know, inferences or like, you know, what I felt like
or what people I know who remind me of these characters would listen to,
but it's just those little things that I think can help humanize
and really bring a complexity, a relatable complexity,
to these people who then obviously go on to live incredibly harrowing experiences.
I know we just started getting into the interview,
but while we're talking about the endless complexities of the people involved in Murdoch,
I have to introduce y'all to Liz Farrell.
The only other journalists on the planet who knows just as much or probably more about the Murdox in their world as I do.
Liz worked with me at the Island Packet newspaper in 2019 when we were both first reporting on the boat crash.
And like me, she always saw this investigation as something so much bigger than a story that we were doing for work.
It was a puzzle with a million pieces that required 24-hour dedication and thought.
A puzzle we both quickly became obsessed with solving.
A puzzle I would have quit trying to figure out a long time ago.
If it wasn't for Liz and her curiosity to better understand every member of the Murdoch family
in each of their connections to power.
My name is Liz Farrell.
Like Mandy, I've been reporting on the Murdoch since 2019.
I was a co-host of Murdoch Murder's Podcast, which is now known as True.
sunlight, and I'm an executive producer of this official companion podcast for Murdoch
Death in the Family. As a writer, I've been struck by how captivating every scene is. We're
invited into a world that isn't ours, but it feels familiar. And that's because of those
smaller moments that the writers included, that not only show who these characters are to themselves
and each other, but what resentments they may be harboring. When the Ellick character walks into
his law firm after appearing in court, you immediately sense who he is to that firm and its employees,
and you can see how his personality fills every corner of any room he is in.
He growls, get out of my way, friend, to someone in the hall, and it somehow comes off his
friendly attention. He hands this briefcase to an assistant, but pranks her by pulling it back
before giving it to her. So much is learned about him in those few seconds. When the Paul
character pats his brother on the chest in front of his own.
front of his friends, says, ain't it wild that Buster Murdoch wrote Buster Murdoch on an application
and got into USC law school? You immediately understand the importance of the Murdoch name
and how Paul might feel about the unfettered privilege that comes with it. And when Elick surprises
the Maggie character with jellyballs in her bathtub, and she gets upset as he's bent over in fits
of laughter, the nature of their marital relationship becomes clear. He's her,
ill-behaved and uncontrolled third child.
He's the model her sons have for what a Murdoch man is entitled to.
It seems like these ones that make such a strong first impression
about what the interior life of an influential family can look like,
which is so important in understanding what comes later.
Here's Michael on the decisions the shows creators had to make
as they adapted this story for two very distinct audiences.
The viewers who know every fact about the Murdoch
Murdoch case, and for those who might be learning about the case for the very first time.
I really felt like, you know, and Aaron Lee Carr, is my co-creator on it and who we kind of helped
tackle the process of adapting this story, and then I took that into the script phase.
But it really felt like it was about in general with TV, but especially something like this,
it's about setting the table because some people are going to come to the show and have never heard
or vaguely aware of this or have never even heard of the name or the story.
itself, but then obviously lots of people are very, very familiar with it. So it really was
about, you know, how can we introduce who these people are, introduce to this world that
they live in, they inhabit, and that they wield tremendous power in, in a way that is before
the unraveling began, you know, and so we really wanted to introduce and platform, okay, this is what
a morning is like, a typical morning is like at Mozel when Alec is on the way to court and when
they're planning some big event. And, you know, the one thing, we made some creative narrative
decisions where, you know, the timeline isn't exactly what happened in truth, truth. But the story
truth of it, you know, we open with the Randolph receiving the Order of the Palmetto Award.
Well, in reality, that happened about six months before the boat crash. But to us, it felt like,
okay, here's the kind of pinnacle of this family's power and prestige in a way. And, you know,
was receiving the highest civilian honor in the state, and which there's no better way to do that
than a big ceremony and have a big party that shows their wealth and their, and the fun they have.
And their connections to the governor to show the way that they wield these things and they use
the social influence and that it's not formal, but it's like introducing the governor to somebody
who can help you get a permit for something you're trying to do at this party. And it's just that,
you know, that good old boy backslopping thing, which you know, documented.
so wonderfully and with so much detail on the podcast, you know, it's like, so let's meet these people
before the first penny drops and, and before the first thing happens that really set everything,
the unraveling into full motion. Now, in reality, the unraveling was kind of, you know,
depending on what you believe in terms of fate or free will, but was in motion long before this.
But yeah, that was that. So it was really about setting the table, who are these people,
who is, and who is our version of these people, because that's an important distinction is, you know,
We are a fictionalized series.
We're adapting this into a dramatic TV series.
So we've got to say, okay, this is who our Maggie is.
This is who our Alec is.
This is how who our Paul is and who our Gloria is as we, you know, introduce the world of the show and the setting and all of that.
So a little spoiler alert.
As a character on this show, this has been something that I have come to understand and happily accept.
A series based on a true story or inspired by a true story will never fully mimic the fact.
actual events. The actors playing the characters based on real people will never fully replicate
the real people, but the emotional truth of the story will be there. One of the major ways that
the TV series differs from real-life events is the timing of Gloria Satterfield's death. Gloria
Satterfield, the Murdoch's housekeeper, died one year before the boat crash, but in this series,
her character is alive after the boat crash. Her character helps reveal
the more intimate family moments and how they might have looked on a day-to-day basis.
The Gloria character is also important to showing all sides of Paul's character, and even
gives us insight into what his childhood might have looked like and how her death could have affected
him. I don't know what those moments between real-life Gloria and real-life Paul looked like,
in terms of words exchanged, but from my years of talking to sources, I know that Gloria and Paul's characters
have tapped into the emotional truth of that relationship.
I kept hearing the word emotional truth
when talking to the writers about their process of making this show.
So I had to ask Michael more about that as his answer
always has served as a guide for me for understanding this show.
So emotional truth, story truth, those two are pretty interchangeable for us.
And basically, I've stolen it from an author named Tim
O'Brien, who I'm sure got it from somewhere else, Warner Herzog is a direct writer-director
documentarian who talks about emotional truth as well. But it's essentially like, okay,
truth, truth is the facts by the letter. This is exactly what happened, basically the objective
court case, so to speak, of the story. Emotional truth is, okay, but what can we get at where,
one, we have to streamline certain things. Because we only have so many episodes to tell this
story, this very sprawling, very complicated story. So we have to, there's some decisions we
have to make that have to have an emotional component where we have to make find efficiencies and then
what's the emotional heart of that what's the thing that's really at the connection between those
people or what's the thing that's driving that person in the moment that may not be exactly what they
did in the moment but that we feel like we can dramatize in such a way where it speaks to something
where if we were doing just the facts ma'am or sir that would not be as compelling dramatically
and also not be really getting to the human emotional story truth of it all and it would probably
drag out for like a hundred episodes like the podcast. You could do, yes, as you know, because
you've done over 100 episodes of this story, you could do five, six seasons of the saga
easily. I mean, that was, you know, the biggest, the biggest challenge creatively was, was that
the story is so big, that there's so many pieces to it. There's so many, you could do an entire
season just on, you know, going back to Murdoch's of Yore, you know, and their machinations and, and, and,
of that and there's scandals and all of that. So yeah, I mean, it's a, it's a big story and you
have to find those efficiencies where you can, but also hopefully always maintaining what's
the emotional truth of that. So like an example is we chose to keep Gloria. We made the
creative decision. Gloria and reality passed away about a year before the events of the show.
We decided that in order to show her relationship with the family, with Paul in particular,
and what that meant and then feel her loss
once she had been there,
it made emotional truth, story, truth, sense
to have her be alive and then see how that plays out
in the current timeline of our show
instead of having to reset and go back.
So that's just an example of how we,
the creative decision we made
that had emotional truth at its core.
Emotional truth, and also I think that that goes to being victim-focused
and not just glossing over-Glorious story.
Like, you actually see her
and how she interacted with the Murdox.
And I loved the relationship between her and Paul.
I remember during my reporting and finding that out that they were really, really close.
Paul called her go-go and thought of her as a mother.
That really brought out, I was like, oh, wow, he has a different, like, this is a totally different side that I didn't know.
And I think that their relationship really shines in the show and shows who they were.
Yes.
And we were fortunate enough to have, blessed enough to have two incredible actors.
in those roles, Kathleen Roitoyt and Johnny Burchtold.
And, you know, and I think that to that end, that's a perfect example of it, is allowing
Gloria to be a living, breathing person on screen, our version of Gloria, and have her exist
in space with them and not just be someone where something's discovered and, oh, she's part
of the fabric of, she's just part of their story, but she's living her own life.
we get to see her relationship with her sons outside of the, outside of Moselle and the family.
But then we also see in that way that relationship she has with Paul that I think, you know,
when you're reporting was so, was so illuminating in terms of that ability to humanize him,
to show something about her, about the family.
And then also, I think, to really feel where the story goes with her, you know, with her fate and what happens to her.
And then how Alec uses that to his own benefits and just to really feel that the trend.
tragedy and the betrayal of that, I think we really needed to see and feel her on screen
and not just something in retrospect that was discovered.
Back in 2021, when the Murdoch Murder's podcast was first exploding, David and I had met
with dozens of Hollywood types who were interested in adapting the podcast into a documentary
or a TV show or a series or a movie. I'm not going to lie, it all felt icky, like I was
selling my soul and like I was doing something a small-town journalist just shouldn't be doing.
Then as interest in the case grew and more and more vultures started swarming in,
I realized that people were going to tell this story in many different ways.
And we needed to be smart about picking the right people to work with
who shared the same values and goals for the project.
Aaron Lee Carr and Michael D. Fuller immediately felt different from the dozens of other creators,
directors, and producers who we met with back in 2021.
They saw the bigger picture of the story about power and corruption in a way that no one else did.
They asked questions about the victims and their families and they were worried about their
well-being.
I didn't know the first thing about Hollywood when I met Michael and Aaron, but as a journalist,
I was always pretty good at sussing people out and determining whether or not they actually
cared about the victims involved in a case. Michael and Aaron always cared about honoring the victims
in this story. And that is evident throughout this series. And it's especially evident in their
decision to change Gloria's timeline on screen so that people could get a better understanding
of not only Gloria but Paul too. We'll talk more about this after a quick commercial break
and we'll be right back.
In episode three of this series, you will hear more about Paul's complex character as a victim and a perpetrator and how Johnny Burchdold walked that line.
When I talked to Johnny, Johnny also felt like Paul's relationship with Gloria was essential to show in the series.
And don't worry, you will hear from that treasure of a human being, aka Kathleen Wilhoit, who plays the real-life
treasure of a human being who was Gloria Satterfield in episode four. Longtime listeners of the
Murdoch Murders podcast and True Sunlight know how much we emphasize a victim's first approach
in our reporting. Victims first can mean a lot of things. It can be as simple as asking a victim
of violent crime, how they want to be referred to in our podcast, or making sure that victims know
what we have found in our reporting before we publish an episode, so they are not hearing about it
the first time along with the rest of the world. Victims' first reporting is, unfortunately,
not a priority for most media, who default to the old style of both-sides-ism, which sometimes
further hurts the victim and also tends to normalize violence against them. The first time I saw
Mallory Beach's character appear in the show, it was incredibly emotional. She was immediately
recognizable because of the expertise of costume designer Joseph
of Lecourt and because she was doing something that seemed absolutely true to what the real-life
Mallory would be doing. She was kneeling down to give one of the Murdoch dogs lots of pets
and attention.
Hi, baby. Hi. Hi. Oh, you're so perfect. Oh, you're so sweet. You saying hey to Mallory?
Here, look. Yeah, let me. Oh, thank you. There you go.
She's about to be mama.
Really?
Wait, when's she do?
In the next month.
Oh, it's going to hurt real bad, but it'll be over so fast.
You can have one of her puppets.
Really?
Please, yes.
She's going to be popping him out.
You've got to go somewhere.
Hey, he's hitting on you.
You're coming.
Well, if he is, you can have him.
Oh, sorry, say it again.
Oh, is she going to have him?
It's like that.
One of the first things that I learned about Mallory is that she loved animals.
She didn't just find them cute to play with.
or pet, she truly cared about their well-being. After Mallory's death, the Beach family,
their attorney Mark Tensley, and Mallory's friends created Mal's pals, a nonprofit that is currently
raising money for an animal shelter to house rescues in Hampton County, South Carolina.
The dog petting scene was such a beautiful way to honor Mallory Beach's memory, and I'm so happy
to say that it is not the last time that you will see her love of animals represented in the show.
I talked to Michael about the writer's decisions to include those details.
Okay, so in that scene with Mallory that I really loved where she is petting one of Paul's dogs and what does Paul say to Mallory?
The dog in the show is pregnant and Mallory learns, our character Mallory, version of Mallory, learns that and says, you know, when Paul says she'll be delivering soon, he says, oh, sweet girl, it'll hurt so bad, but it'll be over so soon or something that effect.
And one, it just, it was one of our writers pitched it on the script, and his name's David Gabriel, and he's incredibly talented.
And it felt like there was an emotional truth in that that was also, there's obviously the foreshadowing of what's tragically to come for Mallory.
And, you know, very much humanizing her because it shows the empathy she's having for this pregnant dog, you know.
And this story is obviously just overrun with tragedy and hers being chief among them.
And it felt like something that captured something about the tragedy of what befell her in a way.
It got it something, you know, emotionally true and got it something really special about who she was,
that she would have that without obviously knowing, you know, her own fate to come.
And I think, you know, you had shared so much of that, those details and that information.
And so we have that to go on.
And that is obviously an incredibly relatable and an incredibly endearing trait.
And it felt like knowing that about her, like what's a way to introduce this character that can immediately endear the audience?
We had an incredible actress in Madeline Popovich who plays her.
And she just seeing someone interact with a dog, it's hard to not be immediately endeared to him.
But it's not just us being, you know, using it as shorthand.
it's true to who what we know of who real Mallory was and the way she lived and to what our
understanding of it is. And so it really was, you know, a way for us to access her and bring her
into the story, you know, and try to do so, again, with, you know, emotional sensitivity to her
family and to her as a human being.
From the start, when all eyes were on the low country because of the Murdoch murders,
I felt protective of the case. There was an important
story to tell that didn't just go beyond the easy headlines of the who, what, when, where, why,
and how. To tell the story right, it required a unique understanding of South Carolina and how power
is created and how it gets wielded. The story needed to be told by someone who understood the
ways of the state. In many ways, it hasn't changed at all in 150 years. And now, in 2019, a single
family in their name, could still direct a local economy, determine social hierarchies, and
dictate how the law gets enforced. Luckily, that storyteller existed. On top of Michael and Aaron
being victim-focused, I like that they immediately understood the larger context of the
story and the high stakes involved. Aaron Lee Carr, who you'll hear more from in episode
five of this podcast has an impressive background as a documentarian covering complicated true crime
cases in a brilliant way. And Michael, well, honestly, from day one, I felt like Michael was born
for this because of his background. So I was, I'm born and raised, South Carolina native
and grew up in Lexington, South Carolina, which is about an hour, hour and a half outside of Hampton,
And grew up driving through Hampton, knew the Murdoch name, as you know, these names in South Carolina, these family names didn't have any personal connections to it.
But so when the story started unfolding, I was very aware of it and, you know, felt just a human interest, a back home interest, seeing something that felt very tied to where I'm from and people I knew and just the life that I had grown up living in my own family.
And then, obviously, as things developed, as you, as you yourself and, and your fellow.
reporters reporting on these insane developments as they were happening, it became more and more
clear that this was a real story, as you knew from the get-go, and then one that just continued
to spiral in this really tragic way. And I felt almost, you know, doing what I do, I've been
a TV writer for 15 years now, you know, knowing that we live in this era of true crime stories
and limited series about true crime, feeling like somebody is going to tell this story.
And feeling an obligation in a way to where I'm from and to the place and to the people to, you know, want to be someone who understands the way that the culture is there, the way that societally things operate and how it could create the dynamics at play that erupted in the way that they did with the Murdoch family.
And so, yeah, I just really truly felt like it was almost like an obligation, a calling to sound a little bit high and mighty about it.
But, yeah, it just felt like something that, like, it felt like something that I needed to do.
If somebody were going to do it, I felt like it should be me given my ties.
And done in a certain way.
And, yeah, I felt the same way when we met.
I just remember thinking, like, well, somebody else is going to do this.
And we might as well work with the best people and make it the best that we possibly can and actually make it respectful to victims and victim focused.
and I was so glad that we found you guys.
Well, and I have to say, you know, the thing as for, I think, so many that have followed this story over the years,
the thing that was my first touchstone for it was your reporting, your podcast.
And I think the way that you did focus things on victims first, and you did provide a perspective on things that went beyond just, you know,
here's the crime, here's the criminal, here's the victim.
And, you know, just through that prism, but actually, like, gave us context for the way the
legal system works, the way that, you know, finding the crazy details that you would find that
nothing else was, you know, just kind of doing the drive-by reporting, as it were, and yours was so
in-depth and had led with such heart and emotion that it felt like, you know, when I was just
drawn to the story, then when the opportunity arose to, like, actually be working with you
on it, was just, it felt like the best possible circumstances to be able to do this.
And, like, it was necessary to, like, somebody needed to do it.
Absolutely. Well, you know, your reporting being like, you know, and the podcast itself being so, such a testament to that of like somebody needs to do this because otherwise, you know, it's either not going to get done or it's going to get done by the same people who've always done it and you're going to end up with the same results.
And while Michael was born for writing a compelling scripted narrative based in South Carolina, or at least I believe he was born for that, Aaron Lee Carr was born for telling twisted and captivating true crime stories.
that dig into complicated emotions of the human experience, like family dynamics and addiction.
Together, Michael and Aaron made the perfect team.
I think I had the benefit of a great co-creator in Aaron Lee Carr,
who's a really accomplished documentary filmmaker and who has kind of a North Star
of always finding the truth with the sensitivity to the subjects of her documentaries.
I think for me, creatively, it was always wanting to approach.
this as first and foremost as a family drama because all of the other elements, the crime,
the violence, all of the other, the tragedy, that is all inherent in this saga. So it's,
it's always wanting to put it first and foremost through the prism of this family and then how
this family touched on other families, how it touched on other people. And looking at what are
versions of that that have, I've seen not just in a not really in a true crime space, but in just a
dramatic space, you know, whether it's film or television, that feel like it's the most compelling
in that way because the parts of this story that are going to happen are going to happen.
There's, you know, we know certain developments that are going to happen and tragic turns that
are to come for people who do know the story and for those who don't. Hopefully, they'll
be along for what's a very tragic ride. But it's, you know, I think it's, it's really just
about like what's the family human drama at the heart of this. Both the Murdox is the family,
but then also on a character human level for everyone else involved for Mandy's character as
I say to you, Mandy, as she's exploring this story and what are the obstacles she's encounter
encountering as she tries to cover it and get traction with stories where there's not necessarily
an appetite from the powers that be that to really explore these things with the attention
they deserve and then how does she break through and find her own way to tell the story the way
that it needs to be told and report on it the way it needs to be reported on. So, but really that's
it. It's just always lead with, you know, character and emotion and knowing again that we're dealing
with a story that's true and with real people who live through these things.
During the early days of reporting on Alec Murdoch and his family,
we were focused on the facts, of course, but we were also intent on learning who they were.
We wanted to know their values, what motivated them, what their history was,
and even what their daily lives looked like.
So we talked to as many people who knew them as we could and received a lot of emails
that said things like, be careful, this family is very powerful. But we kept going because, well,
somebody needed to do it. By the time of the murders, we had enough background on Alec and his family,
and it wasn't a stretch to think that he could kill his wife and son, not for us anyway. But not everyone
had that deep understanding of how Ehrlich ticked. The depictions of Eleg and his family here are
remarkable, and that is because of the care put into the development of the characters.
The Ellick character is all things at once.
He is a loving husband who has no respect for his wife, beyond how she meets his needs.
He's a loving father who cares about his sons, but also sees them as extensions of himself in the
worst possible way.
The Maggie character is a devoted wife who adores her husband, but she's also a woman
who sees that her husband is no prince.
We often want to imagine people as being strictly one way.
Bad people are bad, good people are good.
men who love their wives can only love their wives and vice versa.
This show does an amazing job of allowing the characters to reveal themselves in the most human of ways
by putting all their contradictions on display.
The first scene showing Paul Murdoch does just that.
In the first episode, we have very early on when we introduce our version of Paul,
we introduce his character.
He's rolling up to Moselle and he's got half a tree branch sticking out of the, uh,
his truck, and he's bumping some hardy as he's driving up to the house. And, you know, we knew
from research the real Paul had several accidents and that were kind of, you know, for the most
part, just sort of property damage sorts of accidents, obviously before the boat crash occurred.
And for us, it felt like a way to platform this guy, introduce this guy with a sense of kind
of relatable country swagger a little bit, you know. And I also think that, you know, like being a teenager
and it doesn't absolve you of stupidity.
But, you know, it felt certainly to me as somebody who's from South Carolina and from a place very similar to Hampton about just, I crashed my car on a tree stump.
I got it stuck on a tree stump one night at a party and it wouldn't come off.
And that was like a whole ordeal.
And, you know, and there's, there were incidents with water balloons getting thrown out of cars after my senior year.
So it's like I could, it felt relatable in a way to where you could see this, this character that wasn't just a.
a victim wasn't just a perpetrator, wasn't just someone who was responsible for something terrible
or the victim of something terrible. And, you know, and then our actor, Johnny Burst told he
he plays Paul was terrific. And he and Patricia, who plays Maggie, had this exchange where she says,
you know, I'm glad you're, I'm glad you're okay after she sort of has seen the damage he's done
and knows that he's had some previous run-ins with the lull over his drinking and driving.
And he kind of gives her this look of like, you know, this is this sort of endearing sweet,
look, are you sure, but there's like a playfulness to it?
And that's a choice Johnny made as an actor, but it's that kind of interaction that I think,
you know, really kind of humanizes me.
When then seeing him walk over and like try to ask his dad, you know, do you want, are we going
to go test out this new rifle and just, you know, just sort of basic familial interactions.
And then, you know, human interactions, I think that in some way, shape, or form we can all
relate to or at least understand or have someone who's done something similar before the events
of this story go beyond, you know, normal comprehension.
I think that scene also shows how the Murdochs just were not taking Paul's problem
seriously either.
And it's, in one way, it's understandable.
Like, everybody has a problematic teenager and everybody has a teenager that's drinking
too much.
And but at the same time, like, they mentioned there's been several accidents and it's like
a storm is kind of building, but how serious should we take this?
And yeah.
Well, it's like the signs, the signs were there, you know, the warning signs were there
and how seriously they were taken by the people who should have been taking them seriously.
And that does to a certain extent, you know, in real life, it includes all of them.
But it's like, what's the support system that, you know, in reality that was there
and then within our story?
What are we saying when we speak to, you know, hopefully subtly, but that there's been
these other accidents that he's had and that, you know, there's this past drinking ticket.
There's these incidents in like what are these things that are sort of just being brushed aside and not regarded with the gravity that they should for what they could mean and what could happen, which then obviously, as we know, did ultimately rupture in a way that was horrible for everybody and then was the inciting incident in so many ways for while we're here talking.
No.
Oh.
Oh.
What you playing chicken with trees now?
Oh, just ran off the road a little last night.
Were you tricky?
Is the sky blue?
You know, this boy's gone through more vehicles at 19 than I have my old life.
You keep messing around like that.
You're going to win yourself another drinking ticket.
I'm going to get some hydrogen peroxide for that cut.
Thanks, GoGo.
She's just gross, dude.
Oh, my God.
Hey, hey, hey.
You.
I'm glad you're okay.
We will talk more about the complexities of Paul's character in episode 3 of this podcast,
but Johnny's interpretation of Paul actually changed the way I saw the person
who I had harshly reported on for more than two years before and after his death.
The facts of my reporting still stand, of course, but my perspective has shifted a lot.
For instance, to me, Paul's messiness seems unique to his upbringing because of his last name.
So it was easy to see his history of troublemaking, which often had a price tag associated with it, as a function of his personality.
I didn't understand some of Paul's less consequential, hijinks as relatable, as a right of passage almost, until talking to Michael.
At the heart of Paul's story and of the boat crash story is something that most humans can.
can relate to, young people being stupid and doing stupid things.
Paul's recklessness was of course much worse than most teenagers, but I was reminded while
talking with Michael that most of us can look back on our teenagers at things that we did and
just be glad that our mistakes did not define us.
The beginning of the end for Elic Murdoch and his family's deep-rooted legacy was in February 2019,
On the night a drunk Paul Murdoch crashed his dad's boat into a bridge, killing 19-year-old
Mallory Beach and severely injuring three friends of theirs.
The boat crash captured the attention of the entire state of South Carolina, and even
beyond, not only because of who the Murdox were, because that the crash involved teenagers,
in a situation that many people could relate to, going to a party, hanging out with friends,
and one of them, making the bad choice of getting behind the wheel after drinking.
A split second, then everything changes.
And if you're lucky, you can learn from that mistake.
Like Michael, learn from the mailbox incident.
I also was once a dumb teenager who did dumb things while drinking.
Like that one time, I was 19 in the backseat of my drunken friend's pickup truck
when it caught fire, and we were just a few seconds away from all going up in flames.
all because we were dumb and put a lit grill on accident in the truck bed.
Stupid, dumb teenagers.
I always thought of those young and dumb times in my life when I investigated the boat crash case,
which was why I always reported on the case with a level of empathy for Mallory and all the passengers on the boat.
It could have been me when I was young.
You know who else related to Mallory and immediately empathized with her decision
to ride in a boat with drunken Paul Murdoch driving on her last night alive,
Brittany Snow, who plays me.
Well, she plays the Mandy character in this series.
You'll hear more from Britt in episode two of this podcast.
But like so many of you,
Britney was an obsessive fan of the Murdoch Murder's podcast,
who was drawn in by the boat crash case.
Something both Mandy and I really love about the series
is that the writers didn't shy away from showing that Elek Murdoch wasn't just a power player.
He was surrounded by other power players whose mere presence in his atmosphere
served as tacit approval for the way he operated.
The writers accomplished this early on by crafting a reimagining of what happened earlier in the day
when Paul Murdoch crashed his father's boat in February 2019.
This collection of scenes covers a lot of ground
and reveals the emotional truth of what Ehrlich Murdoch's world look like,
around that time. The order of the Palmetto Party, for instance, the governor of South Carolina
awarded Randolph Murdoch with this honor, the highest award in the state in 2018, about a year
before the crash. By merging these two timelines, the writers were able to accomplish so many
things at once. You see the Maggie character putting her heart and soul and creating the perfect
party for Randolph, for Ehrlich's benefit. You see Maggie dancing with Randolph and advocating for Ehrlich,
reporting back to him about what Randolph said, only she tells Ehrlich what she thinks he wants to hear.
You see Ehrlich never staying in one spot. He goes between his family and the powerful public
officials in attendance, all in the name of getting his jellyball endeavor through that red tape.
Now, for 86 years, a Randolph Murdoch was the chief law enforcement officer in five counties
of South Carolina's low country. Elick's father, grandfather, and great-grandfather all served as
solicitor, which is the term South Carolina uses for its district attorney. The Murdox had a long
history of deciding who would be held to the letter of the law and who would get a pass. And when
Randolph III, Ellick's father, stepped down in 2006, after 20 years, people assumed that Ehrlich would
be appointed to take over his father's office until the next election, when voters would continue
that legacy by electing him to office. But that's not how it played out. As we now know, Ehrlich followed
the money and remained at the law firm started by his great-grandfather, which meant that the
Murdox needed a friend in the solicitor's seat, and that's why Randolph Murdoch lobbied for
one of the prosecutors in his office to take his place. That person was Duffy Stone, and he
remains in that seat to this day. To capture this dynamic of Ellick surrounding himself with power
players in government and in law enforcement, whose very presence at events like this one, were
seen as problematic and even corrupt. The writers show Alec talking about Duffy as one of them and
playing beanbags with him. They show Ehrlich feeding grilled jellyfish to Duffy and to the new D&R
officer who had just shut down Elex's operation. They show ELEC introducing that new DNR officer
to the governor of South Carolina, mentioning that he'd make a good director over the entire
office.
Listen, Mr. Murdoch, I'd like to, don't you do that, you call me Alec.
Okay?
All right.
Okay.
Listen, Doug, I'm gonna come to the point.
I got a couple hundred thousand invested in this already.
I got a product I can't move.
That's money out of my pocket until you give me your blessings.
So what's it gonna take?
These things take a lot of consideration.
I mean, there's environmental impact and there's things that I need to just...
Henry? Governor?
Come on, get your ass over here.
Come on.
Let's shaking Big Red.
Eddie.
Yep, sir.
Put a lip on this.
Come on.
What hell is it?
What hell is it?
Jellyfish.
Well, it looks weird as hell, but...
But?
Uh...
Uh...
Mm.
Now, that is some...
texture, isn't it?
Yeah.
It's just what Doug here said.
You all met?
No.
No, Governor, this is Doug Breltsford out of Greenville.
DNR.
He just took over from Braden his county director.
Congratulations.
Real pleasure meeting.
You're going to...
No, please.
Call me Henry.
Yes, sir.
Yes, sir.
Yes, sir.
Alec!
Come on.
Okay, business calls.
I get to love you and leave you.
He's a future state director written all over it, all right?
I'll leave y'all to get acquainted, all right?
Yeah, I want a second.
Again, this all strikes at the emotional truth of Ehrlich Murdoch's world,
and it conveys to the audience what a good old voice system looks like.
Because later in the episode, it's these core relationships that Ehrlich has in his back pocket,
along with a solicitor's office badge and some blue lights for his truck.
when the worst happens and he gets that call about the boat crash.
Here's Michael on the challenge of writing scenes that convey this corruption on screen
in a way that helps the audience connect those dots.
One of the trickier things to, you know, in terms of the exposition of the story
and really showing people and how the world works and how they work within it,
but is that they were worked as both attorneys and,
and also worked as prosecutors.
And that's a really tricky thing to,
because it's a very unique thing, too,
that is unique to the South and general.
And it's, but so really, we wanted to show in organic ways,
but that he has these blue lights,
that he carries around this badge,
that he tries to wield this advantage.
And then, you know, through the show,
hopefully organically, you know,
the events of the boat crash and the fallout of it,
there's no better opportunity to show those attempts
to wield that power.
and to wield those connections and to wield that,
but also that charm in the moment,
that ability to get things out of people,
whereas if someone might not necessarily know who you are,
you can connect with them and then make them, you know,
bend to your will or to do a favor for you in some way, shape, or form.
So, you know, it's really through action that we tried to show those things
where it's like, okay, he's not a cop,
but he's turning on those blue lights to go out and, you know,
deal with some business scheme he's got going
and speeding out there and introducing himself with his badge to people.
which are all things we know that real Alec did.
And I think it's, you know, it's so it's really through action we tried to show it as much as we can.
Because, and again, you know, drawing on the real details of what we know of the story.
There are many large themes to focus on when it comes to the Murdox.
But Aaron and Michael always honed in on what was important to us.
Like telling the victim's stories in a respectful way and exposing the corruption.
that we are still fighting in South Carolina to this day.
It's always important to know why people do what they do.
So for my final question,
I asked Michael D. Fuller what he hopes people take away from this series.
I think as a whole one, I think there,
but for the grace of whatever, higher power in a lot of ways.
And I think that if you have,
we're always going to have moments of,
there's always going to be tragedy. There's always going to be moments beyond our control.
There's always going to be things that happen to our family or to us as people. It's how you
respond to those things and the decisions you make and the way you approach those things and how
you use at your disposal that are going to really define what those moments mean. And I think
what I would really love is just that, you know, ultimately as it relates to this story and that these
are human beings and that these are people and they're complex and they're complicated and and you
know again our version of them obviously but hopefully that there's some truth illuminated about
how they interacted with each other one another within the family itself within generations of
power within generations of privilege and how that if unchecked can really become something
that can unravel in a way if you're if you're not diligent if you're not keeping in touch
it to yourself, if you're not being true to yourself, if you're not being true to what's going on,
that, you know, things can really, really take a turn. And, you know, it's just, it's that human
drama that's at the heart of it that I think is what I would really love for people to take away.
It's just that these are complex human beings at the end of the day.
Yeah.
Part of my job as a journalist is to dig deeper, to discover more beneath the surface.
And that's what we will be doing on this podcast series for each episode of Hulu's captivating look
at this story that I have lived and breathed for almost seven years now.
Watch the interview from this podcast on Hulu and Hulu on Disney Plus.
New episodes Wednesdays.
We hope that you're enjoying the original series Murdoch Death in the Family.
And don't forget to like, share, subscribe, and leave a comment or five-star rating
to give our creators' cast and crew the praise they deserve.
And don't miss, Murdoch Death in the Family, now streaming on Hulu and Hulu
on Disney Plus.
David Moses for Luna Shark and Josh Block for USG Audio.
Sound design and audio engineering by Jamie Hoffman,
Mike Bader, and Grace Hills.
Production support for USG Audio by Josh Lalongi.
Special thanks to Kate Thomas, Ruby Hart, Beth Braden,
Jenny Adams, and Sam Berlin.
To learn more about this story and others,
visit lunasharkmedia.com.
If you want to hear the rest of the official companion podcast series,
including conversations with Britney Snow,
Johnny Birchstold and Patricia Arquette.
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