Hollywood’s MORAL BANKRUPTCY Exposed
They’re GLAMORIZING A Monster… AGAIN
Paulson’s Wuornos Role Sparks OUTRAGE
Published December 18, 2025 11:37 AM PST
HOLLYWOOD has crossed a line from which there may be NO RETURN. Forget Charlize Theron’s Oscar, Sarah Paulson has just been photographed “becoming” executed serial killer Aileen Wuornos for Ryan Murphy’s latest “Monster” spectacle, and the images are a SHAMELESS, SICKENING display of an industry THAT HAS LOST ITS SOUL. These aren’t gritty biopic photos—they are a TONE-DEAF PARADE, a glamorization of a woman who shot seven men in cold blood. This isn’t art; it’s EXPLOITATION for awards and clicks.
The photos show Paulson, hair dyed and wrapped in a bathrobe, methodically “inhabiting” the role of a notorious killer. The context is CHILLING: Wuornos wasn’t a misunderstood anti-hero; she was a MURDERER whose victims’ families still grieve. Yet, here is Hollywood, once again PROFITING from their agony, repackaging trauma as PRESTIGE ENTERTAINMENT. Ryan Murphy’s factory of misery rolls on, digging up the dead for our morbid fascination.
The most DISTURBING part? This is a BLOODY COMPETITION. The article itself pits Paulson against Theron in a macabre game of “Who Can Be the Better Monster?” What does it say about our culture that we turn REAL-LIFE HORROR into a cinematic arms race for accolades? We are REWARDING the sensationalization of pure evil. The victims are reduced to FOOTNOTES in Hollywood’s ghoulish career advancement.
This isn’t just another TV season; it’s a SYMPTOM of a society that consumes tragedy for sport, where empathy is dead and outrage is the only currency left. We have handed our storytellers a license to mine the darkest corners of human suffering for profit, and we CLAP when they do it well. The line between memorializing and monetizing murder has been ERASED.


