Nancy Grace is usually the one to lead the charge and hysteria, whenever there is a hot-button trial, disappearance or legal media circus. It was no different with this case, the former prosecutor was one of the first to extensively cover the disappearance and death of 2-year-old Caylee Anthony. After authorities focused their attention on Anthony, the coverage turned quite hostile.
The fervor reached a climax after Tuesday's verdict when, against all odds and media coverage, Anthony was found not guilty. Naturally, after spending months and years arguing otherwise, Nancy Grace railed against the defense, who she claimed was performing a 'champagne toast' afterward, and argued the media was blameless compared to the 'tot mom'.
Other than Nancy Grace, the biggest outrage over the verdict was shown by Bill O'Reilly, especially when Geraldo Rivera tried to defend the jury's ruling. O'Reilly outshouted him, according to Entertainment Weekly, stating 'I am so angry about this verdict!'
Outrage from O'Reilly and Nancy Grace is nothing new or unexpected, given their reputations. Since these controversial figures are at the center of the media coverage, it only makes the subsequent doubt and criticism more obvious.
Anthony's attorney, J. Cheney Mason, attacked 'incompetent talking heads' for leading a 'media assassination' of her client, while CNN legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin conceded that the 'media's performance will be something we should all discuss'.
As in the sagas of O.J. Simpson, Michael Jackson and the Ramsey family, the media helped fuel the fury over this high-profile case. The press and public will once more debate whether coverage went too far, then promise to tone it down, at least until the next scandalous murder and accused murderer comes along.
Anthony was tailor-made for Nancy Grace and the other talking heads to attack given her questionable character, ever-changing stories about what happened, and her attitude while Caylee Anthony was missing. Yet even the talking heads have to realize by now their fury alone cannot convict someone in a court of law.