Monday, October 18, 2021

Kaiser Health News and Hulu Host Panel Discussion, “Dopesick: The Opioid Crisis Beyond The Script”

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KFF’s Kaiser Health News and Hulu Host Panel Discussion, “Dopesick: The Opioid Crisis Beyond the Script”

 

Hulu’s new miniseries “Dopesick” was built on journalism, and its creators hope it will spark a renewed public discussion about the nation’s opioid crisis, show executives said during a recent panel discussion hosted by KFF’s Kaiser Health News and Hulu.

 

The event brought together the lead creative powers behind the show along with a journalist from KHN and a policy expert from KFF to unpack the making of “Dopesick” and what the show has to say about the origins of the opioid crisis. KFF’s journalists and policy experts have been tracking the devastating epidemic with on-the-ground stories as well as data-driven analyses for a number of years. The panelists brought their different lenses — creative, journalistic and policy — to focus on the devastating impact of opioids on ordinary Americans and the often ineffective efforts to combat this continuing public health emergency.

 

The panel discussion, moderated by Chaseedaw Giles, KHN's digital strategy and audience engagement editor, featured executive producer, writer and showrunner Danny Strong; journalist Beth Macy, who authored the book on which the show is based; KHN correspondent Aneri Pattani, who has reported extensively on opioid policy, substance use and mental health; and KFF senior policy analyst Nirmita Panchal, whose analytical work focuses on mental health and substance use.

 

“What was unique about my collaboration with Beth is that the journalism side of the process never ended,” Strong said. “We would do interviews together, people would leak documents to us. … It was this unusual process in which we were writing a scripted drama and then simultaneously doing active investigative journalism.”

 

Macy, who was in the show’s writers’ room full time, said writers would incorporate into scripts revelations from newly released court filings in ongoing cases against Purdue Pharma, the company behind the drug OxyContin, which features prominently in the eight-episode miniseries.


“New documents were coming out all the time,” Macy said. “We would take turns — you go through this, I’ll go through this. And then we would all report back to Danny and decide what the best highlights were.”

 

 

 

 

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