More importantly, Jelks was guilty of Pay-For-Play. Would anyone care if a Bama fan paid Cam to say he was paid?
The tornado thing wasn't the end. It then went on to show that despite the venom Auburn gets from these insane redneck bama fans, Auburn fans, and even coaches actively went to Tuscaloosa to lend a helping hand.
Shows that we have human decency, where it didn't appear that they did.
And actually, the film ended by stating Auburn was cleared by the NCAA in the Cam Newton case.
If you didn't go in expecting it to be slanted to bammer, it was unbiased. If you pick and choose what you want you can slant it either way. I would think the "normal" bammer would be embarrassed by the prominence of Updyke. Auburn fans, compared to that of Updyke came across "normal".
The tornado happened. It's a fact.
Gelks? Hell I don't even recall that really, and they could have, but didn't even mention Eric Ramsey.
Here's the thing. You can't explain this rivalry to someone in North Dakota, or California in an hour documentary, and have them understand it. It told me NOTHING I didn't already know, but I wasn't the target demographic.
If you think it painted bammer in a positive light, more power to you. You didn't watch. I'd be embarrassed if I was them.
Auburn didn't cause the tornado.
If you wanted to find bias, you could find it from either side.
As far as being good TV...not so much.
Unlike it's billing, the film was pretty much about the last 2 seasons, and nothing more.