Watched a couple more over the last couple of days:
The Bundy Tapes, about Ted, obviously, and told largely through his own words. I vaguely remember the Bundy execution, but most of my knowledge of him and his crimes has been gleaned from tv/movies.
The rap has always been how handsome and charming he was. I guess he was a better-than-average looking guy, but any "charm" he used on his victims was spent by the time he got in front of the documentary camera. He was insufferable in stuffing words he didn't really understand into conversations that were really just his stream of consciousness run amok.
I see why his LSAT grades were disappointing. Any self-respecting sociopath ought to be able to swing a 145...minimum.
Abducted in Plain Sight. Holy balls were these parents dumber than dogshit. I can't believe the FBI (or other appropriate law enforcement) never stepped in and removed the other children from their care. The deference to the wishes/desires of a 12-14 year old was shocking and I wonder if the parents were too compromised to draw a line or if they truly thought they were powerless.
I think the larger story here is how this all played out in a largely (though only obliquely mentioned) LDS community and in the wake of (or concurrently with, I suppose) Berchtold's official reprimand by the church for his inappropriate behavior. Then, the buried lede in all of it was that B spent 1 year in prison for raping a child. That wasn't mentioned until just before the credits rolled. WTF?