Why the creator of monsters Ryan Murphy will not make a television series Luigi Mangione (for the moment)

Ryan Murphy’s “Monster” franchise has generated many views and notoriety for Netflix. The first season brought the series to a macabre start by documenting the vile crimes of the serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer, then made an interesting pivot for the murders of their parents of Lyle and Erik Menendez (who would have abused their sons). Who, exactly, were the monsters here?
This year, Murphy returned in the middle of the serial killer with “Monster: The Ed Gein Story”, which plunges into the sordid story of Ed Gein, who, as well as the murder of women, embarked on serious components and bodily seizures. Since “The Texas Chain Saw Massacre” by Tobe Hooper was partly based on Gein’s actions, the Murphy series attracts additional attention from horror fans. But if he wants to publish record figures, the following season would concern Luigi Mangione, the young man who would have killed and killed the CEO of Unitedhealthcare, Brian Thompson.
You can forget that for the moment. In a recent interview with Variety, Murphy said that Mangione was never a possibility for season 3 because he was still a bit of an enigma. “We don’t know anything about him,” said Murphy. “There was nothing to write – we didn’t have any information yet. Maybe something will come out in the trial.” He added that Mangione’s name appears in his file “maybe one day”.
Although we know that Murphy currently has no plan for a mangione season, there is no trouble speculating on how we would take place.
The story of Luigi Mangione’s complete life has not yet been revealed
Born May 6, 1998, Mangione had, by all the available accounts, a comfortable and stable childhood. He was the major promotion of his high school class in Baltimore and attended the University of Pennsylvania, where he obtained his baccalaureate and his master’s degree in science and genius. He studied robotics, briefly worked in the video game industry (on the game “Civilization VI”) while cultivating an interest in AI. He has earned his life as a coder, but he found the profession boring.
Why would a young man also promising a health framework outside the New York Hilton Midtown? He wrote a manifesto in which he went to burn the land on the American health insurance system. “Frankly, these parasites had come,” wrote Mangione. He expressed his concern that the richest country on the planet ranks somewhere in the 42nd district in life expectancy, and deplored that this country has enabled these companies to make health care so expensive to the point that many cannot afford a necessary treatment.
Obviously, public execution is not the right way to plead the cruel corruption of the health insurance industry, but a series on Mangione would have a call because he was clearly a brilliant child. It is possible that his own health problems (notably a vertebral merger surgery is necessary by a surfing accident) partially motivated his alleged murder of Thompson, but, reading this manifesto, it seems that he acted out of despair. He knew that these powerful people would never face music for killing an countless number of people by denying their insurance complaints. Mangione did something monstrous, absolutely, but, as for the Menendez season, is there more than a monster in this story?