This was hard to watch. Slow and it waffles between a historical documentary and personal story. It felt like the historical part was added as filler.
There were so many ironic and hypocritical statements. Did he really talk about others being willing to do anything for money? Really? Is he that dense?
And they say shouldn't we here the truth straight from them? Normally, that's the best source for a story, except when half of your truth isn't actually true. And it's not even based on tabloid stories or other people talking about them. Their "truths" can be proven as incorrect against their own past words in other print and video interviews! Anyone can look up the articles and the infamous Oprah interview and see that their "truth" has dramatically changed over time.
What would have been better was a documentary involving a director or interviewer willing to ask them the hard questions. They are willing to tell their "truth" so long as it can't be challenged by others with facts and they don't have to admit some blame for what has transpired.
Netflix needs to move on.