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Real-Life Death Videos Getting Harder to Ignore, Impossible to Unsee
Hollywood Reporter ^ | September 12, 2025 | James Hibberd

Posted on 09/12/2025 5:17:28 PM PDT by nickcarraway

“This kind of content scars you for life.” As shock images of Charlie Kirk and Iryna Zarutska’s deaths spread on social media, experts reveal how the long-term impact of such videos is more harmful than you think.

In the 1999 thriller 8mm, Nicolas Cage plays a private detective who watches a graphic film of a girl’s murder. His character becomes obsessed with solving the crime. He watches the footage repeatedly, leaving him psychologically wrecked and prone to violence himself. As one character puts it: “There are some things you can’t unsee … the devil don’t change, the devil changes you.”

This week, millions of people — many unwittingly — saw the devil: a horrific video of 31-year-old conservative activist Charlie Kirk getting shot by an assassin’s bullet, his neck gushing with blood, while hosting a student event at Utah Valley University. The video instantly went viral across social media platforms, autoplaying for hours on X, in particular, to countless users casually scrolling their feeds until moderators eventually clamped down on its spread.

The widespread and quasi-nonconsensual viewing of such content is something that’s relatively new.

The Zapruder film documenting John F. Kennedy’s assassination was arguably the most famous video of a real-life event of all time. Yet for decades the footage was largely unavailable outside of the occasional TV news special. Oliver Stone’s 1991 film JFK — released nearly three decades after the assassination— marked the first time many Americans watched the unedited recording of that day.

In the 1980s and ‘90s, the notorious straight-to-video film series Faces of Death featured scenes of real-life fatal calamities (along with some faked stunts). The film was an underground sensation, an endurance test for morbidly curious teens.

Then came the World Trade Center attacks on 9/11. Journalist Daniel Pearl getting beheaded in 2002. The Boston Marathon bombings in 2013. The live-streamed Christchurch mosque shooting in 2019. George Floyd’s murder in 2020. Each produced a widely seen shock horror video.

News editors have long exercised editorial discretion over content deemed unnecessarily disturbing — not printing, for instance, paparazzi photos of Princess Diana dead inside her car crash, or not airing recordings of people leaping from the Twin Towers on 9/11. Even last week, major news outlets avoided posting the clip of Kirk getting shot. On social media, however, the guardrails are practically nonexistent.

Utah Governor Spencer Cox has it exactly right when he declared that the spread of the Kirk video “is not good to consume … social media is a cancer on our society.” And while details about Kirk’s assassin are currently scarce, you can make one safe bet about him; a link shared by most modern-day ideologically driven killers: They tend to be chronically — if not outright radicalized — online.

Professor Roxane Cohen Silver has authored several studies on the effects of watching real-life violence. Silver has found that while the impact of viewing a single graphic video is small, it can measurably have a negative effect on mental health for literally years. Such images get permanently stored in your long-term memory and are linked to being more fearful and anxious (if you’ve seen JFK, you’ve likely never been able to forget the president’s head exploding to Kevin Costner intoning “back, and to the left…”).

This effect multiplies with additional viewing of similar content, which people tend to paradoxically seek out after their initial exposure — not despite finding the tape upsetting but because they found it upsetting (it’s like how if you’re afraid of spiders, you tend to look for spiders, Silver notes).

“Years ago, we thought people would habituate to violent exposure,” Silver says. “Instead, any exposure is linked to being more sensitive and seeking out the next set of graphic images. It’s a very cyclical process. We see increased distress and anxiety over time, hyper-vigilance over time and actually found cardiovascular problems.” This effect is also different than watching violent movies, TV shows or video games — humans don’t have the same trauma response when they know footage isn’t real.

There is a counter argument to this: That images of monstrous acts need to be seen for society to have the appropriate response. World War II concentration camp footage, for instance, has been instrumental in fighting Holocaust denialism. One might also point to Floyd’s death video, which spawned a movement for racial justice and a push towards more policing oversight. Outrage over the video, however, also was blamed for riots and the Defund the Police movement, which many now consider a mistake that might have precipitated a rise in violent crime in some cities (the statistics are often debated). Similarly, the traumatic footage of 3,000 deaths on 9/11 spurred the United States to rally the world against organized terror groups yet was also used to justify the Iraq War, which resulted in an estimated 200,000 civilian deaths.

And so: Watching graphic tragedies successful provokes human empathy and outrage, but our subsequent decisions — often made from anger and fear — can result in even deadlier deadly outcomes.

“This is an extraordinarily important point,” Silver says. “There can be both a positive for society and negative for the individual. For the individual, we have found there is no psychological benefit to exposure to graphic or gruesome images.”

Which brings us back to Kirk’s death. Dr. Sarah M. Coyne, a professor and media researcher, says throwing politics into any of these videos runs the risk of public response to traumatic footage spinning into dangerous directions. “It’s horrific and I worry that it will just begat more violence,” Coyne says. “I hope the people who saw that have empathy for the individual and for his family and have the message that violence is not okay.”

Political leaders might consider pushing social media companies to increase content moderation — a practice which declined in the wake of backlash over platforms censoring conservative stories and views during the pandemic and 2020 election. Targeting graphic imagery rather than political text could be a start but even this idea comes with a cost. Several stories have documented how moderators of violent content also become traumatized, with one former Meta staffer telling Euronews, “This kind of content scars you for life.”

Using AI to aid moderation might be another solution. But the easiest and most practical idea might be to finally embrace and evangelize the irritating and unwelcome advice you’ve increasingly heard over the last decade: Quit social media and get off your damn phone.


TOPICS: Heated Discussion
KEYWORDS: ai; charliekirk; graphicimages; media; reality; rynazarutska; unsee
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1 posted on 09/12/2025 5:17:28 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway
No, truth and reality are more important than Karens.

Megyn Kelly said it best. No one wants to watch these videos. But we have to. It's our duty.

2 posted on 09/12/2025 5:28:31 PM PDT by Governor Dinwiddie ( O give thanks unto the Lord, for He is gracious, and his mercy endures forever. — Psalm 106)
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To: nickcarraway

“As shock images of Charlie Kirk and Iryna Zarutska’s deaths spread on social media, experts reveal how the long-term impact of such videos is more harmful than you think.”

Interesting how they single out these two - which have thus far led to no rioting - and ignore the video of George Floyd, which triggered nationwide mayhem.


3 posted on 09/12/2025 5:31:52 PM PDT by Steve_Seattle
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To: Governor Dinwiddie
Megyn Kelly said it best. No one wants to watch these videos. But we have to. It's our duty.

Yes, but when your entire timeline for the whole day is a young woman getting her throat slit and the very next day it's a young man getting his neck blown apart in post after post, refresh after refresh, and on every social media platform, it might have the opposite effect of numbing one to the horrors of the reality.

I had to ask my 14-y/o son to stop watching the Charlie Kirk video, that it was bad for his soul. Which is another point: Many of these videos are on sites that have no age restriction.

4 posted on 09/12/2025 5:33:38 PM PDT by Drew68
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To: Drew68

Once upon a time, I would have watched those kinds of things, but I can’t do it, anymore.


5 posted on 09/12/2025 5:34:34 PM PDT by dfwgator ("I am Charlie Kirk!")
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To: Steve_Seattle
and ignore the video of George Floyd, which triggered nationwide mayhem.

Floyd died of an overdose and his death, though caught on video, was not particularly graphic.

Iryna Zarutska's and Charlie Kirk's violent murders produced horrific visual images that I won't ever get out of my mind.

6 posted on 09/12/2025 5:38:04 PM PDT by Drew68
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To: dfwgator
Once upon a time, I would have watched those kinds of things, but I can’t do it, anymore.

When it's bad guys getting smoked, I can watch that stuff all day long.

But not Iryna and Charlie. Those are just too heartbreaking.

There was another awful one of a convenience store worker getting executed in the back of the head after he already complied with the robber that I can't watch.

But bad guy FAFO videos? Yeah, no problem.

7 posted on 09/12/2025 5:41:17 PM PDT by Drew68
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To: nickcarraway

Back in the 1980s some friends enjoyed watching “Faces of Death” videos. I never developed the taste.

I have no desire to watch that crap and am creeped out by those who do.


8 posted on 09/12/2025 5:42:34 PM PDT by Skooz (Gabba Gabba accept you we accept you one of us Gabba Gabba we accept you we accept you one of us )
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To: nickcarraway

in the 50s dead pictures of dead bodies from crime and accidents was regular far on the front pages of newspapers and magazines. Something the public got used to during the wars.


9 posted on 09/12/2025 5:44:51 PM PDT by fella ("As it was before Noah so shall it be again," )
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To: Skooz

I’ve heard of those, but never watched them. I read they are fake, but still, not reason to watch them.


10 posted on 09/12/2025 5:45:33 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: Drew68
"There is a counter argument to this: That images of monstrous acts need to be seen for society to have the appropriate response. World War II concentration camp footage, for instance, has been instrumental in fighting Holocaust denialism. One might also point to Floyd’s death video, which spawned a movement for racial justice . . . "

They cite the Floyd video as something positive despite the mayhem it wreaked. We see the old leftist double-standard at work.
11 posted on 09/12/2025 5:45:38 PM PDT by Steve_Seattle
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To: nickcarraway

On the other hand…

I think Israel made a mistake by not quickly releasing all the images from the Oct. 7, 2023 Hamas massacre of men, women, and children.

I get that Israel wanted to show respect for the dead and their families.

But now Israel is the bad guy. And Hamas is being picked on. It’s disgusting.


12 posted on 09/12/2025 5:45:49 PM PDT by Leaning Right (It's morning in America. Again.)
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To: Leaning Right

You make a good point.


13 posted on 09/12/2025 5:46:10 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: fella

I heard Mexico puts all autopsy photos online.


14 posted on 09/12/2025 5:46:38 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

I am not a fan of graphic violence in movies. I have witnessed the natural deaths of my father and my father-in-law. I saw the video of Laquan McDonald being shot to pieces by a Chicago cop. I saw the videos of Iryna and Charlie.

Yeah, I have had enough for quite a while.


15 posted on 09/12/2025 5:49:34 PM PDT by Southside_Chicago_Republican (God save the United States!)
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To: nickcarraway

If you could unsee them then you would be unseeing reality. To all- Cover your eyes if you want to be dumb and blind and unable to respond to reality.


16 posted on 09/12/2025 5:51:04 PM PDT by Revel
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To: nickcarraway

Police (law enforcement in today’s parlance) are known for having statistically high suicide and divorce rates compared to national averages. No doubt due in part to the psychological toll it takes having to deal with society’s lowest element in a largely thankless profession.


17 posted on 09/12/2025 5:51:38 PM PDT by SpaceBar
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To: Steve_Seattle
"There is a counter argument to this: That images of monstrous acts need to be seen for society to have the appropriate response..."

Well, they're not wrong about this.

And when President Trump uses Kirk's murder to RICO Antifa into oblivion and Zarutska's murder to bring back "3-strikes" and fill our prisons with repeat offenders, I'll argue the same.

18 posted on 09/12/2025 5:55:32 PM PDT by Drew68
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To: Drew68

The “Flying Jihadiis” videos from the Gulf War were great. I don’t want to watch the graphic video showing Charlie’s death.


19 posted on 09/12/2025 5:56:01 PM PDT by bigbob (If thou doth eff around, thou wilt findeth out)
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To: nickcarraway

I hate graphic violence. I don’t watch horror movies. But I force myself to watch raw video and bodycam. Sometimes, we must watch video to see what really happened.

I have found that many people, especially on the Left, form an opinion without watching all the videos - cell phone videos, surveillance video, bodycam from different angles, and so on.

Maybe they cannot bring themselves to watch them. So, they form an opinion based on what they read and hear. If they watch any video at all, they watch one snippet.


20 posted on 09/12/2025 6:52:09 PM PDT by Tired of Taxes
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