A feature-length documentary on the long-term allegations of abuse against young women by the R&B singer R Kelly is in production. BuzzFeed News is co-developing the film for Hulu based on its original reporting by reporter Jim DeRogatis and editor Marisa Carroll into Kelly’s alleged misconduct, Variety reports.
The documentary will feature interviews with key figures from Kelly’s past, including associates and several women who allege mistreatment. Lyric R Cabral, director of the Emmy-winning documentary Terror, will direct. Laura Poitras (Citizenfour, Risk) and Charlotte Cook, co-founders of the documentary production company Field of Vision, will produce.
R Kelly has consistently denied the allegations against him..
DeRogatis is credited with bringing the allegations against Kelly to light. In 2001 he reported for the Chicago Sun-Times on Kelly’s alleged “pattern of sexual predation on young women” based on public record accounts of suits settled out of court and later sealed. In February 2002 he received an anonymous tape of Kelly appearing to have sex with an underage girl, which became the subject of a Sun-Times story and a police investigation.
Kelly was cleared of 14 charges of child pornography in June 2008.
In July 2017, DeRogatis reported for BuzzFeed that three sets of parents were accusing Kelly of holding their daughters in an “abusive cult” in which he allegedly imprisoned women in his Chicago and Atlanta residences and subjected them to physical, verbal and sexual abuse. Kelly denied the charges. In an interview with the Village Voice about his decades-long pursuit of the story, DeRogatis said: “You have to make a choice, as a listener, if music matters to you as more than mere entertainment.”
Allegations against Kelly continue to surface, with new accusations made by at least five women this month, including by one woman who alleges nonconsensual sex and that he infected her with herpes. The #MuteRKelly campaign is putting pressure on Kelly’s record label, concert promoters and streaming services to withdraw their support of his music. The Women of Color branch of the Time’s Up movement has pledged its support to the campaign, which Kelly described as “the attempted lynching of a black man”.
Spotify has withdrawn Kelly’s music from its editorial playlists in accordance with a new “hateful conduct” policy. Kelly’s management issued a statement in response: “He is innocent of the false and hurtful accusations in the ongoing smear campaign against him, waged by enemies seeking a payoff.” Apple Music and Pandora have also withdrawn Kelly’s music from their editorial playlists. His music remains available on all these streaming platforms. This week, footage emerged of Kelly telling a roomful of supporters that attempts to suppress his career are “too late”.