Brasyl, Ian McDonald’s 2008 Hugo nominee, opens with a scene from a rather deranged “reality TV” show . I’d assumed that it was all fiction set in an alternative universe’s Brazil. Looks like I was wrong:
SAO PAULO, Brazil — In one murder after another, the Canal Livre TV show had an uncanny knack for being first on the scene, gathering graphic footage of the victim.
Too uncanny, say police, who are investigating the show’s host, state legislator Wallace Souza, on suspicion of commissioning at least five of the murders to boost his ratings and prove his claim that Brazil’s Amazon region is awash in violent crime.
“The order to execute always came from the legislator and his son, who then alerted the TV crews to get to the scene before the police,” state police intelligence chief Thomaz Vasconcelos charged in an interview with The Associated Press.
The killings, he said, “appear to have been committed to get rid of his rivals and increase the audience of the TVshow.” . . .
Souza’s son, Rafael, has been jailed on charges of homicide, drug trafficking and illegal gun possession. Police said the father faces charges of drug trafficking, gang formation and weapons possession, but remains free because of legislative immunity. No charges have been brought against him in the killings.
Vasconcelos said the crimes appear to have served the Souzas in two ways: They eliminated drug-trafficking rivals, and they boosted ratings.
“We believe that they organized a kind of death squad to execute rivals who disputed with them the drug trafficking business,” he said. Souza, he charged, “would eliminate his rival and use the killing as a news story for his program.”
In Brasyl’s show, Canal Quatro merely set up car thefts. Of course, poor McDonald suffered from the disadvantage of having to keep the reader’s disbelief suspended. Reality has no such constraints.
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