: A documentary screening on May 29, 2026, at Lyric Hyperion Theater exploring the legal and personal impacts of sudden international celebrity; note that an NDA is required for entry. Media Access to Courthouses

Zee licensed raw courthouse audio to documentary filmmakers. She sold “Courtroom Bingo” cards to journalism schools. She even struck a deal with a true-crime podcast to turn mundane contract disputes into nail-biters: He said the lawn mower was a gift. She said it was a loan. Who’s lying? Listen to find out.

The phrase "title zz courthouse entertainment and media content"

Instead of hiring actors, studios are using generative AI to create photorealistic avatars of actual defendants, judges, and witnesses—trained on real transcripts and video footage. Legal experts question whether this violates the "right to control one's likeness."

A defendant named Marcus Webb, accused of stealing six lawn flamingos, was representing himself. He was nervous, sweating through his button-up. The prosecutor yawned. The audience (Zee’s live chat, projected on her laptop) was memeing the flamingos.

Furthermore, the rise of "Legal Commentary" as a genre has changed how we process these stories. Lawyers and legal experts now host podcasts and live streams, providing play-by-play analysis that makes complex laws accessible to the average person. This layer of commentary adds a level of entertainment that traditional news could never provide. Ethical Considerations in Legal Media