JULIE GRANT-OPENING STATEMENTS - podcast episode cover

JULIE GRANT-OPENING STATEMENTS

Sep 25, 20239 min
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This is Later with Lee Matthews, The Lee Matthews Podcast more What You Here weekday afternoons on the Drive. Julie Grant has a license attorney and former prosecutors. She brings a blend of journalism, experience and legal expertise to Court TV's newest show called Opening Statements with Julie Grant, and it's weekdays between eight and nine Eastern Julie, what are we going to see on Opening Statements? Hi? Lee, You're going to see you all when it comes to what is

going on in the world of true crime and trials. And so, just like opening Statements at a trial get the jury crimes for the evidence, we're getting our audience at Court TV Primes for the day of Court TV Live. And so at nine am that typically reports start all across America. Our cameras

are in position ready to broadcast the various trials. And so what we get to do in that special hour of Opening Statements, we were that unique content that we aren't able to get to during the day because we don't have time to do the deep dives. And so we're gonna have special guests, leading voices and true crimes experts and everything from forensics, medicines, law, you

name it. We're going to invite them on the show. Anybody who's a leading voice or authority in that world of criminal justice and true crime, we want to hear from them. And we're also going to invite on survivors witnesses. Want to hear people's stories and do them justice by giving them time to do a deep dive. So it's a unique show, very high energy lass of cold debating. We have a social sidebar lead where we get our viewers involved. We ask them to sound off, send this little videos of what

they think of the cases. So it's very interactive as well as informative and fun and fascinating. If you love true crimes, well, I was going to say, true crime seems to have really exploded in the last oh, I guess five years on our own iHeartRadio app more there most of the more popular podcast our true crime podcast, You're rightly and it's funny and a lot of those podcasters you know, of course you're true crime offictionatos themselves. They

love Court TV and so they love coming on and being guests. And it's great because we get to share a lot of information and a lot of times that they've done and you meet interview or something, they want it to be spotlighted, and so go say, hey, would love to come on your show, and you know, we've put it out there on Court TV.

And then a lot of them will then ask us in turn, hey we come on the podcast and talk because you know, we're looking at cases differently, right as legal analysts, and I like to say, we're kind of like ESPN for trials. We're going to do the play by play in the color commentary, explain things and also weigh in with opinion, you know, root and backs and law, and so it's cool to talk to those podcasters and have those it's almost like your friendships forming. Really some of them you

have become friends of mine, and it's cool. It's cool to meet new people technology as you know, I mean, of course, you know with your showy and other work you do in broadcasting. I mean it's it's like the sky's the let that nowadays with who you can talk to people all around the world at any time, right, Yeah. Opening Statements with Julie Grants. It's week days at eights Eastern on Court TV, and Julie Grant is with us what is it about true crime? Is it? Is it all

amateur sleuthing? You know. It's funny, ily, I never realized until I really got into my hosting work at Court TV, just how many people really believe they're detectives, you know. And that's cool. I mean,

like I love it. You know, everybody watching at home wants to solve the case and so and I feel like, hey, you know, the more guys the better, right You know, when when I was a prosecutor, I would see things, you know, from that lens, right that that was my lens through which I would look at things, and I would you know, you talk to your detectives as the experts. You're relying on

them, maybe your lab analyst, everybody involved in your case. And then you go into the world of true crime, as you said, which has exploded and it's having such a moment right now. If you hear about all these people that they're at home and they just love listening and want to figure it out, and some of them get hung up on really interesting details.

And I feel like the more eyes are better, because sometimes you can look at something in a vacuum, you know, if you're an investigator, it can be easy to maybe close yourself off to decide that isn't favorable, you know, if you really believe strongly in something, and so when you have more objective eyes, I think it's fantastic if people want to be detective. When I go to Crime Cut, it's funny. I'm going there a couple of days and they sild these shirts. The last year. I thought everybody

was walking around in them. They said, I'm basically a detective, and I think that's a lot of the true crimes fields feel that they are court

TVs. Julie Grant's opening statements is hurt show and Julie. I also think it has a lot to do with some of these true crime stories are far more bizarre and intriguing and involved than anything that could be written down from any of the I don't want to slam the writer, the television writers, but a lot of times these stories are beyond anything they could come up with.

Surely, you're spot on. Sometimes truth is really stranger than fiction. And when you hear these cases, you know, it's almost like, you know, it's funny. I always say this. My great uncle, he was a sheriff's deputy, and you know he passed away long before I ever worked in the same courthouse as a prosecutor, but I knew some of the deputies that were younger that worked with him, and they used to sail Your uncle Art used to say, boy, you think you've seen it all today,

just come to work tomorrow. You're getting to see something even a while then. And and it's very true. Some of it is just beyond comprehension. Some of it it's really it's hard to wrap your mind around. I mean, we've thought so many different cases right now that are on the docket that we're watching, and and every time it's like, you've got to be kidding, You've got to be kidding me. Somebody's actually accused of doing this? Who does this? And then you go through a trial and you find out,

Wow, this person actually did be unthinkable. So it really kind of rocks your world sometimes when you hear about some of the allegations it does. It can be kind of sickening, you know, and thankfully it's just it's a small minority of people in our world who do crimes like the ones we show on Court TV. Opening Statements with Julie Grant on Court TV weeknights at eight o'clock and you're a prosecutor, and our legal system can be full of

minutia and painstakingly slow and at times very boring. So do you have to spend a lot of time kind of cutting through the minutia. That's a great question, Lee, Thank you for that. Yes, And I really try to on my show and when we go into our court be live broad because and I've been hosting Quartivy Life since I was part of the Quartvy network relaunched in twenty nineteen, and then I just moved to get my own jowel opening statements recently, as you know. And thank you again for having me on

to talk about it. But I try to when we're live and when we're watching the trial, to never waste the viewer's time, right, you know. For instance, sometimes when we have let's say, an expert witness and they've put this really impressive curriculum vitae of qualifications, and they've done a million things, and during really doesn't want to hear about all those things, and

our viewers certainly does either. They just want the experts espinion. They know they're an expert, they know they're more than qualified, and so so sometimes we'll dip away from from that and bring on against let's say, to try to give the viewers some more value and kind of cut to the chase and then go back into the live coverage to hear the opinion or sometimes you know, jury instructions that can be very tedious. Nobody wants to sit there and

it's like in paint drive. So well, we'll do an interview and do something. We're exciting when that happened. That was one of the weaknesses of court TV in the early days. I remember watching it and going, wow, this is a root canal. When is this going to end? It's funny, yeah, you know, and and I'm going to tell you something. You'll appreciate this, you know, being such a pro at broadcasting week when when we we broadcast trials, those of us who are travel lawyers and

we know that in the court room they're going to be natural positive. But in radio or in television, you know, a positive like oh my goshd of dead air. And so it's funny like I'll be sitting there in the desk and the producers look at my air. Do you want to talk to you? Let's go out. They're like you know having a offense because it's ten seconds with nothing said. But it's just the way it is. Yeah. Opening statements with Julie Grant. You can see it week days at eight

a m. Eastern. UH and Julie Grant WI. Thank you for bringing us the story and for bringing us the show and for joining us today. A Lee, thank you for letting me on to your show. Appreciate your time today. Thanks for listening to Later with Lee Matthews, the Lee Matthews Podcast, and remember to listen to The Drive Live weekday afternoons from five to seven. And iHeartMedia presentation

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