Dan Reed once talked about including graphic details in his documentary on Michael Jackson(Photo Credit –Instagram)

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Michael Jackson’s two-part documentary, Leaving Neverland, follows child abuse allegations against the King of Pop, and shares explicit details in the film. Reflecting on the graphic details, the director of the documentary, Dan Reed once shared why he decided to choose that route.

During an interview with TODAY host Savannah Guthrie, Reed was asked why he chose to include the “incredibly graphic” content with “no euphemisms whatsoever.” To this, Reed responded that he believed Jackson’s true actions against the two men, Wade Robson and Jimmy Safechuck, who allege they endured abuse as children, as well as potentially other boys, went unchecked for too long under the guise of the singer wanting to “live out his childhood” with young boys. The filmmaker wanted to tell their version of the full story.

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He explained, “For many years, Michael Jackson kind of hid in plain sight. He portrayed himself as someone who never had a childhood and therefore was living out his childhood very much in the public eye — he’d be seen everywhere holding hands with a little boy — and he said that his interest in little boys was entirely innocent.”