Amanda Knox Is 'Free,' But Is That Enough?

阿曼达·凯克斯获得自由,但这足够了吗?

Fresh Air

艺术

2025-03-27

44 分钟
PDF

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Amanda Knox spent nearly four years in an Italian prison for a murder she didn't commit. After her exoneration, she reached out to the man who prosecuted her case. She talks about how she made herself useful while in prison, readjusting to being back home, and the survivor's guilt that follows her. Knox's new memoir is Free. TV critic David Bianculli reviews The Studio, starring Seth Rogen, on Apple TV+. Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoices NPR Privacy Policy
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  • This message comes from CBS.

  • Survivor 48 is here.

  • And alongside it is a new season of On Fire with Jeff Probst, the official Survivor podcast.

  • It's the only podcast that gives you inside access to Survivor.

  • New episodes are available every Wednesday, wherever you get your podcasts.

  • This is FRESH air.

  • I'm Tanya Moseley, and today my guest is Amanda Knox.

  • American Amanda Knox entered an Italian courtroom.

  • Convicted of a horrid crime in a foreign land, sentenced to 26 years for killing her roommate,

  • her pleasant for innocence seemed more cold and calculating than remorseful.

  • Amanda's MySpace nickname, Foxy Knoxy, dubbing her.

  • The angel face with the icy blue eyes.

  • Knox was catapulted into global infamy after being convicted and later acquitted for the 2007 murder of her British roommate,

  • Meredith Kercher.

  • She's become a symbol, though few still to this day can agree on what she represents.

  • To some, she was an innocent woman unjustly imprisoned,

  • a cautionary tale of a young student who became trapped by Italy's legal system.

  • To others, she was a tabloid fascination, her every expression scrutinized and reinterpreted.

  • In the years since her exoneration and return to the United States,

  • Knox has worked to reclaim her narrative.