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{{Infobox Shock Site | {{Infobox Shock Site | ||
| | |title = Ronnie Mcnutt Suicide Video | ||
|image = Ronnie.png | |image = Ronnie.png | ||
|imagecaption = Ronnie in his last minutes before killing himself. | |imagecaption = Ronnie in his last minutes before killing himself. | ||
|maker = Ronnie Mcnutt | |maker = Ronnie Mcnutt | ||
|type = Suicide | |type = Suicide Livestream | ||
|date = August 31, 2020 | |date = August 31, 2020 | ||
}} | }} | ||
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==Content== | ==Content== | ||
This live stream features 33-year-old Ronnie McNutt playing his favorite game (offscreen). After a while, he gets a phone call from a person he knows (either his ex-girlfriend). After that, he hangs up the call and misfires himself with a hunting rifle (confirmed by his friend in an interview), blowing his brains out with blood splatters on the screen. The full video would stay on his corpse for a few minutes, until officers arrived at his home after someone alerted the department, only seen in the | This live stream features 33-year-old Ronnie McNutt playing his favorite game (offscreen). After a while, he gets a phone call from a person he knows (either his ex-girlfriend). After that, he hangs up the call and misfires himself with a hunting rifle (confirmed by his friend in an interview), blowing his brains out with blood splatters on the screen. The full video would stay on his corpse for a few minutes, until officers arrived at his home after someone alerted the department, only seen in the entire video. | ||
==Background== | ==Background== | ||
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Ronnie's friends, including his close one, Josh Steen,<ref name="Forbes" /> tried to report the live-stream to Facebook before he killed himself.<ref name="mirror" /><ref name="heavy" /><ref name="TechCrunch">Coldewey, D. (2020, September 14). [https://techcrunch.com/2020/09/13/graphic-video-of-suicide-spreads-from-facebook-to-tiktok-to-youtube-as-platforms-fail-moderation-test/ "Graphic Video Of Suicide Spreads From Facebook To TikTok To YouTube As Platforms Fail Moderation Test"]. [[wikipedia:TechCrunch|TechCrunch]].</ref> At 11:51 pm, Facebook later dismissed one of the reports because it did not violate its guidelines.<ref name="Rolling Stone" /> The video was not taken down by the platform until eight hours later. However, it was too late for the video to be taken down, it was shortly re-uploaded to many platforms, such as [[wikipedia:YouTube|YouTube]], [[wikipedia:Twitter|Twitter]] and [[wikipedia:TikTok|TikTok]]. TikTok was also criticized for having the suicide appear on the "For You" feed.<ref name="news">Gramenz, J. (2020, September 10). [https://www.news.com.au/technology/online/social/tiktok-facebook-suicide-video-cant-be-stopped-by-laws-expert-warns/news-story/1f301f625ad4f3aa1085c415e25fa4a2 "Why TikTok Suicide Video Horror Will Happen Again"]. ''News.com.au''.</ref><ref name="mirror" /><ref name="nypost2">Steinbuch, Y. (2020, September 8). [https://nypost.com/2020/09/08/army-veteran-kills-himself-in-facebook-livestream/ "Army Veteran Ronnie McNutt Commits Suicide In Facebook Livestream"]. [[wikipedia:New York Post|New York Post]].</ref><ref name="Forbes" /> Media outlets also stated that some re-uploads of the suicide were also disguised as clips of cute animals.<ref name="news" /><ref name="Rolling Stone" /><ref name="Forbes" /> Steen blamed Facebook for failing to remove the video late. Facebook responds that they were "''reviewing how we could have taken down the live stream faster.''"<ref name="TechCrunch" /> | Ronnie's friends, including his close one, Josh Steen,<ref name="Forbes" /> tried to report the live-stream to Facebook before he killed himself.<ref name="mirror" /><ref name="heavy" /><ref name="TechCrunch">Coldewey, D. (2020, September 14). [https://techcrunch.com/2020/09/13/graphic-video-of-suicide-spreads-from-facebook-to-tiktok-to-youtube-as-platforms-fail-moderation-test/ "Graphic Video Of Suicide Spreads From Facebook To TikTok To YouTube As Platforms Fail Moderation Test"]. [[wikipedia:TechCrunch|TechCrunch]].</ref> At 11:51 pm, Facebook later dismissed one of the reports because it did not violate its guidelines.<ref name="Rolling Stone" /> The video was not taken down by the platform until eight hours later. However, it was too late for the video to be taken down, it was shortly re-uploaded to many platforms, such as [[wikipedia:YouTube|YouTube]], [[wikipedia:Twitter|Twitter]] and [[wikipedia:TikTok|TikTok]]. TikTok was also criticized for having the suicide appear on the "For You" feed.<ref name="news">Gramenz, J. (2020, September 10). [https://www.news.com.au/technology/online/social/tiktok-facebook-suicide-video-cant-be-stopped-by-laws-expert-warns/news-story/1f301f625ad4f3aa1085c415e25fa4a2 "Why TikTok Suicide Video Horror Will Happen Again"]. ''News.com.au''.</ref><ref name="mirror" /><ref name="nypost2">Steinbuch, Y. (2020, September 8). [https://nypost.com/2020/09/08/army-veteran-kills-himself-in-facebook-livestream/ "Army Veteran Ronnie McNutt Commits Suicide In Facebook Livestream"]. [[wikipedia:New York Post|New York Post]].</ref><ref name="Forbes" /> Media outlets also stated that some re-uploads of the suicide were also disguised as clips of cute animals.<ref name="news" /><ref name="Rolling Stone" /><ref name="Forbes" /> Steen blamed Facebook for failing to remove the video late. Facebook responds that they were "''reviewing how we could have taken down the live stream faster.''"<ref name="TechCrunch" /> | ||
In | In one of those comments, Ronnie's close friend Josh Steen found most of them as "harassment" and reported them to Facebook. Facebook, still suffering from failure, had dismissed it for not being an account holder. Similarly, trolls were also setting up accounts to impersonate Ronnie on platforms.<ref name="BBC" /><ref name="nypost" /><ref name="mirror" /> Ronnie's mother, Elaine McNutt, also stated that there were many false GoFundMe ages about Ronnie Mcnutt appearing, and none of them "are legitimate!".<ref>Warnock, C. (2020, September 7). [https://heavy.com/news/2020/09/ronnie-mcnutt-death-live-stream/ "Ronnie McNutt: Man Dies By Suicide On Facebook Live Stream]. Heavy.com.</ref> | ||
Josh Steen created the Twitter hashtag #ReformForRonnie,<ref name="Rolling Stone" /> to which people could post to "take action against those who violate their policies."<ref>https://www.wdam.com/2020/09/09/criticism-lobbed-social-media-companies-after-suicide-video-mississippi-man-goes-viral/</ref><ref>[https://twitter.com/hashtag/ReformForRonnie #ReformForRonnie Hashtag]</ref> | Josh Steen created the Twitter hashtag #ReformForRonnie,<ref name="Rolling Stone" /> to which people could post to "take action against those who violate their policies."<ref>https://www.wdam.com/2020/09/09/criticism-lobbed-social-media-companies-after-suicide-video-mississippi-man-goes-viral/</ref><ref>[https://twitter.com/hashtag/ReformForRonnie #ReformForRonnie Hashtag]</ref> | ||
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Ronald Merle "Ronnie" McNutt was born on May 23, 1987, in [[wikipedia:Mississippi, United States|Mississippi, United States]]. He was one of five children born to Mr. Cecil Ronald McNutt and Elaine Rooker McNutt. Ronnie McNutt was a member of the Celebration Church in Tupelo and also enjoyed or was involved in performing theater plays. He was an Iraq War veteran who served in the United States Army Reserve and was employed as a worker at a Toyota plant in Blue Springs, New Albany.<ref>https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/215119078/ronald-merle-mcnutt</ref><ref name="nypost2" />Ronnie was also a member of the Comicons club and wrote some comic book reviews on websites. According to his close friend, Joshua Steen, he was later diagnosed with PTSD shortly after his military service.<ref name="nypost2" /> | Ronald Merle "Ronnie" McNutt was born on May 23, 1987, in [[wikipedia:Mississippi, United States|Mississippi, United States]]. He was one of five children born to Mr. Cecil Ronald McNutt and Elaine Rooker McNutt. Ronnie McNutt was a member of the Celebration Church in Tupelo and also enjoyed or was involved in performing theater plays. He was an Iraq War veteran who served in the United States Army Reserve and was employed as a worker at a Toyota plant in Blue Springs, New Albany.<ref>https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/215119078/ronald-merle-mcnutt</ref><ref name="nypost2" />Ronnie was also a member of the Comicons club and wrote some comic book reviews on websites. According to his close friend, Joshua Steen, he was later diagnosed with PTSD shortly after his military service.<ref name="nypost2" /> | ||
During the early 2000s, Ronnie McNutt met Joshua Steen at a community theater production of Footloose, which was located in the city of Mississippi, while they were in high school.<ref name="Rolling Stone" /> Ronnie McNutt joined JustUs Geeks, a podcast by Josh Steen, with the intention of connecting "''with the millions of geeks and pop culture nerds all across the globe.''" He started writing some reviews for the official website in 2014. During the live stream, Steen | During the early 2000s, Ronnie McNutt met Joshua Steen at a community theater production of Footloose, which was located in the city of Mississippi, while they were in high school.<ref name="Rolling Stone" /> Ronnie McNutt joined JustUs Geeks, a podcast by Josh Steen, with the intention of connecting "''with the millions of geeks and pop culture nerds all across the globe.''" He started writing some reviews for the official website in 2014. During the live stream, Steen tried calling Ronnie with two phone numbers that he could easily recognize, only for Ronnie to decline the call on the stream.<ref>Steinbuch, Y. (2020, September 8). [https://nypost.com/2020/09/08/ronnie-mcnutts-friend-facebook-couldve-stopped-suicide-livestream/ "Ronnie McNutt's Friend: Facebook Could've Stopped Suicide Livestream"]. [[wikipedia:New York Post|New York Post]].</ref> Some media said that the gun that he used to shoot himself with was a shotgun, but Steen stated to the media that it was a single-shot rifle.<ref name="Mirror" /> | ||
On October 11, 2020, a 1-hour podcast titled "Ronnie McNutt Revisited: An Interview with Josh Steen" was uploaded to YouTube on The Misery Machine's channel, which features Joshua Steen explaining details about Ronnie McNutt.<ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rl8vni3R0Pc "Ronnie McNutt Revisited: An Interview with Josh Steen"] October 12, 2020 - via [[YouTube]].</ref> | On October 11, 2020, a 1-hour podcast titled "Ronnie McNutt Revisited: An Interview with Josh Steen" was uploaded to YouTube on The Misery Machine's channel, which features Joshua Steen explaining details about Ronnie McNutt.<ref>[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rl8vni3R0Pc "Ronnie McNutt Revisited: An Interview with Josh Steen"] October 12, 2020 - via [[YouTube]].</ref> |
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