Murder in Small Town X
Murder in Small Town X was an American reality television series that aired
on FOX from July through September 2001. The show is noteworthy for the macabre
and ironic fate of its eventual winner.
The premise of the show was to bring 10 contestants from around the United
States to a small fishing village (called "Sunrise" in the show) on
the coast of Maine to act as amateur detectives to solve a series of fictional
murders.
Initially, the contestants were given a list of 16 suspects who were "townspeople"
played by actors. Each week, the contestants were sent out on varying missions
in order to discover clues to eliminate suspects. Additionally, the murderer would
strike again, eliminating suspects as well.
At the end of each episode, two contestants would be sent out to a two different
remote locations completely alone, with their movements recorded only by a head-mounted
camera. One of the contestants would discover a further clue to the mystery, whereas
the other one would be claimed as a murder victim, with their last seconds seen
through the eyes of the "killer" in the manner of classical slasher
films like Psycho.
The solution to the mystery involved the discovery that the members of local
family had been murdered together in 1941 just after the Pearl Harbor Attack because
they had stumbled onto a town's secret involving illegal liquor smuggling from
Canada. The murder had been committed with the assent of many of the town's leaders,
who met in a secret lodge. The family had been bound in a room together, and the
room was set on fire. The "murders" were being committed by a descendant
of one of the family members who escaped the fire and who was gaining his revenge
against the descendants of the town leaders who had condoned the burning of the
family in 1941.
The final episode aired on Tuesday, September 4, 2001. The contestant who solved
the final mystery by identifying the "murderer", and therefore won the
prize money, was Angel Juarbe, a firefighter from New York City. He was later
killed in the World Trade Center Collapse on September 11, 2001.
The format was sold to the BBC who made a British version (with slight amendments
to the rules) in 2003 under the name The Murder Game. Ratings were judged poor
and the programme was not a critical success.
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