Season 5 took place in Florence, Arizona at the Pinal County Jail. A spinoff titled 60 Days In: Narcoland was released on July 30, 2019. On November 19, 2019, the show was renewed for a sixth season which takes place in the Etowah County Detention Center in Gadsden, Alabama and premiered on January 2, 2020.
The precedent set by the show’s inaugural season is more or less retained throughout subsequent seasons. 60 Days In is currently wrapping up its sixth season, with spin-off 60 Days In: Narcoland airing concurrently.
Is 60 Days In Real or Scripted? The show premiered in 2016, and the makers had acknowledged that it was not scripted. After all, there is a reason that this docuseries gained a massive fanbase in the past few years. Executive producer, Greg Henry, said that productions that focus on jails are usually biased depending on who is being interviewed.
A spinoff titled 60 Days In: Narcoland was released on July 30, 2019. On November 19, 2019, the show was renewed for a sixth season which takes place in the Etowah County Detention Center in Gadsden, Alabama and premiered on January 2, 2020.
Who played the cadaver in 60 Days In?
60 Days In cast member Robert Holcomb touts himself as a non-professional actor despite receiving credit for his part as a post-motorcycle accident cadaver in the 1985 horror-comedy, Re-Animator.
One female “inmate” in season one was a social worker with a grudge against gang violence. Another was an ex-Marine who felt that the experience would help him in his quest to join the DEA. Yet another was an educator who wished to tell a first-hand experience about bad choices to students.
Guards and prisoners at the correctional facility were told that a series was being filmed about the experiences of first-time inmates while omitting the fact that seven new residents at the county jail were not authentic prisoners.
What did Robert feel about 60 days in jail?
However, Robert felt that his fellow inmates were portrayed in the wrong light by the team of ’60 Days In.’ He stated, “They tried to make it look like I was going to be attacked. The show made inmates look like animals; in reality they were kind human beings suffering from drug problems. When you watch the show, you get the feeling (that) inmates are bad people and you should be scared to go to jail. In reality, many are respectable people who made poor decisions.”
The school teacher stated, “The show was real, but the editing was fake. The inmates figured me out in two hours and they treated me like gold.
ADVERTISEMENT