| Did anyone see this documentaey yet about triplets separated at birth and adopted by different families as part of a study? Did the film reveal anything about nature vs nurture? I havent seen it yet but really want to. |
| Never heard of it but I'm intrigued. |
| Totally want to!Looks really good. |
| Just saw it. So sad and unbelievable they would do that without the families’ knowledge. The study has never been published and all of the findings are sealed until 2066 |
| DVR'd it from CNN last night. |
| Never heard of this but now I'm intrigued. I might watch it today. |
| there's a really good one about a asian american actress meeting her sister who was raised in london. its on Netflix and really good... Twinsters |
| I saw it. It was good. There was also a news story (maybe 20/20 or prime time live, I don’t remember) that also covered this story and also other people’s stories as well. |
The issue for the study is that !SPOILER! Once they met eachother a good part of the study was ruined |
| It was on CNN last night. We DVR'ed it. I CAN't WAIT TO SEE IT!!!! |
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It's on Amazon, too, for $3.99 (or free if you hoard $1 digital credits like I do, lol). I watched it over the weekend. Fascinating and disturbing.
SPOILER It was disturbing enough when it seemed they chose the families based on economic factors, but to factor in the parenting/disciplinary styles. Wow. It was all by design. |
But they say that in the documentary, right? And the study "officially" ended in 1980, when the triplets met. |
| I saw it. It was really sad. Hard to believe people would intentionally split up identical triplets like that. |
| I didn't like the way they insinuated that the one father was to blame for what happened to his son. There was no evidence of this...and here the poor dad agreed to be interviewed for the film. I wonder how he feels about the end product. |
I totally agree! Thought that was horrible and cruel. |