Well, it tuned out just about as I expected. LeeAnn looked great wielding that hatchet as did Ed. I did not see poor "Bridget" at all. The house looked great on camera- and so did Max. When I think of all the masterful work the camera men did and the many hours we all spent doing take after take, it is too bad some great footage hit the cutting room floor, while much camera time focused on some rather pointless things. That Mr. Underwood with his Gettysburg shadows in the trees, and the gas station bug on the lens left me wanting less! (I have seen the bug on the camera lens thing several times with the same effect). And so much was devoted to them. I actually thought this episode was just about the house- not all of the other stuff thrown in for good measure to fill out the hour.
I was REALLY surprised nobody thought to set up a camera in the sitting room in front of the black sofa- infinitely more productive than the "chimney room". I also think, that any self-respecting ghost might say more than "soooo" or "sure". Knowing Michael as well as I did- he was a great talker!
Then of course, the historical errors, John Morse as Abby's brother, Mrs. Ladwick Borden killing her children in the basement, etc. It is maddening because we have experts who offer to listen to the show before air date to catch errors -and some ask for NO money to do it!
On the plus side, I am glad it will generate interest in the property and visitors. Publicity is always appreciated. On the down side, I was hoping for more -they had a good budget to work with, and I think switching back and forth to different ghost venues was disconcerting. I rather think the camera moved up in the Knowlton room because of vibration and it not being secured. Every time the big buses go by, the front of the house trembles a bit in spots- even car traffic will do it. The door to the Morse room will also pop open. 99.5% of the oddities can be explained logically and scientifically. The other percent- well, who knows? There are one or two things I cannot explain.
I hope one fine day, a really topnotch program will be done on the case, with attention to the history and trial and real people by people who really love history and setting out the facts acurately and in an entertaining way.