Netflix

Michael Jackson The Verdict Hits Netflix: Release Date, How to Watch, and Everything You Need to Know

Michael Jackson The Verdict Hits Netflix: Release Date, How to Watch, and Everything You Need to Know
Image credit: Legion-Media

Netflix reopens one of pop culture’s most explosive chapters, unveiling a Michael Jackson docuseries poised to reignite a global debate.

Michael Jackson never really leaves the chat. Antoine Fuqua's big-screen biopic, 'Michael,' just reignited the whole conversation — sold-out screenings, TikTok edits set to 'Human Nature,' and the usual legacy-vs-artistry arguments flaring back up. Now Netflix is sliding in with its own angle. Not the glove. Not the arenas. The courtroom. The verdict.

Netflix's move, right on cue

After 'Michael' reminded Hollywood how much heat Jackson still draws — nearly 20 years after the 2005 trial — Netflix clearly thinks there is more oxygen in the room. The streamer has a docuseries ready to go that zeroes in on the trial itself and what the jury decided.

So, when can you watch it?

'Michael Jackson: The Verdict' premieres on Netflix on June 3.

What this doc actually does

The series is three parts, directed by Nick Green, and it leans hard on firsthand accounts. We are talking new interviews with people who were actually part of the process, plus the folks who lived inside the coverage — jurors and media figures who spent months in the Santa Maria courtroom following every witness and objection in real time. If you want the spectacle, the movie has that. This one goes back to the room where it happened.

  • Title: 'Michael Jackson: The Verdict'
  • Premiere: June 3 on Netflix
  • Format: Three-part documentary series
  • Director: Nick Green
  • Focus: The 2005 trial — the courtroom and the jury's decision
  • Who speaks: New interviews with trial participants, including jurors and media who spent months inside the Santa Maria courtroom
  • Context: Arrives right after Fuqua's 'Michael' sparked fresh attention with sold-out shows, TikTok love for 'Human Nature,' and renewed debates over legacy vs artistry

Bottom line: Netflix is betting that revisiting the evidence, the room, and the verdict — not the iconography — is the conversation people want right now.