Poster for Netflix documentary series titled 'Rotten' featuring an apple with a banknote partially inside it, with a green leaf and text 'The truth is hard to swallow' in red.

Rotten on Netflix

A docu-series born from investigative reporting on food crimes.

Watch the Rotten Trailer
Watch Rotten on Netflix

From Pitch to Premiere

  • In December 2014, Haughney left her staff reporter job on The New York Times media desk to consult with Zero Point Zero Production (the Emmy-award winning television production company behind Anthony Bourdain's Parts Unknown and Mind of a Chef) about developing a series on crimes in the food world.

  • The Food Crimes web series was launched on ZPZ's partner website, Food Republic. The four episodes and the accompanying articles attracted extensive media attention, views on YouTube and even helped a French government official get his job back.

  • In 2016, Netflix purchased Food Crimes and turned it into the series Rotten. During the production of Rotten, Haughney Dare-Bryan oversaw a team of four investigative reporters for all six episodes who developed all of the season's episodes from original idea through post-production. Season One streamed on the network in January 2018 and Haughney Dare-Bryan was instrumental in promoting the show on networks like CBS and in publications like The New  York Post. Netflix commissioned a second season by the summer of 2018.

  • Rotten debuts its second season which earns an Emmy nomination and a James Beard award for investigative reporting.

Haughney Dare-Bryan's reporting on the avocado industry earned a James Beard award and an Emmy nomination.

Recognitions

Featured

A cartoon avatar of a man with glasses, headphones, and dark hair, with text reading 'CONSUMED with Scott Porch' above him.

Netflix’s ‘Rotten’ with Politico’s Christine Haughney

Politico food policy reporter Christine Haughney, who was the lead researcher on the Netflix documentary series 'Rotten,' talks about the series

Listen on Spotify
Listen on Apple Podcasts