From a podcast to multiple documentaries, the rise and fall of the once- revered NFL star Aaron Hernandez is certainly well documented. An FX limited series is latest to rehash the saga, attempting to go beyond the headlines and dig deeper into his story.
“American Sports Story: Aaron Hernandez,” now airing Tuesdays, stars Josh Andrés Rivera as the New England Patriots tight end. It details Hernandez’s troubled childhood with an abusive father who demanded his son play football and project masculinity and toughness to the world. Secretly, Hernandez also struggled with his sexuality.
He played college ball at the University of Florida and was drafted by the Patriots. Over time, the series shows how Hernandez’s behavior grew increasingly erratic. He was convicted of murder and died by suicide in 2017 while serving a life sentence. After his death, research showed Hernandez’s brain had evidence of chronic traumatic encephalopathy.
“What we tried to do with this show is take a tabloid headline, take some story that you think you know about Aaron Hernandez ... and go behind it and see what it’s like to walk in the shoes of all the people who are part of this,” Brad Simpson, one of the series’ executive producers, said in a recent interview.
Hernandez’s life, crimes and death have been detailed in long-form writing, documentaries like Netflix’s “Killer Inside: The Mind of Aaron Hernandez,” and the podcast “Gladiator: Aaron Hernandez and Football Inc.,” which is the basis for “American Sports Story.”
Rivera said playing the former tight end was a “responsibility that you have to approach with a certain level of sensitivity.”
Once he started learning more about Hernandez’s life, diving into recordings of phone calls he made from prison and watching clips from his interviews, Rivera said he began to see the layered intricacy of Hernandez’s life. And he only became more eager to play him.
“To a lot of people, he was very charming and very charismatic and easy to get along with. There were not a small amount of people who felt that way, so that was interesting because you have to dissect the ‘why,’ ” Rivera said. “There’s clearly a magnetism there, disguising an inner life that’s very complex.”
Rivera said he enjoyed the challenge of that character work, calling Hernandez “a chameleon.”
“There was variations on the amount of tenderness and even the frankness, or the amount of swagger he would use from person to person, so I tried to incorporate that to a core essence,” he said.
Transforming into Hernandez was also a physical commitment for Rivera, who said he increased his food intake and worked with trainers to build muscle to get into NFL shape over the course of a summer.
Rivera stars alongside Jaylen Barron as Hernandez’s high school sweetheart and later fiancée, Shayanna Jenkins; Lindsay Mendez as his cousin; Ean Castellanos as his brother; and Tammy Blanchard as his mother. Patrick Schwarzenegger plays Hernandez’s college teammate Tim Tebow, Tony Yazbeck portrays former Florida coach Urban Meyer, and Norbert Leo Butz is former Patriots coach Bill Belichick.
With the first sports- focused season of the “American Story” franchise, producers said they are interested in dissecting the “American religion of football.” They also hope viewers question the preconceptions they had about people involved in stories that captured the nation, like that of Hernandez.
“We can use this story to challenge certain perspectives or to just add a little bit of nuance for people who maybe don’t know much about it or have a fixed mindset about it,” Rivera said. “It’s an interesting opportunity.”