Entertainment
Prince, Angus Cloud and Tom Petty Spotlighted in Doc on ‘the Deadliest Drug Epidemic in American History’ (Exclusive)

NEED TO KNOW
- The new A&E documentary Fame and Fentanyl sheds light on the devastating toll of fentanyl abuse in the United States
- “Everyone knows someone who has fallen victim to fentanyl,” Ice-T, who hosts the two-hour documentary, says in the trailer, shared exclusively with PEOPLE. “These are the stories that everyone needs to hear”
- Fame and Fentanyl premieres on Aug. 25
An upcoming documentary special hosted by Ice-T is shedding light on the devastating toll fentanyl has taken on modern-day America.
In the newly released trailer for A&E’s Fame and Fentanyl, shared exclusively with PEOPLE, Ice-T, 67, underscores the pervasiveness of the crisis, stating, “Everyone knows someone who has fallen victim to fentanyl,” as viewers see emotional footage from inside hospitals and ambulances.
Recalling the tragic deaths of celebrities linked to fentanyl, the rapper and actor lists “Prince, Tom Petty, Mac Miller, Michael K. Williams, Angus Cloud and Coolio” as their photos appear on screen, followed by a sobering reminder of the “thousands of everyday Americans” also lost to the drug. The trailer then cuts to grieving parents holding up photos of their children who’ve died because of fentanyl abuse.
“It’s the deadliest drug epidemic in American history,” a voiceover says, as images of a woman mourning beside a loved one’s casket and three men spray painting a memorial mural flash across the screen. Ice-T adds, over footage of a man in a hazmat suit handling bags of pills, “These are the stories that everyone needs to hear.”
The upcoming special — which premieres on Monday, Aug. 25, at 9 p.m. ET/PT — offers deeply personal accounts of loss and a stark warning. “I wanted to find out who sold my daughter death,” says one father, previously seen in the trailer holding a photo of his late daughter.
Ice-T is not the only celebrity taking action to raise awareness about the fentanyl crisis. Last year, Jelly Roll appeared before Congress during a hearing on the FEND Off Fentanyl Act, speaking from firsthand experience about the dangers of synthetic opioids in the U.S.
“I’ve attended more funerals than I care to share with you all [on] this committee,” the country singer, 40, said. “I could sit here and cry for days about the caskets I’ve carried of people I loved dearly, deeply in my soul — good people, not just drug addicts. Uncles, friends, cousins, normal people, some people that just got in a car wreck and started taking a pain pill to manage it. One thing led to the other and how fast it spirals out of control — I don’t think people truly, truly understand.”
A month later, Jelly Roll, who has been open about his own past struggles with addiction, told PEOPLE, “It scares me for my daughter. It scares me for my son. It scares me for this next generation. We’ve never seen nothing like fentanyl.”
He added, “I think opening conversations about some of this stuff is the beginning of healing.”
Fame and Fentanyl premieres Aug. 25 on A&E.
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