OJ Simpson tries on a leather glove during his trial
O.J. Simpson tries on a leather glove allegedly used in the murders.
  • The O.J. Simpson trial lives on infamy more than 30 years later.
  • Maybe you remember where you were when the Bronco chase ensued, or the verdict was read.
  • Here are some of the biggest moments from "the trial of the century."

Nicknamed "the trial of the century," O.J. Simpson's 1995 murder trial captured public attention.

A former NFL player, Simpson was already a celebrity. The case touched on polarizing racial politics just a few years after Rodney King was brutally beaten by members of the Los Angeles Police Department.

The courtroom proceedings were also broadcast on live TV, a relatively new phenomenon that helped spawn unscripted reality shows and bolster cable news. Rupert Murdoch reportedly launched Fox News after seeing how lucrative the trial coverage was for CNN — around $200 million, CNN reported.

The trial still remains a cultural touchstone, with the Emmy-winning 2016 FX series "The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story" starring Cuba Gooding Jr., Sarah Paulson, John Travolta, David Schwimmer, and Sterling K. Brown.

O.J. Simpson died on April 10 at age 76.

Here's a look back at some of the most iconic photos from the trial.

Coverage of O.J. Simpson's murder trial kicked off with a car chase on June 17, 1994, that was broadcast on live TV.
Police cars chase OJ Simpson's white Bronco
Police cars follow the Ford Bronco carrying murder suspect O.J. Simpson.

Days after Simpson's ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman were found dead, Simpson failed to turn himself in to the Los Angeles Police Department to be charged with first-degree murder. Instead, he evaded authorities in a car chase on the 405 freeway in Los Angeles and Orange County.

Simpson sat in the backseat of a white Ford Bronco, holding a gun to his head as Al Cowlings drove away from the police vehicles in pursuit.

News channels interrupted their programming to broadcast live coverage of the chase, which ended with Simpson's surrender at his home.

Simpson's defense team was led by Johnnie Cochran, a prominent civil rights attorney.
Defense attorney Johnnie Cochran Jr. puts his hand on the shoulder of murder defendant OJ Simpson
Defense attorney Johnnie Cochran Jr. (center) puts his hand on the shoulder of O.J. Simpson during a hearing.

Cochran developed a reputation for litigating high-profile cases related to police brutality.

In Simpson's trial, he argued that LAPD officer Mark Fuhrman planted evidence to frame Simpson for the murders, motivated by racism, CNN reported.

Simpson's defense also included Robert Kardashian, a friend of Simpson's and the father of the famed Kardashian siblings.
O.J. Simpson (R) consulting with friend Robert Kardashian (C) and Alvin Michelson
O.J. Simpson consulting with friend Robert Kardashian (center) and Alvin Michelson (left) during a hearing in Los Angeles.

Kardashian's wife, Kris Jenner, was also close friends with Nicole Brown Simpson.

The media dubbed Simpson's defense team of high-powered lawyers "The Dream Team."

Marcia Clark served as lead prosecutor.
Marcia Clark in the trial of OJ Simpson
Prosecutor Marcia Clark during the trial of O.J. Simpson.

Clark's appearance, demeanor, and personal life, including an ongoing custody battle, were widely covered and criticized during the trial.

"That was the hell of the trial," Clark told Vogue in 2016. "There was no privacy. I was famous in a way that was kind of terrifying."

The trial became a media circus with live TV broadcasts covering every moment.
TVs tuned to the OJ Simpson trial
A Massachusetts store with all of its televisions set to trial coverage.

The Simpson trial occurred in the early 90s — long before today's saturated and fractured digital media environment, Business Insider's Peter Kafka reported Thursday.

As a result, the event drove massive viewership figures on TV, with even pre-trial moments like the Bronco chase nabbing Super Bowl-sized ratings. All three major broadcast networks cut into their regularly scheduled programming to cover the chase, which nabbed 95 million viewers.

In one of the most famous moments from the trial, Simpson appeared to struggle to put on a leather glove that was found bloodied at the crime scene.
OJ Simpson tries on a leather glove during his trial
O.J. Simpson tries on a leather glove allegedly used in the murders.

A key piece of evidence in the trial was a pair of leather gloves that prosecutors alleged Simpson donned while committing the murders, and which were stained with the blood of the victims.

But when asked to try on the gloves in court, Simpson appeared to struggle, saying they were "too tight."

Prosecutors argued the gloves didn't fit because the blood had caused them to shrink, and because of the the rubber gloves underneath that Simpson was wearing to protect the evidence.

A 2016 documentary put forth another theory: that Simpson had stopped taking his arthritis medicine, which had caused his hands to swell.

The prosecution provided a new pair of gloves, but the damage was done.
OJ Simpson wears gloves during his trial
O.J. Simpson shows the jury a new pair of Aris extra-large gloves, similar to the gloves found at the crime scene.

After the first demo proved dubious, prosecutors asked Simpson to try on a new pair of gloves in the same brand and size, which appeared to fit well.

Nevertheless, the gloves inspired a quip in Cochran's closing argument that became synonymous with the trial: "If it doesn't fit, you must acquit."

In 2012, looking back at the case, one of Simpson's lawyers, Alan Dershowitz, said he couldn't imagine "anything stupider" than for prosecutors to have had Simpson try on the gloves. Prosecutor Christopher Darden responded at the time that the defense had "manipulated" the evidence.

When the verdicts were announced, viewers across the US stopped to watch the trial's dramatic end.
Logan Airport travelers jam Chatfield's Bar and Grill to watch a TV on which Judge Lance Ito announces the jury's verdict in the O.J. Simpson murder trial.
Logan Airport travelers watch a TV as the verdict is announced.

With the proceedings airing gavel to gavel, viewership culminated on Oct. 3, 1995 with the reading of the verdicts after just four hours of deliberations.

Time reports that a staggering 150 million people tuned in for the "not guilty" verdicts, amounting to roughly 57% of the US population.

If you were alive at the time, chances are you remember where you were. Some students at the time recall watching the verdicts during school hours, with televisions being wheeled into lunch and classrooms.

Goldman's family reacted in horror.
Members of murder victim Ron Goldman family react to the not guilty verdicts in the O.J. Simpson murder trial
Members of Ron Goldman's family — Kim, Fred, and Patti — react to the not guilty verdicts.

After the verdicts were delivered in a highly-charged courtroom, members of Goldman's family — including father Fred, stepmother Patti, and sister Kim — wept and comforted one another.

"This prosecution team didn't lose today," Fred Goldman said at a press conference, according to the Associated Press. "I deeply believe this country lost today. Justice was not served."

Simpson's relatives celebrated.
Simpson family members celebrate the not guilty verdicts in the murder trial of O.J. Simpson
Simpson's family members — including his mother Eunice, daughter Arnelle, son Jason, and sister Shirley — react to the verdict

The defense, on the other hand, celebrated the jury's decision with relief.

Simpson smiled and mouthed "thank you" to the jury, according to the AP, while Cochran slapped Simpson on the back. Simpson's children Arnelle and Jason embraced, while the AP reported that another Simpson family member told Cochran, "We did it!"

The trial lives on in infamy.
Media outside the courthouse during OJ Simpson's trial
A fleet of press covering the case.

After serving as a seminal event in the now-ubiquitous true crime genre and illuminating critical divisions around race in America, the "trial of the century" lives on in infamy over 30 years later.

Read the original article on Business Insider