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Travis Scott performs at day one of the Astroworld Music Festival at NRG Park on Friday, November 5, 2021, in Houston. Image Credit: Amy Harris/Invision/AP

Hulu has pulled a 50-minute news special titled ‘Astroworld: Concert From Hell’ after an online backlash suggested viewers thought it was a documentary produced by the streamer.

‘Astroworld: Concert From Hell’ became available Wednesday on Hulu, though the investigative local-news special out of Houston originally aired November 20 in Texas. It was presented as the first episode of a series, which added to the confusion.

Some Hulu users were confused and upset by the offering, which appeared less than a month after the concert tragedy that to this point has led to 10 deaths, including that of nine-year-old Ezra Blount, who died November 14.

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Visitors cast shadows at a memorial to the victims of the Astroworld concert in Houston on Sunday, November 7, 2021. Image Credit: AP

Blount was buried the Tuesday before Thanksgiving after apparently being trampled in a prolonged November 5 crowd crush during rapper Travis Scott’s headliner set.

“Hulu really moved fast as hell to make a documentary and named it Astroworld: Concert from Hell. I am crying at everyone trying to make their profit from that event,” Rise Nation esports player Jonathan “Pacman” Tucker tweeted Wednesday.

“Hulu making a documentary about Astroworld is in poor taste all around. People are still burying their loved ones,” another Twitter user said in a post that was retweeted nearly 4,500 times. “The legal cases haven’t even started. Great documentaries are done when all the facts are laid out. Not enough time has passed to fully discuss this.”

“The Astroworld: Concert from Hell doc on Hulu puts blame on concert goers ‘not caring’-no type of structural analysis & they didnt interview the RN who said medics there were undertrained, under staffed & HPD was useless. [Expletive] seemed directed by Live Nation/Travis Scott himself,” a third commenter posted.

The Los Angeles Times confirmed that Hulu removed ‘Astroworld: Concert From Hell’ shortly after the controversy. KTRK-TV, the Houston station that originally aired the special, is owned and operated by the ABC network; ABC and Hulu are both owned by Disney, and Hulu streams ABC programs.

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Scott’s offer to pay funeral costs was rejected recently by the Blount family, and other Astroworld victims’ families have done the same.

The Blounts are among more than a dozen parties who have filed lawsuits against Scott, who has been widely criticised for continuing his performance for 40 minutes after authorities declared a “mass casualty event.”

Others named in various lawsuits are the promoters of the two-day festival, guest performer Drake and other companies that provided security and medical services for Astroworld.

Scott quickly cancelled the second day of the festival, pulled out of the Day N Vegas festival in Las Vegas and offered to refund all Astroworld ticket fees.

‘Astroworld: Concert From Hell’ can still be viewed on KTRK’s website.