farrahsstory.jpgcourtesy Windmill Entertainment/NBC

Nine million Americans tuned in to Farrah Fawcett's documentary, Farrah's Story on Friday night -- the story of the "Angel" who's suffering from cancer and doing it in front of the cameras.

jgoody.jpgAcross the pond, the English had Jade Goody, who died just less than two months ago of cervical cancer -- and she went through it all, until the end, on camera. Goody made it clear that she was doing it for her sons so that she would have money to leave to them when she passed on. The nation was on the edge of their collective seat, following Jade until she died on March 22. Her funeral was like nothing England had seen since the death of their beloved Princess Diana.

With America's own sweetheart, Farrah Fawcett, in what appears to be the final stages of rectal cancer that has spread, the US audience is lapping up media coverage of Farrah, including her own first-person account of what she's going through. Which raises some questions ...

Can the public delve deep enough into an ill celebrity's personal life or is it never enough? Was it fair for Farrah to criticize photographers for snapping pix of her in a wheelchair at the airport upon returning from Germany for treatment if she produced a national broadcast with similar images airing just weeks later? Where is the money from Farrah's Story going? And most significantly ... Is death the new reality show???

X17online reached out to the co-producer of Farrah's Story, Chris Nevius, and got some answers. Click through to read the Q & A ...