None of them seemed disappointed or upset at the terrible company they worked for while the money was rolling. It was only after LuLaRoe (1) changed the bonus structure to be based on sales in a way that decreased their bonuses by 60-70% and (2) allowed people to return all of their stuff for a refund for a short time causing them to lose a huge portion of their downline all at once. Only after that did they all of a sudden become skeptical and critical of the company and start looking for ways to get out.
It seemed like the only lady who sort of owned (or at least acknowledged) her role in the company was that girl who was like the #3 retailer in the entire company who got a divorce because she sort of abandoned her family to pursue LLR success. Everyone else cast themselves as these unsuspecting victims turned heroes for having the courage to get out. (Though the one girl has allegedly helped 1,000s of retailers get out — They never really went into detail on that)
Anyway — I was hoping for more. It was fine and informative and interesting, but I agree with what you said. It was just a run of the mill MLM that grew too fast and messed up in their incentive program to put more incentive on recruiting than actually selling products. Same as any other big or famous MLM as far as I can tell.