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Serial

  • 06-11-2014 9:45am
    #1
    Registered Users Posts: 147 ✭✭


    Has anyone out there been listening to Serial? I'm half way through the 6th episode in 36 hours and my inner detective is bursting to come out!!!!


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Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 221 ✭✭simonsays1


    Hey,
    I'm starting the 5th shortly. I've listened to them these 2 days & can't stop now..... .
    It's the top podcast in USA, UK & Australia at the mo I believe....
    I'd love to think he is innocent but so hard to say!!!


  • Registered Users Posts: 11,645 ✭✭✭✭El Weirdo




  • Registered Users Posts: 221 ✭✭simonsays1


    Thanks for that, El Weirdo!!

    Yeah I'm listening to Slate's pod-cast too which is mentioned in that article...
    Glad I'm up to date and have to wait a few days now as I'm getting NO work done.....


  • Registered Users Posts: 256 ✭✭leonards




  • Registered Users Posts: 3,287 ✭✭✭padraig_f


    I like it, though I feel what's letting it down slightly in later episodes is
    that it seems to me the guy Adnan is almost certainly guilty. It would be a bit more intriguing if there was some more doubt.

    That's my take anyway, there's no conclusive proof, but the circumstantial evidence seems overwhelming.

    I still enjoy the portrait of Baltimore that the story draws, kind of like a mix between Twin Peaks, The Wire and a Sherlock Holmes story.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 11,645 ✭✭✭✭El Weirdo


    padraig_f wrote: »
    I like it, though I feel what's letting it down slightly in later episodes is
    that it seems to me the guy Adnan is almost certainly guilty. It would be a bit more intriguing if there was some more doubt.

    That's my take anyway, there's no conclusive proof, but the circumstantial evidence seems overwhelming.
    Are you listening to a different podcast to me?


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,287 ✭✭✭padraig_f


    El Weirdo wrote: »
    Are you listening to a different podcast to me?

    No need to be so patronising, obviously not.


  • Registered Users Posts: 11,645 ✭✭✭✭El Weirdo


    padraig_f wrote: »
    No need to be so patronising, obviously not.

    No need to be so defensive. I was just wondering how you could come to such a conclusion and appear to be so certain.


  • Registered Users Posts: 147 ✭✭Real Psycrow


    El Weirdo wrote: »
    No need to be so defensive. I was just wondering how you could come to such a conclusion and appear to be so certain.

    I agree. I can't understand how someone would see him as guilty. The whole thing is built on Jay's testimony that is all over the place. He's very unreliable and very suspicious


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,850 ✭✭✭FouxDaFaFa


    I stumbled on that Guardian article today and came here wondering if anyone was listening to it.

    It sounds like a very interesting concept and way of doing journalism. (reminds me of what Lyra McKee is doing with her upcoming book, releasing it chapter by chapter as she investigates).

    I don't think the producers were expecting the level of interest its garnered and I'd be torn whether it's good that there's a crowd-sourced pool of knowledge out there or if it's bad to potentially (and unintentionally) create a lynch mob surrounding real people who are still alive and easily found in real life. I was on reddit for the Boston Bombing thing and I still feel sick when I think about Sunil Tripathi's family.

    I'm going to listen to Episode 1 later and see for myself.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,666 ✭✭✭Rosy Posy


    I'm loving this podcast. I'm a long term This American Life listener but the nature of this story and the way it's told make it really gripping. There's a whole subreddit dedicated to it which is pretty intense but has lots of extra information like photos and court records and links to the woman who brought the case to Sarah's attention, Rabia Chaudry's blog.

    I'm Adnostic (:D) about whether he did it or not. I want to believe he's innocent. At the very least
    the fact that the Innocence Project is taking the case seems to point that the evidence presented should not have been enough to convict him
    .

    I think one of the most compelling things about this is the way that the outcome is still undecided and it's almost like it's happening in real time.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,287 ✭✭✭padraig_f


    Why I think he did it...

    - Motive (as much as they try to play that down, it's there).
    - Opportunity (rang her 3 times the night before, asked for a lift with her that day).
    - No alibi.
    - Witness claiming he did it, providing a large amount of detail.
    - No other real suspect (no evidence of sexual assault seems to make a person unknown to her unlikely).
    - His phone hit a cell tower covering Leakin park, where she was buried, at 7pm that night.
    - Was confirmed to be with the main witness (Jay) by other people later that night.
    - Sketchy evidence. Claims he can't remember a lot about the day, despite it being the day his recent ex-girlfriend went missing.
    - Other miscellaneous things like: rang her 3 times the night before, then never tried to contact her after she went missing.

    People question Jay, and while there are some inconsistencies, the main part of his story has stayed the same. There are just some inconsistencies with times/locations, which I think are easy to get wrong, especially when you're a stoner.

    Jay also told his friend (Jen?) what happened the night Hae Min went missing, so it wasn't like he cooked the story up a week later.

    And the main thing probably to me is: what possible motive would Jay have to lie? And what's the coincidence that he constructs this elaborate story and all the other things match, like Adnan having no alibi etc. He's even getting himself in trouble because he becomes an accessory.

    Only possible reason is that Jay did it, but they've given no indication that this is the case. It's not even implied so far from Adnan, all he's really said is that Jay's lying.

    Tonight's episode was previewed last week as 'the problem with Jay', so maybe we'll find out more in that.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 3,957 ✭✭✭Dots1982


    I agree. I can't understand how someone would see him as guilty.


    C'mon
    his phone records indicate he's at the remote place the body was found at
    the date she disappeared.


  • Registered Users Posts: 147 ✭✭Real Psycrow


    I'm going to go listen to today's episode before I reply. Before I do, will someone tell me how to do the spoiler masking?


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,393 ✭✭✭Dubh Geannain


    Bloody brilliant. Episode 8 to come tonight. Never followed a serial podcast before.

    This is where I heard about it:
    http://www.thejournal.ie/serial-podcast-adnan-syed-hae-min-lee-1763134-Nov2014/


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,393 ✭✭✭Dubh Geannain


    I'm going to go listen to today's episode before I reply. Before I do, will someone tell me how to do the spoiler masking?

    "Spoiler" tag is beside the "youtube" tag when your in the message editor. Look along the top of the editor where you can select to Bold, Italicise text etc.


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,850 ✭✭✭FouxDaFaFa


    I'm all caught up.

    It is very well done.

    I'm curious as to whether there will be any real resolution or "closure" at the end of the series. I think a lot of people are expecting a Scooby Doo style "It was me all along!" scenario, when Hae herself might be the only person able to tell us who killed her.

    I was very surprised that (Ep. 7 spoiler)
    all members of the team from the Innocence Project believe Adnan to be innocent. And not just "innocent until proven guilty" but completely innocent.

    For what it's worth, I personally think Adnan is guilty. But I'm not sure if he should have been found guilty.

    I think Koenig was too quick to brush off the argument that Adnan was accustomed to lying due to how well he hid various things from his family and members of his mosque. (Drinking, pot, girls, etc). I wouldn't call it a "double life" but he was comfortable lying to authority figures.

    Plus he
    calls Hae three times the night before her murder just to give her his new phone number but then never attempts to (personally) contact her when she goes missing for weeks?

    I think people were too quick to negatively judge a young Jay versus a mature, prepared Adnan and rally around Adnan because his is the voice they are hearing.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,666 ✭✭✭Rosy Posy


    FouxDaFaFa wrote: »
    I think Koenig was too quick to brush off the argument that Adnan was accustomed to lying due to how well he hid various things from his family and members of his mosque. (Drinking, pot, girls, etc). I wouldn't call it a "double life" but he was comfortable lying to authority figures.

    This was an aspect that, as a child of an immigrant family, I really identified with. I think it looks bad for him but it also made me think, if I were accused of something what kind of stuff could be pulled out of the closet to paint a less than favorable picture.

    I think the story is wonderfully crafted.
    Just when I was ready to paint Jay as the big bad wolf we get the impression of him given in episode 8. I get the feeling the same is going to be done for my changing impression of Adnan in next weeks episode.
    For me it's the way our perceptions are manipulated from week to week that's the genius of the thing. I'm staying firmly on the fence til the end although I agree that I doubt there will be a big finale reveal.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,393 ✭✭✭Dubh Geannain


    FouxDaFaFa wrote: »
    Plus he
    calls Hae three times the night before her murder just to give her his new phone number but then never attempts to (personally) contact her when she goes missing for weeks?

    Although most would think this strange and I do too. I can understand a teenage boy reacting a little more coolly than say Hae's girlfriends would. Did he say he assumed she ran off with her new boyfriend? That's initially. But, as you say, over the course of weeks you really would expect him to try and ring once. Do the police phone records only cover the few days around the murder though?

    Disappointed
    that Jay wouldn't go on tape. He should be in a much more comfortable place to talk about it now. The reporters said he was very tired. Tired from the days work or tired from years carrying a burden?

    I don't believe Jay. I'm not sure what to make of Adnan.
    Remember his alibi for the library (the girl he was talking to). But also didn't Jen say that one of Jays versions was that Hae was killed in the library carpark
    . But if he was such a masterful liar surely he'd have a much more reliable alibi for the police than "I think I might have been at XYZ".

    I don't think the truth will out at any stage in this saga. I wouldn't have said there was enough to put him away but
    the independent detective thought otherwise and I guess he'd know better than I.

    Questions: Where's the hard forensic evidence like fingerprints? And DNA? 1999 was not the middle ages.
    We have a hand print on a map in Hae's car along with 15 other peoples prints.

    When's the last episode of this season and how many seasons are they intending to do?


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,595 ✭✭✭Giruilla


    At this stage.. I'm convinced Adnan is guilty, and that Jay got caught up in it afterwards as he says.

    The one thing I don't buy, is Adnan saying he doesn't remember the day.. that it was like any other. Everyone else in the story seems to have some recollection of the days events.
    I think the reason Adnan is saying he doesn't remember anything to SK, is that it's his best bet to create doubt. He can probably see how complicated the case is with the info SK has given him, and how any story he fabricates of what happened that day could get extremely messy on details and shot down easily. If he was telling the truth he'd have a version of events and stick to that no matter what.

    Have a feeling SK is holding something big back though..


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  • Registered Users Posts: 6,850 ✭✭✭FouxDaFaFa


    Rosy Posy wrote: »
    For me it's the way our perceptions are manipulated from week to week that's the genius of the thing. I'm staying firmly on the fence til the end although I agree that I doubt there will be a big finale reveal.
    I agree. One of the most frightening aspects of Serial for me (apart from the obvious) is how easy it is to manipulate people and their perception of an event. To manipulate the listeners of Serial. For a killer to manipulate his friends into believing he would never do such a thing. Remember, both Adnan's and Jay's friends are adamant that they would never do such a thing. But one of them is lying.

    Even hearing how the police work, how they routinely "clean up" stories. It's fascinating and unsettling. Because on the one hand, you want to avoid conformation bias. But on the other, you have to present a coherent case that doesn't collapse because of insignificant information.
    Disappointed
    that Jay wouldn't go on tape. He should be in a much more comfortable place to talk about it now. The reporters said he was very tired. Tired from the days work or tired from years carrying a burden?
    I share your disappointment but I can't say I'm surprised. We have to keep in mind that Sarah and her team may have been working on this for months and thinking about it every day but
    they didn't give Jay notice that they were coming or what they were doing. This could have been the first he'd heard about it in years. I was surprised he was so calm. And I can understand his reluctance to go on tape. He couldn't have anticipated how popular the podcast would become but he must have known it would mean most people in his life (neighbours, colleagues, etc) finding out about a very ugly period of his life. I mean, the most innocent he can be is that he *just* helped move a body. It's pretty bad.
    When's the last episode of this season and how many seasons are they intending to do?
    There will be 12 episodes and the second season will focus on a different story, which will not be a crime.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,393 ✭✭✭Dubh Geannain




  • Moderators, Category Moderators, Entertainment Moderators, Science, Health & Environment Moderators, Regional East Moderators Posts: 18,173 CMod ✭✭✭✭The Black Oil


    I'll likely check this out given the buzz about it.

    Alan Sepinwall has a piece up about it, liked Homicide: LOTS, so I'm intrigued. http://www.hitfix.com/whats-alan-watching/the-city-that-bleeds-on-serial-homicide-the-wire-and-ambiguous-crime-stories


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,595 ✭✭✭Giruilla


    I think Jay's testimony is inconsistent because he is an accomplice and he is trying to frame the events in a way that doesn't implicate himself.

    ^^ That could be it in a nutshell. I think Jay is extremely lucky to escape a jail sentence.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,666 ✭✭✭Rosy Posy


    Questions: Where's the hard forensic evidence like fingerprints? And DNA? 1999 was not the middle ages.
    We have a hand print on a map in Hae's car along with 15 other peoples prints.

    When's the last episode of this season and how many seasons are they intending to do?
    Adnan had been in Hae's car countless times before so the print is spurious. They seem to have done a shoddy job on the forensics which is something that the innocence project are following up on.

    They said 'about' 12 episodes per season but if it took a year to research and produce and they're still working on it I doubt they're working on a second season yet so I'd say it will be a while, unless some others of the TAL team are researching something else. There seems to be a lot of outsourcing of stories on TAL lately so this could be the case. My impression is that next season will cover a different story.

    It's well worth listening to TAL's Confessions program (Episode 507) for context. There's a whole piece from Jim Tranium, who features in this weeks episode, on witness leading and false confessions that's very interesting.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,681 ✭✭✭Standman


    Wow, what a riveting podcast!

    I am leaning towards Adnan being guilty, but as one of the innocence project people put it, there are mountains of reasonable doubt.

    Also people talking a lot about
    it being strange that Adnan claims he can't remember the day of the crime when he really should seeing as getting a call from the police saying Hae was missing should have been a big enough of an event to make him remember.

    This is something that I actually have some experience with because I had a close friend go missing years ago, and while I can remember the moment I got an identical call with crystal clarity, the rest of the day before and after is a lot more hazy.

    I can't remember what day of the week it was or what exactly I did before or that night after the call. Adnan says the same himself, he can remember the call perfectly but not the rest of the day. Given that, I don't think it's as damning as some would suggest.

    One thing I do find suspicious is that he didn't attempt to call her after he found out she was missing. I know when my friend was missing I called him myself many times even though I knew my friends were also. If you have a certain relationship with someone, there's always a chance they could be ignoring other calls and may answer yours for whatever reason. In that situation you will try anything and it's very strange that he didn't.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,666 ✭✭✭Rosy Posy


    Standman wrote: »
    One thing I do find suspicious is that he didn't attempt to call her after he found out she was missing. I know when my friend was missing I called him myself many times even though I knew my friends were also. If you have a certain relationship with someone, there's always a chance they could be ignoring other calls and may answer yours for whatever reason. In that situation you will try anything and it's very strange that he didn't.
    It was a pager though, not a phone, so all he'd be able to do was to ask her to call him- if she wasn't calling back her best mates she'd hardly call him. Also he says he doesn't remember paging her- he might have done from his house phone. Afaik they looked at his phone records, not hers.


  • Registered Users Posts: 147 ✭✭Real Psycrow


    "Spoiler" tag is beside the "youtube" tag when your in the message editor. Look along the top of the editor where you can select to Bold, Italicise text etc.

    Hmmmm.... I actually don't see those options at all. There's nothing over the box I'm typing in and below it I only have the Post Icons bit.


  • Registered Users Posts: 147 ✭✭Real Psycrow


    FouxDaFaFa wrote: »

    For what it's worth, I personally think Adnan is guilty. But I'm not sure if he should have been found guilty.

    I think that's key to how this story is going to end. I personally don't think he's guilty, but as a suspect, he should never have been found guilty. There was more than a reasonable doubt that he didn't commit the murder. If they innocence project can create any other plausible narrative, and I think its more than possible to set up a scenario where Jay is the murderer with at least the same amount of "evidence" that convicted Adnan, then they should be able to overturn the conviction


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  • Registered Users Posts: 147 ✭✭Real Psycrow


    The Jay episode did nothing to dissuade me of his guilt. There's a lot of talk of how charming he is etc, which doesn't matter a jot. Adnan seems perfectly charming as well, but he's still in jail. Criminals are more than capable of being charming and guilty at the same time. In fact, Jay seems to have a charisma.
    A lot of people who talked about him seemed to suggest he had a presence. He's certainly a liar. The lawyer in the innocence projects said SK would be very unlucky to come across a sociopath in her first case. But maybe she has come across one in Jay. A sociopath will happy change their story from one lie to another even when they're blatantly caught out, stick to the new story and swear its the truth. A sociopath is more than capable of living a seemingly normal life as Jay is currently doing. They're certainly capable of having charisma and persuading people they'd never commit such a terrible crime. If you look at the timeline, I think its significantly more likely that Jay is guilty rather than Adnan.
    The lawyer's questioning of Jay "stepping out" with someone on his girlfriend is interesting, as is Jay's admittance that he'd do anything to protect his relationship with her. Maybe he hit on Hae and she refused, threatening to tell Jay's girlfriend. As I said above, it is just as easy to setup a narrative where Jay is the guilty party as it was do setup one for Adnan.

    Oh, I figured out the spoilers, just manually typing in the code!


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