Steviesol wrote: » Good call listened to both today, any more recommendations? Thanks
PropJoe10 wrote: » The Mia Zapata one was good. Hadn't heard that name in a very long time and actually made me check out some of her music. Pretty decent!
Dots1982 wrote: » Was it said who was the commanding officer at the road block?
runningbuddy wrote: » Such a horrific case. A wasted talent...poor girl
runningbuddy wrote: » Some of these cases would make you despair for humanity. The Daniel morecambe one always stuck with me.
pc7 wrote: » Some just show how random things can be, like Daniel Morcombe, was the bus late or broken down? Can’t remember exactly but his fathers words at the end had me bawling. I tend to try avoid the kiddie ones can’t listen/watch stuff like that since having the smallies. Losing a child especially in such circumstances really is a fate worse than death.
PropJoe10 wrote: » There's a few very grim ones. Sword & Scale is even darker than Casefile!
retro:electro wrote: » I’ll never for as long as I love forget his father’s words at the end. Absolutely heartbreaking.
PropJoe10 wrote: » That one was dreadful alright. Poor kid. Casefile is definitely the best true crime podcast I've found. The narrator is fantastic. Would love to know who he is
Morby wrote: » Oh, he has? Who is he? Did a quick Google but came up with Nada!
Arghus wrote: » One more true crime podcast that I've recently discovered that I'd also recommend to people is Small Town Dicks. Two presenters - one of whom is Yeardly Smith, AKA Lisa Simpson - talk to two real life detectives about their most memorable cases. The detectives are supposedly brothers, but it's hard to know for sure because they're using assumed names and names have also been changed in the cases being discussed, in order to protect victims etc, etc. Anyway it's pretty interesting listening to my ears and it's cool to hear about the real world experience of the people doing the actual investigating; sometimes this aspect of the nitty-gritty gets overlooked in similarish pods, even though, for me, it's the most fascinating aspect of most true crime tales. The show manages to pull off that neat Casefile like trick of being respectful towards the victims of crime and avoids falling down the hole of becoming mawkish sensationalist rubbish like Sword and Scale - which truly sickens my hole. Though some of it is extremely hard to listen to: I listened to one of the detective's detailed account of being present at the autopsy on the body of a somewhat over-ripe and hefty lady and it was honestly the most ghastly sounding thing I'd ever heard.
optogirl wrote: » I find 'My Favourite Murder' & 'True Crime Garage' quite hard to listen for their lack of brevity also - laughing and joking while discussing murder is a bit off I think.
Dread Pirate Roberts wrote: » He was found