The Shrink Next Door is fascinating, horrifying and baffling all in one, but mostly it feels a little incomplete, and that's not just to do with the lack of bodies.

The Shrink Next Door is fascinating, horrifying and baffling all in one, but mostly it feels a little incomplete, and that's not just to do with the lack of bodies.
The road to hell is paved with good intention, and ego's that need the propping up of "doing good."
While I try to avoid spoilers in my reviews, with this one it has not been possible, mainly because the pod progresses in a way I want to discuss, and talk about - which is a testament to how powerful a piece of investigative journalisim it is. If you do not want spoilers then please …
Sex has never been as straight forward as people would like it to be. The sexual revolution of the 60s was meant to free us all, but unfortunately the likelihood of every encounter possibly ending in pregnancy, child birth, and massive social stigma for any unmarried mother, was not the only thing that was holding …
You can visit the Morbid website at http://www.morbidpodcast.com You can listen to the Podcast here. I've already gone through numbers 5-2 of my top five recommended true crime weekly podcasts, and we have finally arrived at poll position. Number one. If any of you know me personally you will probably have already guessed who it …
You can listen to the Podcast here. This next podcast on my list of top 5 weekly true crime podcasts is not strictly true crime. Weekly stories also contain paranormal, cryptozoology, cults and of course a heft dose of spooky gay bullshit. It is indeed, the one, the only That's Spooky. Hosted by Canadians Johnny …
You can listen to the podcast of this review here. Bad Bridget is a true crime and history podcast, with a sociological bent, from Queen's University Belfast, and Ulster University. This podcast however bucks the trend of a slew of academicly styled podcasts, by not sounding like a lecture given to an echoey, half empty, …
Continue reading True Crime Podcast Review: Bad Bridget, with hosts interviews.
True crime bares as much relation to crime fiction as commercial historical non-fiction does to fantasy. They make solid foundations, but you don't want to build the rest of the house out of it.
West Cork comes from the Audible Original stable, which of course, is owned by the behemoth which is Amazon. You can tell immediately the two journalists involved Sam Bunge and Jennifer Forde had a good budget to make this podcast. It shows everywhere from the layered and evocative soundscape, to the three years they spent …
Ain't nothing happy about this. True Crime Podcasting has taken off tremendously over the last few years. It all started with the addictive Serial and now there are hundreds which are either ongoing series which look at a new, or several new cases each week, or deep dives, which forensically examine a case, or series …