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New serial podcast 2017
New serial podcast 2017





  1. #New serial podcast 2017 for free#
  2. #New serial podcast 2017 serial#
  3. #New serial podcast 2017 series#

In The Dark’s second season is a representative example of this, as its case revolved around a black man in Mississippi who was tried six times by the same white attorney for a crime he might not have committed. (Of course, the question of who constitutes the “we” is always and rightfully a subject of debate, meditation, and criticism.) But the most noteworthy of these works tend to deal with extraordinary cases in order to bring attention to the strangeness and the failures of the systems that are meant to support us. These works find value in mining the gap between how the world works and how we think it works - or rather, how we think it should work. The surreality is often key to crime journalism, novels, documentaries, podcasts, and legal dramas like The Good Fight. (A judge’s relative may get a lighter sentence than a non-relative for the exact same crime, for example.) The Justice Center might serve as the bureaucratic layer for the city of Cleveland, but as we’re introduced to its hallways and brutalist architecture, the world contained within can feel strange and obscene to the citizens outside of it. Deals are cut and sentences negotiated in sometimes illogical and unfair ways. Lawyers clash, collude, and commiserate with judges, clients, and each other. Serial presents the Justice Center as an intense web of detail with characters, codes, histories, relationships, ugly buildings, an entire universe unto itself. The ding of elevators, the crunch of boots, the implicit power of the building’s literal structure: These are the little details that turn a setting into a scene, a place into a world. The main court tower is 26 stories high, so the elevator really runs the place.” Roughly speaking, the building functions like most hierarchies: Vertically, in this case, from the bowels up. “The city and county courts, the county jail, the prosecutor’s offices, the Sheriff’s office, and headquarters for the Cleveland police. “The Justice Center houses, in location, everything a justice system needs,” she narrates. Koenig, who will split hosting duties this season with This American Life staffer Emmanuel Dzotsi, takes just under 25 seconds in the opening minutes to vividly establish Cleveland’s Justice Center, which serves as the hub of stories for the season. The podcast’s highly anticipated third season opens, as it always does, with Sarah Koenig’s narration, once again lyrical and surprising and wildly economical.

#New serial podcast 2017 serial#

It’s such a pleasure to listen to Serial again. To listen on desktop go to the LA Times website.Photo: Moth Studio and Adam Maida/Courtesy of SERIAL

#New serial podcast 2017 for free#

All the episode are available for free on most online podcast stores including Apple’s Podcasts app.

#New serial podcast 2017 series#

Where you can listenĭirty John is a six-part series by LA Times and Wondery. Try and listen without bingeing the whole thing. While there are elements of violence, most of its runtime is spent exploring what crimes John might have committed and why. Just like excellent recent series S-Town, Dirty John is not a simple murder mystery. Forgotten by his parents, helpless to his drug addictions and mired in self-loathing, this is a man who believes society owes him everything for nothing in return. Which, of course, is why he is such an interesting character study. He is a completely heinous man with seemingly no good traits. Just when it seems John’s actions can’t get any crueler, another revelation lowers him yet further in our eyes. This utterly compelling story is a complex web of love, lies and intimidation. Dirty John recounts, in captivating fashion, Deborah and her family’s growing horror as they discover the violent and sinister truth this man tried to hide from everybody. But as their relationship progressed, it soon became clear that this knight in shining armour was not who he said he was. He was handsome, a freelance anaesthesiologist and treated her like a queen. When Deborah Newell, a wealthy 50-something interior designer, met John Meehan on a dating site he seemed like a total catch.







New serial podcast 2017