I made a wonderful discovery today. Jungle Prince. It's a podcast by a New York Times reporter about an Indian 'royal' family. It turns out they were not really royal but it is very moving.
You can alleviate the lockdown blues by listening to the audio podcast S-Town. It is my very favorite podcast, and I've listened to just about all of them.
"S-Town is an investigative journalism podcast hosted by Brian Reed and created by the producers of Serial and This American Life. All seven chapters were released on March 28, 2017. The podcast was downloaded a record-breaking 10 million times in four days." - Wikipedia
Bundyville is the true story of the Bundy family; a family that refuses to recognise the US government. It is one of the podcasts that I have listened to repeatedly.
Caliphate is well worth a listen. The podcast follows journalist Rukmini Callimachi, who covers terrorism for The New York Times, on her quest to understand ISIS.
The Out Crowd won the 2020 Pulitzer Prize for audio reporting, the first ever given for audio journalism. "Reports from the frontlines of the Trump administration's "Remain in Mexico" asylum policy. We hear from asylum seekers waiting across the border in Mexico, in a makeshift refugee camp, and from the officers who sent them there to wait in the first place." https://www.thisamericanlife.org/688/the-out-crowd
Crime Junkie
Serial Killers
Morbidology
The Generation Why Podcast
CrimeLapse True Crime
What Happened??
True Crime App The Time, Unsolved
True Crime App The Time
The Minds of Madness
Criminilogy
True Murder: The Most Shocking Killers
True Crime South Africa
True Crime Garage
Framed
Medical Murderers
Super Natural with Ashley Flowers
Anatomy of Murderer
They Walk Among us
That's Messed Up
Casefile True Crime
Revisionist History
Prash's Murder Map
The Philosophy of Crime
Scene of the Crime
Jensen and Holes: The Murder Squad
George Saunders (A Swim in a Pond in the Rain) is a #1 New York Times bestselling, Booker Prize-winning author. George joins the Armchair Expert to discuss the mental phenomena of life, farting in an elevator, and romanticizing everything as a writer. George explains how he learned that being a writ