The Blotter Presents

The Blotter Presents

The true crime worth YOUR time, reviewed weekly. Sarah D. Bunting, desk sergeant. read less
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Episodes

153: Ann Rule's Sleeping With Danger and The Last Narc
Aug 5 2020
153: Ann Rule's Sleeping With Danger and The Last Narc
Two guests, no waiting this week, as ...These Are Their Stories co-host Kevin Flynn joins me to talk about Ann Rule's Sleeping With Danger, starring Elisabeth "Serena Southerlyn" Röhm and Leslie "ME Rodgers" Hendrix. It's a thumbs-sideways from both of us on the movie, which is not quite good, but not all that bad, and has some anachronism issues and PSA pacing that undercut surprisingly decent acting. Grab a Smoothie Of Doom to fortify yourself for... ...the second Most Wanted topic, Amazon's The Last Narc, a series Jessica Liese and I meant to talk about months ago, before Amazon yanked it unceremoniously. The case of what really happened to murdered DEA agent Kiki Camarena premiered last week, with nearly as little fanfare, and while we're still not clear on why it got disappeared, it's a compelling and confidently shot four-parter featuring clear explainers and flavorful anecdotes. But that doesn't mean we wouldn't have changed anything...or that we weren't happy to hear Robert Stack in a voice-over. Brace yourself for more government malfeasance: it's The Blotter Presents, Episode 153. SHOW NOTES Ann Rule's Sleeping With Danger The Mets' starting catcher in 1978The These Are Their Stories podcastWATCH Crime Writers On… The Last Narc on Amazon Prime "Midnight In The Garden Of East Texas," by Skip HollandsworthHector Berrellez alleges the CIA got the series taken off Collider's interview with director Tiller RussellJessica at Rob Has A Website Check out Feals Best Evidence
149: I'll Be Gone In The Dark and Murder Made Me Famous
Jul 1 2020
149: I'll Be Gone In The Dark and Murder Made Me Famous
[content warning for sexual assault, neonaticide, truly egregious Foley design] When the subject is the Golden State Killer, the guest is Mike Dunn, who's back to talk about the first three episodes of HBO's I'll Be Gone In The Dark. Directed by Oscar-winner Liz Garbus and others, the six-part docuseries seems to struggle to integrate two narrative styles: a straight-ahead true-crime tale, and a "crimoir" about the wearing effects of researching monsters and the abysses they call home. Does Michelle McNamara's untimely death create a halo effect? Are some Capote comparisons more apt than others? And will we keep watching? In the Cold Case section, I went looking for a Garden State case to pair with the Golden State Most Wanted section...and what I found was so hilarribly bad, tacky, overacted, and downright bizarre that I fully expected Mike to end our friendship after watching it. Murder Made Me Famous S04.E06 covers the Melissa Drexler/"Prom Mom" case in pitilessly cringey detail, including a splash neither of us will ever forget, and when we go to hell for laughing at this trash-isode, it's this show we'll have to watch for all eternity. Collect all your most irrelevant details for the voice-over: it's The Blotter Presents, Episode 149. SHOW NOTES HBO's I'll Be Gone In The Dark page Mike's and my first convo about the case in Ep 048 My IBG piece for Primetimer Filmmakers' "responsibility" to McNamara/her materialsMurder Made Me Famous S04.E06 Mike on TwitterThe Best Evidence newsletter