Right now every night before bed my mom watches an episode of Bones. She likes the lighthearted character interactions, so when that’s done I’ll have to find another program in the same spirit. I just love the crazy variety of television, where everything is different and the same. Think about it: there are so many crime procedurals, all trying to outdo the next with bizarre murders. It makes me wonder.
Wait, don’t stop reading and call the FBI yet! Just see where I’m going with this.
It makes me wonder what it would be like to live in a world with as much insane, inventive, improbable crime in the news as we see on a week of network television (or did, back in the early to mid 2000’s). There wouldn’t be time for politics, or celebrity gossip, or heck! Even the weather. And forget about sports. The news would be filled with stories about mummies in walls, corpses in bogs, pianos falling on heart doctors, hitmen, you name it.
Note to anyone who takes in a steady diet of media: the real world isn’t that bad.
That said, eventually we all encounter a true crime series and get reminded that truth can be every bit as strange as fiction. Now, since I’m not a suburban white woman, I’m not a true crime junkie. I don’t know why women in particular love these things, but we all know it’s true. Don’t even try and deny it. But I do like a good story.
Stories are how we communicate truths like, crime doesn’t pay, or, “And be sure your sin will find you out.”
Lately I’ve been listening to Overruled with KTZed, which according to its description is all about “digging through the propaganda and misinformation of the mainstream media reports and unearthing the truth.” Shut up. I’m in. This isn’t another slick, overproduced, evil-glorifying podcast to tickle the imagination. Like the good, God-fearing, southern woman she is, KT gives us the facts in ways that are blunt, yet entertaining, with a healthy dose of common sense.
A spade is a spade on Overruled.
Listening to the show is different from watching a Netflix docuseries, and is far from a lecture. The shows are streamed live and audience participation is encouraged, so it’s closer to sitting down with a very knowledgeable friend for coffee. She’s done her research, has audio and video clips ready to go, and keeps facts distinct from opinion, sure. But it’s just the right amount of informal.
I appreciate that.
On a recent episode KT interviews a man who was guilty of murder and served his time. It’s a wonderful story of redemption, and one hopes it’s a taste of things to come. Our host is who she is, so we can be certain some things (the best things) will never change. But hopefully as the show grows in popularity she can get more guests and experts with firsthand knowledge to join her.
So yeah, it’s even better than Bones.