So I have been a true crime fan since I was 10 years old and saw Silence of the Lambs in the movie theater for the 1st time (donāt ask why a 10 y/o was seeing that movie in the theaterā¦1988 was a different time and I could also buy a pack of smokes for 5 quarters at any gas station too :/ )
So hereās the thing about true crimeā¦while i am fascinated, knowing someone elseās pain is entertainment has always bothered me. Now while Iāve always felt like reading and consuming true crime helps me be and feel more āAwareā thatās not the entirety of itā¦
Laura fixes this issue for me. Her passion for advocacy is literally contagious. And really, if you love true crime, like, really love it, shouldnāt you give something back? Shouldnāt we be doing something more then consuming in order to help prevent and empower victims? Make changes for a better world and all?
Yes. Yes. And Yes, of course we should! Count me in, Laura.
This podcast is granular, victim centered and Lauraās gentle voice & delivery while pleasing and comforting to listen to, doesnāt detract from what is clearly passion driven work. **
So thanks Laura! For sharing your knowledge and spreading passion while still giving us true crime junkies a more justifiable āfixā.
**It makes me wonder after listening to Laura, if this isnāt something sheās had to carefully craft over years in order to be taken seriously in her line of work. Just comparing her conservative, careful passion in juxtapose to say Jim Clementeās fiery, raised-voice rants, full of F-bombs & exclamationsā¦
I love both deliveries & I have pondered this while listening to both Crime Analyst & Real Crime Profile over the last few years. Canāt have hysterical women criminal profiling and fighting to change the patriarchal narrative!