What’s true and what’s not?
The content is interesting but the story is so overly dramatized and editorialized that it’s hard to tell what’s true and what’s just assumption about what might have happened, been said, etc. It’s also very clear that Rubenhold is caught up in her own biases, the same way she accuses others of being, but she doesn’t seem to notice that. She spends a lot of time complaining about others’ criticisms of her. The Ripper story is certainly a story worth telling, but tell it and let it speak for itself. She’s so heavy-handed, it’s hard to take. Also, yeah, the fake accent (which disappears in her interactions with others) is bad. Tells me pretty much everything I need to know.
Tfayter via Apple Podcasts · United States of America · 02/22/24
More reviews of Bad Women: The Blackout Ripper
An enormous contribution to the history of women. Devoured her books; addicted to the podcast. As close as one can come to a time machine. Brilliant.
Prufrockian via Apple Podcasts · Germany · 10/08/21
Instantly one of my favourite podcasts, fantastic way to get lost in history
Woods1598 via Apple Podcasts · Great Britain · 10/09/21
Fascinated with true crime mainly from a psychological stand point but not many books cover the lives of the victims. They always detail the lead up to the death and impact after. Then continue with the murder’s life erasing them as people in pursuit of understanding the murder. victimhood is...Read full review »
sammyt! via Apple Podcasts · Great Britain · 10/07/21
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