Episodios
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Introducing a new podcast from Tenderfoot TV. While digging through an old memory box, host Thrasher Banks discovers forgotten VHS tapes, police reports, and faded letters regarding a 1995 murder in Dayton, Ohio. Drawn to the connection between this murder and the other seemingly innocuous contents of the box, Thrasher begins an investigation. As he follows the threads, he finds that a participant in the 1995 murder may be connected to more than one brutal, unsolved case… Against the backdrop of Ohio in the 1980s and 90s, around the height of satanic panic, this true crime story explores memory, perception, and a personal quest for the truth.
Join Thrasher as he unpacks this box and searches for answers about the “Lords of Death.” Listen now or subscribe to Tenderfoot+ to binge the show ad-free!
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Matt Schaer, one of the Executive Producers of Noble and host of hit podcasts such as Suspect, sits down with the host and writer of Noble, Shaun Raviv for a deeper look into how the series was made.
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Randy Taylor became a soldier to serve America. But he was forced to live a life plagued by paranoia, secrecy and isolation. For years, Randy hid his true identity while risking his life in the United States Army. This is his harrowing, untold story.
Unfit for Service is an 8-episode series with new episodes publishing Monday mornings. Listen to Unfit for Service now on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Unfit for Service is a production of Wavland and Vespucci and is hosted by Eric Marcus. -
From long-time collaborators Sean Kipe and Jason Hoch comes ‘How It All Went South’, the new twice weekly podcast and video series where we share all the crazy stories we've been saving up for years. Until now.
Subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify and watch all episodes on our YouTube channel.
You’ll get stories like:
How to Hire a HitmanThe Unlucky Lottery WinnerThe Alaska Memory Card KillerThe Runaway BrideAl Capone: Original Gangster of Atlanta?Family Drama at Sweetie Pie’sThe Ash Street ShootoutDeath by Root Beer FloatThe Great Bear Hoax
Join How It All Went South twice a week every week for these stories and so much more.
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Years later, Shaun meets a man who knows all of Brent Marsh’s secrets, and travels to Noble, where it all started.
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As Brent Marsh’s court case winds up, one victim of Tri-State Crematory has a remarkable change of heart, even after seeing her husband’s mummified corpse. Other families are not so forgiving.
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The family that owns the crematory—the Marshes—has been in northwest Georgia since slavery times. Their story may help explain what went wrong at Tri-State.
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Forensic specialists from around the country are brought in to help recover and identify all the bodies found at Tri-State Crematory. One woman brought in to help also searches for her own brother’s body and finds a conspiracy.
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The Marsh family hires a lawyer with a history of representing town weirdos. And an expert examines the crematory furnace.
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As police scour the crematory property, hundreds of family members who sent bodies to be burned learn that they’ve been deceived, setting off a panic.
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Two EPA agents investigate a report of human body parts discovered at the rural site of Tri-State Crematory. What they find sets off the biggest investigation in Georgia history.
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A gas man out on a routine delivery discovers a corpse on a rural property in the tiny town of Noble, Georgia.
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In the winter of 2002, police discovered more than 300 bodies on one property in the tiny town of Noble, Georgia. What followed was one of the biggest and most expensive investigations in the history of the American South. To get to the bottom of this forgotten case, journalist Shaun Raviv visits a rural community with plenty of secrets.
He discovers the epic history of the well-respected family who owned the property, uncovers the fates of the bodies sent to a crematory called Tri-State, and searches for the mysterious man at the center of it all. And in the process, Shaun explores one of the most primal and vexing questions we face as human beings: What do the living owe the dead?