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Podcast: Serial

This American Life
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Serial is a podcast from the creators of This American Life, hosted by Sarah Koenig. Serial unfolds one story - a true story - over the course of a whole season. The show follows the plot and characters wherever they lead, through many surprising twists and turns. Sarah won't know what happens at the end of the story until she gets there, not long before you get there with her. Each week she'll bring you the latest chapter, so it's important to listen in, starting with Episode 1. New episodes are released on Thursday mornings.
    This American Lifeadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: Serial4 days ago
    A new warden comes to Guantánamo and decides to make some changes. A prison’s a prison, he thinks. How hard could this be?
    This American Lifeadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: Serial11 days ago
    The case against a young airman gets even weirder when the government pulls in two fresh investigators. Part 2: A bride, an FBI agent, and a polygraph machine.
    This American Lifeadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: Serial18 days ago
    An Arabic-speaking airman is sent to Guantánamo to translate, and soon finds himself at the center of a major scandal. Part 1: Suspicion swallows evidence.
    This American Lifeadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: Serial25 days ago
    Maybe you have an idea in your head about what it was like to work at Guantánamo, one of the most notorious prisons in the world. Think again.
    This American Lifeadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: Serial25 days ago
    In 2002, an elite interrogation team secretly staged Guantánamo’s most elaborate intel operation — to try to get a single detainee to talk.
    This American Lifeadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: Seriallast month
    From Serial Productions and The New York Times, Serial Season 4 is a history of Guantánamo told by people who lived through key moments in Guantánamo’s evolution, who know things the rest of us don’t about what it’s like to be caught inside an improvised justice system. Episodes 1 and 2 arrive Thursday, March 28.
    This American Lifeadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: Serial2 months ago
    This American Lifeadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: Serial5 months ago
    A police officer in Rutherford County, Tenn., sees a video of little kids fighting, and decides to investigate. This leads to the arrest of 11 kids for watching the fight. The arrests do not go smoothly.

    From Serial Productions and The New York Times in partnership with ProPublica and Nashville Public Radio, “The Kids of Rutherford County” is reported and hosted by Meribah Knight, a Peabody-award winning reporter based in the South.
    This American Lifeadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: Serial5 months ago
    Wes Clark reads a telling line in a police report about how Rutherford County’s juvenile justice system really works. He and his law partner Mark Downton realize they have a massive class action on their hands.

    From Serial Productions and The New York Times in partnership with ProPublica and Nashville Public Radio, “The Kids of Rutherford County” is reported and hosted by Meribah Knight, a Peabody-award winning reporter based in the South.
    This American Lifeadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: Serial5 months ago
    A young lawyer named Wes Clark can’t get the Rutherford County juvenile court to let his clients out of detention — even when the law says they shouldn’t have been held in the first place. He’s frustrated and demoralized, until he makes a friend.

    From Serial Productions and The New York Times in partnership with ProPublica and Nashville Public Radio, “The Kids of Rutherford County” is reported and hosted by Meribah Knight, a Peabody-award winning reporter based in the South.
    This American Lifeadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: Serial5 months ago
    The lawyers settle with the county, which agrees to pay the kids who were wrongfully arrested and illegally jailed; the hard part is actually getting the kids paid.

    From Serial Productions and The New York Times in partnership with ProPublica and Nashville Public Radio, “The Kids of Rutherford County” is reported and hosted by Meribah Knight, a Peabody-award winning reporter based in the South.
    This American Lifeadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: Serial6 months ago
    For over a decade, one Tennessee county arrested and illegally jailed hundreds, maybe thousands, of children. A four-part narrative series reveals how this came to be, the adults responsible for it, and the two lawyers, former juvenile delinquents themselves, who try to do something about it.

    From Serial Productions and The New York Times, “The Kids of Rutherford County” is reported and hosted by Meribah Knight, a Peabody-award winning reporter based in the South. Get it everywhere you get your podcasts on Thursday, October 26th.
    This American Lifeadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: Serial8 months ago
    Patients at a fertility clinic experience excruciating, unexpected pain. For months the reason for that pain remains hidden. Then they get a letter from the clinic.
    This American Lifeadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: Serial8 months ago
    The patients know what happened to them. Now they learn who did it. The story of the nurse whose own pain was also unseen.
    This American Lifeadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: Serial8 months ago
    What we know about what happened at the clinic.
    This American Lifeadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: Serial8 months ago
    At the nurse’s sentencing hearing, the patients learn a shocking detail that forces them to confront the limits of their compassion.
    This American Lifeadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: Serial8 months ago
    In fertility treatment, a successful outcome is defined as a healthy baby. In this story, the outcomes are complicated for everyone involved.
    This American Lifeadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: Serial10 months ago
    The patients in this story came to the Yale Fertility Center to pursue pregnancy. They began their I.V.F. cycles full of expectation and hope. Then a surgical procedure called egg retrieval caused them excruciating pain.

    Some of the patients screamed out in the procedure room. Others called the clinic from home to report pain in the hours that followed. But most of the staff members who fielded the patients’ reports did not know the real reason for the pain, which was that a nurse at the clinic was stealing fentanyl, and replacing it with saline.

    From Serial Productions and The New York Times, The Retrievals is a five-part narrative series reported by Susan Burton, a veteran staff member at “This American Life” and author of the memoir “Empty.”

    Susan details the events that unfolded at the clinic, and examines how the patients’ distinct identities informed the way they made sense of what happened to them in the procedure room. The nurse, too, has her own story, about her own pain, that she tells to the court. And then there is the story of how this all could have happened at the Yale clinic in the first place.

    Throughout, Burton explores the stories we tell about women’s pain. How do we tolerate, interpret and account for it? What happens when pain is minimized or dismissed?

    Episode 1 of The Retrievals arrives Thursday, June 29th.
    This American Lifeadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: Seriallast year
    Kim talks to someone who confessed to Shelli’s murder from a jail in Arizona.
    This American Lifeadded an audiobook to the bookshelfPodcast: Seriallast year
    A Times investigative reporter, Kim Barker, revisits the murder of Shelli Wiley — a long-unsolved case from Kim’s time in high school. She reaches out to Shelli’s family to understand why the police arrested a man named Fred Lamb for Shelli’s murder in 2016, and why prosecutors abruptly dropped the charges against him.
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