New episode out now! We watched the first installment of The Suspicions of Mr Whicher, \u201cThe Murder at Road Hill House\u201d. We cover how this is a pretty faithful adaptation of a horrifying true story, discuss the character of Mr. Whicher and his real history as \u201cthe prince of detectives\u201d, and talk about the nature and purpose of justice within flawed systems that are just made up. We also wonder what kind of forensic sciences existed in the 1860s, discuss the influence of class on how the big-city detective interacts with the countryside village and household, and think that the Kent family dynamics are toxic and weird. Katy tries to remember Victorian police facts, Carrie gets infuriated with smarminess, Maddy reveals herself to be anti-monarchy, and Mack wins some big vocabulary points. We also talk about Victorian child labor laws, pitch some new TV shows, lament the state of 1800s medicine, and think this would have benefited from the addition of Henry Cavill\u2019s Witcher. Listen now to hear more about studying dinosaurs, the lack of caveman mysteries, delivering bounties in Red Dead Redemption 2, and the perpetualness of boob sweat. Enjoy!
\nTW: Murder of a young child, fratricide, historical high rates of child mortality, infidelity, antiquated medical attitudes towards women
\nShow Notes/Sources:\xa0
\nMy Favorite Murder Episode 299: London & England
\nWikipedia: Jack Whicher \xa0 Constance Kent \xa0The Suspicions of Mr Whicher
\nThe book Carrie talked about was Lud-in-the-Mist by Hope Mirrlees
\nShort video about jury nullification:\xa0 The Law You Won't Be Told (be careful about investigating this topic too much as it can give lawyers and judges the right to deny your place on a jury)
\nTikTok link to Brennan Lee Mulligan telling the story Mack mentioned
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