Agree, I thought the Gabby and Laci ones were good too ..... I think I've missed the Shannon Watts one for some reason, so I'll catch up with that oneThe 'american murder' strand on netflix is very good. I watched the documentaries on Gabby Petito, Shannon Watts and Laci Peterson and they were really well done!
Is this on anything else? BBC player is blocked in irelandIf you don't have Sky to watch 'death of a showjumper' the beeb have covered it here
![]()
BBC One - Spotlight, Katie: Coerced and Killed
Katie’s killer covered up her murder as suicide. How did police begin to fall for his lie?www.bbc.co.uk
I can get it on Now TV, and someone else mentioned SkyIs this on anything else? BBC player is blocked in ireland
I've watched Murder in the Outback a couple of times, it's about the murder of Peter Falconio, and it was first shown during lockdown on Channel Four.Do many of you fall asleep to True Crime documentaries?
--
Is there a particular Crime documentary/case you can watch over again or have watched more than once?
I watched Making a Murderer a couple of years after it first came out and I remember thinking that Steven and that Brendan guy, his nephew was it, were both guilty and I was reading about it online etc but I can't remember now why I thought they were guilty, it's so long since I read up on it.It is from 2015, but did anyone ever watch Making a Murderer on Netflix about Steven Avery? I've gone back and forth with this for years now and I still don't know what to fully make of it. I'm not sure if it's still on Netflix (I cancelled my subscription a few months ago) but there is stuff about him on YouTube still.
Making a Murderer kick started my interest in true crime! I've since realised that it was probably a very biased documentary and Steven Avery is probably guilty. I think Brendan (the nephew..was that his name?) is innocent though!It is from 2015, but did anyone ever watch Making a Murderer on Netflix about Steven Avery? I've gone back and forth with this for years now and I still don't know what to fully make of it. I'm not sure if it's still on Netflix (I cancelled my subscription a few months ago) but there is stuff about him on YouTube still.
I went googling last night to refresh my memory about Steven Avery, and there's a documentary series that is a rebuttal of Making a Murderer, and it's called Convicting a Murderer, I think it was made in 2023.Making a Murderer kick started my interest in true crime! I've since realised that it was probably a very biased documentary and Steven Avery is probably guilty. I think Brendan (the nephew..was that his name?) is innocent though!
I enjoy these as well, it is amazing how they can work things out.It's mostly repeats now but I do enjoy Medical Detectives on CBS Reality
Faking it:Tears of a crime is one I enjoy despite Kerrie Nixon.It's mostly repeats now but I do enjoy Medical Detectives on CBS Reality
Faking it: Tears of a crime on Quest Red and Discovery plus is interesting. I've watched it too much and there's so many other documentaries I've watched on crimes and it's clear to me they're lying
It's Kerry Daynes on Faking It. I watch with fascination to see i) how big her hair is and ii) how shiny and taut her face is this week.Faking it:Tears of a crime is one I enjoy despite Kerrie Nixon.
Thank you xIt's Kerry Daynes on Faking It. I watch with fascination to see i) how big her hair is and ii) how shiny and taut her face is this week.
I enjoy the show but it's very easy to say someone is lying when they've been convicted.
I like this series too, not so much the micro expressions because I don’t know how much I believe them, but more-so those kind of crimes where people court the media to try and get away with their crimes!Thank you x
As I posted it, I thought Nixon didn't sound right!
Oh it's the breathy exhales of the taught face that get me
Yes, very true- a micro inch of nostril movement when there is proof of crime probably means an itchy nose!
They had an episode with Mitchell Quy, Mick Philpot and others who had the fake tears.I like this series too, not so much the micro expressions because I don’t know how much I believe them, but more-so those kind of crimes where people court the media to try and get away with their crimes!
I also like Chase - -he's my favourite if the Behaviour Panel.YouTube has been my recent go to for the bodycam videos, EWU Crime Storytime being one. Real police footage is crazy, the ways people will behave even in the face of evidence.
For deeper analysis I'm a huge fan of Chase Hughes, who gives insight into human behaviours from his skills and abilities. He has videos on how women can avoid narcissistic relationships, but he's not sensational about this, just real and without drama.
There's loads of tips on this thread for my catch ups on Netflix etc, love all sorts of crime stuff.
I did once meet Mick Philpott, unfortunately, in my time at the benefits office - he was bluster and sexist, I had to do hard focus professional with him, horrible man