meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
Citations Needed

Ep. 161: The Real Life Implications of Pop Culture's Fascination with the Dubious Science of “Criminal Profiling”

Citations Needed

Citations Needed

Bias, News, Media, Society & Culture, Journalism, Criticism, Politics

4.84K Ratings

🗓️ 11 May 2022

⏱️ 94 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Criminal Minds. Inside the Mind of a Serial Killer. Inside the Criminal Mind. Killer Inside: The Mind of Aaron Hernandez.

Each of these is the title of a series, fictional or otherwise, or documentary that relies on the work of so-called criminal profilers. They’re all premised, more or less, on the same idea: That the ability to venture inside the mind of an individual who’s committed a horrific act of violence–say, serial murder, rape, or kidnapping–is the key to figuring out why that crime happened in the first place. This theory may sound promising at first blush; after all, the highest echelons of law enforcement in the US continue to use criminal profiling tactics to this day.

But the reality is that, despite their prevalence in law enforcement both onscreen and off, criminal profiling techniques are largely ineffective, and in many ways, dangerous. Failing to consider institutional factors such as a culture of violence and easy access to weapons, patriarchy, austerity and other social ills that contribute to and reinforce violent crime, criminal profiling focuses almost exclusively on individual experiences and psychological makeup. Meanwhile, it categorizes “criminals” not as people who’ve been shaped by this social conditioning, but as neuro-deviants whose psychological anatomy is just different from yours or mine.

On this episode, we examine the history of the practice of criminal profiling in the West; how the FBI and entertainment industry work in tandem to glamorize the profession, despite its harms; what the actual effectiveness of profiling is; and how it serves as yet another form of Hollywood copaganda.

Our guests are Thomas MacMillan and Chris Fabricant.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is Citations Needed with Nemeshirazi and Adam Johnson.

0:09.0

Welcome to Citations Needed, a podcast on the media, power, PR and the history of Bullshit.

0:14.9

I'm Nemeshirazi.

0:15.9

I'm Adam Johnson.

0:17.4

You can follow the show on Twitter at CitationsPod Facebook, Citations Needed and become

0:22.0

a supporter of the show through patreon.com slash Citations Needed.

0:26.7

Podcast, all your support through patreon is incredibly appreciated as we are 100% listener

0:31.5

funded and don't have any advertisements.

0:34.1

Yeah, being 100% independent of advertisements, corporations, and random nonprofit grants

0:40.6

you have to beg for really helps us keep the show entirely independent and your support

0:44.1

in patreon makes it possible so we're very grateful for that.

0:48.4

Criminal Minds Inside the Mind of a serial killer

0:53.2

Inside the Criminal Mind Killer Inside the Mind of Aaron Hernandez

1:00.0

These are the titles of popular television series fictional or otherwise or documentaries

1:04.3

that rely on the work of so-called criminal profilers.

1:07.6

They're all premised more or less on the same idea that the ability to venture inside

1:11.1

the mind of an individual who's committed a horrific act of violence, say serial murder,

1:15.9

rape, kidnapping is the key to figuring out why that crime happened in the first place.

1:21.2

This theory may sound promising at first blush after all the highest echelons of law enforcement

1:25.4

in the US continue to use criminal profiling tactics to this day.

1:28.8

But the reality is that despite their prevalence in law enforcement both on screen and off,

1:34.4

criminal profiling techniques are largely ineffective and in many ways can be dangerous.

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Citations Needed, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of Citations Needed and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.