4.7 • 699 Ratings
🗓️ 7 November 2022
⏱️ 45 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
I welcome Robin Jarossi to the show in this interview episode.
Robin is a London-based journalist and true crime author who contributes to documentaries such as Murder by the Sea, Voice of a Killer, The Real Prime Suspect and Dark Son: The Hunt for a Serial Killer.
He is currently working on a book about corruption and how the hit BBC drama Line of Duty echoes real-life wrongdoing in the police.
Robin's latest book 'Murder by the Sea: True Crime Stories from our Sinister Shores', was released on July 7, 2022, and is available to purchase here:
Murder by the Sea | Mardle Books
For all things British Murders, please visit my website:
https://www.britishmurders.com/
Intro music:
David John Brady - 'Throw Down the Gauntlet'
https://linktr.ee/davidjohnbradymusic
My recording equipment:
Shure SM7B Vocal Microphone
Cloud Microphone Cloudlifter CL1
Focusrite Scarlett Solo USB Audio Interface
Rode PSA-1 Professional Studio Boom Arm
Recorded using:
Zencastr
Edited in:
Hindenberg PRO
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0:00.0 | You are now listening to British Murders. |
0:03.5 | Let's for a podcast. |
0:18.7 | Hello everyone and welcome to British Murders, the podcast that focuses exclusively on British murder cases with an occasional glimpse at horror movies. |
0:26.8 | I'm your host Stuart Blues and this week I have a very special guest on the show. |
0:31.4 | He is a journalist and an author. |
0:33.9 | Please welcome to the show, Robin Gerossi. |
0:36.8 | Hello. |
0:37.4 | Hi, Robin. Welcome to the show. It's a pleasure to |
0:39.6 | have you. Now, before we get started, I always like to ask my guests a bit of an icebreaker question, |
0:45.7 | something that they're perhaps not expecting. It might be something completely out of the blue. |
0:50.4 | The good thing is I've not actually thought of this question yet, so it makes it even more intense, because now on the spot, I have to think of this question. |
0:58.3 | My question is going to be this. If you could go back in time and meet anyone, who would it be and why you can go back as far as you want? Let's say there's no language barrier. So if you went back to the 11th century, you could speak fluently to each other. So we're not saying you'd have to |
1:14.6 | have a translator. You could just speak whatever language you want. It could be someone |
1:18.8 | abroad. It could be someone on the British Isles. Who do you think you'd like to meet |
1:23.5 | and why? God, that's a quite thought-provoking one. |
1:29.2 | I think I'd like to go back and meet maybe a great artist of some kind or musician |
1:37.9 | like Bach or Mozart or somebody from that period. |
1:43.2 | I just think it would be interesting to see the sights and the sounds and see what |
1:47.5 | the city like Vienna was like at that time. |
1:51.2 | Yeah, I think that would be an amazing experience. |
1:54.3 | But also to see what these people are like, because of course there's no film, there's no |
1:57.5 | recording of them. |
... |
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