Like being in his culture and making the decision to forego higher education to help with his sister shows how strongly he values family. I think he prided himself on being a very family motivated person (and honestly seemed to be). I think it ultimately has something to do with his family or that would change how he appeared to them. I don’t think it was related to the fraud. I will say, I think that Robin absolutely did it. I agree with a lot of the criticisms though. I think the strongest part of this podcast was the insight it provided into Korean culture and how that impacted the case. Disappointing, because the concept is so rich and important, surely there is not a shortage of tragedies that end up ruining the lives of innocent people due to cultural barriers and prejudice? It seems like they just picked a dud of a case which they hoped would fit their concept but at the end you most likely still side with the jury. It’s really just a super long recap of a terrible tragedy and a possible tragedy of a man (maybe?) being wrongly convicted. There’s no real digging into the father or the mothers enemies, no dialogue with the neighbors or members of the community to suggest why they think or heard happened. They hardly even posit an alternative to Robin, which seems like the minimum an investigative podcast should do. There is very little discovery or investigation that furthers our understanding of the facts and events and what happened to the three victims. However, the hard truth of it is that you don’t learn anything in episodes 2-10 that you didn’t learn in episode 1. I thought this podcast was well produced, sounded good, and had a great and important concept. Please read, understand, and follow the rules.Ĭontact the moderators if you have questions, concerns, or seek a special exemption for any of these rules. Posts and comments should be in easily comprehended English free of excessive profanity, emojis, punctuation, or other signs of a low quality, low effort contributions.Enhanced moderation posts exclude accounts with low karma in this subreddit.No surveys, research studies, polls, fundraisers, or petitions. If you're linking to a podcast, please use the source website or a neutral platform link. Please no Apple, Amazon, Spotify, or other closed platform links.Mentioning your podcast, even indirectly, is considered promotion. Are you a creator? Promotion is allowed, but you must be authorized to promote.Would like to discuss an episode, podcast, or a topic related to true crime podcasts? A standalone post is acceptable if original, quality, and is detailed.Seeking a podcast on a specific case? A standalone post is acceptable if original and a fully fleshed out request.Recommendation posts and comments NOT allowed from low karma and/or new accounts. Providing a recommendation? They should go in the weekly recommendation thread.Looking for a recommendation? They should go in the weekly recommendation thread.New users are not allowed to post or comment recommendations (because of the proliferation of disingenuous creator promotional activity). New users are generally not allowed to create posts. We use account age, total reddit karma, or TCP specific karma to reduce privileges here, which we will call "new users" for brevity. New or low karma users have reduced privileges.shitposts or memes or YouTube or TikTok videos.) YouTube only channels are not generally acceptable. We are not a podcast creator focused community. TCP is for discussions about true crime podcasts primarily by and for podcast listeners. ![]()
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