Criminal Behaviorology
Science & Tech
Criminal Behaviorology is the synthesis of criminology and behavior analysis. This podcast reviews areas of importance to both fields and explores new possibilities. Criminal Behaviorology is a podcast for all those interested in crime, psychology, history, and improving the world we live in.
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Criminal Behaviorology - The Exploitation of Crime: Crimesploitation and the Media Misuse of Reality Crime Stories - 11.29.2019

https://anchor.fm/criminalbehaviorology/episodes/The-Exploitation-of-Crime--Crimesploitation-and-the-Media-Misuse-of-Reality-Crime-Stories-e98l6l

Paul Kaplan, PhD and Daniel La Chance, PhD, two experts on cultural criminology, have written on Crimesploitation, where reality programs create a kind of folk wisdom about crime, addictions and correctional work. The dangers of this kind of portrayal, the popularity of these shows and the possible hidden agenda in the development of such entertainment form the basis of this episode. I interview Paul Kaplan to discuss his work on crimesploitation, and cover the different forms of this intriguing phenomenon being broadcast on television programs and internet podcasts.

Show Highlights:

  • What is crimesploitation and how can we distinguish it from other kinds of educational programs on crime, corrections and addiction? Is the nightly news an example? What about this podcast!?

  • The two likely target audiences of crimesploitation.

  • The irony of Neoliberalism and Law and Order Punitivism.

  • The “Addiction Industrial Complex.”

  • Does crimesploitation subtly justify police misconduct, aggressive law enforcement tactics and even vigilante justice?

  • How the program To Catch a Predator, a popular show nationwide, came to its own abrupt end in a case of “punitive burnout.”

  • How such voyeuristic broadcasts may promote an escape from social responsibilities in our modern world.

  • When discussing cases of the wrongly convicted, how the emphasis should be on more than just finding out who is innocent, but instead on the preservation of the rights of criminal defendants.

  • Death as a taboo topic and why it is a factor in our interest in the macabre.

Crimesploitation article by Kaplan and La Chance (2017): https://oxfordre.com/criminology/view/10.1093/acrefore/9780190264079.001.0001/acrefore-9780190264079-e-34

Dr. Kaplan’s page – San Diego University:
https://spa.sdsu.edu/people/spa_profiles/paul-kaplan

The Prison in Twelve Landscapes:
https://www.prisonlandscapes.com/

Op Ed on the Addiction Industrial Complex:
https://www.njspotlight.com/2017/05/17-05-23-op-ed-the-opioid-addiction-industrial-complex-america-s-dirty-secret/

Look up CrimBehav on Facebook: facebook.com/CrimBehav

Criminal Behaviorology on Blogger.

CB Podcast Sites:
https://criminalbehaviorology.podomatic.com https://anchor.fm/criminalbehaviorology https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/criminal-behaviorology/id1441879795?mt=2&uo=4 https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy83MzY4OWFjL3BvZGNhc3QvcnNz https://open.spotify.com/show/5VM7Sjv762u7nb91YWGczZ https://www.breaker.audio/criminal-behaviorology https://overcast.fm/itunes1441879795/criminal-behaviorology https://pca.st/Q38w https://radiopublic.com/criminal-behaviorology-GEv2AZ https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/anchor-podcasts/criminal-behaviorology

Please write a review on any of our podcast sites listed above.
Questions, comments, and requests for transcripts to: [email protected]

Thank you for listening.

Criminal Behaviorology - The Exploitation of Crime: Crimesploitation and the Media Misuse of Reality Crime Stories - 11.29.2019
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The Sylvia Lkens Case in Hoosier Killers: Indiana's Darkest History by Ed Wenck

Criminal Behaviorology
Episode # 58
This is a brief reading of a book chapter focusing on the case. The author is Ed Wenck and the book is from 2012, Hoosier Killers: Indiana's Darkest History.

00:27:11
AI Legal Cases and Crimes of the Future

Criminal Behaviorology
Episode # 60
Title: Artificial Law: AI Legal Cases and Crimes of the Future
The entire presentation can be found on our YouTube channel:
@criminalbehaviorology -

The views of our guests, should he have any, do not necessarily reflect those of Criminal Behaviorology, nor our sponsors.

Donate to Criminal Behaviorology Patreon:
https://www.patreon.com/user?u=81930699

Two articles on the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) now being used in the legal system. How this new technology is impacting our laws, and our rights. In addition, a reading from the book Future Crimes, and how we can prepare ourselves for these new technological realities.

Show Highlights:
Instances of AI creeping into legal decisions in multiple countries.
How AI ‘hallucinates’ to create cases that never existed.
The “Post Office” scandal.
What can be done avoid the dangers of this new technology.
Providing an ethical groundwork for attorneys to use AI.
The Future of Crime: a book by Marc ...

AI Legal Cases and Crimes of the Future
Remembering Phil Zimbardo: Obedience and Authority in the Stanford Prison Study

Criminal Behaviorology
Episode # 59
Title: Remembering Phil Zimbardo: Obedience and Authority in the Stanford Prison Study
The entire interview can be found on our YouTube channel:
@criminalbehaviorology -

The views of our guests do not necessarily reflect those of Criminal Behaviorology, nor our sponsors.

Donate to Criminal Behaviorology Patreon:
https://www.patreon.com/user?u=81930699

In October of this year (2024) Philip Zimbardo passed at the age 91. After a legendary career in psychology, he is known for a very innovative study at Stanford University. A group of students, who were about to get quite a surprise, were randomly assigned be either guards or prisoners. In this episode we look back at Zimbardo’s life and the surprising outcomes of some of his most controversial research on the dynamics of incarceration.

Show Highlights:
The life and career of one Philip Zimbardo.
The BBC special on the Stanford Prison Study. Zimbardo’s inspiration from the Attica Prison uprising.
Students ...

Remembering Phil Zimbardo: Obedience and Authority in the Stanford Prison Study
Halloween Candy Poisoned? Reality and Urban Legend in Halloween Fears

Criminal Behaviorology
Episode # 57
Title: Halloween Candy Poisoned? Reality and Urban Legend in Halloween Fears
The entire interview can be found on our YouTube channel:
@criminalbehaviorology

The views of our guests do not necessarily reflect those of Criminal Behaviorology, nor our sponsors.

Donate to Criminal Behaviorology Patreon:
https://www.patreon.com/user?u=81930699

A reading of two articles on the alleged poisoning of candy. The reality our favorite holiday ritual and fear in the community. Another on a dramatic case of poisoning as extortion out of Japan. Finally, a third article reviews the motivations for urban legends.

Show Highlights:
Fears of poisoned candy
The Tylenol poisonings
The ‘Mystery Man with 21 Faces’ case out of Japan
Motivations for urban tales

Halloween Candy Poisoned? Reality and Urban Legend in Halloween Fears
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