3 Investigative Podcasts You Need in Your Life

The human voice is a very powerful tool. Babies react to their mother’s voice before they’re even born. Later in life, a certain tone can trigger a beautiful or terrible memory

“When someone is telling you an engrossing story, you can’t stop listening,” said Sandra Bartlett, a veteran radio journalist from Canada.

“Sounds bring you to the place of where the protagonist of your story is,” added Citra Prastuti, chief editor of Kantor Berita Radio, the largest radio network in Indonesia.

At the Uncovering Asia 2018 conference in Seoul, the sound experts shared their recommendations on must-hear investigative storytelling.

Missing & Murdered

In this podcast, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation reporter Connie Walker investigates the disappearances of dozens of indigenous women in Canada. These are cases that were ignored by law enforcement for years, until public pressure forced them to investigate. Bartlett said the episodes takes the audience into the world of marginalized indigenous people and into the individual cases. “It’s an investigation told from the point of view of the victims and their families,” Bartlett said.

In Java, Uncovering the Memories and Mass Graves of 1965

For years it was taboo to even speak about the massacres of 1965 and 1966 in Indonesia, when over half a million people accused of supporting Communism were murdered. In this podcast, reporter Mohammed Ridlo takes the audience to suspected mass graves in Central Java. “It’s a very personal account of the event, and a moving one,” Prastuti said.

Caliphate

This podcast takes the listener on a reporting mystery with The New York Times’s ISIS reporter Rukmini Callimachi as she delves into the terrorist organization’s underworld. She interviews a Canadian man who claims to have joined ISIS and killed people, as well as a young Yazidi girl in Iraq, who was captured and enslaved by an accused ISIS member. The podcast creates an intimacy through audio, letting the audience in on Callimachi’s real-time experience. “There are a lot of surprises in this podcast and you are taken into real-time exploration” said Bartlett.


Alexandra Jegers is a journalist from Germany who has completed the KAS multimedia program. She has studied economics in Germany and Spain and now writes for Handelsblatt, Capital and Wirtschaftswoche.

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