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- Serial is an investigative podcast hosted by Sarah Koenig that examines one story per season told week by week. The first season looks at the 1999 murder of Hae Min Lee in Maryland. The second season looks at the story of Sergeant Bowe Bergdahl who was held prisoner in Afghanistan by the Taliban. The third season looks at criminal cases in the Cleveland justice system.
- TV Series
- Nice White Parents is a podcast about the six decade old relationship between white parents and the public schools in their neighborhoods. It is hosted by Chana Joffe-Walt.
- Dozens of women seeking to become mothers came to a fertility clinic at Yale. A (five-part) narrative series about the shocking events that unfolded there.
- A story of lies, family, America, and what Covid revealed, as well as what it destroyed.
- Follows the story of a Tennessee county that was arresting and illegally jailing children for almost two decades.
- Kim Barker, a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative reporter for The New York Times, revisits an unsolved murder that took place while she was in high school in Laramie, Wyoming, nearly 40 years ago.
- From the makers of Serial and The New York Times, a five-part series about allegations of election fraud, and the powerful forces that fuel them.
- Sarah Koenig examines the story of Adnan Syed who was convicted of the 1999 murder of his ex-girlfriend Hae Min Lee. She gives some background of the case and begins her investigation by following up on several dormant leads and rechecking alibis.
- Sarah Koenig discusses Adnan Syed and Hae Min Lee relationship which was kept secret from their parents. After Lee, ends the relationship her friends speculate about Syed's behavior some thinking him he was fine with it while other think he was angry.
- Sarah Koenig examines the testimony of 'Mr. S" who discovered the body of Hae Min Lee three weeks after she disappeared. The detectives who question him find his account suspicious before a background check reveals a number of bizarre behaviors.
- Sarah Koenig examines how an anonymous tip leads detectives to search Adnan Syed's phone records. They, then, track down a marijuana dealer Jay Wilds who claims that Syed confessed to killing Lee and then forced him to help bury the body. The police claim to cooperate the story with cell phone records.
- Sarah Koenig drives the route that prosecutors claim Adnan Syed took to day of Hae Min Lee's murder. She goes from the high school to the Best Buy parking lot where Jay claims he was shown the body. Although the time-line is possible, there are questions about whether call logs and cell tower pings back Jay's story.
- Sarah Koenig examines the evidence against Adnan Syed. This includes Jay's testimony, a palm print on a map, and cell phone records. She speculates on how the murder could have taken place if Syed was responsible, but she also examines some evidence that does not quite fit the prosecutor's narrative.
- Sarah Koenig talks to Deirdre Enright the Director of Investigations for the Innocence Project at the University of Virginia School of Law. She and a group of students examine the case against Adnan Syed and argue that the evidence against him remains thin.
- Sarah Koenig looks more closely at Jay's account of events. She talks to jury members and a homicide detective who tells them the investigation was better than average. Koenig and a producer meet with Jay, but he refuses an interview. They speak to one of Jay's friends and are left with further questions.
- Sarah Koenig considers new information about a crucial call in the case. She discusses contradictory stories about a pay phone in front of Best Buy. She also talks to a witness who claims to have spoken to Hae Min Lee on the day of the murder and another witness who say Adnan Syed in the library the day of the murder.
- Sarah Koenig examines whether anti-Muslin sentiment factored into the trial of Adnan Syed. The prosecution argues that Syed would flee to Pakistan if bail was granted and that the murder was a religiously-motivated honor killing. His first trial ends in a mistrial, but the second trial goes poorly with Syed 's lawyer perhaps mishandling the case.