Crime & Pop Culture Office Hours

S1 E12 American (Rural) Crime Landscapes: The Degenerate Family Beyond the Last Gas Station — The Texas Chain Saw Massacre Franchise

1 h 0 min · 6. heinä 2026
jakson S1 E12 American (Rural) Crime Landscapes: The Degenerate Family Beyond the Last Gas Station — The Texas Chain Saw Massacre Franchise kansikuva

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Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2561761/fan_mail/new] The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) is widely regarded as one of the most influential horror films ever made. Over the past fifty years, it has grown into a sprawling franchise of sequels, remakes, prequels, and reboots that have continually reimagined Leatherface, his family, and the rural landscape they inhabit. But what does this franchise actually tell us about rural America, crime, justice, family, and the cultural meanings attached to place? In this episode of Crime & Pop Culture Office Hours, host Kevin Buckler examines one of popular culture's most enduring and influential portrayals of rural crime and violence. This episode explores The Texas Chain Saw Massacre franchise through the lens of the American Crime Landscapes series. We examine how the films transformed isolated rural spaces into landscapes of fear, how documentary realism blurred the boundary between fiction and reality, and how changing sequels reflected evolving American anxieties from the 1970s through the 2020s. Along the way, we explore the franchise's connections to the Ed Gein case, the symbolic role of gas stations and other transition institutions, intergenerational violence, blood loyalty, degeneracy, conspiracy culture, institutional corruption, urban-rural conflict, and the remarkable ways each film reconstructed rural America to reflect the fears of its own era. More than a horror franchise, The Texas Chain Saw Massacre offers a fifty-year cultural history of how Americans have imagined rural landscapes, family, violence, and justice. Join us as we examine why Leatherface became an enduring cultural icon, how the franchise reshaped the popular imagination of rural America, and why its influence extends far beyond horror cinema. *Part of the American Crime Landscapes series.

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jakson S1 E12 American (Rural) Crime Landscapes: The Degenerate Family Beyond the Last Gas Station — The Texas Chain Saw Massacre Franchise kansikuva

S1 E12 American (Rural) Crime Landscapes: The Degenerate Family Beyond the Last Gas Station — The Texas Chain Saw Massacre Franchise

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2561761/fan_mail/new] The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) is widely regarded as one of the most influential horror films ever made. Over the past fifty years, it has grown into a sprawling franchise of sequels, remakes, prequels, and reboots that have continually reimagined Leatherface, his family, and the rural landscape they inhabit. But what does this franchise actually tell us about rural America, crime, justice, family, and the cultural meanings attached to place? In this episode of Crime & Pop Culture Office Hours, host Kevin Buckler examines one of popular culture's most enduring and influential portrayals of rural crime and violence. This episode explores The Texas Chain Saw Massacre franchise through the lens of the American Crime Landscapes series. We examine how the films transformed isolated rural spaces into landscapes of fear, how documentary realism blurred the boundary between fiction and reality, and how changing sequels reflected evolving American anxieties from the 1970s through the 2020s. Along the way, we explore the franchise's connections to the Ed Gein case, the symbolic role of gas stations and other transition institutions, intergenerational violence, blood loyalty, degeneracy, conspiracy culture, institutional corruption, urban-rural conflict, and the remarkable ways each film reconstructed rural America to reflect the fears of its own era. More than a horror franchise, The Texas Chain Saw Massacre offers a fifty-year cultural history of how Americans have imagined rural landscapes, family, violence, and justice. Join us as we examine why Leatherface became an enduring cultural icon, how the franchise reshaped the popular imagination of rural America, and why its influence extends far beyond horror cinema. *Part of the American Crime Landscapes series.

6. heinä 20261 h 0 min
jakson S 1 E 11 American (Rural) Crime Landscapes: The Landscape that Demanded Blood — The Wicker Man (1973) and Folk Horror kansikuva

S 1 E 11 American (Rural) Crime Landscapes: The Landscape that Demanded Blood — The Wicker Man (1973) and Folk Horror

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2561761/fan_mail/new] The Wicker Man (1973) is widely regarded as one of the greatest folk horror films ever made. Although set on a fictional Scottish island, its themes profoundly influenced American depictions of rural crime, isolated communities, and alternative systems of justice, culminating in the 2006 American remake. But what does The Wicker Man actually tell us about crime, authority, belief, and the power of place? In this episode of Crime & Pop Culture Office Hours, host Kevin Buckler explores one of the most influential portrayals of community, violence, and rural identity in horror cinema. This episode examines The Wicker Man through the lens of the American Crime Landscapes series, exploring how landscape shapes belief, how belief shapes legitimacy, and how legitimacy can transform violence into something viewed as necessary rather than criminal. Along the way, we analyze the origins of folk horror, Sergeant Neil Howie's investigation, the competing moral worlds of Christianity and paganism, the relationship between land and identity, and the remarkable portrayal of an entire community functioning as the offender rather than a single criminal. We also examine why rural isolation has become such a powerful symbol in popular culture and what distinguishes geographic isolation from social isolation. More than a horror film, The Wicker Man offers a compelling meditation on authority, legitimacy, community, and the cultural meanings attached to rural places. Join us as we ask what happens when outsiders enter a landscape governed by a different moral order, why communities can become more frightening than monsters, and how one Scottish film became a foundational influence on American stories about rural crime, justice, and fear. *Part of the American Crime Landscapes series.

29. kesä 202656 min
jakson S 1 E 10 American (Rural) Crime Landscapes: The River with Memory but no Witnesses — Deliverance (1972) and the Myth of the Mountain Man kansikuva

S 1 E 10 American (Rural) Crime Landscapes: The River with Memory but no Witnesses — Deliverance (1972) and the Myth of the Mountain Man

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2561761/fan_mail/new] Deliverance (1972) is a film that for generations has shaped how Americans imagine rural danger. For many viewers, the film is remembered for its famous dueling banjos sequence and its brutal sexual assault scene. But what does Deliverance actually tell us about crime, justice, fear, and rural America? In this episode of Crime & Pop Culture Office Hours, host Kevin Buckler explores one of the most influential portrayals of rural crime and violence in American film history. This episode examines Deliverance's depiction of environmental loss, cultural misunderstanding, masculinity, survival, and moral decision-making. Along the way, we explore the competing worldviews of characters Lewis, Ed, Bobby, and Drew, and consider how the film portrays rural residents, outsiders, local knowledge, law, and social order. We also examine the enduring figure of the rural degenerate (the mountain man), the legacy of the film's famous dueling banjos scene, and the ways Deliverance helped shape popular culture's understanding of the American countryside. More than a wilderness thriller, Deliverance offers a powerful cultural narrative about fear, place, and the relationship between urban and rural America. Join us as we ask what happens when outsiders enter a landscape they do not fully understand, why perceptions of place matter, and how one controversial film became one of the most influential stories ever told about rural crime, justice, and survival. *Part of the American Crime Landscapes series.

22. kesä 202659 min
jakson S 1 E 9 American (Rural) Crime Landscapes: Sheriff Taylor's Small Town America — Mayberry and the Myth of Rural Justice kansikuva

S 1 E 9 American (Rural) Crime Landscapes: Sheriff Taylor's Small Town America — Mayberry and the Myth of Rural Justice

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2561761/fan_mail/new] For generations, "Mayberry" has served as shorthand for a simpler, safer, and more orderly America. But what does The Andy Griffith Show actually tell us about crime and justice? In this episode of Crime & Pop Culture Office Hours, host Kevin Buckler explores one of the most influential portrayals of rural America in television history. Using the classic episode "Crime-Free Mayberry" as a case study, this episode examines how The Andy Griffith Show constructed a vision of rural justice grounded in community trust, informal social control, legitimacy, and local knowledge rather than bureaucracy, punishment, or coercion. Along the way, we explore Sheriff Andy Taylor, Deputy Barney Fife, Otis Campbell, the Darling family, and other iconic Mayberry residents while considering how the series portrayed outsiders, authority, social order, and community life. More than a nostalgic sitcom, The Andy Griffith Show offers a powerful cultural narrative about how Americans have imagined rural crime and justice. Join us as we ask what Mayberry reveals about the relationship between community and law, why legitimacy matters, and how one small fictional town became one of the most enduring symbols of rural America. *Part of the American Crime Landscapes series.

15. kesä 202655 min
jakson S 1 E 8 American (Rural) Crime Landscapes: Shirley Jackson’s The Summer People — Rural Degeneration or Misplaced Fear of the Rural Other? kansikuva

S 1 E 8 American (Rural) Crime Landscapes: Shirley Jackson’s The Summer People — Rural Degeneration or Misplaced Fear of the Rural Other?

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2561761/fan_mail/new] American Crime Landscapes is a series exploring how popular culture imagines crime, justice, deviance, and social control through place. Across novels, films, television, music, and other cultural artifacts, the series examines how urban, suburban, and rural settings become more than locations. They become symbols, myths, and cultural narratives that shape how we understand danger, belonging, and community. In this first episode exploring rural American crime landscapes, host Kevin Buckler examines "The Summer People" by Shirley Jackson. At first glance, the story appears simple: an older New York couple decides to remain at their summer cottage after Labor Day, breaking an unspoken local tradition. But as deliveries stop, communication falters, and familiar routines begin to unravel, the couple becomes convinced that something is wrong. Are the townspeople quietly pushing the Allisons out? Or are the Allisons interpreting ordinary rural realities through a lens of stereotype, anxiety, and urban assumptions? Drawing on criminological concepts of fear, perception, and social control, this episode explores rural ambiguity, outsider status, the mythology of rural degeneration, and the enduring cultural construction of the rural other. Along the way, the podcast connects Jackson’s story to later popular culture texts such as Deliverance and Wrong Turn, showing how rural landscapes have often been portrayed as both idyllic and threatening, welcoming and exclusionary. Because sometimes the most powerful crime story is not about a crime at all. It is about fear. And the stories we tell ourselves about the people and places we do not fully understand. *Part of the American Crime Landscapes series.

8. kesä 202648 min