The Fear Archive
A note arrives at the San Francisco Chronicle in August 1969. It begins: This is the Zodiac speaking. He did not wait for the press to invent a nickname. He named himself. He branded himself. He was doing personal marketing before personal marketing was a concept — and he did it while murdering people and daring the public to catch him. The Zodiac killed five confirmed victims, possibly seven. He claimed 37. He was never identified, never arrested, never charged. He encoded his communications in ciphers that took the public 51 years to fully crack. He threatened to shoot children off school buses. He taunted detectives by name. He called radio stations. He wrote to celebrities. He turned the city of San Francisco into a stage and the San Francisco Chronicle into his personal broadcast network. In this episode of The Fear Archive, Amanda and Mike go deep into the full Zodiac case — the confirmed murders from Lake Herman Road in December 1968 through the killing of cab driver Paul Stine in October 1969, the 408-symbol cipher solved in a week by a high school teacher in Salinas, the 340-character cipher that remained unsolved for 51 years, the suspects, the letters, the phone calls, and the detective whose entire career was consumed by a case that never closed. They also cover the Zebra murders — a parallel series of killings happening on the same San Francisco streets at almost the same time, solved, largely forgotten, and in certain ways more disturbing precisely because there are answers. And they go deep on David Fincher's Zodiac, one of the greatest films of the 21st century and one of the most meticulous portraits of obsession ever committed to film. Also: the man who made an exploitation film to catch the Zodiac using a motorcycle raffle and an ice cream truck full of cops. Robert Graysmith, who started as a political cartoonist and ended as the most famous amateur investigator in American true crime history without ever being able to close the case. The New York Zodiac copycat who terrorized the city 20 years later from a room in his mother's apartment in Brooklyn using homemade zip guns. And the question this case refuses to let go of — what does uncaught evil do to a culture? What does the refusal of resolution produce? The names of the confirmed dead: David Faraday, Betty Lou Jensen, Darlene Ferrin, Cecilia Sheppard, Paul Stine. They were not ciphers. They were not mythology. They were people on ordinary nights in ordinary places. Hosted by Amanda Kagiwada and Michael Ryan Assip. Executive produced by Cassie Jozefov. A Violet Hour Media production. LISTENER WARNING: This episode contains graphic violence, descriptions of murder, discussion of threats against children, and a significant quantity of what Amanda calls epistemological horror — the specific terror of not knowing and never knowing. Popular Topics Include: Zodiac Killer, Zodiac Killer unsolved, David Fincher Zodiac film, Zodiac 2007 film, Robert Graysmith Zodiac, Zodiac ciphers, 408 cipher solved, 340 cipher solved, Lake Herman Road murders, Blue Rock Springs murders, Lake Berryessa attack, Paul Stine murder, Darlene Ferrin, Betty Lou Jensen, David Faraday, Zebra murders San Francisco, San Francisco Chronicle Zodiac letters, Zodiac suspects, Arthur Leigh Allen suspect, New York Zodiac copycat, Heriberto Seda, Sleep My Little Dead, unsolved serial killers, San Francisco 1960s, counterculture San Francisco, Fear Archive podcast, true crime horror, horror podcast, Amanda Kagiwada, Michael Ryan Assip, Violet Hour Media Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices [https://megaphone.fm/adchoices]
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