The Exorcist Within: Where Mental Health Meets Horror Media

The Stanford Prison Experiment (2015): Power Dynamics are Horrifying

56 min · 5 de mar de 2026
Portada del episodio The Stanford Prison Experiment (2015): Power Dynamics are Horrifying

Descripción

This episode covers the movie 'The Stanford Prison Experiment' and the role of a mitigation specialist in the criminal justice system. It delves into the ethical considerations of human experiments, the scale of incarceration, and the impact of legal proceedings on individuals. The discussion also addresses the approach to social justice issues and the importance of humanizing people in the court system. The conversation delves into the Stanford Prison Experiment, exploring participant screening, role assignment, conditions, abuse of authority, lack of intervention, psychological impact, blurring of reality, experimenters' involvement, ethical concerns, and learnings. The experiment's ethical concerns and impact on participants are highlighted, providing valuable insights into the criminal justice system and societal dynamics. Takeaways * The Stanford Prison Experiment movie is a psychological horror based on the actual experiment that occurred in 1971. * The role of a mitigation specialist in the criminal justice system is to humanize individuals and tell their complete life story to instill empathy and provide a fair trial.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de The Exorcist Within: Where Mental Health Meets Horror Media!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

33 episodios

episode The Evil Dead (1981): The Violence of Helplessness artwork

The Evil Dead (1981): The Violence of Helplessness

This episode plunges into The Evil Dead as Jamie and Bobby dissect its filmmaking legacy, its mythic lore, and the raw human fears it exposes. Blending personal stories with cultural insight, the conversation reveals how horror—at its most chaotic and unhinged—becomes a mirror for resilience and the strange comfort found in confronting the dark. THEMES * Indie Origins & Nostalgia The hosts revisit the scrappy beginnings of The Evil Dead, celebrating its DIY spirit and the way its low-budget ingenuity shaped generations of horror filmmakers. * Practical Effects & Innovation From stop-motion grotesqueries to Raimi’s kinetic camera work, the episode highlights how practical effects and creative problem‑solving became the film’s signature terror. * Lore & Mythmaking The Necronomicon, demonic realms, and supernatural rules of the franchise are examined as foundational pillars of modern horror world‑building. * Themes of Isolation, Control & Trauma The conversation traces how the film’s cabin setting, possession sequences, and moral dilemmas reflect deeper psychological struggles—loss of agency, derealization, and the fight to reclaim control. * Personal Reflections Childhood memories, formative scares, and adult rewatch experiences reveal how horror evolves alongside us, becoming a lens for vulnerability, growth, and emotional endurance. * Behind the Scenes Raimi’s chaotic filming techniques, the cast’s physical endurance, and the film’s shifting critical reception are explored with humor and admiration. * Franchise Evolution From Evil Dead 2 to Army of Darkness and modern reimaginings, the episode charts how the series expands its mythology while preserving its feral energy. * Horror as Metaphor The hosts connect the film’s brutality and absurdity to real mental health experiences—hallucination, trauma, resilience—framing horror as a tool for understanding the self

4 de jul de 20261 h 36 min
episode King Sorrow 2025 Part 2 [Novel]: Finding Humanity While Fighting Dragons artwork

King Sorrow 2025 Part 2 [Novel]: Finding Humanity While Fighting Dragons

In this episode, we break down Joe Hill’s King Sorrow through the lens of trauma, power, and the ways people try to survive what stalks them. Instead of treating horror as spectacle, we look at how the story exposes real emotional patterns: sorrow that becomes a force of its own, systems that trap people in cycles they didn’t choose, and the small acts of compassion that keep characters from losing themselves. This conversation focuses on how Hill uses supernatural elements to highlight psychological truths and the social pressures shaping each character’s choices. CORE THEMES * The cabinet of curiosities as a symbol of inherited trauma, temptation, and the weight of history * King Sorrow as a representation of social conditions that feed despair * Acceptance and resilience shown through the Six — and how their coping strategies differ * Ghosts as either supernatural or psychological — exploring how the story blurs the line between haunting and mental projection * The mirror as a tool for confronting uncomfortable truths and distorted self‑perception * Privilege, trauma, and social constraints shaping each character’s emotional and moral development * Intertextual references and Easter eggs that expand Hill’s universe and reinforce recurring themes * The ambiguous ending and what it suggests about whether sorrow can be defeated or only transformed * Character-focused analysis: Colin’s fixation, Gwen’s grounded acceptance, Van’s search for peace, Donna’s determination (and Robbin Fucking Fellows) * Community and connection as the only reliable counterweight to both personal and cosmic threats

24 de jun de 20261 h 30 min
episode The Conjuring 2 (2016): Para‑Complicated & Still Choosing Charity artwork

The Conjuring 2 (2016): Para‑Complicated & Still Choosing Charity

In this episode, Jamie and Ryan (and Ed and Loraine) crack open The Conjuring 2 — not just as a horror film, but as a mirror for belief, partnership, and the strange ways our lives rhyme with the stories we love. We talk about the Warrens on screen versus the Warrens in real life, the almost‑meeting with Patrick Wilson that still lives rent‑free in our minds, and how growing up Catholic leaves a permanent soft spot (or soft terror) for nuns who shouldn’t be in the hallway. This conversation drifts between the paranormal and the deeply human: what we believe, why we believe it, and how those beliefs shift as our visions and goals evolve. We explore the importance of helping others, the “live and let live” ethic that guides both our work and our relationships, and the quiet parallel love story between us and the fictional Warrens — devotion, flexibility, and the willingness to face the dark together. And yes, we also talk about why The Conjuring 2 still hits: the jump scares, the atmosphere, the charm of the cinematic Warrens, and the way Valak taps into a very specific Catholic childhood dread.

30 de may de 202654 min
episode Sick New World (2026)[Music Festival]: The Intersection of Hard Rock, Horror & Mental Health artwork

Sick New World (2026)[Music Festival]: The Intersection of Hard Rock, Horror & Mental Health

In this episode of The Exorcist Within, Jamie opens the door to the haunted hallway where horror, hard rock, and mental health intersect. Through stories of mosh pits, childhood trauma, religious pressure, and the strange comfort of the grotesque, she traces how “dark” art became a lifeline. This is an episode for the ones who were told they were too intense, too emotional, too dramatic, or too strange — and found refuge in distortion, monsters, and the loud honesty of heavy music. MAIN THEMES * Horror and hard rock as emotional exorcisms — places where fear, rage, grief, and identity can finally speak. * Concerts as sacred communal spaces for the misunderstood, the anxious, the neurodivergent, and the kids who never fit the mold. * The shared mythology of horror fans and rock fans — demonized by society, deeply empathetic in reality. * Music as a trauma-processing tool, especially for those raised in silence, shame, or religious constraint. * How protest songs and horror narratives mirror each other in their refusal to look away from suffering. KEY INSIGHTS * Jamie’s journey through trauma, identity, and the healing power of sound — how distortion became clarity. * The way mosh pits function as nonverbal group therapy, built on consent, care, and catharsis. * The emotional milestones marked by bands like System of a Down, Pearl Jam, and Disturbed, each one a chapter in survival. * The tension between religious upbringing and the “forbidden” music that ultimately offered more honesty and compassion. * System of a Down for President?

17 de may de 20261 h 17 min