My Dance with the Dark
Updated | By Diane Macpherson
What drives someone to commit the most fundamental taboo – murder?
In episode three of 'To Catch a Serial Killer', true-crime author Janine Lazarus and Jacaranda FM news editor Marius van der Walt speak to respected clinical psychologist Leonard Carr (pictured below) about the Norwood serial killer and about the mind of a psychopath.
Carr was the clinical psychologist Janine quotes at length in her new book, ‘BAIT to Catch a Killer’. He made his name doing expert commentary
during the Oscar Pistorius trial.
Importantly, Carr was the person
Janine turned to when her crime reporting became too much.
In this episode we will also explore questions such as:
• Is there such a thing as someone who is pure evil?
• How does a psychopath think?• Why do so many women have a fascination for the true crime genre and with the dark side of things?
• What drove Janine to break so many rules as a journalist in the manhunt for Kobus Geldenhuys?
Listen below.
Meanwhile, episode two last week explored whether news reporting had become better or worse in South Africa since the early 1990s?
When Janine Lazarus worked in news in the early 90s, there was no Internet, no access to mobile phones, no social media. She arguably broke just about every rule in newsroom ethics as she became increasingly obsessed with serial killer Kobus Geldenhuys.
While traditional reporting relies on hard facts, gonzo journalism takes
readers or listeners a step inside the mind and feelings of the
reporter as the story unfolds.
It’s written without objectivity, often
including a reporter as part of the story using a first-person
narrative.
In Janine's case, the police used her flat as a surveillance
point at the height of Norwood serial killer Kobus Geldenhuys’ reign of terror. They also used the journalist
to try to lure the killer.
In episode two our hosts are joined by Anton Harber, the Caxton
Professor of Journalism at the University of the
Witwatersrand. Harber has a 35-year career in journalism, media
management and training.
They look at how sourcing news and how news
coverage itself has changed since the early 90s and ask if new communication
technologies have revitalised the public sphere - or simply become the
commercial tool for an increasingly closed and undemocratic news media?
In episode one, Lazarus, Dr Gerard Labuschagne (pictured below) - former head of the police’s
psychiatric unit and Marius van der Walt
discuss and explore the characteristics of serial killers that cut
across almost all of them.
They're very often family men with sinister secrets. They take care of
abused animals; can be a community’s much-loved babysitter; open support
groups for drug addiction.
Are people born serial killers, or is it their upbringing that makes them into what they become? Listen to the discussion and then make up your own mind.
If you prefer to listen via Apple, Google or Spotify, click on the relevant button below.
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