• Hecuba's Revenge: Justice or Murder in Greek Mythology?
    Jun 30 2026

    After the fall of Troy, Queen Hecuba discovers that her youngest son has been murdered by the man entrusted with his protection.

    You've heard the story. Now hear the case.

    In this episode of Folklore Forensics, we reopen one of the most disturbing cases in Greek mythology. We investigate the murder of Prince Polydorus, reconstruct the betrayal that followed the fall of Troy, and examine the violent revenge that transformed a grieving mother into a suspect herself.

    The facts seem straightforward. A trusted guardian betrays his oath. A prince is killed. A mother strikes back.

    But the deeper investigators looked, the more complicated the case became.

    Was Hecuba seeking justice?

    Or did one crime simply create another?

    Drawing on the ancient tradition surrounding Queen Hecuba, King Polymestor, and the aftermath of the Trojan War, this episode explores why audiences have argued over the case for more than two thousand years.

    Because some stories survive not because they provide answers.

    They survive because the question never goes away.

    Folklore Forensics reopens myths, legends, and folklore as historical criminal cases. Listener discretion is advised.

    Written and hosted by Danielle Christmas and produced by Audio Ellis.

    Follow / subscribe for weekly storytelling investigations.

    Follow the show on Instagram @folkloreforensics

    Case suggestions and research inquiries: folkloreforensicspod@gmail.com

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    45 mins
  • Medusa’s Persecution: Greek Mythology's Most Misunderstood Monster
    Jun 23 2026

    What if Greek mythology remembered Medusa as a monster because it forgot what happened to her first?

    You've heard the story. Now hear the case.

    Medusa is one of the most recognizable figures in Greek mythology: a monster with snakes for hair whose gaze could turn men to stone. But the oldest versions of the myth tell a very different story.

    Before she became a monster, Medusa was a priestess serving in Athena's temple. According to later sources, she was assaulted by Poseidon in a place that should have been sacred and safe. Yet the consequences did not fall on the perpetrator. They fell on her.

    In this episode of Folklore Forensics, we reopen the Medusa case and examine the surviving evidence from Greek mythology, classical literature, ancient history, and artistic tradition. We investigate the transformation that made Medusa a monster, the hero narrative that elevated Perseus, and the questions that artists and storytellers have continued asking for nearly three thousand years.

    Was Medusa truly the villain of the story? Or did Greek mythology preserve a very different kind of crime beneath the monster tale we inherited?

    Because sometimes the most enduring monsters begin as victims.

    Folklore Forensics reopens myths, legends, and folklore as historical criminal cases. Listener discretion is advised.

    Written and hosted by Danielle Christmas and produced by Audio Ellis.

    Follow / subscribe for weekly storytelling investigations.

    Follow the show on Instagram @folkloreforensics

    Case suggestions and research inquiries: folkloreforensicspod@gmail.com

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    34 mins
  • Season 2 Trailer: The Crimes of Greek Mythology
    Jun 9 2026

    You've heard the story. Now hear the case.

    Season 2 of Folklore Forensics investigates the crimes hidden inside Greek mythology. From murders and disappearances to betrayals, conspiracies, and acts of revenge, we reopen the ancient cases that became myths, legends, and folklore.

    This season, we'll examine the stories of Medusa, Cassandra, Persephone, Philomela, Hecuba, Orestes, Lamia, and other figures whose cases have shaped Western storytelling for thousands of years.

    What happened? Why did these stories survive? And what do they still reveal about us today?

    New episodes weekly.

    Folklore Forensics reopens myths, legends, and folklore as historical criminal cases. Listener discretion is advised.

    Written and hosted by Danielle Christmas and produced by Audio Ellis.

    Follow / subscribe for weekly storytelling investigations.

    Follow the show on Instagram @folkloreforensics

    Case suggestions and research inquiries: folkloreforensicspod@gmail.com

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    1 min
  • The Crimes of Clytemnestra: Murder and Justice in Greek Mythology
    May 5 2026

    A king returned home from war expecting celebration. Instead, he walked into a murder ten years in the making.

    This week, we reopen one of the most infamous domestic killings in classical mythology: the murder of King Agamemnon by his wife, Queen Clytemnestra. After sacrificing their daughter Iphigenia to launch the Trojan War, Agamemnon returned home victorious, bringing with him a mistress "war prize" named Cassandra and the expectation that the past had been forgiven. It hadn't.

    What followed was not a crime of passion, but a carefully staged execution planned across a decade of silence, resentment, and inherited blood feuds.

    Content warning: child sacrifice, domestic murder, revenge killing, ritual violence, and references to intimate partner violence. Listener discretion is advised.

    Folklore Forensics presents narrative investigations inspired by myth, legend, and historical context.

    Folklore Forensics reopens myths, legends, and folklore as historical criminal cases. Listener discretion is advised.

    Written and hosted by Danielle Christmas and produced by Audio Ellis.

    Follow / subscribe for weekly storytelling investigations.

    Follow the show on Instagram @folkloreforensics

    Case suggestions and research inquiries: folkloreforensicspod@gmail.com

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    39 mins
  • Rumpelstiltskin: The Child Trafficker of Fairytale Lore
    Apr 28 2026

    A desperate bargain inside a locked spinning room should have saved a miller’s daughter from execution. Instead, it ends years later in a nursery, when a strange man arrives to collect payment for a debt the young queen thought she’d escaped: her firstborn child.

    This week, we reopen the case of Rumpelstiltskin: a mysterious broker who appears in moments of economic desperation, transforming worthless straw into gold, at a price that escalates from jewelry to a child. We reconstruct the timeline from the miller’s lie that started the crisis to the final confrontation inside the royal nursery, then examine the darker pattern beneath the tale: how debt, coercion, and power imbalances may have enabled systems where desperate families were forced into impossible bargains, and where the cost of survival could become a child.

    Content warning: coercion, exploitation, child endangerment and abduction. Listener discretion is advised.

    Folklore Forensics presents narrative investigations inspired by myth, legend, and historical context.

    Folklore Forensics reopens myths, legends, and folklore as historical criminal cases. Listener discretion is advised.

    Written and hosted by Danielle Christmas and produced by Audio Ellis.

    Follow / subscribe for weekly storytelling investigations.

    Follow the show on Instagram @folkloreforensics

    Case suggestions and research inquiries: folkloreforensicspod@gmail.com

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    42 mins
  • The Wendigo Murders: Indigenous Folklore and True Crime History
    Apr 21 2026

    Three hunters vanished into the winter wilderness. And the man who returned with their remains claimed he was no longer human.

    In the winter of 1879, a hunting party returned to Rat Portage, Ontario, reduced to three survivors and carrying the story of a man who had killed and preserved his companions in the deep snow. Similar deaths would follow across the Great Lakes region, isolated camps discovered with missing hunters, butchered remains, and witnesses claiming that starvation alone could not explain what had happened.

    Today, we reopen the case of the Wendigo executions, examining whether these deaths represent survival cannibalism, starvation-induced psychological collapse, or the cultural recognition of a condition once feared across northern communities. When authorities arrived, they gathered evidence that blurred the line between crime and possession, leaving behind one of the most disturbing clusters of wilderness killings in North American history.

    Content warning: cannibalism, starvation, murder, execution, and cultural violence. Listener discretion is advised.

    Folklore Forensics presents narrative investigations inspired by myth, legend, and historical context.

    Folklore Forensics reopens myths, legends, and folklore as historical criminal cases. Listener discretion is advised.

    Written and hosted by Danielle Christmas and produced by Audio Ellis.

    Follow / subscribe for weekly storytelling investigations.

    Follow the show on Instagram @folkloreforensics

    Case suggestions and research inquiries: folkloreforensicspod@gmail.com

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    35 mins
  • Boudica: The Warrior Queen Who Burned Down Rome
    Apr 14 2026

    Three Roman cities burned. Tens of thousands died. And the woman who led the attack had once been publicly flogged by the empire she destroyed. Entire settlements were destroyed as Roman forces struggled to contain a rebellion led by a widowed queen whose lands had been seized, whose daughters had been assaulted, and whose authority had been stripped under imperial law.

    Today, we reopen the case of Queen Boudica, examining whether her uprising represents resistance against colonial brutality, calculated retaliatory warfare, or one of the earliest documented examples of mass-casualty vengeance carried out under the banner of justice. When the rebellion collapsed, Boudica vanished from the historical record, leaving devastation that reshaped Roman policy across Britain for generations.

    Folklore Forensics presents narrative investigations inspired by myth, legend, and historical context.

    Folklore Forensics reopens myths, legends, and folklore as historical criminal cases. Listener discretion is advised.

    Written and hosted by Danielle Christmas and produced by Audio Ellis.

    Follow / subscribe for weekly storytelling investigations.

    Follow the show on Instagram @folkloreforensics

    Case suggestions and research inquiries: folkloreforensicspod@gmail.com

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    34 mins
  • Snow White: A Fairytale's Dynastic Poisoning
    Apr 7 2026

    A teenage queen collapsed beside a half-eaten apple—no pulse, no breath, and yet her body refused to decay. Witnesses reported multiple prior attacks: laces drawn tight enough to suffocate, a poisoned comb pressed into her hair, and a final act of deception carried out under the appearance of kindness. Each attempt grew more deliberate, more intimate, and more lethal.

    Today, we reopen the case of Princess Sophia and Queen Elise, examining whether the story remembered as Snow White preserves the record of a dynastic elimination campaign carried out within a royal household. Was this a tale of jealousy and vanity, a struggle for succession, or a calculated series of murder attempts designed to remove a political rival before she could inherit power?

    Folklore Forensics presents narrative investigations inspired by myth, legend, and historical context.

    Folklore Forensics reopens myths, legends, and folklore as historical criminal cases. Listener discretion is advised.

    Written and hosted by Danielle Christmas and produced by Audio Ellis.

    Follow / subscribe for weekly storytelling investigations.

    Follow the show on Instagram @folkloreforensics

    Case suggestions and research inquiries: folkloreforensicspod@gmail.com

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    55 mins