Episodes

  • The Wendigo Executions (Case File #231)
    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.

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    Follow / subscribe for weekly storytelling investigations.

    Folklore Forensics is written and hosted by Danielle Christmas and produced by Audio Ellis.

    Follow the show on Instagram @folkloreforensics

    Case suggestions and research inquiries: folkloreforensicspod@gmail.com

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    35 mins
  • The Boudica Massacre (Case File #189)
    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.

    -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Follow / subscribe for weekly storytelling investigations.

    Folklore Forensics is written and hosted by Danielle Christmas and produced by Audio Ellis.

    Follow the show on Instagram @folkloreforensics

    Case suggestions and research inquiries: folkloreforensicspod@gmail.com

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    34 mins
  • The Snow White Poisoning Case (Case File #286)
    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.

    -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Follow / subscribe for weekly storytelling investigations.

    Folklore Forensics is written and hosted by Danielle Christmas and produced by Audio Ellis.

    Follow the show on Instagram @folkloreforensics

    Case suggestions and research inquiries: folkloreforensicspod@gmail.com

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    55 mins
  • The Delphi Conspiracy (Case File #22)
    Mar 31 2026

    For over a thousand years, rulers, generals, and empires trusted a single voice: the Oracle of Delphi. Kings crossed borders because of her words. Wars were launched. Dynasties fell. From King Croesus of Lydia to the legend of Oedipus and the sacrifice of Leonidas at Thermopylae, the prophecies of Delphi shaped the ancient world.

    Today, we reopen the case of the Pythia of Delphi—examining whether the ancient Greek oracle was a genuine prophet, a political instrument, or the centerpiece of one of history’s longest-running strategic manipulations.

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

    -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Follow / subscribe for weekly storytelling investigations.

    Folklore Forensics is written and hosted by Danielle Christmas and produced by Audio Ellis.

    Follow the show on Instagram @folkloreforensics

    Case suggestions and research inquiries: folkloreforensicspod@gmail.com

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    51 mins
  • The Changeling Trials (Case File #156)
    Mar 24 2026

    Ireland’s ‘changeling’ killings: when fairy folklore justified child murder and torture. In 19th-century Ireland, some families believed that illness or disability wasn’t sickness at all. Instead, the fairies had stolen the real child (or spouse) and left a changeling behind: an imposter wearing a familiar face. And if the victim wasn’t “truly human,” then violence could be reframed as salvation.

    This episode reopens a true-crime history investigation into Irish changeling folklore and the real deaths it helped justify. Through two cases involving the killing of a child and the torture and murder of an adult woman, this episode examines the intersection of Irish fairy belief, poverty, medical ignorance, domestic violence, and ableism, as well as what modern medicine suggests these victims were actually experiencing.

    Content Warning: child murder, domestic violence, ableism, and torture. Listener discretion is advised.


    -------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Follow / subscribe for weekly storytelling investigations.

    Folklore Forensics is written and hosted by Danielle Christmas and produced by Audio Ellis.

    Follow the show on Instagram @folkloreforensics

    Case suggestions and research inquiries: folkloreforensicspod@gmail.com

    Show More Show Less
    45 mins
  • The Red Hood Predator (Case File #225)
    Mar 16 2026

    In the Black Forest of medieval Europe, young women begin vanishing on the forest paths between village and cottage—always on errands of care, always near dusk. Their bodies are found days later in the underbrush. Their grandmothers are found strangled in their beds. And one detail repeats like a signature: missing baskets, missing red hoods, missing scarves—taken as trophies. Through pattern analysis, witness accounts, and a long-delayed medieval manhunt, the “wolf” becomes something far more frightening than a storybook monster: a methodical human predator using disguise, voice mimicry, and the landscape itself as a weapon.

    Content warning: violence against children and elderly women, predatory behavior, murder, and disturbing material. Listener discretion is advised.

    Follow / subscribe for weekly storytelling investigations.

    Until next time, stay curious—and always follow the evidence.


    Folklore Forensics is written and hosted by Danielle Christmas and produced by Audio Ellis.

    Follow the show on Instagram @folkloreforensics

    Case suggestions and research inquiries: folkloreforensicspod@gmail.com

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    1 hr and 6 mins
  • The Minotaur Murders (Case File #13)
    Mar 10 2026

    For years, Athens was required to send seven young men and seven young women to Crete as tribute—fourteen victims per cycle who were said to vanish inside the labyrinth beneath the palace and be devoured by the Minotaur. Modern analysis suggests the monster may have served as narrative cover for something far more human: ritual sacrifice, executions of foreign captives, or killings carried out within the Cretan royal court, with the labyrinth functioning as an architectural space designed to isolate victims and conceal evidence.

    Content warning: violence, human sacrifice, and disturbing material. Listener discretion advised.

    Follow / subscribe for weekly storytelling investigations.

    Until next time, stay curious—and always follow the evidence.


    Folklore Forensics is written and hosted by Danielle Christmas and produced by Audio Ellis.

    Follow the show on Instagram @folkloreforensics

    Case suggestions and research inquiries: folkloreforensicspod@gmail.com

    Show More Show Less
    52 mins
  • The Baba Yaga Cannibal Killings (Case File #117)
    Mar 3 2026

    Deep in Russian forests, in times of famine and social upheaval, children sent to gather food or seek help from distant relatives frequently vanished without trace. Local accounts attributed these disappearances to a cannibalistic witch living in a mobile dwelling. Modern forensic analysis suggests these cases may involve a combination of exposure deaths, predation by desperate hermits or outcasts, and the deliberate abandonment of children by families unable to feed them—with the Baba Yaga legend providing psychological cover for both perpetrators and survivors.

    Content warning: child harm, violence, and disturbing material. Listener discretion advised.

    Follow / subscribe for weekly storytelling investigations.

    Until next time, stay curious—and always follow the evidence.


    Folklore Forensics is written and hosted by Danielle Christmas and produced by Audio Ellis.

    Follow the show on Instagram @folkloreforensics

    Case suggestions and research inquiries: folkloreforensicspod@gmail.com

    Show More Show Less
    46 mins