Bad Women: The Blackout Ripper  By  cover art

Bad Women: The Blackout Ripper

By: Pushkin Industries
  • Summary

  • The streets of wartime London are pitch black and the darkness offers cover to a murderer every bit as terrible as Jack the Ripper. During one awful week in February 1942 he viciously attacks women night after night. But the victims of the so-called Blackout Ripper are now all but forgotten.

    In this season of Bad Women, historian Hallie Rubenhold and criminologist Alice Fiennes share new details from the archives to tell the extraordinary and moving stories of the women who died and why their deaths were swept from view.

    And don't miss season one of Bad Women about a cold case like no other. In the fall of 1888, five women were brutally murdered in the slums of London. But everything you think you know about Jack the Ripper and those murdered women is wrong. Hallie reconstructs the lives of the five victims - revealing the appalling treatment they faced as women in the 1880s, and completely overturning the accepted Ripper story.

    2024 iHeartMedia, Inc. © Any use of this intellectual property for text and data mining or computational analysis including as training material for artificial intelligence systems is strictly prohibited without express written consent from iHeartMedia
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Episodes
  • Bad Women: The Ripper Retold coming October 5
    Sep 21 2021

    In late 1888, five women were brutally murdered in a slum neighbourhood of London. The violent killer earned himself a nickname - Jack the Ripper. But everything you think you know about the murders and those murdered women is wrong.

    In a new 15-part series, historian Hallie Rubenhold tells you the real story of those victims and how they came to be in the path of a serial killer - completely overturning the Ripper story we've been told up until now.

    Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    5 mins
  • S1 E1: The Ripper Myth
    Oct 5 2021

    Jack the Ripper's victims were prostitutes murdered while selling sex on the streets of Whitechapel - that's what historian Hallie Rubenhold thought when she started researching the crimes. She was wrong.  

    As she looked into the case, she discovered much of the familiar Ripper story is totally false. But by challenging that myth and trying to tell the true stories of the murdered women, Hallie attracted a storm of criticism. 

    Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    30 mins
  • S1 E2: Welcome to Whitechapel
    Oct 5 2021

    London on August 6th, 1888 is one of the greatest cities on Earth, but the Whitechapel neighborhood is a byword for poverty, violence, and vice. Jack the Ripper will slaughter his victims here.

    Join Hallie Rubenhold on a tour of this slum - with its busy markets, rowdy pubs, filthy lodging houses, and crowded police cells - and meet the real women who will soon cross paths with the Ripper.

    Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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    33 mins

What listeners say about Bad Women: The Blackout Ripper

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the hack's podcast loves this podcast

there is a lot work in this podcast serious and it shows, we love WW2 and serial killers..perfect

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fantastic

I really enjoyed this podcast so far. I heard a clip while listening to redrum and came straight over. The author and "narrator" is fantastic. She enjoys telling the stories of the women she has uncovered. the audio clips really set the tone I like the background music and voices. thank you for a great podcast.

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Jack met his Match and he isn't even in her Top 5!

I was fascinated by Jack the Ripper since I was a child and first read about him in a school library book called, "Strange but True: Stories to Horrify". I walked down the Jack the Ripper display at Madam Tussaud's alone because my family didn't want to see it. My best friend and I snuck into a showing of "From Hell" we were too young to buy tickets for.

And then, some where in early high school, I saw the famous photos of Elizabeth Stride and Mary Kelly. Suddenly, Jack wasn't spooky fun anymore, suddenly the women he killed were real people to me, I was disgusted with myself and done with him.

I went on to develop I deep passion for true crime, especially when explored through the eyes and voices and experiences of women. Jack the Ripper, obviously, came up A LOT, and I was always a little disappointed when he did.

To me, Jack the Ripper became a mark of adolescence in the true crime genre. Partly because of where he fit in my own life and partly because of the way I saw his crimes portrayed. There was this vile fascination with the sex, the gore, the Mystery. So I often tuned out when he was brought up.

Then I heard an interview and pitch for Bad Women on another podcast. Suddenly, I was back in that school library, wanting to know more and for the first time in decades I didn't tune out. And I am so Glad I didn't.

This is the story I have been craving since I first saw those pictures. This is the Ripper story, Finally, in the hands of a grown-up.

Move over Sherlock Holmes, Jack the Ripper has finally met his match. And the best part is, he isn't even in her Top Five.

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Great new view of a well tread story

I've listened to 7 episodes so far and am really enjoying hearing a true crime story from the victims. So often, we only hear and analyze and retell the murders story. In the case of Jack the Ripper we really don't even have the murders side (as we don't know who they were) so all we are really hearing is speculation and profiles. This podcast gives the stories of the victims and the period in which they lived. It's based on actual people and is very compelling. I definitely recommend.

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A informative look at the women Jack killed

4 stars - It was really good

Trigger Warnings: suicide, death, gore, alcoholism, death of Children, miscarriage and stillborn, grief, domestic violence, homelessness, starvation, prostitution

This podcast series discusses the lives of the five women who were brutally murdered by Jack the Ripper. A lot of the information presented in this series was covered in Rubenhold’s book The Five, but she also includes interviews with Ripperologists, sex workers, her own experiences since writing the book, and much more.

I enjoyed this podcast series a lot. Yes, this is just an abbreviated version of her book but the interviews in this really brought a new look at these women. I really loved how she provided all the different points of views on who Jack the Ripper is and why he might have been killing these women, even the views that were directly negative about her work. I loved how frank she was about the negativity she has experienced since the book came out.

If you are interested in the women who were killed, not who Jack might have been, I highly suggest this podcast series or her book The Five.

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interesting, different view on whitechapel

I like the way the author highlights the women instead of the murderer. This isn't a classic who-dunnit, it tells the stories about the women in whitechapel, trying to survive in a country with strict Victorian rules for (especially poor) women. If you are afraid of feminist viewpoints, this is probably not for you, on the other hand, maybe it opens your mind :-).

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