A Q&A with Criminal's Phoebe Judge
Criminal's artwork is by illustrator Julienne Alexander.
Award-winning journalist Phoebe Judge is the presenter of Criminal, a Radiotopia-backed podcast about an eclectic variety of crimes told through the eyes of the perpetrators, victims and those affected.
Probably like many, I discovered Criminal through hit crime podcast Serial (Criminal launched first), and began to binge on it for its warm-toned production, air-tight storytelling and the window it opened into off-beat worlds populated by everybody from female serial killers to end-of-life companions to leprosy patients.
This Q&A with Judge - extracted from our initial phone interview for a newspaper feature I wrote about the advancement of Australian podcasting - is the second in a small series of interviews I’m publishing on this blog about the culture, aesthetics, technology and economics of podcasting.
It details some of Judge's experiences making Criminal, which she does alongside co-creator Lauren Spohrer.
ME: How much time do you allocate to making an episode of Criminal?
JUDGE: It really depends on the episode. Some episodes are pretty simple in the sense that I just interview one person and it’s a rather straight-forward story and a very personal story and so it goes a lot faster.
Other episodes take a lot more time because we’re interviewing multiple people but we’re also doing a lot of fact-checking.
Because we’re a show that deals with crime, we need to get things right. So we spend an awful lot of time on the phone with county clerk officers, trying to get court records and such.
The simplest episode, from start to finish (takes)… about 25 hours, and that’s the simplest. The most complex episode takes much more time - way over 40 hours.
But I still have a full-time job in public radio. We do this on the night and weekends. Lauren is full-time now but I would say anywhere from 25 to 70 hours on an episode is fair.
What are the major stages involved in the creation of each episode of Criminal?
We share the work rather evenly.
The first step is coming up with a story idea and that involves a lot of research and looking around and always having our eyes open. We’re constantly looking for interesting stuff.
Then we’ll check with the other person and say, ‘Do you think this might be a good idea?’ Then we’ll reach out to the person and do a pre-interview - Lauren usually does those. It’s usually around half an hour to 45 minutes. We just talk to the person and see if they’re a good fit, if they’re willing to do this and to get some background information.
Then we’ll make a question line and that question line is kind of the guide map for what I’ll use when we conduct the interview.
Most of the time we also have to find a studio for the guest to go into, so we’re doing all logistics. Then I most often will do the interview with the guest and it usually lasts about an hour per guest. We’ll then transcribe the interview, save a copy of it and one of us will take the lead on writing the episode – the first draft.
“Well, I completely agree that anybody can do this, in terms of the equipment and what you need. For more than a year, we made Criminal in a closet....”