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Our minisodes are a break from true crime where we discuss Michelle's internet search history, which is teeming with all things weird and wonderful. We are joined by special guest Paige to explore the topic of voyeurism in connection with The Voyeur's Motel, a nonfiction book written by the journalistic icon, Gay Talese, which was only just released in 2016 but was decades in the making. Naturally, our gang on the pod is highly skeptical of this wannabe 'Kinsey-like' sexologist and has some thoughts... Tune in to find out why!
The actual book is compilation of Talese’s reportage of a Colorado man by name of Gerald Foos, a father of two, who with the help of his wife Donna a nurse, created a motel in the late 1960s engineered to spy on his guests and to satisfy his voyeuristic tendencies. The book is also largely written from Gerald Foos personal manuscripts, which he referred to as “The Voyeur’s Journal”, which Talese described as handwritten entries on yellow legal pad notepaper with ‘near perfect penmanship’ whereby Foos catalogued and studied his guests noting his approximation of their heights, weights, education, and backgrounds and above all their sex lives and sexual proclivities all in the name of what he Foos noted as the good for 'sexual research.' But while
Books Referenced
The Voyeur's Motel
The Monster of Florence: A True Story
Documentaries/Shows
The Watcher
By Scarlett Davis4.5
2323 ratings
Our minisodes are a break from true crime where we discuss Michelle's internet search history, which is teeming with all things weird and wonderful. We are joined by special guest Paige to explore the topic of voyeurism in connection with The Voyeur's Motel, a nonfiction book written by the journalistic icon, Gay Talese, which was only just released in 2016 but was decades in the making. Naturally, our gang on the pod is highly skeptical of this wannabe 'Kinsey-like' sexologist and has some thoughts... Tune in to find out why!
The actual book is compilation of Talese’s reportage of a Colorado man by name of Gerald Foos, a father of two, who with the help of his wife Donna a nurse, created a motel in the late 1960s engineered to spy on his guests and to satisfy his voyeuristic tendencies. The book is also largely written from Gerald Foos personal manuscripts, which he referred to as “The Voyeur’s Journal”, which Talese described as handwritten entries on yellow legal pad notepaper with ‘near perfect penmanship’ whereby Foos catalogued and studied his guests noting his approximation of their heights, weights, education, and backgrounds and above all their sex lives and sexual proclivities all in the name of what he Foos noted as the good for 'sexual research.' But while
Books Referenced
The Voyeur's Motel
The Monster of Florence: A True Story
Documentaries/Shows
The Watcher