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These days liars and con artists are popular fodder for documentaries, TV shows, blockbuster movies and best-selling books, but they’re a particularly ripe subject for podcasts, which allow for high-level investigative reporting and in-depth storytelling. Here we highlight 14 must-listen podcasts — including AARP’s The Perfect Scam — that feature shocking stories of truly reprehensible criminals, as well as valuable lessons on how you can lower your risk of becoming a fraud victim.
Sweet Bobby
In this gripping investigative series from Tortoise Media, reporter and host Alexi Mostrous uncovers the story of Kirat Assi, a London-based radio presenter who got wrapped up in a nearly decade-long case of catfishing. For years, she was deceived by a scammer who pretended to be a handsome cardiologist named Bobby and who invented up to 60 other characters to cement the ruse. The victim eventually started a friendship by phone and text, then it grew into love — but somehow Bobby was never able to meet with her in person. Get ready to be shocked when you find out who Bobby really was. Netflix is now working on a docuseries based on the podcast that will be called Sweet Bobby: My Catfish Nightmare.
The Perfect Scam
With 200 episodes and counting, AARP’s weekly podcast The Perfect Scam shines a light on the very real schemes that affect millions of Americans every year, host Bob Sullivan focuses on the everyday people who have been victimized, allowing listeners to get to know them as they tell their own stories. Among the most absorbing is a two-part story featuring journalist Benita Alexander, who was swept off her feet by a renowned surgeon and was in the midst of planning their lavish wedding when she discovered that he was a complete fraud (episodes 131 and 132).
Scamanda
Amanda Christine Riley was a twentysomething Christian mommy blogger when she announced that she’d been diagnosed with Hodgkin’s lymphoma and started a blog called “Lymphoma Can Suck It” to document her progress and raise more than $100,000 to pay for her treatments. The problem? She lied about the whole thing! In this eight-episode podcast from Lionsgate Sound, which ranked as the most-shared show on Apple Podcasts in 2023, journalist Charlie Webster breaks down the years of fraud that led a young mom to break bad. Soon you can also check out a four-part docuseries on the scam, premiering on October 9 on ABC, and streaming the next day on Hulu.
The Six Billion Dollar Gold Scam
A coproduction of the BBC World Service and the CBC, this detailed nine-part series pulls back the curtain on one of the biggest gold-mining scams in history. In 1995, a Canadian mining company called Bre-X announced that it had discovered massive deposits of gold deep in the Indonesian jungle, and they quickly lined up investors. But when the company’s chief geologist died under suspicious circumstances after falling from a helicopter, the whole scheme came crashing down, and those investors lost their savings. In search of the truth, Suzanne Wilton traveled to Borneo, the Philippines and even a small town in Alberta, Canada, that got swept up in the excitement of the gold rush.
Believe in Magic
Is there anything worse than scamming kids? How about scamming seriously ill ones? In this new 7-episode BBC podcast series, Jamie Bartlett, host of The Missing Cryptoqueen (see below), tells the story of Megan Bhari, a 16-year-old girl who has been diagnosed with a brain tumor but creates an inspiring charity, Believe in Magic, that helps out other kids with cancer. It got so much attention that the boy band One Direction and Prime Minister David Cameron took notice. When amateur sleuths begin to suspect that Megan was not actually sick, they hired a private detective to do some digging and uncovered many shocking truths. The end result proves to be much darker, twistier and sadder than you might first imagine.
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