Serial Serial
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Serial returns with a history of Guantánamo told by people who lived through key moments in Guantánamo’s evolution, who know things the rest of us don’t about what it’s like to be caught inside an improvised justice system.
Serial Productions makes narrative podcasts whose quality and innovation transformed the medium. “Serial” began in 2014 as a spinoff of the public radio show “This American Life.” In 2020, we joined the New York Times Company. Our shows have reached many millions of listeners and have won nearly every major journalism award for audio, including the first-ever Peabody Award given to a podcast.
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S04 - Ep. 1: Poor Baby Raul
Maybe you have an idea in your head about what it was like to work at Guantánamo, one of the most notorious prisons in the world. Think again.
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S04 - Ep. 2: The Special Project
In 2002, an elite interrogation team secretly staged Guantánamo’s most elaborate intel operation — to try to get a single detainee to talk.
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S04 - Ep. 3: Ahmad the Iguana Feeder
An Arabic-speaking airman is sent to Guantánamo to translate, and soon finds himself at the center of a major scandal. Part 1: Suspicion swallows evidence.
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S04 - Ep. 4: The Honeymooners
The case against a young airman gets even weirder when the government pulls in two fresh investigators. Part 2: A bride, an FBI agent, and a polygraph machine.
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S04 - Ep. 5: The Big Chicken, Part 1
A new warden comes to Guantánamo and decides to make some changes. A prison’s a prison, he thinks. How hard could this be?
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S04 - Ep. 6: Part 2, Asymmetry
After the worst happens at Guantánamo, the warden tries to explain it to the outside world – and to himself.
Customer Reviews
Interesting Letdown
Fantastic journalism, interesting to hear multiple viewpoints regardless of how much I disagree with them, however there is some revisionist history to the situation. It’s hard to find the line of where to apply modern ideals to moments in history.
Still loving Serial!
This podcast is still fantastic. I came back for season four about Guantánamo Bay. This isn’t something I know a ton about because of my age, but I have been fascinated. Especially loved the last episode with family members of 911 victims and their quest for peace and humanity. Thank you serial!!
Guantanamo epilogue
It feels like a lost season of a show I stopped watching. What has happened since 2001 and where we are now is so eye-opening. I really think this podcast is going to be one of the historic sources they will study about the early 2000s, perhaps in a college class, and it will make them just as uncomfortable as we feel now about Vietnam and other conflicts of the 1960s.