The Hurricane Tapes
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| The Hurricane Tapes | |
|---|---|
| Genre | True crime |
| Format | Podcast |
| Cast and voices | |
| Hosted by | Steve Crossman |
| Music | |
| Theme music composed by | Nick Thorburn |
| Production | |
| Production | Joel Hammer |
| Length | Variable (27–53 minutes) |
| Publication | |
| No. of episodes | 13 |
| Original release | 14 January – 1 April 2019 |
| Provider | BBC World Service |
| Reception | |
| Ratings | 3/5 |
| Related | |
| Website | www |

The Hurricane Tapes is a 13-part BBC World Service podcast series, released in 2019, discussing in detail the case of Rubin Carter, an American-Canadian middleweight boxer, wrongfully convicted twice of murder in 1966 and 1976 respectively and later released following a petition of habeas corpus in 1985 after serving almost 20 years in prison.
Presenter Steve Crossman and producer Joel Hammer use interviews with survivors, case notes from the original investigations, and 40 hours of tapes recorded with Carter by author Ken Klonsky for his 2011 book The Eye of the Hurricane and recordings of Vincent DeSimone, the lead detective.[1][2]
According to Sarah Larson in The New Yorker The Hurricane Tapes skilfully shows how the violence central to Rubin Carter’s meandering life led to a boxing career—and how quickly boxing took him from pariah to hero and back again.[3] The exhaustive amount of research was praised upon its inclusion in The Atlantic 50 best podcasts of 2019.[4] The Daily Telegraph called it “a superb listen”.[5]