I’m up to the “someone else ends up dead” twist early on and I’m hooked. In the first couple episodes the reporter gets sucked into a drama in an Alabama town and we meet the hyper eccentric John B. McLemore. It’s like Louis Theroux meets Chris Cooper’s John Laroche character from the movie Adaptation.
You can binge on the whole 8 episodes right now.
Spoiler tags are probably appropriate until everyone has a chance to listen to the whole story.
The John character almost drove me away from this series in chapter one. He’s eccentric and amusing, but his voice was such a big part of chapter one, and there were so many indications that he might be totally full of shit, that I almost gave up on listening. I stuck with it only because of where it came from (the people who bring us This American Life and Serial). Chapter two, which is as far as I have listened, brought in more voices and ensured that I will stick with it.
When I posted earlier, I had listened to half of chapter 2. I just got back from a walk during which I finished chapter 2 and began chapter 3. The story took a sharp turn at the end of two. It has become a very different story, and I will listen until the end.
I’ve listened to the entire series and I really liked it. I found it to be a really melancholy, gothic story and I found myself sympathetic to most of the people, even some of the “villains.” I’ll wait until more people have finished to say more than that. The one thing that bugged me was Brian Reed’s little lift at the end of almost every sentence.
Sarah Koenig was interviewed on Wait Wait, Don’t Tell Me and said she’s working on a story that may become the 3rd series of Serial. When asked when the 3rd series is coming out, she said “When I’m good and ready.” It seems she had minimal involvement in S-Town.
One thing I was left wondering which didn’t seemed to be mentioned was how much did this guy use the internet. He did have folks he emailed back and forth, that much was evident.
If he joined online communities he probably got banned from most of them.
I finished listening over the weekend. I thought it was a great work of audio art, but I found myself today agreeing with this Vox article. It’s a great piece of work that probably should not have been released.
I have to agree–it’s a great story that sucks you in right from the start, but the reveals at the end were a little TMI for me.
I did like the aspect of the story that shed light on the horologist “community” and the kind of detective work needed to restore incredibly old and complicated timekeeping devices.