14 - The Black Dahlia: Elizabeth Short, Media Myth, and an Unsolved Murder
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概要
In January 1947, the body of a young woman was found in a vacant lot in Los Angeles. Before investigators could piece together what happened, the press had already given her a name: The Black Dahlia.
Her real name was Elizabeth Short.
In this episode of Kat Has Questions, we take a slower, more careful look at one of the most infamous unsolved murders in American history. Who was Elizabeth before the headlines? How did media obsession shape the investigation? And why did dozens of suspects emerge — yet none ever lead to justice?
We explore the cultural moment, the press frenzy, the most discussed suspects, and the uncomfortable truth at the center of the case: that sometimes a story becomes louder than the evidence.
This episode isn’t about shock value. It’s about how a woman became a symbol — and what was lost in the process.
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About the show
Kat Has Questions is a curiosity-driven podcast about real stories that sound unreal — from unsolved crimes and strange history to the quietly weird corners of human behavior.
New episodes every week.
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Sources & Further Reading
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Vault: Black Dahlia Case Files
Los Angeles Times Archives (1947 coverage)
Gilmore, John. Severed: The True Story of the Black Dahlia Murder
Harnisch, Larry. The Black Dahlia Files (historical analysis & investigative reporting)
LAPD Historical Case Summaries
Smithsonian Magazine: Coverage on the Black Dahlia case
Biography.com: Elizabeth Short biography
Newspapers.com archival records
(Note: This episode prioritizes verified historical records and avoids sensationalized retellings.)
🎵 Music: “Scrunchy” by Night Drift
Licensed by Uppbeat
License code: CAHWZR9T33BFXDNY
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Contact
📩 kathasquestionspod@gmail.com
Instagram: @KatHasQuestions
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