Arden
On December 25th, 2007, movie star and heiress Julie Capsom crashed her car into a tree in Northern California, walked into a nearby clearing, and vanished, leaving behind a male torso in her trunk. 10 years later, reporter Bea Casely and private detective Brenda Bentley are going to reopen the case. Each has a personal tie to the story. Each thinks they know what happened. And each knows the other is going to screw this whole thing up. Join Bea, Brenda, and the rest of the Good People at Wheyface Radio as they attempt to answer once and for all: what happened to Julie Capsom?
Trailers
Only Listen to the First Season
Dec 15
The second season is way to drawn out with several episodes that barely move the plot forward.
Love the show, hate the mouth sounds
07/13/2023
I really enjoy this show so far, starting from season 1. I enjoy the comic relief and the whole premise. But I am REALLY struggling with the mouth sounds and swallows when one of the radio hosts. It makes it listening very difficult for someone with misophonia. Hope it improves with the seasons.
Not Nearly Funny as It Thinks It Is
Jun 3
And also trivializes the extent that executives and others sexually harassed talent in the 90s and the 00s. At the end, one of the "hosts" explains why they named their detective agency "Arden". The explanation makes no sense, but their conclusion is that Everything is Connected. The writers apparently think this means that everything can be included in their hour long episodes. It is hard to be hateful because the acting and production are good. Perhaps the characterization of Brenda and Bea are is a little simplistic, and the fact that 75% of the humor is about the leads, one the hardened cop who needs an answer and the reporter looking for a big break (Podcast Style!), and the awfully Big Daddy sponsor of said podcast Andy Wheyface (white face!?!). That is tiresome and there is just too much including the dumb parody ads like (seriously) one for "Oral Emojis". It is amusing enough until the 11th episode when it is revealed there is True Crime that the show is about. Distantly but just enough the disappearance of Julia Capsom is ultimately related to a Harvey Weinstein-like director's attempted sexual assault of the teenage starlet. Trivializing because the daughter of an established star married to a rich and powerful lawyer was not the target of Weinstein and his like, but more ordinarily actresses who had climbed a rung or two up in Hollywood and had much more to lose. Their probably can be a silly even funny podcast about Me too, but we are meant to take Julia and Ralph's story as a tragedy and her reaction to her predicament as sad. At the mushy core, there is a meet cute and a story about what Ralph's dad said to his mom at their meet cute. (By the way Mrs Montgomery is a visa overstayer from the 1980s. This show cannot go an episode without including some talking point.) Instead getting annoyed about the lack of substance in the podcast, this illustrates the Arden point: everything is connected, so anything can be brought up. It is not just tonal shifts between episodes and within each episode (somehow the couple are both the most saintly teenagers ever and are thought so by friends) but how the whole podcast lives in am imaginary 50s style era of plot points, motivations and even slang and the jokey voices of the larger casts. Julia is called a "debutante" by her friend and Ralph (who has a doomed affair with a Ralph?) is called a "science whiz". I would not be surprised if the car with the torso was a Malibu. It seems the writers are a bit self-aware of this, but it reinforces what the podcast is really about. It is not a parody, not a mystery, but a cozy form of of true crime fanfic that happens to include Me-too as a plot point. To use a different line from the podcast, "It was made in 2006, so it was about 9-11." I think Arden is really about 9/11 and I hope this is addressed by the second season.
Great Crime Podcast Parody
Feb 15
Really enjoy this parody of the usual crime podcast show. I like the banter between to Bea and Brenda it reminds me of old screwball comedies. While it is a parody the crime they are investigating does have me intrigued so it work on the mystery level as well as the comedy level.
About
Information
- Channel
- CreatorWheyface Radio
- Episodes77
- Seasons3
- RatingClean
- Copyright© 2018
- Show Website
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