Square Peg
In 2017, Frank Carver, a one-eyed English septuagenarian and somewhat lovable provocateur, accidentally emailed someone he’d never met. That someone was Rob Collins, a kind and reliable 43-year-old suburban dad from Virginia. That email would change both of their lives. The email was meant for a British blogger. But instead, Rob heard the story. Frank said that when he was in the Army, over 50 years ago, he was viciously assaulted by a fellow soldier, and that attack left him nearly blind at 17 years old. Oh, and the alleged attacker was Frank’s older brother. But the crime was “covered up,” and while Frank had already sued the British military over this—the case even reached the country’s High Court of Justice—only recently had Frank decided to bring criminal charges against his brother. Meanwhile, Frank had been diagnosed with cancer and felt he was running out of time to right this wrong. So despite having no journalistic experience and some doubts about the details of the story, Rob decides to investigate the case and help Frank in his quest for justice. Two years and many detours—including a psychiatric evaluation in Berlin—later, Rob’s self-funded quest for the holy grail of getting justice for Frank concludes... and Rob, struggling with what it all meant, realizes he gave Frank what he really needed. That’s how, in the end, it wasn’t Frank’s son or his siblings, but Rob, suburban dad from Virginia, who officiated and was the only speaker at Frank’s funeral in 2019. And the big question remains: who was left more affected by this relationship, Rob or Frank? ”…riveting enough that I couldn’t stop listening, and am so glad this show has completely dropped, I would have died if I wouldn’t have been able to binge it.” — Lauren Passell, Podcast the Newsletter “This is what David felt like when he slew Goliath. The Square Peg podcast, an indie production, has released an eight-episode narrative series that is comparable to—and in many ways —better than any production a large podcast network could create, develop, finance and produce.” — Frank Racioppi, EarWorthy
Episodes
Worth the listen
12/22/2023
I have not written many podcast reviews, but felt compelled to write something about this one. The story is well told and captures the essence of fate, several times over. The host is endearing and you can’t help but root for him. I wonder if he realizes, in the end, that he and Frank are the same in that neither can no for an answer. Very well done!
There is no story here except borderline unethical journalism
Apr 18
Man with no podcasting experience is taken for a ride by an aging narcissist. In his desperation to generate some kind of story podcaster engages in reckless amateur therapy with family he has known for a few weeks, wildly indulging his subject who is clearly an unreliable narrator. I feel so bad for this podcasters family, he seems to have wasted a lot of their time and money.
46774567 stars!!
08/27/2023
It grabbed me and never let me go.
Beautifully told story
06/10/2023
This one grabbed me right off the bat. The serendipitous and ultimately deep connection between the storyteller and his subject moved me deeply. I had a complicated family with deep divisions at times so I empathized with all the various people who were featured. I felt I knew and could understand Frank - his struggles. A profoundly human story.
About
Information
- CreatorLUSID48
- Years Active2K
- Episodes9
- RatingExplicit
- Copyright© 2022 LUSID48
- Show Website
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