But as for true crime, in my opinion, I'm sure there's something bizarrely fascinating about seeing the dark depths into which human nature can plunge. Also, perhaps it may be a good way to become more aware of the potential red flags that people with good intentions may be likely to miss.
Since Gypsy Rose's arrest in 2015 for her involvement in her mother's murder, there have been numerous documentaries, docuseries, interviews, and made for TV mini-series about the Louisiana native.
The history of serial killers in Texas includes The Candy Man, The Eyeball Killer, The Butcher of Elmendorf, The Broomstick Killer, The Sunday Morning Slasher, and The Servant Girl Annihilator
"Butchers of the Bayou", currently trending on Hulu, details the horrors of a decade where Louisianians lived in terror as not one, but two serial killers hunted the neighborhoods and bayous of South Louisiana.
There is a little-known slice out of Lafayette and Acadiana's history that is so horrifying and gruesome, it makes the Charles Manson murders seem like The Mickey Mouse Club...seriously.