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Stories Fables Ghostly Tales Podcast

Stories Fables Ghostly Tales Podcast
Stories Fables Ghostly Tales Podcast
Último episódio

1208 episódios

  • Stories Fables Ghostly Tales Podcast

    The Butcher of Aberdeen | Katherine Knight & John Price (Australian True Crime)

    18/1/2026 | 32min

    Listener discretionThis is a confronting episode. It involves graphic violence.I keep the tone respectful, but it’s still a hard listen — so please take care of yourself while you’re hearing it.If you or someone you know needs support in Australia, you can contact 1800RESPECT (24/7).💜💜💜Welcome Legends! 💜💜💜Tonight’s episode is one of the heaviest I’ve ever covered on Stories Fables Ghostly Tales — a case from Aberdeen, New South Wales (NSW) in the Hunter Valley, known widely in Australian true crime as “The Butcher of Aberdeen.”This is the story of Katherine Knight and John Price, and the events that unfolded across late February 2000 into March 1, 2000 — a 2000 murder case that remains one of the most infamous and confronting examples of New South Wales crime in modern memory.And I want to be really clear before you hit play:This episode isn’t here to sensationalise anything. It’s here to bear witness — and to show how domestic violence and coercive control can build quietly, behind closed doors, until the consequences become irreversible.What we cover in the episodeIn this one, The Tale Teller takes you through the full arc — not just the headlines — including: A grounded look at Aberdeen NSW and the Hunter Valley setting, and why this case shook a small town so deeply Who John Price was, and what people around him noticed in the lead-up The history of Katherine Knight, and the escalating violence that came before this relationship The relationship dynamic — intimidation, control, threats, and the warning signs of coercive control The final days before the murder, including the AVO / restraining order and why leaving is often the most dangerous moment The night of the crime (Feb 29 / March 1, 2000) and what investigators walked into The court outcome in NSW, including life imprisonment without parole The aftermath, and why this remains one of the most infamous Australian homicide cases ever recorded A closing reflection on why domestic violence should never be treated as a “private matter” Katherine Knight was later held at Silverwater Women’s Correctional Centre, and this case remains a grim reference point in True Crime Australia — not because of spectacle, but because it forces a conversation people still avoid.The Town of Aberdeen Australia:https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Aberdeen_NSW_banner.JPGThank you for being here, truly.💜💜💜💜💜💜💜For supporting the show, for listening with care, and for backing storytelling that doesn’t treat real people like entertainment.I’m your Tale Teller…and I’ll see you in the next one. 🖤

  • Stories Fables Ghostly Tales Podcast

    KERRYN TATE: 46 Years Too Late

    11/1/2026 | 41min

    What happens when a case goes cold — but because time got there first....Because in true crime, some stories don’t stay unsolved due to a lack of effort.They stay unsolved because the world simply didn’t have the tools to hear what the evidence was trying to say.This week on Nocturne Files: True Crime, we step into the case of Kerryn Tate — last seen in daylight in Mount Lawley in 1979, and found the following morning in bushland near Karragullen.For decades, her case lived inside a gap.A small window of time where everything changed… and nobody could explain how.Cold cases aren’t only about what we don’t know.They’re about what stops moving.Leads that run out.Witnesses who forget.Details that soften at the edges.A file that stays open — but never progresses.And yet, sometimes… the future shows up.Not with a confession.Not with a dramatic reveal.But with science — patient, methodical, unromantic science — finally catching up to a question that’s been waiting for years.This episode explores that shift.Not with sensationalism or shock-value detail, but by sitting with what it means when an answer arrives late — and how a name can change the weight of silence, even when there’s no courtroom ending.Because some truths don’t arrive loudly.They arrive slowly.Piece by piece.Over decades.That’s all I’ll say for now.Thank you for being curious.And thank you for being willing to sit with the unresolved parts — with care.💜💛 You're all amazing, and thank you so much for your fantastic support! 💜💛Grateful as always you living legends!!! And here's to more True Crime Episodes just around the corner....— Your Tale Teller

  • Stories Fables Ghostly Tales Podcast

    The Joan Bernal Case: No Body, No Crime?

    04/1/2026 | 46min

    🕯️ A Question at the Heart of This EpisodeThere’s a quiet question that sits at the centre of this week’s episode.What happens when someone disappears — and never comes back — but there’s no crime scene, no physical proof, and no clear ending?In true crime, these are known as no-body cases. And they’re some of the most unsettling stories we encounter, not because they’re dramatic, but because they’re incomplete.No-body cases aren’t about what we can see.They’re about what stops happening.Phone calls that never come.Routines that never resume.Lives that simply… pause, and never restart.For a long time, silence is treated as uncertainty. But as years pass, that silence begins to take on a different weight. It stops feeling neutral. It starts to feel deliberate — or interrupted.This episode explores that shift.Not with graphic detail or courtroom theatrics, but by sitting with the idea that absence itself can tell a story, if we’re willing to listen long enough.No-body cases ask us to rethink what “evidence” really means. They challenge our instincts. And they remind us that some truths don’t arrive loudly — they arrive slowly, over time.That’s all I’ll say for now.Thank you for being curious.And thank you for being willing to sit with the unanswered.You're all amazing, and thank you so much for your fantastic support!— Your Tale Teller

  • Stories Fables Ghostly Tales Podcast

    Solved: The Murder of Louisa Dunne (Bristol Cold Case)

    28/12/2025 | 43min

    Alright my absolute legends of the lantern-lit lane 💜 Welcome! As we all wobble toward this coming Wednesday — New Year’s Eve — I wanted to pop my head out of the shadows, dust off the trench coat, and give you a proper Patreon cuddle in words. Because you lot aren’t just “supporters”… you’re my mates. You’re the campfire crew. The ones who stick around when the story goes quiet and the air gets heavy. And speaking of heavy… This week’s episode is the kind that doesn’t just tell a story — it waits with you. It’s the Bristol Cold Case: Louisa Dunne, murdered in 1967, solved 58 years later. This is one of those cases that starts in a place so ordinary it feels sacred: a street with routines, neighbours who noticed, a woman whose life had a rhythm to it. The sort of life that says “nothing bad should happen here.” And yet… it did. What shook me most isn’t just the crime itself — it’s the sheer length of the silence afterwards. Decades of unanswered questions. A family living inside a question mark. A community that never quite forgot. And then, finally… the future arrives with the tools to read what the past preserved. It’s a story about memory, patience, and the kind of justice that turns up late… but still matters when it does. I’ve told it with one rule at the centre: Louisa is not a headline. She’s a person. A life. A name that deserves to be spoken with respect. Now—before the fireworks start popping and someone’s uncle tries to cook sausages like it’s an Olympic sport… I want to wish you, genuinely, a Happy New Year for this coming Wednesday. May 2026 bring you more peace than panic, more belly laughs than doomscrolling, and fewer mysterious noises in the hallway at 2am. (And if you do hear something… well… you didn’t hear that from me. Good luck. Godspeed.) Thank you for being here. Thank you for being the kind of people who show up for stories with heart — and for the humans inside them. And a special, warm, slightly dramatic bow to my VIP party in the dark: Matto Star — my Oud Night Tea Titan: you majestic baroque-loving pillar of this whole operation. Lezzasaurus Rex: gym-powered warlord energy, ready to suplex 2025 into the bin. Mayah — Queen of Cats: regal, watchful, and absolutely judging the year from a sunbeam. Sangeetha — The Seer: already knows how my New Year’s is going to go and is politely not telling me. And to my epic splendiferous Earl Grey Enforcers, and all tiers thereafter, my deepest (lowest bow) thanks! You lot keep the lantern lit. If you listen to this episode, tell me: What’s the one detail that stuck to your ribs? The kind you can’t shake even after you’ve turned the lights back on. Happy Pending New Year, my friends. I’m your Tale Teller — and I’ll see you in the next tale. 🕯️✨

  • Stories Fables Ghostly Tales Podcast

    The Death of Lana Clarkson: Phil Spector’s Silent Symphony

    21/12/2025 | 36min

    Some True Crime stories announce themselves loudly.This one doesn’t.It begins quietly — with a late shift, a famous name, and a decision that, on the surface, feels ordinary. But beneath it sits a Murder Investigation that would stretch across years, courtrooms, and headlines, becoming one of the most unsettling Celebrity Crime cases in modern memory.In this episode of Stories Fables Ghostly Tales, we examine the death of Lana Clarkson and the long road that followed — a case forever tied to Phil Spector, the legendary Beatles Producer, architect of The Wall of Sound, and one of the most influential figures in Music History.But this is not a story about musical genius.It’s a story about power, pressure, and what happens when Hollywood’s glow fades into something much darker.On the night she died, Lana Clarkson was working at the House of Blues — a working actress doing what so many in Hollywood do to stay afloat. By morning, she was dead inside Pyrenees Castle, Phil Spector’s fortress-like mansion, and the world was left trying to understand what had happened behind those gates.As the case unfolds, this episode guides you through: The Hollywood Murders narrative that quickly took shape in the media How Forensic Science became central to challenging the initial defence Why this case turned into years of tense Courtroom Drama, including a mistrial and a second jury How fame, legacy, and public perception collided with evidence and testimony This isn’t sensational storytelling.There’s no spectacle here — only careful reconstruction, verified facts, and the quiet weight of accountability.Because when a case involves a music icon, a guarded estate, and a woman whose life was reduced to a headline, the most important thing is getting the story right.If you think you know the Phil Spector case — listen closely.There are details here that rarely receive the attention they deserve.Thank you all for your amazing support!!! It's almost that time of year and I'm excited for the new year ahead legends!!! Again you are all amazing and thank you for the love!! 💜💜💜

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