How did the Jack the Ripper case shape the way true crime is covered today? Lucy Worsley investigates how these shocking killings created a world of entertainment based on murder. Show more True ...
In episode one, Lucy investigates how the Jack the Ripper case shaped the way we cover true crime today and looks at how the shocking killings created a world of entertainment based on murder.
A group of ten young media enthusiasts, aged 14- to 18, spent a couple of days at the Emirates Photography Society in Sharjah learning the basics of poster design, specifically the ones used for film.
“As you get this free gift of God through peace, through prayer, you have an obligation to exemplify the teachings of Christ,” Carter said in a lesson on one of the recordings shared with Scripps News ...
Political and other prognosticators are busy predicting the future, as usual. Never mind calculating how wrong they have been in the past. Our desire to know what’s coming sometimes overcomes ...
Queen Victoria was furious with then-Prime Minister Lord Salisbury over his government's failure to bring Jack the Ripper to justice during his infamous 1888 killing spree. The revelation comes ...
Queen Victoria scolded the then Prime Minister Lord Salisbury for the failure to catch Jack the Ripper. Historian Lucy Worsley discovered the dressing-down in a telegram the monarch sent to the PM ...
Rather than rehash for the umpteenth time all of the details of the case, or offer the same kind of analysis that every political commentator can be relied upon to make, it is to the lessons for ...
But this is not Victorian Whitechapel - and the man is not Jack the Ripper, the maniac in question ... who found a 200-year-old wanted poster in the annals of the British Library.
Light rain that's worse than any tropical storm. We invented it to ruin English people's holidays and ensure your windscreen wipers are constantly on the go on our roads, which brings us to ...