A powerful Hollywood producer, a woman, was reaching out to hire an up-and-coming gig worker, like a trainer or a stylist. Maybe it takes a polished crime podcast for people to believe a mother deserves to know what happened to her slain son, but it shouldn’t. “Maybe this time, if I came in with two white journalists, they’d actually listen to me,” she says. At one point Wells visits the police precinct, something she’s done before, but this time she has Invisible Institute reporters in tow. Somebody makes you consider why true crime investigative pieces about black victims are so few and far between. Wells shares the captivating story of her persistent efforts to unearth the truth about her son’s killing and to grieve and heal as a mother. With the help of civil rights reporters from the Invisible Institute, on Somebody, she investigates the crime, re-interviewing witnesses, collecting hospital records, and gathering security-camera footage from the scene. Shapearl Wells felt like Chicago police knew more than they were telling her about the shooting death of her 22-year-old son, Courtney Copeland. ( Topic Studios, The Intercept, the Invisible Institute, iHeartRadio, in association with Tenderfoot TV) From an actor’s ruminations on the industry to comedians developing new material, from an examination of racial segregation in schools to a black mother’s search for her son’s killer, from the origins of the modern far-right to the mysteries of Hollywood, here are Rolling Stone’s picks for the best of the year. The pandemic produced new types of audio series, too, offering tips to help us cope or cook our way through the dark days of isolation, and revealing how creative types were dealing with their own unexpected downtime. For those still working outside of home, distraction and comfort in trusty listening material may have been more sought-after than ever. Instead, podcasts soundtracked evenings making dinner, weekends doing chores, long walks to stretch our legs, or drives to clear our heads. For people suddenly working remotely, there were no more commutes. Like so many other parts of our lives, podcasts were different this year.
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