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‘Keep Me Safe All Through The Night’: Bloody Disgusting’s Bleeders DIEgest Episode #12 Now Available!

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Bleeders DIEgest is an original scary story podcast delivered as a fully immersive theatrical experience. From your speakers, straight into your psyche. Our tales are guaranteed to terrify the bravest of souls (even the dead ones). Select episodes feature horror celebrities, so you never know who will be narrating your next favorite story.

This week’s issue is called Keep Me Safe All Through The Night, written by Krsy Fox.

Layne finally meets her dream man, but his son begins to scare her with his sleepwalking. She starts to realize the thing to fear may not be her stepson’s night terrors but what he’s waking up to communicate with. See if you’re brave enough to listen below!

Available now on Apple, Spotify, and everywhere you get your podcasts.

Follow Bleeders DIEgest on:

Instagram: @bleedersdiegest
Twitter: @bleedersdiegest 

Podcasts

Sweeney Todd’s Bloody Path from Old Timey ‘Zine to the Screen [Guide to the Unknown]

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Maybe you haven’t thought about your good friend Sweeney Todd in a while, or maybe you have. The 2007 movie is a bit of a memory, though a fond one – it has a healthy 86% on Rotten Tomatoes, for what it’s worth. But 2023’s Broadway revival starring Josh Groban, who your mom thinks is “so talented” (she’s right!), was enough of a hit that its run was extended.

It appears we’re in a bit of a Sweeneyssaince.

For the uninitiated, Sweeney Todd is the story of a barber who kills his customers and disposes of the bodies by passing them off to pie shop owner Mrs. Lovett, who uses them as a special ingredient. But there’s more below the trap door.

Sweeney Todd isn’t just a late 70s musical that turned into a movie; it started as a penny dreadful called The String of Pearls: A Domestic Romance (author unknown), told week-to-week in the 1840s. Penny dreadfuls were essentially fiction zines featuring serialized stories that were usually horror-based and cost a penny, leading to the very literal nickname.

The String of Pearls differs from the more well-known Sweeney Todd plot in that it follows the investigation of a missing persons case that leads to the reveal of Sweeney and Mrs. Lovett’s arrangement, as opposed to the more modern iteration which treats audiences to the duo hatching their homicidal plan and then giving the worst haircuts ever. What a delightfully wild reveal that must have been if you were a reader in Victorian London after weeks of wondering what had become of the missing sailor carrying a string of pearls to deliver to a lovely girl.

Kristen and Will discuss the history and future of Sweeney Todd and works inspired by it this week on Guide to the Unknown. Subscribe on Apple PodcastsSpotify, or wherever you get your podcasts to get a new episode every Friday.

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