It was the glamorous seventies.
Indoor smoking is still many years away, and smoking is even allowed at high altitudes in airplanes.
Criminal patterns have changed.
In the past, when the police discovered a murder case, they would investigate relatives, friends, colleagues, etc., to kill for vendetta, no matter what, they had to find a motive.
It was in this era that the killing of unmotivated strangers increased. In fact, there were earlier Jack the Ripper. It's just the changes in the economic and political situation that led to the emergence of serial killers one after another in the 1970s. As Ed Kemper said, there are no less than thirty-five people like him in North America.
In this case, the FBI appeared BSU, the Behavirol Science Unit. Anyone who likes "Criminal Minds" knows BAU, and BSU is its predecessor. Mind Hunter is about its creation and development, and it is not easy to be confused.
Those terms that appear every few minutes in Criminal Minds, serial killer, profile, stressor, etc., are defined and used by these few people.
Unlike "Criminal Minds", Mind Hunter is not a case per episode, and it will be solved every case.
Mind Hunter isn't even violent, save for some crime scene photos. The most violent scene in the first season was probably the scene where Richard Speck, who killed eight health school students, threw his bird at the fan.
The first criminal to be interviewed, Ed Kemper, looked harmless, well-spoken, soft-spoken and polite.
Both male protagonists have guns, and almost every episode has to see them take out their guns and hand them over to the guards, but they never fired once.
The whole show is just talk, big chunks of dialogue. However, when I looked at it, my eyes were still wide open, for fear of missing something.
The first season is over in one day, but this show is worth watching again and again. The second season airs on August 16.
Expect.
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