Episodes

  • The “Pseudo-Family” Structure in Women’s Prisons: Domestic Roles as Coping and Support Systems
    May 3 2026
    Explore the distinct social organization in women’s correctional facilities, where inmates frequently form pseudo-families—adopting roles as mothers, fathers, siblings, and grandparents—to recreate domestic support structures absent in the outside world.
This episode contrasts these relational networks with the gang-based hierarchies typical in men’s prisons and examines the psychological, emotional, and adaptive functions of pseudo-family dynamics in mitigating the pains of imprisonment.
Essential listening for correctional professionals, criminologists, psychologists, social workers, and students of gender and incarceration seeking evidence-based insight into female prison culture and rehabilitation strategies.
    Show more Show less
    5 mins
  • Prison Argot: The Hidden Language of Survival
    Apr 26 2026
    Prisons develop their own hidden language—but it’s far more than slang. This episode breaks down key terms like “kites,” “dry snitching,” and “road dogs,” while exploring how language functions as a barrier, a filter, and a survival tool. Inside prison walls, knowing what words mean isn’t just useful—it can determine where you stand.
    Show more Show less
    5 mins
  • Riot at Wasco State Prison-Reception Center: 48 Inmates Involved, Three Hospitalized
    4 mins
  • What Happens When the Brain Forgets Time? The Hidden Damage of Solitary Confinement
    Apr 19 2026
    Imagine being locked in a cell where the lights don’t follow day or night… where there are no voices, no movement, no markers of time at all.

    In this episode, we break down a chilling neurological phenomenon known as the “Carceral Clock”—how long-term solitary confinement doesn’t just isolate inmates… it literally rewires the brain’s timekeeping system.

    Drawing from neuroimaging studies, isolation research, and post-release psychological data, we examine how the brain’s master clock—the suprachiasmatic nucleus—begins to fail without light and human contact. The result? Severe circadian disruption, cognitive breakdown, and lasting damage that follows inmates long after release.

    This isn’t speculation. It’s measurable, biological change.

    No sensationalism. Just a precise, evidence-based look at one of the most overlooked—and unsettling—effects of modern incarceration.
    Show more Show less
    7 mins
  • The Rock Reborn: A $152 Million Resurrection
    2 mins
  • The Ramen Standard: How Instant Noodles Became Prison Currency
    2 mins
  • Woman Sues After Prison Staff Decided To Use Her as Rape 'Bait
    2 mins
  • 3 dead, multiple inmates injured at Nevada prison
    1 min