Toronto Star

CRIMINAL MINDS

Tyler and Bek Allen created true-crime podcast that began in their makeshift studio,

- MIRIAM KATAWAZI STAFF REPORTER

During the late-night hours when their kids are asleep, Bek and Tyler Allen head down to their brightly lit Brampton basement to immerse themselves in the criminal mind.

The biweekly true-crime podcast they produce, research and air, The Minds of Madness, grew inside their makeshift studio, where they look into the events, circumstan­ces and state of mind of the people who commit unspeakabl­e acts.

“The original idea behind the podcast was to cover stories about seemingly ordinary people who all of the sudden snapped,” said Bek, who works full time producing videos for humanitari­an organizati­ons.

The podcast, which began in December 2016, grew from 5,000 listeners to more than 500,000 over the course of a few months. They have aired 24 episodes so far, and this weekend they won four Canadian Podcast Awards — for best debut, sound, theme and news podcast — at PodCamp Toronto, a two-day annual event at Ryerson University.

“In a genre so heavily populated, to be able to see the growth of our podcast has been wonderful,” said Tyler, who works as an IT profession­al during the day.

“We try to humanize the stories we tell by listening to the people impacted by the tragedies and giving them a voice.”

The podcast includes interviews with investigat­ors, forensics specialist­s, social workers, detectives, as well as family members of the victims. It covers cases from around the world, including Canada.

Tyler is the host and Bek does the research, writing and producing for the episodes. They edit together.

The pair focus on stories about individual­s who have suddenly committed horrific crimes, rather than serial killers or people whose crimes were well-planned.

Their most popular case is one the Allens have been working on for four months — the unsolved death of 19year-old Indiana teen Tanner Barton, a healthy college football player at Marian University, who suddenly collapsed and died at a friend’s home in 2012.

Three episodes on this case have been released so far.

“We were approached to cover the case in October and it’s got to the point now that we are helping with the investigat­ion,” said Rebecca Foster, who uses the name Bek Allen on the show.

“We try to give insight into the fact that these are real people in these stories and families are still trying to pick up the pieces. We want to make the people listening empathize and relate.”

The listeners are very engaged and often become invested in the characters, she said. Sometimes the hosts receive questions asking for more info about the people involved.

Foster said that people often don’t hear about the human elements behind the crime stories in the news. Their podcast offers the details and human aspects to the stories, she added.

“To be able to create something together and to see thousands of people listening to it means a lot to us,” Tyler said.

“We try to spend not too much time on the gruesome details of crime and glorify them but more on the story of the people involved and the states of their minds.”

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 ?? RICHARD LAUTENS/TORONTO STAR ?? Tyler, left, and Bek Allen’s true-crime podcast won four Canadian Podcast Awards at PodCamp Toronto, a two-day event at Ryerson University.
RICHARD LAUTENS/TORONTO STAR Tyler, left, and Bek Allen’s true-crime podcast won four Canadian Podcast Awards at PodCamp Toronto, a two-day event at Ryerson University.

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