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Serial Killers: The Influence Of Violence In Pop Culture

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Serial killers are everywhere. Though eminent during the 1980s, there are now less in the real world and more scattered throughout popular culture. These killers have turned into cultural icons, constantly being referenced throughout favorite television shows and movies. Regardless, the average person is ignorant to this fact; this is just the problem. People are quick to blame these movies and television shows, saying that the vehement and at times macabre scenarios depicted are why we even have dangerous people on this earth. By contrast, this argument, that the increased exposure of violence in pop culture is contributing to real life serial killers, is absurd, and it is actually popular culture being born and influenced by these diabolical kings.
Serial killing is the rarest form of homicide, which occurs when an individual has killed three or more people. Usually serial killers pick their victims at random, leaving a “cooling off” period in between each committed crime (Kevin Haggerty). It also should be noted that serial murderers …show more content…

The earliest dates back to the late 1700s, which happened to be a pair of brothers, known as the Harpe Brothers. The Harpe Brothers were deemed the first serial murderers, and left a bloody trail along the American Frontier. Furthermore, other parts of the world were being terrorized by serial killers. In Germany, Sophie Ursinus became known for poisoning her whole family with arsenic; in England, Jack the Ripper targeted and terrorized prostitutes, and in Russia, Darya Saltykova tortured and murdered over 100 of her serfs. Perhaps, though, the most famous among the other serial killers in this particular era was H.H. Holmes. Holmes had created a hotel in Chicago (now called the Murder Castle) that was used to torment quite possibly hundreds of guests that came to stay there during the 1893 World’s

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