Dead Ink copertina

Dead Ink

Dead Ink

Di: Dead Ink
Ascolta gratuitamente

Every tattoo tells a story. Most of them are darker than you'd expect.


Dead Ink is a weekly anthology podcast about the hidden history of tattooing — the codes, the criminals, the outcasts, and the moments when ink changed everything. Russian prison gangs. Yakuza masters. Circus performers. Naval superstitions. Forensic detectives. Each episode takes one story from the underground history of marked skin and tells it the way it deserves to be told: with precision, without sensationalism, and with everything that makes it strange.

New episodes every week.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Mx Orsini
  • Ep:3 The Tattoo That Solved a Murder
    Jul 3 2026

    On Anzac Day 1935, a tiger shark on public display in a Sydney aquarium vomited a human arm in front of a paying crowd. The arm had been severed cleanly with a blade, not bitten, and tattooed clearly with two boxers squared up for a fight. A newspaper printed the description. A woman recognised it as her husband's. From that moment, the tattoo became the only solid evidence in a murder case that would never be solved. This episode traces what happens when a tattoo is the last piece of a person that can still speak: from the Cleveland Torso Murders of the 1930s, where six distinctive tattoos on an unidentified victim failed to produce a name for ninety years, to the forensic genealogy breakthroughs that finally gave cold case victims their identities back, to the FBI's tattoo recognition database and the civil liberties questions it quietly opened up alongside it.


    More info: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shark_arm_case clevelandpolicemuseum.org interpol.int/en/Crimes/Operation-Identify-Me

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Mostra di più Mostra meno
    17 min
  • Ep:2 Yakuza Irezumi: How a Government Ban Created Organised Crime
    Jul 3 2026

    The Meiji government banned tattooing in 1872, embarrassed by what foreign visitors might think of Japanese men covered in elaborate ink. The ban didn't end the tradition. It handed it exclusively to the one group for whom illegality was never much of a deterrent. The Yakuza adopted irezumi as a badge of honour, a declaration of commitment so painful and expensive to earn that wearing it became proof of who you were. A full bodysuit could take two hundred hours and the cost of a house, applied by hand, one tap at a time, by a master who'd spent years just cleaning the studio before he was allowed near a needle. Then the same tattoo that once made a Yakuza member untouchable became the thing that got him identified, tracked, and caught. A fugitive boss living quietly in Thailand for over a decade was identified within days when a stranger posted a photograph of two old men playing checkers in a park.


    More info: nippon.com — search "irezumi history" metropolisjapan.com — Horiyoshi III interview

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Mostra di più Mostra meno
    15 min
  • Ep:1 The Secret Language of Russian Prison Tattoos
    Jul 3 2026

    Inside the Soviet prison system, known to its inhabitants as the Zone, a criminal caste called the Vory v Zakone spent decades building one of the most complex tattoo systems ever created. Every mark was earned. Every symbol carried precise information about rank, crimes committed, and allegiance. A cathedral on the chest told you how many sentences a man had served. Stars on the knees told you he would kneel to no one. A dagger through the neck told you he had killed inside and was available to do it again. Wearing a tattoo you hadn't earned could get you killed. Then a Soviet prison guard named Danzig Baldaev spent fifty years secretly drawing all of it down, and the world outside finally got to read the code.


    More info: fuel-design.com/publishing/russian-criminal-tattoo-encyclopaedia

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Mostra di più Mostra meno
    15 min
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
Ancora nessuna recensione