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Mind of a Serial Killer Exhibit Opens in Greenwich Village
On a quiet Greenwich Village block, a new attraction is asking New Yorkers to walk straight into some of the darkest chapters in true-crime history. The immersive exhibit, which opened April 17, recreates scenes tied to infamous serial killers, from Ted Bundy’s 1968 yellow Volkswagen to a Jeffrey Dahmer kitchen complete with a severed head in the fridge. Every visitor has to sign a waiver acknowledging potential emotional distress, and anyone under 18 is barred at the door. Organizers insist it is a psychological deep dive, while critics say it skirts dangerously close to a horror theme park built on real victims.
Popularity of Serial Killer exhibition leads to extended engagement
A crowded parking lot and constant lines are testimony to the popularity of Serial Killer: The Exhibition now at Pullman Yards in DeKalb County’s Kirkwood community. In response to what they called “overwhelming demand and continued strong attendance,” owners of the exhibition have extended its engagement through May 31.
In what owners describe as “one of the most comprehensive and in-depth exhibitions of its kind,” the exhibit features more than 2,000 original artifacts connected to serial killers from around the world. “It is one of the largest private collections of authentic objects ever assembled. The collection reflects more than 15 years of research and collaboration with more than 100 collectors,” according to Italmostre, creators and owners of the exhibition.
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This serial killer exhibit made me want to hurl – has our true crime obsession gone too far?
The ‘experience’ in New York sensationalizes history’s most gruesome murders – and pays little respect to the victims
It occurred to me the second I idly tapped “submit” on the waiver required to enter Mind of a Serial Killer: the Experience – perhaps I should have read this one more closely. Just what were they going to do to me in there?
I was entering an exhibit about the (mostly) men who committed some of history’s most gruesome murders: Ted Bundy, Jeffrey Dahmer, Ed Gein, John Wayne Gacy and others. The extravaganza just hit New York after opening in Dublin earlier this year. Though it looks like a low-budget haunted house, the exhibit purports to examine the motives of murder via crime scene recreations, wall texts and psychological profiles.
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