Published: 23 April 2026. The English Chronicle Desk. The English Chronicle Online.
I hesitated for a brief moment before clicking submit on that necessary entry waiver. The digital document required my full legal consent to enter the unsettling experience. I wondered what exactly they were planning to do to me inside there. The exhibit was centered on men who committed some of history’s most gruesome murders. It featured names like Ted Bundy and Jeffrey Dahmer alongside Ed Gein too. This strange display has just arrived in New York after visiting Dublin earlier. It claims to explore the complex psychological motives behind these truly horrific crimes. The organizers use crime scene recreations and detailed texts to guide the viewers.
It makes sense that this display landed in the United States of America today. Psycho killers are certainly a distinct obsession within the vast American cultural landscape. They haunt our dark interstate highways and many of the lonely, deserted alleys. These figures lurk within suburban basements and quiet cabins deep in the woods. Serial killers surely exist everywhere, but they loom large in our collective national consciousness. We seem trapped between a feeling of genuine fear and a deep, dark fascination.
I eventually left the venue alive with all my original appendages still perfectly intact. The waiver I signed only warned of potentially disturbing material causing some emotional distress. That specific warning was certainly not a case of any fake or misleading advertising. There were several moments on my tour where I gasped in genuine, loud horror. I even felt that I might vomit due to the sheer, palpable disgust. This was not because of what the actual killers did to those victims. I already knew about their sickening proclivities and their dark criminal modus operandi. I suspect you know them too, even if you would prefer to ignore them.
These crimes are forever fuel for endless documentaries, television films, and many books. They also populate the expansive and popular Ryan Murphy cinematic universe for modern audiences. I have seen far too many Netflix documentaries to be shocked by anything. I am no longer surprised when I hear about a body being dismembered. I simply do not understand why anyone would pay money to see replicas. Paying twenty-eight dollars to look at a fake bloodied bathroom seems morally very questionable.
It was not the gory recreations that really grossed me out that afternoon. I direct my intense repulsion toward the company that decided to build this. That would be the organization known as Exhibition Hub, which launches immersive events. They have created everything from ball pits to displays about the Titanic disaster. I also must mention Fever, which is their primary online event ticketing platform. To be fair, the actual customer service is not the issue at play here. The staff members were genuinely cheery throughout my entire visit to the space.
I stood staring at a wall featuring quotes from various famous serial killers. One quote from the Green River Killer was particularly haunting to read today. It noted that he killed so many women he could not remember names. Gary Ridgway preyed upon vulnerable and disenfranchised women who were sex workers. He simply assumed that nobody would actually miss those poor women at all. At least three staff members reminded me that my ticket included a gift. A free poster was available for me at the souvenir shop nearby.
I declined the offer, but the cashier encouraged me to keep my lanyard. He told me it would make a nice souvenir for my visit home. I suddenly pictured myself bleeding out in a lonely ditch along a highway. I wondered in my last moments if my own murder would be noteworthy. Would my death be grisly enough to earn a small, sad, tragic footnote? My death would likely not compare to the cannibalistic crimes of Jeffrey Dahmer. In the Dahmer kitchen, guests lined up to take pictures of refrigerators.
They took photos of the inside containing a fake, plastic frozen head. In the section for the BTK killer, a child-size doll was hung. It was bound and gagged inside a recreated living room from the seventies. The display of stuffed puppies lying on a floor was also very disturbing. It was meant to illustrate the crimes of the Vampire of Sacramento today. This exhibit should not exist in our modern society for many good reasons. It is entirely sensationalistic and exploitative while offering absolutely no real educational value.
It represents the very ugliest parts of the modern crime industry under capitalism. Even the most unspeakable acts now contribute to a booming, profitable true crime business. This industry produces endless films, television series, and podcasts for eager listeners. It broadcasts a steady stream of child abductions and horrific family annihilation stories. One annual event brings together armchair detectives and some actual law enforcement officials. Tickets for these immersive extravaganzas start at nearly four hundred dollars each year. Much of the content is heavily marketed to women in our current society.
Women are statistically more likely to be victims of violent attacks than men. Perhaps women enjoy the genre because it often features a clear justice arc. This genre valorizes good police officers who are dedicated to helping grieving families. In reality, about half of the murders in the US remain completely unsolved. However, in the years since the MeToo movement gained global, necessary cultural momentum, things changed. There is increasing cultural queasiness about turning real suffering into common, cheap entertainment.
True crime creators have recently attempted to reframe their approach to these stories. It is now supposedly about honoring the victims and being a loud voice. It aims to right the deep, systemic wrongs of many historical false convictions. The famous investigative podcast Serial led to a total re-examination of cases. Netflix has also released documentaries that highlight the tragic effects of certain laws. Another recent release tackled the tabloid-fodder murder of a professional cyclist involved. It took great care to interview her family and show her full life.
The Mind of a Serial Killer experience pays the skinniest of lip service. Forgive me for finding these minor efforts completely disingenuous after my long visit. I spent an hour and a half seeing replicas of dead bodies displayed. Violence very rarely comes out of nowhere in the real world we inhabit. Most serial killers showcased suffered from serious mental illness or extreme childhood abuse. The exhibit does tenuously address how past trauma may have pushed these men. A pop culture podcaster told me she hopes the effort raises mental awareness.
But she rightly acknowledges that she would not want to see this exhibition. At the end, visitors step into a room with large mirrored, candlelit walls. I assume we are forced to look at our own reflection to remember victims. It is too bad that the room resembles a tacky nineties music video. Just before exiting, I noticed a small screen mounted on the wall nearby. It rolled through the names and ages of many serial killer victims. Given the combined death toll, the number reached into the hundreds of souls. The list sped by like copy on a very fast, runaway television teleprompter. I could not catch even one name as the list blurred before my eyes.

























































































