Murders to Music: Crime Scene to Music Scene (Streamline Events and Entertainment)
Come on a ride along with a Veteran Homicide Detective as the twists and turns of the job suddenly end his career and nearly his life; discover how something wonderful is born out of the Darkness. Embark on the journey from helping people on their worst days, to bringing life, excitement and smiles on their best days.
Murders to Music: Crime Scene to Music Scene (Streamline Events and Entertainment)
A Quick Pause and Then Back To Your Regularly Scheduled Program....
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After 160 weekly releases and two full seasons, I’m making a choice that’s easy to judge from the outside and hard to do from the mic: I’m taking a short break. I walk you through what’s behind that decision, from the pressure of never missing a week to the reality that constant vulnerability can start to feel repetitive when you’re forcing yourself to perform your own story on demand.
I also go back to where Murders to Music began, a season of survival, healing, PTSD, and identity rebuilding as I stepped away from law enforcement and tried to find my footing in a new world. That origin shaped the rawness you hear in every episode, and it’s exactly why I’m protecting this show now. I don’t want it running on fumes, and I don’t want to implode the way I have in the past.
We talk openly about the fear every podcaster recognizes: losing momentum. I’ve worked to earn my place, learn the algorithm, and build a loyal audience, and I’m still choosing to pause before the work takes a negative toll. I share what the next four to five weeks will look like, why I may drop a few snapshot episodes, and how you can revisit older conversations while I regroup and plan Season 3 with new energy and direction.
If this message resonates, subscribe so you don’t miss the return, share it with someone who needs permission to rest, and leave a review to help more listeners find the show.
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Welcome And Big Season Update
SPEAKER_00Ladies and gentlemen, welcome back to the Murders to Music Podcast. My name is Aaron, I'm your host, and thank you guys so much for coming back for another week. On tonight's show, I want to talk about the future of the Murders to Music Podcast. You see, two years ago, I started this show, and we just finished our second season. And during that time, we I recorded 160 episodes, and I haven't missed a single week.
Why The Show Started
SPEAKER_00When I started the Murders to Music podcast, I started from a place of survival, healing, PTSD, identity rebuilding. I was leaving law enforcement, finding my footing again in the real world, in a corporate world, in a new world. And during the last 160 episodes, I have said a lot of things that were deeply personal, vulnerable, but at some point there's only so many ways to tell the story of myself before I feel like it starts to be repetitive or forced. The last thing I want to do is force a square peg into a round hole in this show. I believe it's too important. I believe there are people out there who listen every single week because they love the content and the vulnerability and the rawness that comes out in these episodes, whether it's myself or a guest speaking.
Choosing A Short Break
SPEAKER_00So what I have decided to do after much prayer and reflection is I have decided to take a short break. I need a short break to refill the tank, to reflect, and to come back even stronger for season three. This show means too much to me to allow it to run on fumes. You know, if we were talking about an automobile, we would be going down the road using a clutch and a gas and a brake and a stick shift. And at some point, you have to shift to a different gear to allow the engine to rest. And when you do that, it keeps you from having to hit the brakes. And I don't want to hit the brakes on this podcast. I simply want a time to breathe, to reflect, and to figure out what the next chapter of the Murders to Music podcast is going to become.
Fears About Losing Momentum
SPEAKER_00And considering all of this, there are some fears. The fears are that I have been involved in this podcast for two years. I have played algorithm games. I have got the momentum. I am in the top 50 podcasts in my space. And I've worked very, very hard to find that place. And my fear is that I lose it. My fear is that you, the listeners, go somewhere else and don't come back when I start this back up. And if that happens, well then that's the price of doing business. I hope it doesn't. But at the end of the day, if the podcast I'm putting out is taking an adverse or negative toll on me, I need to pause before things implode. I have imploded in the past and I don't want to do it again.
Asking For Support
SPEAKER_00That being said, I just ask for your support and your love and your prayers. As I take a pause on season three and figure out what the next chapter of this show is going to look
What You Can Listen To
SPEAKER_00like. Ladies and gentlemen, I thank each and every one of you for listening, and I encourage you to go back and listen to older episodes. If you have listened to all 160 episodes, you're going to get a free toaster. I believe that there's lots of material there for people to listen to over a four or five week period while I regroup. Please keep watching. I may throw out some snapshot episodes over the next few weeks just to keep a little bit of momentum going, but I promise I'm not going to ghost
The Return Plan For Season Three
SPEAKER_00you. I will be back four to five weeks with a new season, new thoughts, new direction, and new energy. Ladies and gentlemen, I love you. That is a Murders to Music Podcast.