How Clean Is Your Crime Scene Online
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How Clean Is Your Crime Scene Online

How Clean Is Your Crime Scene Online

“At crime and accident scenes around Oakland, California, Neal Smither and his hard-working crew clean the messes that criminals and cops leave behind.” You had me at hello. But if blood, real blood, and death and dead people is not your thing then it’s safe to say this programme is NOT for you.

At crime and accident scenes around Oakland, California, Neal Smither and his hard-working crew clean the messes that criminals and cops leave behind. Watch trailers & learn more.

However, if you’re of a certain disposition and yes, I am of that certain disposition where I can’t curb my enthusiasm and fascination for this kind of TV. It’s been live on Netflix since August 1st 2016, and who know how long one season wonder will stay there.

It’s ten episodes, and if you’re hooked in with the first one you’ll be binge watching this in a heartbeat. This show is both as gory and as un-gory as you think it will be. It leads you to think you’re going to see a lot more than you actually do. But then, on the other hand, you’re treated to some scenes that you thought would be censored!

Neal sends out his main two cleaners, a couple of young bucks called Joe and Nate, to clean up piss in a police cell, to clear out what is called a “trash house”, to pick up pieces of brain after a suicide. There’s a tragic amount of suicide in this show. Sara Bareilles I Choose You Mp3 Download Skull. And OBVIOUSLY you don’t see the body. But you see the aftermath. Is it a lucrative business?

It would appear so! Neal, the head honcho, owns a yacht and a swanky house on a golf course (so the narrator says) so you have to assume the company does pretty well for itself. Blood, blood, blood. It’s fascinating. And then there’s the body removal side of the bizz. With its own set of strict rules and regulations.

And euw, corpses leak. I mean, I KNEW they oozed, but here’s the hard evidence right in front of my face.

The only downside binge watching this is that they repeat a lot of the same facts in every episode. Suicide rates, company trivia, etc.

They even reuse the same clips of employees, saying the same things. Maybe they realised too late that they didn’t actually have as much useful footage as they first thought. *shrugs* If it’s your jam then its good watching. Nothing mind blowing (oof, terrible choice of words, considering), but it’s very watchable. What do you think?

Joseph Bullman’s keenly observed documentary follows entrepreneur Neil Smither as he races from crime scene to crime scene in his 24 hour a day job In California, when a person dies, it is the responsibility of the owner of the house or apartment where they lived to clean up any mess that may have resulted from their demise. There is currently no government agency in California to clean up what’s left behind after a crime has been committed, creating a gap in the market for Crime Scene Cleaners. Neil Smither is a new kind of entrepreneur, with an annual turnover of close to one million dollars he is the founder and president of a company which has been in operation for five years. Want to watch more full-length Documentaries? Click here: Follow us on Twitter for more - Facebook - Instagram - @realstoriesdocs Content licensed from Digital Rights Group (DRG). Any queries, please contact us at: realstories@littledotstudios.com Produced by HALCYON PRODUCTIONS LTD.