House of Mystery Radio on NBC

Black Dahlia - William J. Mann

Feb 7, 2026
William J. Mann, bestselling author and Hollywood historian, revisits the Black Dahlia case with deep archival research. He humanizes Elizabeth Short and places her story in postwar Los Angeles. Mann examines press sensationalism, forensic limits, suspects he largely clears, and one he cannot fully exonerate. He argues against victim-blaming and highlights Short’s agency.
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INSIGHT

Case as a Window Into Postwar LA

  • William J. Mann uses the Black Dahlia case to illuminate Los Angeles and postwar social change rather than only solve the murder.
  • He widened the narrative to show how the era shaped the crime and public reaction.
INSIGHT

Restore The Victim's Humanity

  • Mann centered the project on recovering Elizabeth Short's life rather than mythologized labels like 'Black Dahlia.'
  • He argues previous books start at the corpse and erase her agency and full biography.
INSIGHT

Press Sensationalism Shaped The Myth

  • Sensational newspapers created and sustained myths about Short to sell copies, often inventing details when lacking facts.
  • Mann links that press behavior to victim-blaming narratives that persist today.
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